11/4/17

Reese Kaplan -- Be Bold, Wilpon-san


This off-season there will be a great many people clamoring for free agents like Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta, Diamondbacks slugger J.D. Martinez and Royals 3rd baseman Mike Moustakas.  These players have played the requisite number of years under team control to warrant their big payday. 

Also potentially entering free agency this year a two players who signed under the old rules of Japanese baseball compensation – starters Yu Darvish of the Dodgers and possibly starter Masahiro Tanaka of the Yankees (who can opt out of his current deal).  Both players required huge payments as posting fees just to get the right to bid on them, then went onto sign lucrative long term contracts.

2018 is the year all of that revenue changing hands nearly comes to a grinding halt.  The bargaining rules changed, capping the posting fee at $20 million to the Japanese club giving up a young star and then that player coming to America is subject to the same service time restrictions as people coming through the traditional drafting process.  You can see that latter wrinkle at work with now ex-Met Nori Aoki who, despite being 35 years of age, was still under team control and not yet a free agent which inevitably led to his ouster after hitting .284. 

That change contrasts with the old system whereby the posting fees were negotiable and went to the highest bidder.  Yu Darvish cost the Rangers $51.7 million just for the right to negotiate a deal and the overall spend by Texas was to the tune of $111 million. 

This new system is now squarely under the floodlights as two-way Japanese star Shohei Otani is expected to be posted by the Nippon Ham Fighters.  At the tender age of 23, he has already established himself both as a star pitcher and a formidable hitter.  Many refer to him as the Japanese Babe Ruth, though his power with the bat is not nearly as impressive as it is on the mound.

How good is he?  Well, in roughly two full seasons of ABs as an outfielder he’s hit .286 with 48 HRs and 166 RBIs.  Those numbers are certainly admirable and when you factor in both his age and the fact he was working on a bum ankle this past year, he’s got room to improve upon them.  He does whiff a bit which led one scout to compare him to an in-his-prime Curtis Granderson – good power, good speed, low batting average, high strikeouts but also a high OBP.

As a pitcher he’s really posting the eye popping stats.  Over the course of five seasons he has a 42-15 record with an ERA of just 2.52.  He strikes out over 10 per 9 IP and despite his young age has exhibited pretty good control with a career WHIP of just a tad over 1.000.  In 543 IP he’s only allowed 384 hits.

Had Otani waited until he was age 25 he would be free to cash in on whatever deal he could strike but by making the jump to the majors now he is likely costing himself a lot of money.  After all, he cannot become a free agent for 6 years, but then again he’d only be 29 at that time so it’s not exactly like he’s going to be ordering off the dollar menu at McDonalds. 

Otani has been vocal about wanting to go to a club where he has the opportunity to hit.  Most scouts are in agreement he’s a more potent pitcher than hitter, but with the holes the Mets have in the outfield you’d think they’d at least want to consider having him try both roles.

Therein lies the rub – unlike most gambles on a pitcher or a hitter, in this case you get the potential for success at one or the other (or if you dare to dream big – both).  Consequently the risk of signing him is far less than a guy who is only a hitter or only a pitcher. 

Heretofore the Mets have been xenophobic when it came to signing free agents out of Japan and Cuba.  Yes, they did sign the immortal Kaz Matsui, a mature Hisanori Takahashi, the enigmatic Kazuhisa Ishii and the flamboyant Tsuyoshi Shinjo.  Not a single one of them was considered a prime prospect and the results pretty delivered what you’d expect from the bargain bin.  Takahashi was a pleasant surprise but the others were pretty forgettable. 

Here is an opportunity to show the fans a sincerely new approach to building the ballclub, filling positions of need on both sides of the diamond, and not having to give up compensatory draft picks as you would with traditional free agents.  The marketing of Otani could create a Tebow-like buzz for the Mets and give them instant gravitas instead of the punchline they have become.  If you consider what it would cost for a top notch starter and a top notch outfielder, Otani may actually prove to be a bargain (even if he only winds up playing one role full time). 

Here’s my challenge to the Wilpons and Sandy Alderson.  You saved a ton of payroll last season.  Spend some of it to make Otani a Met.    

16 comments:

Unknown said...

Methinks that you should update your post Reese seeing that we exercised our option on Cabrera (so long Moustakas ) & Tanaka is staying a Yank

Tom Brennan said...

Yanks got Godzilla in Hideki Matsui, time for us to get Japanese Babe Ruth, I say. With Collins gone, Otani would play, too.

Unknown said...

Makes perfect sense which is why it won't happen....same old Mets.

Tom Brennan said...

Gary, what you're saying is we want Otani, Mets give us Baloney. Can't disagree.

Mack Ade said...

Reese -

You don't really think that the Mets will make a run at Otani, do you?

Unknown said...

They’ve never made that kind of splash with a big name Japanese player (Kaz & Shinjo) don’t count ... Mack do you think the Mets picking up Cabrera is a sign that limited $ will be reinvested this coming offseason & instrmead expect to see smaller moves which middle tiered players will fill the holes that were opened this past season ?

Tom Brennan said...

John Harper today indicated he believes Bruce and Kintsler will come to the Mets, and Otani will go to...the YANKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

And JD Martinez (45 homers in 119 games) to the Phillies

Unknown said...

Thank goodness Harper isn’t a good barometer of predictions

Tom Brennan said...

There was much character assassination in blog comments regarding Asdrubel Cabrera late in the season. In contrast, here is what I read today - note the words "great tutor" and "leader":

“Asdrubal can help us all around the infield,” general manager Sandy Alderson said in a statement. “Asdrubal is a great tutor to our younger players and is a leader in the clubhouse.”

“This is where I wanted to be,” Cabrera said in a statement. “I’m open to playing anywhere [in the infield].”

Grains of salt are what's needed when hearing certain invective-filled comments about guys like Cabrera and Cespedes, I'd say.

Mack Ade said...

Ed -

I am writing about Cabrera in one of next week's Mack's Apple posts.

I am a 'build a winner in 2019' guy.

I have no problem with picking up Cabrera's option. Remember... it was going to cost the Mets $2mil anyway if they did not pick this up, so the option is really only six and change.

Cabrera gives the Mets a chance to work out the right mess and have an insurance policy for Rosario. Amed's dugout buddy (Jose) is gone) and Cabrera can help there also while playing along side of him at third.

Unknown said...

Thanks Mack ... as I have stated before I’ neither love nor dislike Cabrera ... And I’m not a spend for the sake of spending type of fanbut tgat bejng said I think if payroll stays stagnent or lower it sends a bad impression on the organization - especially with the infusion of $ that is coming into the MLB

Reese Kaplan said...

@Ed Yes, I had written the post midweek prior to the inevitable Cabrera signing and the Tanaka decision.

Robb said...

I think we are under estimating the kaz matsui attempt. they paid him real money. it was a big swing, it just didnt work out.

the otani thing is fascinating, bc if done correctly (legally) all the teams can only offer the same thing. Something even the Rays can afford. So he just gets to choose where he wants to play on whatever his criteria is. Who knows maybe he's secretly a Cincinnati reds fan. Or his dad went to a Royals game as a kid. theres no financial advantage for any team in this. Its just super interesting

Reese Kaplan said...

Matsui cost less than $7 million per year for three years...that's not even Cabrera money.

Bill Metsiac said...

Dollars today aren't the same as they were about 20 years ago. Kaz was definitely a star in Japan, and Bobby V (who was managing in Japan at the time) said that Kaz was better than Hideki. Didn't work out, buut there was a lot of bidding going on.

As for Otani, with the cap in place, there will NOT be a bidding war for $$$. If he decides to leave Japan this year, he will choose whichever team he wants to play for, but the money won't be a factor.

TexasGusCC said...

Where's my barf bag?