Roberto Hernandez & Marcell Ozuna: Deep Waiver Wire

Today we take another stroll into the dangerous and deep waters of the free agent pool of mystery. During our treasure search, we find a pitcher with a new name and pitch mix and an outfielder that was just called up.

Roberto Hernandez | TAM SP | 8% Owned

The artist formerly known as Fausto Carmona is back with a new name and pitch mix. On the main FanGraphs blog, we have already discussed Hernandez twice. Never a strikeout pitcher in the past — his career high K/9 is just 5.7 — he is suddenly punching batters out at an 8.8 rate. His SwStk% is also at a career best at 9.2%, after not exceeding 7.9% since 2007. The majority of the credit should go to his change-up, which has generated a SwStk% of 17.5% and has been thrown much more frequently than in the past.

He remains a strong ground ball pitcher and has continued to show pretty good control over the past several seasons. What does that mean? We have the skills trifecta hiding beneath a 5.28 ERA! A ridiculous 24% HR/FB ratio which has killed his ability to strand runners is to blame for the inflated ERA. But his SIERA is just 3.41 and his skill improvement is easily explainable. With a surprising ownership of just 8% in CBS leagues, he should be available for either free or peanuts in AL-Only and deep mixed leagues. Make the move now!

Marcell Ozuna | MIA OF | 4% Owned

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Ozuna was called up yesterday to make his Major League debut for the fish to replace the injured Giancarlo Stanton. Once again, the team isn’t being shy about promoting prospects who don’t seem to actually be ready for the big show. So here are the negatives: he has no Triple-A experience and just 47 plate appearances at Double-A, plays for a horrific offense and calls a pitcher’s park home. That is enough for me to not get too excited about his short-term prospects and keep this recommendation to NL-Only leagues.

So now let’s talk about the positives. He does have power, posting .200+ ISO marks at both Single-A and High-A in 2011 and 2012. During his short stint at Double-A this season, his power surged higher, as he hit five long balls, three doubles and a triple, good for a .476 ISO. He also has some speed and may be able to steal 10 bases or so in a full season of at-bats. His contact rate has been acceptable, though his plate patience could use a bit of work. The biggest opportunity here is that he’s going to play. The team didn’t call him up to bench him every couple of games and it’s not like they have any good alternatives. With literally no power outside of Justin Ruggiano (it boggles my mind that he continues to hit fifth when he’s the team’s only power threat and probably best offensive force with Stanton injured), they need to give Ozuna a chance to contribute some run production to their meager offense.





Mike Podhorzer is the 2015 Fantasy Sports Writers Association Baseball Writer of the Year and three-time Tout Wars champion. He is the author of the eBook Projecting X 2.0: How to Forecast Baseball Player Performance, which teaches you how to project players yourself. Follow Mike on X@MikePodhorzer and contact him via email.

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Darren
12 years ago

Any evidence that Jose Molina’s superior framing skills are helping Hernandez this season.

tylersnotes
12 years ago
Reply to  Darren

does catcher framing have any impact at all on swstr%? I honestly don’t know but I just assume there can’t be any correlation there at all, and I’d give more weight to the swstr% than catcher framing even though it is molina behind the plate, especially since his bb/9 is in line with his career avg while his k/9 is so inflated. I think this might be overvaluing molina’s ability, when the real answer here is that the home runs and k/9 are both likely SSS and he’s pretty similar to the pitcher he was in the past.

RotoholicMember since 2016
12 years ago
Reply to  tylersnotes

I can see a connection. SwStr% tends to be higher on putaway pitches (in this case, the change), and putaway pitches tend to be thrown in pitcher’s counts. And a good pitch framer gets you into more pitcher’s counts. On a 2-1 count, a batter is less likely to chase a low change up than he would be on a 1-2 count.

Also, maybe Fernando Rodney gave him lessons on how to throw it.