Sunday, October 12, 2008

Winner for hire...

You've heard of the hired gun - the guy who comes in and is supposed to give the team whatever it lacks, hopefully leading to a championship.  You've seen it work - Rasheed Wallace in '04, Dominick Hasek in '02 - and you've seen it fail - Todd Bertuzzi in '07, CC Sabathia for the Brewers this year - but that is the team going out to find that one last puzzle piece.  What Marian Hossa did this last off-season flipped the tables a bit.

Hossa, a free agent and hot commodity after helping lead the Penguins to the Stanley Cup Finals, was ready to cash in on a long term deal.  (Side note - why are all the hockey contracts these days so long?  Like Rick DiPietro's contract with the Islanders a couple years ago, something like 11 years?  Maybe there is some nuance in their collective bargaining agreement they are leveraging, but it just seems like that is way too long a time period to guarantee someone money for playing such a violent sport.)  Instead he called up the Wings, who had given up on him since they couldn't afford to spend money on him and sign all of the internal free agents.  Hossa was fine with that - he'd take less.  Ken Holland told him that he couldn't make more than Nick Lindstrom, the team's Captain and leader.  Hossa was fine with that too.  So the Wings signed him to a one year deal, and Hossa can cash in next year - hopefully after hoisting the Cup.

The question is - will this be a new trend?  Athletes SAY they want to win, but the money is what tips the scales time and again.  A-Rod couldn't have expected to win in Texas, but that $252 million sure looked nice on the bank ledger.  Jose Guillen couldn't think the Royals were contenders, but as long as the checks didn't bounce, he was fine.  Some players give home town discounts when they re-sign with teams, but I don't really remember a player in his prime, with many teams ready to offer long term deals, eschewing that and going somewhere that truly gives him the best chance of winning.  Will Detroit in hockey be a destination for Stanley Cup seeking free agents?  A one-stop-shop for people trying to complete their trophy case?  And is that a good thing or a bad thing?

What about other sports?  Will there ever be a prime time free agent who decides purely based on the chance to win?  And which teams would be the most likely destinations?  I guess Randy Moss did that a little this past year when he re-signed in New England, but with his checkered past, who knows what money and how many years other teams would have given him.

I wish Hossa the best, and of course hope he succeeds in his quest in Detroit, but it is just one more thing that makes it hard to root for your team in sports these days.  The turnover is so high, you have a hard time keeping track of the guys on your team...but that is for another day.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Hey, Hey, Hockey Town!

Your Stanley Cup Champion Detroit Red Wings are back!  (That was almost an entire sentence with justifiable caps.)  Tonight the Wings lost a close one to the Leafs, 3-2.  Actually, I didn't see the game.  I don't have Versus, and until I hook one of my parents up with Slingbox, I am out of luck in Kansas City.  Some observations courtesy of the box score:
- glad to see Osgood back again
- Holmstrom's two goals are the only offense
- the standard: outshoot the opponent (37-29), still a close game
- Lindstrom led the team in ice time
- Hossa had an assist and plenty of shifts

I am eager to see Hossa work with the other talent on this team.  My next post will be about him, as I concentrate on hockey for a couple weeks.  I'll still comment on the baseball playoffs when I think about it, but hockey probably won't pique my interest as much as it does now until after the New Year, so better get it while it's hot...

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Batting 6th, your Left Fielder...

...Carlos Guillen?!  Does not really inspire confidence, I must say.  First off, I don't know why we jacked around so much with positions this year.  Maybe having Grandy hurt to start the year just threw everything out the window from Day 1, with Inge starting some games at CF even.  Then the old "who's on first, I don't know's on third, and old man Renteria is at short."  Guillen from SS to 1B to 3B.  Cabrera from 3B to 1B.  Renteria from SS to...aw crap, he stayed there the whole year?  Well that explains some things.  I think Cabrera would have had more long term value as a 3B, just because that position is more difficult to play.  You can get any scrub (Thames, Marcus) to play 1B.  But I can't really complain about Cabrera - leading the league in homers, top 5 in RBI, and .300+ BA is a great year.  Guillen was not BAD at third.  He may be even worse in left, but you can at least hide him more easily (only a couple of chances per game versus potentially a couple per inning at third).  I think the move is a wash overall - Inge's bat is still in the lineup, Guillen's is there too, along with a as-yet-unnamed catcher.  The saving grace might be if Sheffield can play the outfield when he comes back.  He will whine less, Guillen can DH, and all will be right with the world.

Of course, none of that answers any questions about the pitching...

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Tigers done, Lions on their way...bah

What a completely disappointing season.  The one highlight - Miguel Cabrera turning into the $100+ million dollar man he is being paid to be - is slightly ominous to me because he completely killed the ball while Detroit was pretty much out of it, but choked A-Rod style when the Tigers were in the race and trying to claw their way back in.  Of course in Florida, he never had much to play for or any expectations of the team either, so...does that mean he is someone who can't step it up in crunch time?  Clutch hitting is somewhat overrated, in my opinion - I think all hitting will average out, clutch or otherwise - but I am hoping this isn't a bad trend.  It feels like the Tigers - especially Cabrera but ESPECIALLY Thames - hit a disproportionate number of solo home runs.  Not sure what it all means, but I'm just saying it doesn't add up to a winning team (not this year at least).

Oh yeah, and the Lions started playing.  Then stopped.  Too bad the season has 13 more games.  At least Millen is gone.  I wonder how long it will be before a Lions GM will draft a WR in the first round for fear of ridicule.  5 years?  10 years?  Wake me up when they win a game.

So my friend Andy brought up a good point about sports a few weeks ago, and I am just now getting around to writing about it.  Basically, the question is:

Why is there seemingly so much parity in baseball - a sport with no salary cap - while capped sports have great disparities in records?

So, from the surface, you might say, there is no parity in baseball at all!  The Yankees, Red Sox, Cubs, Mets - they all always win, always go to the playoffs...and the Pirates and Royals will always suck.  To see the parity, you have to realize that the worst team this year - Seattle (and they were AWful) - won 37.7% of their games.  (The Angels had the best record and won 61.7% of the time.) During the season, it is notable for a team to sweep another team in a three game series.  Usually the better team wins 2 out of the 3 games.  That means the top teams will win around 67% of the time, and the absolute worst 33% of the time.  That sounds pretty bad, till you look at football (Miami last year - 6.25% - and New England - 100%), basketball (Miami - 18.5% [bad year for that city] - and Boston - 80.5%), and hockey (Tampa Bay and L.A. - 43.3% - and Detroit - 71.1%).  And these are not outliers - the most wins in baseball history is 116, 71.6%, which just barely approaches what those other sports see every year.  So why is it, when you have the big, bad, all powerful, all spending teams in baseball and you have an even playing field, salary capped, parity filled group of leagues, the capped teams are more disparate in their records?  A couple ideas...

  • The season is just waaaaaaaaaaay too long to be successful at that high rate
That is probably the best reason, but I'll lead with it anyway.  Even looking at 3 game subsets of the season, one team doesn't always sweep those subsets.  2-1 is still a series win, but keep doing that, and all you'll get is the best record in the league - just not domination Patriots style.  Playing together with the long season is the way players are rested in baseball.  On day games following night games (probably happens once a week or so), you'll notice the starting catcher sitting out and maybe one or two other regulars on the bench, just to give them a break.  Also in play is the amount of travel.  Baseball teams will go on the road for weeks at a time as a regular occurrence, and play for 2 weeks straight at times.  Unless you're the San Antonio Spurs trying to avoid the annual rodeo in your arena or the Boston Bruins avoiding the circus, basketball and hockey teams play maybe 3 or 4 straight road games at a time.  Football teams might play 2-3 straight road games, but they're at home for the week in between, so that hardly counts.  Finally, with a season twice as long as basketball and hockey, the sample size is just too large to have any one team win almost all their games or any team lose theirs.

  • But what about the money?  Wouldn't an uncapped team salary lead to some team being really dominant?
The Yankees tried that, and others (Red Sox, Mets, Tigers) have thrown money at players to get a winner, but that doesn't always work.  In fact, since the Yankees have started to just pay dumb amounts of money for their players, they haven't won a World Series.  Sure they made the playoffs all the time (before this year - side note, the fact that the Yankees missed the playoffs should be enough for any atheist to admit there is a God) but they haven't won the whole thing since 2000.  That is a nice problem to have, true, but it remains that the Marlins have won since then.  Money doesn't buy baseball championships.  And those other leagues...I can't speak as much for hockey since their cap is new and I still don't really get it all the way, but football and basketball have weird cap situations.  Basketball is not a hard cap, so teams can spend as much as they want, but they have to pay a dollar-for-dollar penalty for going over.  Teams with lots of extra money lying around - like the Knicks - can spend over the cap, pay the fee, and still...suck.  And teams that are below the cap can win big.  My theory with basketball is that, since they have so few players (12/team), the mistakes are magnified and the good decisions have a bigger impact.  Overpaying for a guy will really hurt your team because a lot of money is tied up in 1/12th of your team.  So the value of scouting, drafting well, and picking the right people to keep on your team is very high.  One good thing is that the NBA has a solid draft slotting system for payment, so the #1 pick gets $X and that is all - there is no negotiating.  That is different from football, where draft picks money is sky high.  A guy gets $30 million guaranteed before he's ever played in the NFL?  Good for him, but come on, that is just bad business.  And the NFL salary cap is inflexible compared to the NBA.  Sure, you can pro-rate the bonus over 6 years and only take a $5 million/year hit on the cap, and do some other creative things with roster bonuses vs performance clauses, etc, but the number at the end of the year has to be under the cap or else.  The better teams - the New Englands, the Denvers - have great salary cap guys that know how to work the system.  They also value those cheap players at the end of the draft and don't overspend on those highly slotted rookies that are unproven.  Since teams CAN pay big bucks, they do.  Michael Vick has millions from his signing bonus, and that seems like a waste right now.  Don't even mention all those Detroit draft busts...that goes without saying.  In baseball things are changing a little with regard to the draft.  It used to be some players were avoided because they would cost a lot, but then teams willing to pay (Detroit) would get them later in the draft and pay more, but get a better player than the ones that should have been available at that draft spot.  That is a smart move because you can pay that young guy very little compared to the veterans and even get something in a trade later on.  But other teams are catching on, and the KC's and Pittsburgh's of the world will now sign the best player.  Anyway, point being, salary cap is not the end-all, be-all of success.

  • The number of important movable parts is too high on a baseball team
This might be as important as the length of the season.  Baseball teams have 9-10 (with the DH) players in any given game at any given time that all need to contribute in order to be successful.  The other sports can have 1-2 dominant players at key positions and be hugely successful.  QB + RB.  Goalie + Center.  Michael Jordan + anyone else.  Baseball is the opposite - you can hide maybe 1-2 scrubs in your daily lineup, but everyone else better be Major League quality if you want to win.  Good example: Angel Berroa.  He won Rookie of the Year for the Royals when they were almost good a couple years ago, but he faultered in games that mattered and pretty soon got demoted to AAA.  This year he's traded to the Dodgers and they are in the playoffs right now.  Berroa hasn't changed - hits every once in a while, pretty decent fielder - but the Dodgers have enough other good-to-great players that they can take the hit of having Berroa play and still be successful.  The Royals couldn't overcome that.  How does a team go from too many scrubs to becoming successful?  Luck.  Overpaying (the right) free agents.  More luck.  Minor leaguers coming up and succeeding at the same time.  And a little more luck.

This is all a long answer to get to the point that I don't know exactly for sure.  The long season is an easy enough answer to explain it all away, but I hope I have added enough other insight to some other key points that this exercise wasn't a complete waste of time.