Tag Archives: Corey Hart

Corey Hart wears Jeff Francoeur sunglasses at night

Posted by Steve

Man alive, do I hate the way baseball players are evaluated by those who matter.  I should have known better yesterday when I said Corey Hart would lose his case, but I didn’t–I was absolutely shocked to see he somehow managed to win.

I have no idea what Hart’s team could have said to make an *actual* case, but it’s likely that the case they made featured the following two arguments.

1. Hart is a former All-Star

2. A comparable player who is also in his second year of arbitration, Jeff Francoeur, was given $5 million to avoid an arbitration hearing.

The first point is asinine and shouldn’t matter at all.  The fact that two years ago Hart made the All-Star team should not trump the fact that he’s been a bad baseball player since he made the team–that’s a year and a half of poor production.

The second point, which I had not realized until today, bothers me even more.  My original, and probably melodramatic title to this post was ‘Jeff Francoeur is the root of all baseball evil,’ but that was probably a bit harsh.  Still, Jeff Francoeur is terrible.  Just God-awful.  His career on-base percentage is .311.  That’s poor for a catcher, much less a freaking corner outfielder.  His career walk rate is 4.7%!  Because no pitcher needs to throw him a strike, watching him hit is a comedy (unless he’s on your team; then it’s a tragedy).  Swinging at everything, missing sliders by a mile, never drawing walks.  You’re thinking, ‘Ooh!  Ooh!  That’s Corey Hart!’  It’s actually Francoeur.  He out-Harts Corey Hart by a mile.  Corey Hart wears Jeff Francoeur sunglasses at night.  Googling ‘Jeff Francoeur hacker’ actually yields 241,000 hits.  The proudest moment of his career should be being the answer to the question, “Who graces the cover of the most wrong Sports Illustrated issue of all time?”

Should I go on?

Alright, I will.  That this man’s representatives convinced a GENERAL MANAGER OF A MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL TEAM to give him FIVE MILLION U.S. DOLLARS for this next season is the biggest upset since this guy pulled this off.  Francoeur’s agent should be named Time Magazine’s Man of the Year.  Francoeur is a replacement level player!  He probably shouldn’t even be in the Major Leagues!  Yet because Omar Minaya was somehow duped into giving him this outrageous salary, it helps Corey Hart win his case.  Infuriating.

(As an aside, this is why I’m currently so down on the business side of the game.  Teams cite their budget as reasons they can’t hire as many baseball ops employees, but then they go and give out deals like this one.  You’re willing to burn up 5 million dollars (“burn up 5 million dollars” is the unofficial term for “pay Jeff Francoeur anything to play baseball”), but you won’t pay 25 grand to qualified people from BIS or anywhere else who are willing to bust their asses working for you?  You know what, Omar?  If you paid me 25 grand to come work for you, I could come up with some great research that says DON’T PAY JEFF FRANCOEUR FIVE MILLION DOLLARS, FOR THE LOVE OF GOD! (Jeff Francoeur is so terrible that he has now caused me to break my capslock and parentheses keys.))

*deep breaths…*

Back to my original point, before I forget what it even was.  This is annoying.  700k isn’t a ton in baseball terms, but it can be the difference between being able to add a player down the stretch or not.  I’m not at all mad at Hart for wanting more money.  Good for him; obviously he knew what he was doing.  I’m just baffled that people could be legally convinced that he was deserving of this raise.

Anyway, this is a small blip.  If Hart doesn’t earn this money, it really doesn’t matter, because he certainly won’t be tendered a contract next year when he’ll be due over $6 million.  He’s the one person with reasonable room to improve, and therefore he’s an important part of the offense this season.  The Brewers need him to perform, and if he does, this will all be forgotten.

Money! It’s a gas.

Posted by Steve

Fans seem to have strong feelings when it comes to player salaries.  Many chastise a player for holding out for more money and celebrate the one who re-signs long-term.  I can see why, because when most players make more in a year than the average person makes in a lifetime, people are bound to be put off.

On the slim chance that anyone actually cares, here are my thoughts on the matter.  Yes, baseball players are paid obscene amounts of money.  No, they aren’t as important as firefighters, doctors, teachers, plumbers, etc.  But let me ask this.  Are millions of people willing to pay 30+ bucks a pop to go watch those people work?  People are willing to pay that to watch baseball players.  That’s why I can’t agree with those who hold salaries of professional athletes against them.  The demand for their profession is huge, and simple economics say when something is in high demand, cost goes up.  Aren’t you going to collect your money if you win the lottery?  These people won the lottery with their talent.

I also don’t understand changing feelings about a player based on his decision to sign long-term somewhere.  Players are taking calculated risks by signing or refusing those extensions.  A few years ago, the Brewers approached both Ryan Braun and Prince Fielder with extensions.  These offers were team-friendly, but also made sure the player got paid big money much earlier than if he’d have gone through the three-year pre-arby pay scale.

As we all know, Braun signed his deal and Prince did not.  Braun was lauded and Prince was grumbled about.  Some even interpreted it as Braun liking Milwaukee and Prince wanting to get out.  I’d be shocked if things were that cut and dried.  What it more than likely came down to is this:  Braun decided financial security was important to him, while Prince instead wanted to hold out for a bigger payday.

Here’s the interesting part.  A couple years later, with the huge benefit of hindsight, Prince Fielder looks a lot smarter than Ryan Braun.  Prince put up massive numbers and is poised to receive at least double what the Brewers offered a couple years ago.  Meanwhile, after Braun’s great 2009, think of what he could demand now if he hadn’t signed his extension.  It would literally be several million dollars more.  I’m not saying Braun made the “wrong” move, because of course he didn’t have the benefit of hindsight that we do now.  If he had known he’d stay healthy and put up two monster seasons, maybe he wouldn’t have signed his extension.  He chose security in case of injury or drop in production.  Neither has occurred yet, but you can’t blame him for protecting himself–just as you can’t blame Prince for taking a gamble that has paid off in a big way.  I’ll certainly have more to say on Fielder’s contract situation as the season goes on, as the possibility of making a much larger offer has become a big issue once again.

Alright.  So now that that’s out of the way, how does this apply to the Brewers’ current situation, namely, Corey Hart’s?  Hart is another player who turned down an extension a couple years ago, and unlike Prince Fielder’s, Hart’s decision has not paid off.  His production has dropped pretty severely in the last couple seasons, to the point where many teams would no longer consider him a starter.

Hart is of course making headlines currently due to his “record-breaking” arbitration case taking place today.  I say record-breaking because he is the first Brewer to actually reach arbitration since Doug Melvin has been GM.  Every other player over the years has been able to reach a middle ground with the Brewers and avoid the undesirable outcome of the team listing off all the reasons he doesn’t deserve the money he’s requesting.

Players who go through arbitration generally receive raises no matter how they performed the previous season.  It seems strange, but it makes up for their first three seasons of league-minimum salary.  Last year, Corey Hart made $3.25 million.  In arbitration this season, he filed for $4.8, while the Brewers offered $4.15.  In my opinion (and the Brewers’, obviously), $4.8 is too huge of a raise for a guy who missed time last season and didn’t hit well when he was healthy (.753 OPS).  Hart rejected a raise that was likely more than a million dollars (the Brewers meet in the middle of those two figures to avoid arbitration, so somewhere around $4.4 million is what Hart is likely turning down.)  Like I said earlier, I don’t blame a guy for asking for more money, but Hart is overstepping his bounds here.  He’s coming off two consecutive poor seasons, and he’s saying a million bucks isn’t enough of a raise.  He’s not going to win his case, and he’s going to have to sit through all the reasons why before the panel chooses the Brewers’ offer (there’s no settling in this system; the panel chooses either the team’s figure or the player’s figure).

I guess all this rambling (boy, that was a lot of rambling, huh?) goes to show that you just never know what the right choice is when it comes to these pre-arbitration extensions.  They’ve paid off for the Brewers in the cases of Ben Sheets and Ryan Braun, but they’ve been burned by Bill Hall, and they would have been burned had Hart not rejected his.  Picking their spots for extensions is one of the most important thing for smaller market teams to do.  If it’s done right, you can get long-term production at a great value.  If it’s not, it can strap a team for years.

What in tarnation is Ken Macha thinking?

Posted by Steve

Ken Macha’s propensity to play veterans over young players bugged me at times this season, but now it’s reached a different level.  Did Mat Gamel kick Macha’s dog?  Do Casey McGehee or Craig Counsell have incriminating photos of him?  Because something like that would be the only explanation for not playing Gamel at least half the time the rest of the way.

Here’s what Macha had to say once Gamel was called up.  ”I’m sure (Gamel) will get a couple of games.  But it’s tough to get McGehee out of there.  He has done a great job.”

Ugh.  Yes, McGehee has been one of the only bright spots of this season, but we’ve seen him all year.  Aren’t the Brewers at least curious to see what Gamel would do with a few weeks of regular playing time?  They never gave him that the last time they called him up.

McGehee over Gamel is one thing.  But today, I went to JSOnline and saw this headline: Counsell at third.  This is the tipping point for me.  Playing Counsell at third over Gamel when the team has no playoff aspirations is absurd and unacceptable.  Teams do not play 39-year-olds over their top prospect when they’re 16 games out of first in September.  They play their young players.  Counsell is another guy who’s had a very good year, but there is no reason he should start at third or short the rest of the season.  The Brewers have really botched their handling of Mat Gamel this season.

While we’re at it, am I going insane, or has Corey Patterson started in center field for the Brewers the last few days?  And hit leadoff?! Perhaps I’m just having a nightmare.  Corey Patterson is not a major league player.  He’s had more than ample time (3751 plate appearances) to prove that–and his career .290 on-base percentage speaks for itself.  Corey Hart was activated yesterday, yet Macha still decided to play Patterson over Hart.  Looking at a boxscore and seeing him at the top of the lineup just about sums up this season perfectly for me: it’s a disaster.

You down with OBP? Yeah, you know me.

Posted by Steve

I know I continue to harp on the Brewers’ excellent patience so far this year, but that’s only because it was so bad last season.  I said before the season that I felt the loss of CC Sabathia and Ben Sheets would be offset more by the offense than the pitching.  We’re only about five weeks in, but so far that’s definitely been the case.  The improved discipline has made a huge difference so far, and is seen in just about every player.

Rickie Weeks

Current OBP: .343

OBP at this time last year: .320

2008 OBP: .342

Pretty much everyone seems to prefer 2009′s Rickie Weeks to the Weeks of years past.  I’m not sure I do, although I’ll save my reasons for a different post.

Corey Hart

Current OBP: .345

OBP at this time last year: .358

2008 OBP: .300

What’s encouraging about Hart is that he isn’t even really hitting well.  His average is only .262, but because he’s walking at a career-best rate, his OBP is still alright.  If he gets his average up, the OBP will only improve (assuming he continues to be patient).

Ryan Braun

Current OBP: .463

OBP at this time last year: .311

2008 OBP: .335

Braun has been an absolute beast this season.  Like Hart, Braun is another player who struggled with plate discipline last year.  He’s been vastly improved so far in 2009 in that area.  My brother pointed out the other day that his numbers this season are basically what Albert Pujols has put up the last few years.  Again, I realize it’s only been a little over one month, but if he keeps within shouting distance of this pace he’ll be a top three MVP candidate (and actually deserve it this time).

Prince Fielder

Current OBP: .410

OBP at this time last year: .348

2008 OBP: .372

Prince has already taken 27 walks and is on pace to destroy the team record.  His batting average is only .255!  Just wait until he gets that up to the regular .270-.280 range.

Mike Cameron

Current OBP: .395

OBP at this time last year: .269 (had only played in 11 games at this point)

2008 OBP: .331

Up until a couple days ago, the Brewers had three starters with OBPs above .400, which is impressive even if it’s only May.  It’s unreasonable to expect this to continue with Cameron, whose career OBP is .341, but a .341 OBP combined with his slugging and defense adds up to an extremely valuable player.  Right now that valuable player is playing out of his mind.

J.J. Hardy

Current OBP: .289

OBP at this time last year: .338

2008 OBP: .343

Well, they couldn’t all be hitting at the same time, could they?  Hardy is definitely off to a rough start. He’s had slow starts before though, so I’m not very worried.  The good news is he’s really the only one who has been disappointing to this point.

Bill Hall

Current OBP: .364

OBP at this time last year: .276

2008 OBP: .293

By this time last season, Hall was already careening towards a terrible offensive year.  He still isn’t hitting righties (.678 OPS) but he is absolutely mashing lefties (1.269 OPS).  Hall has been very good defensively this year as well (save for the occasional holding onto the ball too long to show off his arm).  If he plays at this rate all year he’ll justify or possibly outperform his contract, which is something he certainly did not do last season.

Jason Kendall

Current OBP: .315

OBP at this time last year: .369

2008 OBP: .327

Kendall can’t hit, but it’s not a disappointment because we weren’t expecting him to.  I continue to not understand why the team refuses to pinch hit for him late in the game in big spots.  I hoped this would change with Macha replacing Yost, but we’ve yet to see it.  I went on a pretty good rant on Sunday when he let Kendall hit with two outs and the bases loaded against Carlos Marmol with Craig Counsell and Brad Nelson both available.

Craig Counsell

Current OBP: .429

OBP at this time last year: .308

2008 OBP: .355

He’s not a starter, but I included Craiggers in here because he’s been hitting out of his mind.  He’s always been a good on-base guy, but recently he’s done it despite a low batting average (hit just .226 last season).  What gives me a little hope is his new, non-ridiculous batting stance he’s using this season.  Not that I expect him to hit .333 all season like he is right now, but .275 or even .285 might be within reason.