Posts Tagged “Bryan Anderson”

The Cardinals are approaching the end of what will be a nine-year relationship with catcher Yadier Molina barring an extension beyond 2012.  Over that 9 year period, Molina will have earned something in the neighborhood of $25M according to Cot’s Contracts.  It’s almost certain that Molina would have been a starting catcher on the merits of his defense alone but he has also proven a capable hitter at the plate.

From 2004-2011, Yadier Molina ranks 8th in Fangraphs’ WAR among catchers.  This understates his talent though as defensive rankings for  catchers are rudimentary. While other catchers are getting nearly full credit for their talent since they are offense first players (e.g. Jorge Posada), Yadier Molina doesn’t even crack the top 30 in wOBA over that time period. There’s a compelling rationale that Molina is a top 5 catcher during his MLB tenure.

The Cardinals have become accustomed in recent years to consistency in their backstop. Prior to Molina, now manager Mike Matheny was the primary catcher from 2000-2004. Matheny personified the Cardinals desire for a defensive catcher in spite of offensive shortcomings.  Loved by his pitchers, Matheny was nothing short of anemic at the plate.  Posting a .277 wOBA, about .055 points worse than league average or 3 wins below league average on offense, Matheny was still behind the plate for no less than 110 games each year.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments 56 Comments »

The St. Louis Cardinals have upgraded their farm system in a major way the past two seasons.  Just last year Baseball America ranked their club 29th out of all 30 major league teams.  They received a relatively small bump up to being ranked 24th earlier this season after the Cardinals drafted Zack Cox, Tyrell Jenkins, and saw the beginning of the rise of a now highly touted prospect by the name of Carlos Martinez.  In 2012, it’s entirely possible that the Cardinals will receive a consensus Top 10 ranking.

Below is an updated depth chart for the top position player in the Cardinals system for each respective position.  Due to length, I’ve broken it down into two parts, the second of which will be posted tomorrow.  For each player, a breakdown of their skills is included in addition to other information and statistics that I found interesting in their stance with the big club and their current league.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments 34 Comments »

Erik pointed out a great post on Royal Review by Scott McKinney in which Scott takes a look at a Success and Bust rates for Baseball America’s top 100 prospects over 13 years to see how they turned out.  And I thought that on the eve of spring training, this was a good check on the “hope springs eternal” optimism of Spring Training.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments 15 Comments »

Forgive the slowness of wrapping up this series, we still need to look at our beloved Triple-A affiliate.  I deleted pitchers and players with less than 100 at bats.

It was definitely a banner year for the Redbirds, who won the PCL Championship.

Rk Age PA AB R H 2B 3B HR SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS ▾ HBP
3 Allen Craig 24 521 472 78 152 26 1 26 3 0 37 95 .322 .374 .547 .921 6
4 Mark Hamilton 24 144 130 22 40 11 0 6 0 0 13 34 .308 .375 .531 .906 1
5 David Freese 26 225 200 34 60 15 0 10 1 0 22 51 .300 .369 .525 .894 1
6 James Greene 25 388 340 70 99 10 5 15 31 3 38 86 .291 .369 .482 .851 5
7 Nicholas Stavinoha 27 295 259 39 73 17 2 11 2 0 25 48 .282 .353 .490 .843 6
8 Jarrett Hoffpauir 26 402 358 53 104 22 3 14 4 1 35 28 .291 .357 .486 .843 3
9 Brandon Yarbrough 24 141 119 14 34 7 1 1 0 1 21 42 .286 .393 .387 .779 0
10 Brett Wallace 22 243 222 22 65 11 0 6 0 1 15 42 .293 .346 .423 .769 4
12 Mark Shorey 24 275 258 20 75 13 0 5 3 2 16 50 .291 .335 .399 .734 1
13 Jonathan Jay 24 564 505 72 142 23 2 10 20 8 34 64 .281 .338 .394 .732 12
14 Donovan Solano 21 178 164 22 52 7 0 0 3 0 10 27 .317 .364 .360 .723 2
15 Brian Barden 28 206 187 26 50 11 0 4 1 1 10 44 .267 .317 .390 .707 4
16 Bryan Anderson 22 174 163 22 40 7 3 4 1 0 10 42 .245 .293 .399 .692 1
19 Shane Robinson 24 393 345 46 82 18 3 5 16 3 28 42 .238 .306 .351 .657 8
20 Daniel Descalso 22 172 150 23 38 4 0 2 3 0 16 21 .253 .327 .320 .647 1
21 Matt Pagnozzi 26 291 253 21 56 7 0 5 0 1 26 78 .221 .299 .308 .608 3
22 Casey Rowlett 26 166 148 16 32 4 0 1 3 1 13 24 .216 .278 .264 .541 0
23 Joe Mather 26 150 136 12 24 6 2 1 7 1 9 27 .176 .233 .272 .505 2
48 Players 24.8 5399 4809 649 1288 226 23 134 103 23 415 981 .268 .332 .408 .740 63
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 10/31/2009.
  • Allen Craig is my favorite monster, as is yours, but if there is a red flag with him other than the fact that the Cardinals do not believe he can play third base, it’s his BB/K ratio.
  • I must have been in a cave, but I had no idea David Freese had the type of season he had, even if it was an abbreviated one.  He’s a year older than Craig, and the Cards do believe he can play third base, which is why there’s talk of Freese starting at third base next year and we saw Craig not even receiving a September call up. I haven’t seen both players play at much length, but my judgment is Craig is the superior hitter, albeit not by a lot. If Freese can play third and be at least average while putting together a .320 OBP and .435 SLG, that’s more valuable than a left fielder who would give you a little better production at the plate.
  • Tyler Greene quietly had himself one fine season. Among other things, look at that stolen base/caught stealing numbers. The man has some speed and knows how to pick his spots. With the Boogstache firmly holding on  the SS job, it’s nice to know Greene is there as a fallback option and backup. He may fill up a boxscore with steals, doubles, strikeouts and errors; it’s never a dull moment with Greene.
  • As for disappointments, look no further than Bryan Anderson and Jon Jay. Jay pulled himself up after a nose-dive of a second half, but it’s hard to see him becoming better than a fourth outfielder at this point. The Cardinal brass bragged about Jay and his potential future batting titles, so that’s not quite the future they had pegged for the quirky outfielder. Anderson was once a Top 100 prospect and has since tanked it hard. Before hitting the DL he was allowing about a stolen base per game and his offense bit the dust. He’s currently hitting for a .630 OPS in 27 at-bats in the Arizona Fall League, for what it’s worth.

Comments 19 Comments »

We’ll resume our top twenty next Monday, but in case anyone’s out there and is interested, there is still some baseball being played. Here’s an update on some of the Cardinal players of interest-

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments 6 Comments »

Ben Badler takes a look at catchers in the minors who best controlled the running game. The good news is out of the 55 catchers on his list, 3 Cardinals are in the top twenty in caught stealing percentage.

  • Nick Derba caught 34 out of 78 attempts (43.6%) and came in 5th on Badler’s list.
  • Luis De La Cruz caught 20 out of 52 (38.5%), coming in 13th.
  • Bryan Anderson was much improved from last year, catching 41 out of 109 attempts (37.6%), good for 19th. Last year his CS% was 26.8%. Hopefully that will squelch some of this nonsensical talk that he should be moved to another position.

Badler only looked at players whose names were in one of their handbooks so I figured I may as well could look around and see how well our other catchers controlled the running game. Onward bullet points, ho!

  • Arnoldi Cruz:  15-for-55, good for 27.2%.
  • Blake Murphy:  20-for-53, 37.7%.
  • Paul Vasquez:  31-for-74, 41.9%
  • Brandon Yarbrough: 26-for-75, 34.6%
  • Kevin Moscatel: 12-for-35, 34.2%.
  • Steve Hill: 1-f0r-4, I don’t have is AFL #’s, unfortunately.

Some quick thoughts:

  • The reverse-Inge experiment with Cruz is probably still worth exploring, but he has some work to do. That percentage would put him well in the bottom third of Badler’s list.
  • Nick Derba fooled us into thinking he could hit, posting a .377 wOBA for the Quad Cities last season. This season at Palm Beach his wOBA .274, but he dominated the running game. Another Jason Motte experiment in line?
  • Murphy was my favorite late round pick last season, and here is another reason why. The 42 round pick completely dominated college ball both on offense and defense, then he hit pretty well in Batavia before struggling a bit at the QC. We’ll see what he can do over a full season before I get really interested.
  • Paul Vasquez came from the independent leagues to hit for a .394 wOBA in the Quad Cities. He struggled in under 70 plate appearances at Palm Beach. Maybe he’s a hidden gem.

Comments 12 Comments »