Archive for Mining the News

Mining the News (9/24/24)

American League

Astros

Tayler Scott pitched through a back injury.

Scott is on the injured list with what the Astros described as a “thoracic spine strain” — a back injury he acknowledged trying to pitch through all month. Scott surrendered nine hits, five walks and four earned runs in 5 2/3 September innings, inflating an already unsustainable workload.

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Mining the News (9/21/24)

American League

Blue Jays

Will Wagner will have his knee operated on, should be ready for Spring Training, and the team sees him as a second baseman.

Will Wagner will get his left knee scoped on Thursday after meeting with specialists in Cleveland, and while the procedure will come with some rehab time, the Blue Jays expect him to be ready for Spring Training next February without any issues.

“I think he’s probably a little bit relieved that he’s getting this taken care of now,” John Schneider said Wednesday. “It’s also about him understanding from us and the organization how he’s viewed, the way he played and what we’re looking for from him heading into the offseason and next year. He’s shown really well. He’s a guy we’re confident in, and rightfully so.”

Schneider wants to leave as many doors open as possible, but it’s clear that Wagner has impressed him enough to get a shot at playing second base on a near full-time basis.

“He can play first and we dabbled at third with him in Buffalo, but we like what we see at second,” Schneider said. “We think he’s got a really good game for that spot. There’s a fine line between the versatility aspect, which we do value, and keeping a guy regular at a certain spot. I can see him getting a lot of reps at second.”

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Mining the News (9/18/24)

Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

American League

Angels

Mike Trout might move to a corner outfield spot or DH next season.

Angels superstar Mike Trout said his twice surgically repaired left knee is feeling better and he’s open to potentially moving to a corner outfield spot or serving as designated hitter more often to try to stay healthy.

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Mining the News (9/10/24)

American League

Angels

Logan O’Hoppe tries to regain his swing as he works through some fatigue.

“After that game, we hopped in and worked on some things, felt really different,” O’Hoppe said. “So that was a good sign, you know? I mean, it wasn’t beating my head against the wall like it was the past month. So I’m just looking to build on it.”

O’Hoppe wouldn’t get into detail on the changes he made, but he said that both coaches pointed out things that were different with his swing during his recent skid.

“They pointed a lot of things out to me that I didn’t realize had changed over time,” O’Hoppe said. “There was a lot going on, so I don’t want to get into the specifics of it, but I’m grateful for them and kind of keep leaning on them.”

“We’re supposed to be tired right now in September,” O’Hoppe said. “I didn’t just admit that I am tired. Don’t take it the wrong way, but I really do believe that we’re supposed to be tired right now.”

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Mining the News (9/4/24)

American League

Angels

• Here is your periodic reminder to read Lance Brozdowski’s work on pitcher adjustments (and watch his YouTube channel). In this instance, Lance points out how much Caden Dana’s release varies between his pitches.

There’s large release height variation here that makes me worried. He’s popping a half-foot above his slider to get to his fastball shape and then popping another half-foot to get to his curveball shape. These are massive differences and he’s not creating outlier shapes in the process like a Ricky Tiedemann, where you can squint and justify it. Rhett Lowder does this a bit too but not nearly as dramatic. Dana looks like a 20-year-old pitcher to me.

Here are Dana’s different release points.

For a comparison, here are Zack Wheeler’s release points from his last start.

The biggest issue with the various release points is he is tipping his pitches so the batters know which pitch is coming. Read the rest of this entry »


Mining the News (8.29.24)

Katie Stratman-USA TODAY Sports

General

Keep a list of articles on late-season options for next season. Teams will eventually look to the same subs and it’s a good idea to have some evaluation of their talent. Here are some articles from Pitcher List on pitching and hitting stashes. Read the rest of this entry »


Mining the News (8/20/24)

American League

Angels

Griffin Canning is struggling for several reasons including a new sweeper that is not yet “sharp”.

The sweeper that he’s worked on in bullpen sessions hasn’t been as sharp in game action and is registering as a slider. There’s also some concern he’s showing his grips, potentially tipping pitches. His fastball-changeup usage against lefties has also been viewed as a bit predictable, resulting in an .865 OPS for lefties against him.

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Mining the News (8/13/24)

American League

Angels

Jo Adell simplified his swing by removing his leg kick.

So Adell made a major change at the plate against the Rockies on July 30, ditching his leg kick in an attempt to cut down on his strikeout rate and put the ball in play more often. It’s worked so far, as he’s hitting .286/.388/.476 with two homers, two doubles and seven RBIs in 12 games since. He looks much like he did early in the year and he’s struck out just nine times in 49 plate appearances over that stretch after having previously struck out in 29% of his plate appearances.

“The no leg kick, at times it takes some getting used to, but my contact rate has gone through the roof,” Adell said. “I’ve been really able to make a lot more contact, and that’s something where it’s not always about the big fly. We’ve talked about this before, but being able to put the ball in play hard [going] forward should be my goal every time — and I think it’s given me a better chance to do that.”

Adell, 25, added that he doesn’t believe the change will have a negative impact on his power, and so far, the results have shown that. He hit a two-run homer on Friday into the bullpen in left-center field at Nationals Park that went a Statcast-projected 431 feet. And he has four extra-base hits since making the change.

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Mining the News (8/6/24)

American League

Angels

Griffin Canning thinks he is doing a better job of hiding the ball.

Canning had trouble with his control, walking four, but made up for it by allowing just three hits and striking out a season-high eight batters. He credited a change in his mechanics for his success, as he felt hitters were seeing what was coming because he separates the ball from his glove early in his delivery.

“It was significantly better today,” Canning said. “Mentally, just, in a good spot. Felt like I had good rhythm, just on the same page with [catcher] Matt [Thaiss]. And obviously I can clean up some of those walks and some deeper counts, but overall, I feel pretty good about it.”

“I think it was just hiding the ball a little bit better,” Canning said. “I feel like hitters have kind of been telling me, I’m probably just showing the ball for too long, just based on the swings they’re getting off on me. I feel like I was hiding the ball and making them make later decisions.”

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Mining the News (8/1/24)

Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

• Driveline Baseball published a must-read article for anyone considering using the new bat tracking data.

A higher bat speed opens the door to a multitude of different approaches. With lower bat speed, the options are significantly lower and the margin for error is incredibly small.

The one item they brought up is that batter clustering might be the best way to compare hitters.

• MLB.com ranked all the prospects traded at the deadline. Connor Norby was their top guy.

1. Connor Norby, 2B/OF, Marlins (No. 5)
Acquired from the Orioles in the Trevor Rogers trade

Norby earns the nod here for basically being a finished product. Baltimore’s crowded position-player group allowed Norby to build basically a second full year at Triple-A in which he slashed .297/.389/.519 with 16 homers in 80 games, and he has the chance to hit for a solid average with selective aggression and at least average power. He could step in quickly and seize Miami’s second-base job with the opportunity he never quite got with Baltimore.

The deal is that no top-end prospects were traded almost all being fantasy irrelevant except in the deepest leagues. Here are the Steamer600 comps for Norby. Not many rostered players on the list.

American League

Blue Jays

Ryan Yarbrough could be used in the MLB rotation.

Of the 14 players acquired, 10 have reached at least Double A or higher (that includes Yarbrough who was DFA’d by the Dodgers and will likely come to Toronto to eat innings as a member of its rotation down the stretch).

Mariners

Jorge Polanco has been dealing with a knee injury for a while …

… while working on a change in approach.

Polanco is hitting the ball harder (a rise in average exit velocity from 86.8 mph to 91.2 mph in this stretch), making more consistent contact (a drop in whiff rate from 31.4% to 20.8%), getting the ball in the air more (a drop in ground-ball rate from 38.1% to 28.9%) and striking out less (a dip in K rate from 33.6% to 20.3%).

• Polanco says the improvements are more centered on approach rather than mechanics, with help from personal hitting coach Osvaldo Diaz, who also works with Julio Rodríguez and was in Seattle earlier this month.

“Approach is a lot of stuff,” Polanco said. “It’s how you stand at the plate, what you think, what you look for, all of those kinds of things. It’s helping right now, but we’ve got to keep working on it.”

• After signing with the team, Victor Robles made “an adjustment with his lower half”.

Robles’ 33.8% hard-hit rate this season is by far the highest of his career, yet he says that it’s not a reflection of a tinkered swing, but rather, an adjustment with his lower half — which Mariners director of hitting strategy Jarret DeHart helped install shortly after he signed, because he arrived with an open mind.

“I’ve always been a quick hips type of guy,” Robles said through an interpreter. “And JD made some type of balance in between and helped me with a scissor swing a little bit, so I can have more direction to the ball. I just got close to him and told him that I’m here to do whatever I thought was going to help me out.”

Rangers

Evan Carter has dealt with back issues for years.

This isn’t the first time Carter has dealt with a back injury either, despite being just 21 years old.

He played only 32 games with Single-A Down East during his professional debut in 2021 due to a stress fracture in his back, though he slashed .236/.438/.387 in that small sample that season.

“It’s the same injury,” Carter said. “Exactly the same thing. … Except instead of fighting through it like an 18-year-old in Single-A vs. a 21-year-old facing All-Star pitchers in the big leagues — you can’t really fly through quite as long.

Rays

Jeffrey Springs had problems keeping his fastball velocity over 90 mph in his 76-pitch debut.

Red Sox

James Paxton is making some adjustments to try to get his velocity back up.

It was interesting to hear Paxton talk about some of the tweaks he’s been making to get his velocity back up.

“I was trying to squeeze the ball a bit harder to get my flexor involved into throwing the ball, just because my arm’s not snapping through quite as hard as it was,” Paxton said. “So getting the flexor involved by squeezing the ball harder hopefully will create some tension for me to throw the ball a little harder.”

Vaughn Grissom is likely headed to AAA once off the IL.

Grissom, the presumptive second baseman heading into the season, has to be activated from the injured list by Aug. 9, but two people in the organization said the team has considered optioning Grissom to Triple-A Worcester after the rehab clock is up. The 23-year-old has been sidelined for much of the year, and the Red Sox aren’t certain he’ll be at his best — or their best option — when his rehab assignment ends.

Connor Wong will start taking reps at second base.

When the Red Sox traded for right-handed-hitting catcher Danny Jansen over the weekend, manager Alex Cora announced that primary catcher Connor Wong could start seeing some reps at second base, making clear that the Red Sox are preparing for alternatives at the position.

Royals

• In AAA, Alec Marsh will have a medium workload in order to move back to the rotation or the bullpen.

Quatraro said Marsh will scale back his workload in Omaha now, pitching in the 40-60 pitch range, and start some games or pitch behind an opener to get ready for any role he’s needed for in Kansas City in these last two-plus months of the season.

Tigers

Javier Báez is healthy and letting the ball travel deeper into the zone

The difference now, Báez said, is a comfort level waiting for the ball a split second longer to let it travel deeper into the zone and give his eyes a little more chance to recognize the pitch.

“It’s at the point where I’ve been wanting for the last three years,” he said. “I’m just feeling really good, seeing the ball well and just letting it get deep in the zone and recognizing it pretty good.”

Just as important, he’s also feeling healthy after battling lower back issues for a good stretch of the season, an issue he addressed during his month on the injured list. He’s doing daily exercises to keep it loose, and he said it’s just about normal.

… because he was loading too early.

His coil before the pitch has been less exaggerated. Friday night, he hit two other balls with exit velocities of more than 100 mph, in addition to his 104.1 mph home run. He mentioned studying video and seeing how off-kilter his load had become.

“I was loading too early,” Báez said, “and now I just got another point to start my swing.”

Yankees

Gleyber Torres does not want to play third base

Boone spoke with second baseman Torres about potentially playing some third base in deference to Chisholm, who has played center field the past two seasons but was once considered a high-level defender at second base. Boone said Torres prefers to stay at second base but that the 27-year-old would take grounders at third base just in case. Torres will also be a free agent at the end of the season and likely doesn’t want to hurt his value playing out of position.

Torres didn’t seem happy about the idea late Sunday night, though he said “everything is still on the table.” He said he played third base in the minors — back in 2018 — only because it was a faster way to the majors at the time.

“I don’t like it,” he said about playing third base back then.

“I’m a second baseman, so I’ll play second,” he added.

… but needed a restart and is now “seeing the ball”.

Entering Friday, he was hitting .308 with three homers, eight RBIs and an .862 OPS in 18 games since manager Aaron Boone benched him for two straight games in late June for a mental reset and to rest a tight right groin.

During the All-Star break, Torres flew home to Tampa and spent lots of time working on his swing at a baseball facility he co-owns with best friend and former teammate Gio Urshela, a third baseman for the Detroit Tigers. Torres said he worked with someone “who knows me and knows my swing and all my routines” and who wasn’t quite his personal hitting coach.

“I went over there for a restart a little bit,” he said.

Torres added that he feels like he’s finally seeing the ball well at the plate.

National League

Brewers

• Highly touted prospect Jacob Misiorowski will transition to the bullpen.

The Brewers also have two young arms knocking on the door of the Major League bullpen in left-hander DL Hall, who is once again nearing a return from the IL, and top pitching prospect Jacob Misiorowski, who was promoted to Triple-A Nashville on Tuesday and will transition to the ‘pen.

That move with Misiorowski has two benefits. One, it controls his workload as he approaches what Arnold characterized as a loose innings limit. Two, like Corbin Burnes six years ago, it prepares him for a potential late-season call-up to the Major League bullpen.

Christian Yelich is going to find a way to deal with his back pain.

“Sometimes things pop up and you have to deal with them,” Yelich said. “[Bad] timing, obviously. We’ll try to figure out a way to get back out there this season, because I like playing with these guys, obviously.

“Right now, I’m not thinking about surgery. I’m trying to figure out, how do we push this as far as we can? We’ll see what happens and see if I can do it. I have hope. That’s a good thing.”

And asked what kind of surgery he would require, should he go that route, Yelich said, “I don’t want to say what they would do. They would just fix me, hopefully.”

Rhys Hoskins is working on his swing decisions and set up in the box.

Hoskins is hitting for more power, and he feels like he’s getting to a better spot at the plate.

“Yeah, I do,” Hoskins said. “Still working on swing decisions. I’ve always said that if the swing decisions are good, the results usually tend to follow. I like my chances if you’ve got to beat me in the zone. We’ll just continue working on pitch recognition and being stubborn to what we do well as a team — also as me individually.”

Lately, Hoskins has been working a lot on his setup at the plate and trying to get his body in better — and more comfortable — position in the box.

“I think with comfort comes a thoughtless mind,” Hoskins said. “And usually, when you’re not thinking much up there, talent tends to come out. Like I said — continue to fight for more comfort in the box and let the eyes tell me swing or no swing.”

Dodgers

Alex Vesia is seeing a major velocity drop.

Vesia surrendered the home run on an 89.9 mph fastball, by far his slowest of the season. Roberts didn’t shoot down the idea that there might be something ailing Vesia, who has quickly reemerged as one of the Dodgers’ most valuable relievers over the past months.

It’s not good.

Giants

• The team plans on Marco Luciano being the primary designated hitter.

The Giants recalled Luciano, who hit six home runs and has a .416 on-base percentage for Triple-A Sacramento in July while drawing as many walks as strikeouts. Zaidi and Melvin made it clear that Luciano will get everyday at-bats and most of those opportunities will come in Soler’s place as the DH.

Marlins

Max Meyer wasn’t in the majors because he was working on utilizing his changeup, not service time manipulation.

The 25-year-old right-hander had boxes to check before returning to the big leagues, like utilizing his changeup more and getting back on a regular starter’s routine of pitching every five days. Due to starting-pitching injuries and others not performing, Meyer made his long-awaited return in Saturday’s 7-3 comeback victory over the Brewers at American Family Field. He is back without restraints in terms of pitches per start or innings.

“Max was going to make his way up here no matter what, because he’s so good,” manager Skip Schumaker said. “He was going to find his way. I don’t think it was one thing or another, more just protecting, making sure that he’s good to go when he does come up here.”

In his first MLB start since April 13, Meyer went four innings, allowing four hits – three singles – with three strikeouts and two walks. He threw a lot of strikes but wasn’t efficient, as Milwaukee fouled off 27 of his 85 pitches.

Meyer, whose slider and four-seamer combination make him MLB Pipeline’s No. 79 overall prospect, worked on his changeup and a new two-seamer in the Minors. Though he didn’t debut the latter on Saturday, he threw his changeup 14 percent of the time – including on Rhys Hoskins’ three-run homer with two outs in the fourth.

Nationals

Alex Call made an approach and mechanical change in AAA.

Call batted .222 in 75 games with the Red Wings this season, but recent adjustments saw him averaging .321 in 21 contests this month. Call batted .391 in his last 15 Triple-A games.

“Just a little bit of an approach change and kind of a target change,” Call said. “That kind of brought out a little bit of a mechanical change, too.”

Padres

Dylan Cease changed his delivery and found more velocity.

Before the All-Star break, Cease and Niebla worked to tweak Cease’s delivery, bringing his glove closer to the body. At first, it was meant to disguise his pitches. But as Cease began to throw with his new delivery, he found himself significantly more comfortable and consistent with his release.

“I was like, ‘I think this is a double whammy here,’” Cease said. “I think we’ve really found something.”

Niebla broke down the mechanics of it.

“He’s basically getting more aligned,” Niebla said. “He’s found some velo within that adjustment. His breaking ball has been more consistently getting to lanes, in and out. Just overall, he feels more compact. Really feel that he’s taken the next step with this adjustment.”