The 2012 Free Agency Team

In Commentary And Analysis by myles48 Comments

This has been a pretty bare year for free agency. Aside from Greinke and Hamilton, there haven’t really been the impact talents available like in previous years. That’s only going to get worse.

However, there is something interesting to note. For under $150 million, a GM could have signed an entire 25-man roster out of free agents and won over 100 games. Here is that list.

  2013 AAV WAR
C Molina 1.8 0.8
1B Pujols 24.68 4.6
2B Hill 5.5 4.6
SS Hairston 3 1.5
3B Ramirez 12 5.4
RF Beltran 13 3.6
CF Cespedes 9 3.4
LF Willingham 7 2.9
DH Encarnacion 3.5 4.6
SP Iwakuma 1.5 1.9
SP Chen 3.7 2.4
SP Kuroda 10 3.4
SP Saunders 4 1.3
SP Maholm 4.75 1.9
RP Papelbon 12.5 1.6
RP Nathan 7.38 1.9
RP Affeldt 5 0.7
RP Broxton  4 1.6
RP Rodney 2 3.7
RP Dotel  3.5 1.1
RP Oliver 4.5 1.9
Bench Repl 0.5 0
Bench Repl 0.5 0
Bench Repl 0.5 0
    143.81 54.8

That’s $143.81 (the midpoint, almost exactly, between #5 and #6 in payrolls last year[Tigers and Rangers]) million, and 54.8 bWAR (good for 103.8 projected wins). 

Clearly, this is an onerous undertaking even considering. You’re on the hook for the Pujols’ contract as well as Papelbon, though it’s interesting to note that those are really your only 2 incredibly bad contracts (you can maybe lump in Ramirez’). You could lose their 6.2 WAR, go to 97.6 wins, and drop to ~ $106 million in payroll, just under the Cardinals!

Of course, there is no way any GM could have signed this collection of free agents. However, it’s also important to note that no team is without it’s intrinsic resources. The Astros have under $12 million dollars in payroll obligations, and I mean that literally. They also have some worthwhile pieces (Altuve, Castro) that they wouldn’t need to acquire, though the cupboard is bare in Houston probably more than any other team I’ve ever seen. It used to be possible to wisely spend  into contention. I think that window is closing, but likely slower than we think.

The one thing I think we should all take away from this is as recently as last year, you could find a worthwhile option at basically every position (catcher and shortstop were the two areas that were harder to fill, and Reyes’ contract is too awful for even a fictional team). The better GMs can still have an advantage in this marketplace, and I believe we have one of the better GMs.

 

Share this Post

Comments

  1. dmick89

    I wonder how much that advantage to large market teams is going to exist in its current state. More and more teams are signing long-term players with fewer than 6 years of service time. Free agents were typically players in their late 20s so you were already paying for players beyond their prime. Now that teams are locking these guys up even later than that it seems it’s going to be much more difficult for high spending teams to acquire talent via free agency.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  2. Author
    Myles

    dmick89 wrote:

    I wonder how much that advantage to large market teams is going to exist in its current state. More and more teams are signing long-term players with fewer than 6 years of service time. Free agents were typically players in their late 20s so you were already paying for players beyond their prime. Now that teams are locking these guys up even later than that it seems it’s going to be much more difficult for high spending teams to acquire talent via free agency.

    Exactly. It certainly feels like the beginning of a sea change brought on my the new CBA. We’ll have to wait and see, but I was certainly surprised with this team’s quality.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  3. dmick89

    @ Myles:
    Yeah, it’s kind of amazing what you can do each year if you really want to contend. I’m still a little disappointed the Cubs didn’t opt try to contend quicker than they have. I think a team with the resources the Cubs have should never have to wait 4 to 5 years to contend and that’s unfortunately the direction they went.

    I didn’t want the Cubs to sign every expensive player available of course, but I think they could have hurried the rebuilding process along by signing a player or two they had no interest in. Same thing goes for trading for someone like Justin Upton. He’s precisely the kind of player you part with a good amount of young talent like a Javier Baez for.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  4. dmick89

    I think WARP used to use a .200 winning percentage before Colin reworked it. Not sure exactly what it used now, but it’s probably close to .300. rWAR might use a higher replacement level, but I’m not sure.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  5. Suburban kid

    dmick89 wrote:

    @ Myles:
    Yeah, it’s kind of amazing how much new shit we no longer need to churn out since we got you on board.what you can do each year if you really want to contend. I’m still a little disappointed the Cubs didn’t opt try to contend quicker than they have. I think a team with the resources the Cubs have should never have to wait 4 to 5 years to contend and that’s unfortunately the direction they went.
    I didn’t want the Cubs to sign every expensive player available of course, but I think they could have hurried the rebuilding process along by signing a player or two they had no interest in. Same thing goes for trading for someone like Justin Upton. He’s precisely the kind of player you part with a good amount of young talent like a Javier Baez for.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  6. Author
    Myles

    Suburban kid wrote:

    dmick89 wrote:
    @ Myles:
    Yeah, it’s kind of amazing how much new shit we no longer need to churn out since we got you on board.what you can do each year if you really want to contend. I’m still a little disappointed the Cubs didn’t opt try to contend quicker than they have. I think a team with the resources the Cubs have should never have to wait 4 to 5 years to contend and that’s unfortunately the direction they went.
    I didn’t want the Cubs to sign every expensive player available of course, but I think they could have hurried the rebuilding process along by signing a player or two they had no interest in. Same thing goes for trading for someone like Justin Upton. He’s precisely the kind of player you part with a good amount of young talent like a Javier Baez for.

    What can I say, I’m a shitting machine

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  7. Author
    Myles

    Berselius wrote:

    54.8 bWAR (good for 103.8 projected wins).

    Isn’t replacement level much lower? For some reason I thought it was in the 30s or 40s

    I take bWAR replacement-level to be 49 wins. I’m not sure why I do, but I do. If they use .320 as replacement level, this team instead wins 106.6 wins and we can actually trim it a great deal. If I’m a GM, I’m building a team to have an expected win total of 93 games (so +/- 4 games still puts me at a good chance to make the playoffs), so you’d have 13.6 wins to play with (though it certainly doesn’t work exactly like that).

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  8. GW

    Interesting post. Career years for EE, Aaron Hill, Rodney… Decent rebounds for broxton and nathan… A couple better than expected IFAs in Iwakuma and Cespedes. Actually worth a shit seasons from Chen, Saunders, and Maholm.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  9. dmick89

    @ GW:
    If we used projections and say the team is exactly replacement level, they’d have to add 51 wins to get to 100. 51 wins multiplied by $5.5 million per win and you get a shitload of money.

    Not every player makes $5.5 million per win so you could probably get there, but it would be tough.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  10. GW

    @ dmick89:

    Yeah, I think it’s completely unrealistic. At the start of last season, this team would be looked at as having a really weak starting rotation, lots of big bats, very shaky defensively, and with the potential to lose half the team to the dl for extended stretches.

    My point with the ‘pen is that LI plays a huge role in the WAR calcs. This team has 4 guys who were primary closers (Papelbon, Rodney, Nathan, Broxton pre-trade and during Chapman’s injury) along with Affeldt who had a handful of save opps. I’m not sure about Dotel and Oliver, but they may have gotten a few, as well. Start adjusting their LI’s, and their WAR numbers would go way down.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  11. Author
    Myles

    GW wrote:

    Interesting post. Career years for EE, Aaron Hill, Rodney… Decent rebounds for broxton and nathan… A couple better than expected IFAs in Iwakuma and Cespedes. Actually worth a shit seasons from Chen, Saunders, and Maholm.

    If a GM could more accurately predict reliever volatility, I think that would be a huge advantage. I think it’s probably the area that is the least known and most valuable to uncover. I think most teams are approaching a very high level of intelligence regarding the offensive side of the ball, and it’s been very well researched. Starting pitching is nearing that level of understanding. Reliever volatility, to this point, seems far less understood (hence, Valverde gets 9 million).

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  12. GW

    The problem is that even if you could predict the breakouts (good luck), you are ignoring all the injuries. Also, if a team like the Astros had tried to sign a fraction of these guys, it would have significantly impacted the market for the rest of them (their prices would have gone up).

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  13. Author
    Myles

    Oh, I know. I’m just saying that even in the absolute worst way to buy wins (free agency, as opposed to trades/waiver claims/draft and develop), you could have “theoretically” fielded a very good team. I’m not advocating buying your whole team, but I am saying that it’s not as poor a tactic as people might think at first blush. If the average win in free agency is $5.5 million, that doesn’t stop you from signing Aaron Hill (4.6 wins, 5.5 million) and the like, and those players can be very valuable and not very expensive.

    GW wrote:

    Oh, and I looked up EE. His was a $3.5M club option with the Jays, not a free agent deal

    Ugh, I tried to avoid options, but I couldn’t do it 100% because I was working off memory/mlbtraderumors (which doesn’t count club/player options, apparently.) Maybe sign Eric Chavez to DH (.9 million, 1.5 WAR).

    I also didn’t include a single player making under a million bucks, like Shawn Camp or Jeff Francis. Slightly more cost-savings there.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  14. dmick89

    I don’t know much about Rizzo, but was he born in Italy? Did he ever live there? Is he a citizen? If he is, great, but if he just visited the place and has an Italian sounding name then the WBC is a joke.

    /knows-nothing-about-Rizzo’s-personal-life

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  15. mikeakaleroy

    @ dmick89:
    I don’t remember the exact rule but it’s something like parents, grandparents, or father’s brother’s nephew’s cousin’s former roommate have to be from the country.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  16. Suburban kid

    What difference would it make if he was born there? He obviously has a family connection to the place. I doubt he would bother playing in the WBC for a team other than the US unless he felt pride in his Italian heritage.

    You can easily make arguments that the WBC is a “joke”. But it’s still a lot of fun and could eventually turn into a more legitimate competition.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  17. Author
    Myles

    dmick89 wrote:

    I don’t know much about Rizzo, but was he born in Italy? Did he ever live there? Is he a citizen? If he is, great, but if he just visited the place and has an Italian sounding name then the WBC is a joke.
    /knows-nothing-about-Rizzo’s-personal-life

    He really digs the never-ending pasta bowl at Olive Garden

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  18. dmick89

    Suburban kid wrote:

    What difference would it make if he was born there? He obviously has a family connection to the place. I doubt he would bother playing in the WBC for a team other than the US unless he felt pride in his Italian heritage.

    What are the rules for other international competitions? I’m asking because I don’t know. I’m fairly sure you couldn’t decide to be a US Olympian just for the hell of it. I doubt strong connection or great great grandpa’s uncle live there would be enough.

    Why have countries at all if the players can elect to play wherever the hell they choose? Why not just have everyone sign up for the WBC and then have a draft or randomly assign players to teams called the 1s, 2s and 3s?

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  19. Author
    Myles

    dmick89 wrote:

    Suburban kid wrote:
    What difference would it make if he was born there? He obviously has a family connection to the place. I doubt he would bother playing in the WBC for a team other than the US unless he felt pride in his Italian heritage.

    What are the rules for other international competitions? I’m asking because I don’t know. I’m fairly sure you couldn’t decide to be a US Olympian just for the hell of it. I doubt strong connection or great great grandpa’s uncle live there would be enough.
    Why have countries at all if the players can elect to play wherever the hell they choose? Why not just have everyone sign up for the WBC and then have a draft or randomly assign players to teams called the 1s, 2s and 3s?

    Fuck the 3s, 2s for life

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  20. Rice Cube

    @ dmick89:
    I recall this being a stink in the Olympics because Chris Kaman (an American) elected to play for the German basketball team because he had German ancestry. In the Olympics, once you declare for one country I don’t think you can switch to another country later barring a hostile takeover or something.

    Also, it seems many American coaches will coach for foreign teams in international play. It’s kinda weird.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  21. Suburban kid

    @ dmick89:

    THe Olympics, World Cup, etc. make their own rules. In fact, each country in those competitions make their own rules. But no one is pretending the WBC is at this level of competition.

    The point of this is that with a few helpful ringers with a weak connection to the country, places like Italy and the Netherlands can send their best players to play with and against the best in the world. This motivates the players and coaches and clubs and leagues in those countries, and it brings news coverage of baseball inside their countries. I live in Ireland and baseball in never ever on the news, except a 20 second report the day after the last game of the World Series. If Ireland was in the WBC, it would be on the national news every day. It would be a huge shot in the arm to the fledgling baseball community resulting in hundreds or thousands of inquiries by kids, parents and young adults where they might be able to play baseball. MLB would then support that interest by sending equipment, coaches, and money to help make the increased interest turn into actual growth in the number of active players and coaches.

    If you didn’t enjoy watching the Dutch and the Japanese and the Canadians and the US last time, then you didn’t really watch.
    also:
    WBC games >>>>>>>>>>>>Cactus/Grapefruit games

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  22. dmick89

    @ Rice Cube:
    That’s odd, but I suppose if it’s fairly standard for international competition, so what. It just seems odd that you’d create a tournament pitting nations together allowing individuals to choose where they want to play for whatever reason they see fit.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  23. WaLi

    http://web.worldbaseballclassic.com/wbc/2013/about/rules.jsp#player_eligibility

    PLAYER ELIGIBILITY
    Each player on a Federation Team’s approved Provisional Roster must be eligible to participate for that Federation Team. A player will be so eligible only if:

    •The player is a citizen of the Federation Team’s country or territory, as evidenced by a valid passport the player holds as of January 1, 2012; or
    •The player is currently a permanent legal resident of the Federation Team’s country or territory, as evidenced by documentation satisfactory to WBCI and the International Baseball Federation (“IBAF”), or
    •The player was born in the Federation Team’s country or territory, as evidenced by a birth certificate or its equivalent ; or
    •The player has one parent who is, or if deceased was, a citizen of the Federation Team’s country or territory, as evidenced by a passport or other documentation satisfactory to WBCI and the IBAF; or
    •The player has one parent who was born in the Federation Team’s country or territory, as evidenced by a birth certificate or its equivalent; or
    The player presents documentary evidence satisfactory to WBCI that, even if he has not been granted citizenship or been issued a passport, the player would be granted citizenship or a passport in due course under the laws of the Federation Team’s country or territory had the player applied for such citizenship or passport. Such presentation must include documentary evidence showing to the satisfaction of WBCI that the player would be granted citizenship or a passport in due course under the laws of the nation represented by that Federation Team, had the player applied for such citizenship or passport.

    Each Federation Team shall submit to WBCI on or before the time it submits its proposed Interest List Roster the evidence supporting the eligibility of each of the players on its proposed Interest List Roster, unless WBCI grants an extension in regard to a player. If such an extension is granted, evidence supporting the eligibility of such player shall be submitted to WBCI as soon as practicable but in no event later than a date to be set by WBCI with respect to such player.

    In the event a player is eligible to play on more than one Federation Team, the Player may select the Federation Team for which he wishes to play, provided that nothing shall prohibit such a player from declaring his willingness to play for any Federation Team for which he is eligible to play.

    If a player on a Federation Team’s approved Provisional Roster or approved Final Roster is subsequently determined, in the sole discretion of WBCI, not to have been eligible to participate for that Federation Team, the player shall be removed from the Final Roster and shall not be eligible to play in the remainder of the Qualifying Round. Such ineligible player may not be replaced on the Federation Team’s Final Roster. WBCI may, in its discretion, impose sanctions upon any Federation Team that WBCI determines has used one or more ineligible players.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  24. Suburban kid

    @ dmick89:
    Yeah, but you can’t. I guess it’s true that there are a lot of Hispanic American players who could choose to play for a grandparent’s homeland, but they still need some kind of connection to that country, like Rizzo has to Italy through his fairly recent ancestors. (most Italian immigration to the US was between 1890 and 1920).

    You make it sound like players can choose to play for any team.

    Rizzo can’t play for Israel or Germany as far as I know, and Dempster can’t choose to play for South Africa or Venezuela or Korea.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0

Leave a Comment