White Sox Analysis

Monday, February 28, 2005

The Basepaths

In Sunday's Chicago Tribune, Bob Foltman writes an interesting piece on the White Sox' basestealing prowess and approach to baserunning in the upcoming season. Foltman discusses the club's high stolen base totals from the 90s and suggests that the club will need a large improvement from last season to represent a strong running team. I found the article highly disturbing due to the fact that at no point in the entire piece is the concept of stolen base success rate addressed. In fact the closest the article comes to discussing outs on the basepaths is this nauseating passage:

Guillen wants his runners to be aggressive going from first to third on hits, and if that means they sometimes run the team out of innings, so be it.

"That's fine with me because if you're afraid to make a mistake running the bases, you're not going to be aggressive enough," Guillen said. "I'll take the chance because in the long run, we'll have the [last] laugh."

Rest assured, if the Sox run wild on the basepaths and find themselves running into outs 40% of the time, Ozzie Guillen will not be laughing this season unless the club benefits from a number of huge breaks to compensate for the baserunning blunders. For some time now, it has been well accepted in the sabermetric community that for a stolen base to increase a team's chance of scoring runs, a player must be successful roughly 75% of the time. Fans subscribing to more traditional baseball knowledge tend to scoff at this assertion for reasons I've never been able to completely understand. Even children in little league understand the concept that being thrown out on the basepaths costs the team scarce opportunities to score runs. Everyone should be able to agree that there is a point at which a player is caught stealing too frequently to render his stolen bases valuable. For those who consider the 75% figure to be arbitrary, Joe Sheehan wrote an outstanding article for Baseball Prospectus about a year ago that demonstrates the strength of the calculations based on run expectation and dispels the common misconception that intangibles such as distracting the pitcher are not accounted for in the calculations.

Now, with the help of the always wonderful Baseball-Reference.com let's take a look at the Sox' potential to generate runs on the basepaths in 2005 compared to the teams of the 90s:

YearSBCSSuccess Rate
19901409060.9 %
19911347464.4 %
19921605773.7 %
19931065765.0 %
1994772774.0 %
19951103973.8 %
19961054171.9 %
19971065267.1 %
19981274673.4 %
19991105068.8 %
20001194273.9 %
20011235967.6 %
2002753170.8 %
2003772972.6 %
2004785160.5 %

A few things stand out from table. First of all, despite Foltman's praise for the baserunning ability of the Sox clubs in the 90s, none of those teams scored substantially more runs through the act of stealing bases. While the clubs with success rates above 70 % certainly were not killing the team on the basepaths, the rate still falls below the 75 % break even point. As far as the current club's prognosis, while we have only the admittedly small sample size of one season, it appears Ozzie Guillen's aggressive approach towards baserunning is hurting the Sox' ability to score runs. The table suggests that Guillen inherited a power laden team with few stellar baserunners and encouraged them to run wild in 2004. While the team's number of stolen bases remained virtually the same as the past two seasons, the number of attempts increased, leading the club's success rate to plummet more than ten percentage points. Perhaps such a decrease should not come as a shock for a team managed by a man with a putrid 61 % success rate during his playing career.

The optimistic outlook on the Sox' ability to steal bases this season states that Guillen now has the proper personnel to fit into his baserunning philosophy and the team will therefore be more successful on the basepaths. Scott Podsednik is a good place to start. While Podsednik does have a number of flaws in his game, stealing bases is most certainly not one of them as Pods had 70 thefts last season and sports a stellar success rate of 83.1 % (!) over his career. Tad Iguchi figures to be another plus on the basepaths with a career success rate of 77.9 % in Japan. However, it does remain to be seen though how Iguchi's basestealing prowess in Japan will translate to the majors and Iguchi will be taking playing time away from speedster Willie Harris (19 SB in 2004, 81.3 % career success rate). Additionally, offseason acquisitions Jermaine Dye (23 career stolen bases) and A.J. Pierzynski (6 career stolen bases) do not represent upgrades on the basepaths. Ultimately, the best case scenario in 2005 is that Podsednik and Iguchi will perform to the best of their abilities and Guillen will lay off the green light. The former is a distinct possibility. I for one would not count on the latter.

Wednesday, February 23, 2005

Random Notes

First of all, congratulations to Brandon McCarthy and Brian Anderson for nabbing spots 23 and 32 respectively on Baseball Prospectus' Top 50 Prospects list. Ryan Sweeney also added an impressive nod as the favorite outfield prospect of BP's prospect guru Rany Jazayerli during the site's outfield prospect roundtable.

Today's interesting bit of news regards Willie Harris' prospects of making the roster as the Sox' utility infielder. The Chicago Tribune states:

Guillen wasn't sure about having Harris take ground balls at short to add to his versatility. Harris played some shortstop in Double-A and also can play center field.

"It's not easy moving from one position to another, especially shortstop," Guillen said. "He had some innings there but I don't know that he can play shortstop that quickly at this level."


It's assumed Harris is going to be shopped this spring, but the Sox may want to wait and see how Iguchi looks when the games start. Plus, Harris' speed would seem to fit Guillen's style.

The bottom line is that while Harris has limited experience playing shortstop, he is not completely green at the position and appears to clearly represent the club's best option as a utility infielder at this point in time. Harris' would be a valuable asset as a pinch runner, has demonstrated strong on base skills despite his lack of power, and would presumably make up for minimal defensive lapses at shortstop with the versatility of being able to play any outfield position. If Harris proves himself completely unable to handle SS in spring training, the trading block seems like a reasonable option. Otherwise, Harris should be given the hardest look of any player on the roster at the utility infielder spot this spring.

Monday, February 21, 2005

A New Format

So...in the event I still have any readers remaining, one might notice this is my first entry in two months. Sadly this phenomenon cannot be explained by a lack of White Sox news as both Tadahito Iguchi and A.J. Pierzynski were signed during that span. My explanation (aside from the nightmares generated by the thought of attempting to spell the names of those two players) is sadly mere general laziness. In an attempt to rediscover my original intent in creating this space, I am hoping that writing shorter, less expansive analysis will make writing these entries more fun and less daunting. Hopefully what will be lacking in the length of the entries will be made up for in the frequency with which I post. Here goes nothing:

The Daily Southtown and a number of other sources are reporting that at this point in time the Sox are leaning towards moving Aaron Rowand to left and leaving Scott Podsednik in center field as a means of keeping Rowand healthy. The timing of the report is somewhat odd, considering that Rowand played in 140 games last season - the second most of his career - and as far as I can tell did not miss a single game to injury. The club's concerns about Rowand's health presumably stem from the fact that he has a reputation for playing with reckless abandon, earning the nickname "Crash" due to a propensity to collide with the outfield walls. The reality of the situation though is that apart from missing a handful of games after slamming into the wall on a highlight reel grab in '01, Rowand has never missed substantial time due to injury and has never landed on the DL. The only serious injury Rowand has experienced while in the organization was a non-baseball injury, his dirt bike accident in the 2002 offseason. Furthermore, there are outfield walls to crash into in left field as well as center field. The unique health benefits of a move to left are almost completely lost on me.

As I noted in my previous entry on the club's outfield defense, he downside to selecting Podsednik and not Rowand as the team's center fielder is considerable. BaseballProspectus' metrics rate Rowand as slightly above average in '04 while rating Podsednik below average in his two full seasons. Perhaps more importantly, as noted in the Southtown article Rowand had more outfield assists last season and conventional wisdom suggests a strong arm is more important in center field than left field.