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Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"Yost, Escobar, & The Ghost of J.J. Hardy."

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June 10, 2011 at 1:09 AM

Blogger Daniel said...

I knew Escobar was horrible, but then looked into it and saw he was the 2nd worst hitter in all of MLB...and the gap between him and 3rd worst is quite large. It doesn't really matter, but it drives the point home -- he simply cannot do enough defensively to make up for that absolute lack of offense.

If Escobar was doing anything well, I'd be more patient. But he hits for no power at all, and if memory serves, those doubles were all down the line -- no gap shots indicating a really well-hit ball. I remember once where he flew out to the warning track. But that wouldn't matter as much if he was a good basestealer, at least, but he's not good at that, either.

If Aviles is performing poorly enough to be sent down, fine, but the difference between those two isn't great enough where one of them is sent down while the other is rigorously defended.

June 10, 2011 at 1:42 AM

Blogger Adrian said...

*face palm*

6th in runs scored, 14th in runs allowed. Clearly, Escobar's bat is the problem.

June 10, 2011 at 1:57 AM

Blogger Bolivar said...

Interestingly, of the eight pinch hit situations you documented for Hardy, only one affected the ultimate outcome of the game. Do you think the 'lesson' Yost learned was that there isn't sufficient value in the move to warrant it?

I do agree with you though. I don't look at my season ticket costs as an 'investment' in future wins. I look at as the price I pay for entertaining baseball. When our manager sacrifices the opportunity to be competitive today in order to build 'for the future' then I have a problem with it.

June 10, 2011 at 6:35 AM

Blogger Robert said...

I'm not a fan of Yost's flat refusal to pinch hit for Escobar, because I don't think it will actually SUCCEED in helping his development. But, I can't get that worked up about it, given this issue is about 147th on my list of worries about this team.

And in fact, if this is the occasional by-product of actually running the young guys out there instead of suffering through at-bats of Rossiesky Guillobs, I'll take it.

June 10, 2011 at 9:15 AM

Blogger gsmith601 said...

On your draft recap can you let us know if the Royals took anyone that they got because of signability issues for other teams. Seems like we've done well paying for better players that we had to give bigger bonuses in rounds 2-5 or so. Did not know if we got one of those type of players this year?

June 10, 2011 at 9:28 AM

Blogger John said...

If they think Escobar will develop into a respectable hitter as he gets more MLB at-bats, that's fine. I don't necessarily agree, but it's certainly worth giving him the chance.

But you do NOT let a .209 hitter with zero power come to bat in the ninth inning of a close game. Escobar knows this is the big leagues, and he knows he's hitting .209. He should, if he is a professional, realize it is in the best interest of the team for someone else to hit in that situation. The only effect getting pinch-hit for should have on him is to make him want to improve his hitting so the manager doesn't have to. That's what Ozzie Smith did. Like Escobar, he was good enough with the glove to play even when he was a terrible hitter. He worked on his hitting until he was no longer a terrible hitter.

June 10, 2011 at 11:30 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

Two things:


There's some merit to him being able to become a better hitter. In Hardy's first half, he BABIP'd .230, which is obscene. In his 2011, AE is BABIP-ing .240.

On the other hand, Hardy was a 22 year old rookie and is being compared to a 24 year old with nearly 1000 PAs. When his season is over, he'll have over 1200 PAs. Hardy had 1204 PAs through his Age 24 season and hit .263/.321/.429 for a 93 OPS+. Does anyone with more time than me want to figure out what AE will have to hit for the remainder of this season to get his career .240/.284/.312 62 OPS+ line up to Hardy's numbers?

June 10, 2011 at 12:51 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Who would play shortstop now?

Brilliant roster construction leaves us no choice but to bat Escobar in the ninth, which is absurd.

I can't believe there are 13 pitchers and no reserves who can play even a remotely passable level of shortstop behind Escobar. What if he gets hurt? Ridiculousness.

June 10, 2011 at 1:59 PM

Blogger kcghost said...

Sometimes the two-headed savant that GMDM/NY does things so they can have there way. Escobar can't hit a lick even if he was in a T-Ball, so the solution is the send the only other SS we have to the minors so we never get tempted to pinch hit for him??

If you are going to bring up Moustakas you have to let him play everyday. This means the triumverate of Avila/Betemit/Getz has to be reduced to a twosome. I know Aviles hasn't hit much (if anything) but he has hit in the past. That's something that Getz has never done. And Getz cannot play SS while Aviles can.

This continues to cement GMDM's reputation as being hopelessly inept in the contruction of a major league roster.

June 10, 2011 at 3:24 PM

Blogger Brad said...

Not only all that, but Yost is letting his strategy put Escobar in high-pressure situations as well.

Monday night, June 6th, when the Royals won in extra innings is a prime example. In the bottom of the 11th, Chris Getz leads off and bunts his way on base. Brayan Pena comes up, with Escobar on deck, and is ordered to bunt Getz over. Surely Toronto had to be happy with that decision, the Royals were trying to give them an out before Escobar came to the plate. Luckily, Pena was unable to get the sacrifice down and wound up hitting a single which enabled Escobar to be the player to put down a sacrifice bunt.

Now, I realize Brayan Pena isn't the greatest hitter in the world, but at least he's shown he is capable of hitting while Escobar was (and still is) barely hitting above .200. Why would you have Pena sacrifice and leave it to Escobar to try and come up with a hit or a walk to at least extend the inning?

June 10, 2011 at 3:49 PM

Blogger MoCrash said...

All you proved is that pinch-hitting for Hardy was less productive than his averages, so what's the compelling case to pinch-hit for Escobar?

June 10, 2011 at 6:09 PM

Blogger Kansas City said...

MoCrash is wrong.

It is not a matter of whether the small sample size of pinch hitting for Hardy produced positive results. It is a matter of whether Yost's rationale for not pinch hitting (even Yost implicitly acknowledges pinch hitting would improve the chances of winning the game) is true (did he actually do it with Hardy) and whether doing so would hinder Escobar's development as a hitter (it did not hinder Hardy, White, etc.).

I am not too harsh on the silly current roster configuration. It is temporary. I assume they think Avilles will start hitting and they will bring him back or they will trade someone.

June 10, 2011 at 6:27 PM

Blogger KHAZAD said...

Great points Rany.

Good call on the IBB.

Also, I think that constantly failing with the game on the line would cause it to get into Escobar's head, rather than build any confidence.It is an asanine explanation.

The point is moot now as the Royals have no one else who can play shortstop.

June 10, 2011 at 6:53 PM

Blogger Harry said...

Regardless of whether you think Yost should pinch hit for Escobar or not, Rany's got a good point here that Yost's recollection of never pinch hitting for J.J. Hardy is factually inaccurate. What I'm curious about, though, is:

1. Has anyone actually pointed this out to Yost yet?
2. And if not, then if/when someone does, will Yost start pinch-hitting for Escobar?

June 10, 2011 at 7:33 PM

Blogger Nathan said...

Adrian wrote:

"*face palm*

6th in runs scored, 14th in runs allowed. Clearly, Escobar's bat is the problem."

Yes. Even so, Escobar's bat is a problem. You don't win games by having balance. You win games by outscoring the other team. The Royals would win more games if they made a move to scored a lot more runs and allow a few more runs, like pinch hitting for Escobar.

On the other hand, I do think it's important that Escobar keep starting. Nobody else in the organization has his long-term potential at the position.

June 11, 2011 at 12:14 AM

Blogger Bolivar said...

I think some folks are being bit one dimensional. Sure, hitting is important but great defense has nearly as much value.

Escobar is far and away the best defensive middle infielder we've had in a number of years. His play keeps runs off the board. As far as I'm concerned a run kept off the board is as good as a run scored.

I do agree that pinch hitting for him (or any low average hitter) in high leverage situations makes sense, but those who seem to find no value in Escobar are not seeing the whole field.

True, we have no great backup at the SS position, but Betemit is apparently serviceable enough to fill in for part of a game, and Aviles is a phone call away in Omaha.

June 11, 2011 at 9:08 AM

Blogger bbxpert said...

Am I the only one who is a big fan of Brayan Pena?

June 11, 2011 at 12:13 PM

Blogger Michael said...

Yes, yes you are.

June 11, 2011 at 1:52 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

A run scored is equal to a run saved, but pitchers are mostly responsible for not allowing the other team to score...not to mention that Escobar teams up with 8 other guys to keep from scoring.


Most defenders make most plays. The transverse is not true. Hitting is significantly more important than defense.

June 11, 2011 at 9:36 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

bbxprt, in the sense that I like the guy and want him to do well, I am also a fan of Brayan Pena. Not in the sense that I think he is really wonderful at baseball, though.

June 12, 2011 at 7:49 PM

Blogger Dodd said...

Since you posted this:

Eric Hosmer 0 for 13
Alcides Escobar 6 for 11

Not trying to make a point. Just found it funny.

June 13, 2011 at 12:20 AM

Blogger Jeff said...

Escobar has been having a mild resurgence at the plate the last week. Seitzer has apparently been retooling his swing and it may finally be paying off. Maybe Ned was right after all.

On a different note, if we had back those FIVE games Soria blew earlier this year, we would be 1.5 games out of first right now.

June 13, 2011 at 11:14 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jeff-

Looking back is both insane and incredibly hard not to do.

I agree with your point, but what I want back is that 4 game Twins series. How did they lose all four to their tripleA lineup?

June 13, 2011 at 1:24 PM

Blogger trjones said...

Looks like Escobar will be fine, but I am starting to wonder about the wonder kid named Hosmer. He is looking positively average at the plate in the last week or so.

Frank and Ryan were talking about how bad his feet looked during his swing on Tuesday night. How can that be??? I thought this kid was supposed to be a pure hitter!

I'm getting that sinking feeling in my Royal gut again.

June 16, 2011 at 12:11 PM

Blogger Keith Jersey said...

You are worried because a rookie has a bad week? That's a little bit of an overreaction, dont you think?

June 16, 2011 at 2:57 PM

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