Brian McCann: Atlanta Braves 2010 Player Preview
This preview is written by Chattanooga, Tenn. resident Andy Johns, who posts on this blog as playertobenamedlate.
Last season marked Brian McCann's fourth straight year as an All-Star, and his third silver slugger (Russell Martin beat him out in 2007). Despite his well-documented eye issues, McCann managed 551 plate appearances in 2009, which is only 22 fewer than 2008 and one fewer than 2007. He ranked third on the Braves in plate appearances behind Chipper and Escobar (McLouth had more combined between the Pirates and the Braves).
After early season issues with dry eyes and blurred vision, McCann adjusted to glasses and this off-season reportedly had a second Lasik procedure in October to correct the changes in his eyes since his first surgery in 2007.
McCann, who turns 26 on Feb. 20th, still hasn't been able to replicate his blistering 2006 campaign in terms of OPS. He's gone from .961 to .772 to .896 and .834 last year. Despite a slight dip in power numbers, he still led the team in RBIs, home runs and doubles in 2009. And despite failing to recapture that 2006 glory, he is still the best hitting catcher in the National League.
The biggest difference offensively for him between 2008 and 2009 seems to be his splits against lefties. His OPS went from .932 against righties and .820 against lefties in 2008 to .932 against RHP and .634 against LHP. In 2007 and 2006 his OPS against lefties was .756 and .809 respectively. I have no idea if his eye issues made it tougher to see southpaws or what other factors might be in play. His fly ball, ground ball tendencies stayed nearly constant losing only a few fly balls for grounders.
A 2nd-round pick in 2002, McCann became the last of the poorly-named Baby Braves this off-season when Kelly Johnson was escorted out of town.
I remember reading articles last off season about how McCann was losing weight and thought it would really help his defense. He was also said to be focusing on his throwing action to try and cut down on steals. Behind the dish, McCann did not have a great 2009. The guys over at Drive Line Mechanics ranked him 96th best defensive catcher in terms of runs last year. Curiously, David Ross is ranked third on the list. McCann is listed between Chris Snyder and Brayan Pena, ahead of Russell Martin (101), Benji Molina (102) and Jorge Posada (109).
After making nine errors in 2008, McCann made 12 errors in 2009, closing in on his career high of 13 in 2007. I attribute these errors to the extra time he spent learning Japanese to deal with KK and the time spent jotting down lyrics of songs to send to Flushing. Or maybe 12 to 13 is about what we should expect and 2008 is more of an outlier.
McCann cut down on base thievery (76 SBs against him in 2009 compared to 93 in 2008), but the percentage of runners caught stealing remained basically the same at 24 percent, compared to 23 percent in 2008. The fewer number of steals could be attributed to a number of factors based on pitchers and the fact the he spent 43 fewer innings (6 percent) behind the plate.
While McCann didn't have the banner year he or others may have hoped for, he is still solidly entrenched as the baseball's best offensive catcher not born in St. Paul, Minnesota.
The keys for McCann in 2010 will obviously be his eyes, but also his weight and the performance of those around him will also play big roles. .
His weight is listed on various sites from 230 on ESPN to 190 on The Baseball Cube (that sounds optimistic). I'd like to see him come back in similar shape to last year since dropping some pounds didn't seem to greatly affect his power numbers. He, like all of the Braves, would benefit from healthy production from Glaus and Chipper as well as the continued emergence of Escobar, who will likely hit behind McCann.
Composite projections (CHONE, Bill James, Marcel) put him at 20 to 24 home runs with an average around .290. They project 84 to 100 RBIs in 142 games and 550 plate appearances.
McCann is signed through 2012 with a club option for 2013.
On a personal note, when my wife and I went to a game shortly after the Francouer trade, Brian McCann's theme music when he came to bat struck a chord with my wife. McCann, who has always been one of her favorite players, chose Kings of Leon's "Use Somebody."
I've been roaming around, I was looking down at all I see
Painted faces fill the places I can't reach
You know that I could use somebody
You know that I could use somebody
Someone like you and all you know and how you speak
Countless lovers under cover of the street
You know that I could use somebody
You know that I could use somebody
Someone like you
She immediately theorized McCann had devoted the song to his recently-departed longtime playing partner and roommate and BFF. Maybe this explains McCann's solid but not spectacular 2009 and hopefully it will be resolved by this season.
Nice work on this player preview by Andy.
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Nothing against Heap...
but I hope Ross gets more starts. Ross is pretty good, and I’d like McCann to be fresher in September.
If only the NL was lame like the AL and Heap could make 28 starts at DH like Mauer.
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+1
Maybe Bobby could assign Ross to one of the pitchers as his personal catcher, or have David play on Sundays or against lefties. He really needs more playing time and Heap needs the rest during a long season.
by John Holton on Feb 12, 2010 11:25 AM EST up reply actions
I have to agree. 142 games for McCann is too much when the Braves have a starter quality backup in Ross. In addition to starting every 5th day, Ross should get some extra starts versus better LHP especially since Brian struggled vs lefties last year. Brian should DH during interleague play instead of using the spot for Infante or whoever Bobby usually puts there.
I miss the days of a personal catcher...
why not give the SP who generally gets the best run support (Lowe, last year) a personal catcher in David Ross. That will give Brian every 5th day or so off, and could leave him to learn to play first…moving Glaus to 3rd to spell Chipper. I know we have Omar ready to be our Super Utility player, but the more power, the better, because all of our guys can hit for a “decent” or better average.
And it’s not like we’d be losing a lot of offensive production…wasn’t David Ross insane with his HR/AB ratio last season?
Tigers love pepper; they hate cinnamon.
by Jareth Cutestory on Feb 12, 2010 3:42 PM EST up reply actions
this proposal wasn’t meant to be an EVERY 5th day thing—spelling Chipper and having Heap play 1st on-the-fly—just an idea for the future. I have no problems with O getting some PT when Chipper needs a day off.
Tigers love pepper; they hate cinnamon.
by Jareth Cutestory on Feb 12, 2010 3:45 PM EST up reply actions
I hate the DH but that’s a good point. That surely helps his numbers.
by playertobenamedlate on Feb 12, 2010 10:23 AM EST reply actions
96th best defensive catcher
Is this of all time? Are there even that many catchers in MLB?
Here are Pujols's stats: 1.000/1.000/4.000/5.000. That's right. He is batting a thousand, with a thousand OBP (naturally), and every hit has been a home run, and thus his OPS is a perfect 5.000.
Last year
That was players who caught last year. Here is a link.
by playertobenamedlate on Feb 12, 2010 12:35 PM EST up reply actions
2 per team is already 60. You can make the very easy assumption that every team uses at least a 3rd catcher at some point, so that’s 90. Realistically it makes sense that you could add another 30 since some teams will have anywhere from 4 to 6 different guys catch at different points in the year. There are over 12000 guys who play in the league each year.
I wrote a novel, it's about baseball, you should buy it: https://www.createspace.com/3407939
www.dropoutproductions.com
So………is anyone gonna buy some KY Intense for Valentine’s Day? They appear to have targeted the TC audience to heavily promote their product.
"Matt Diaz is a baseball player."-Joe Simpson
I was just thinking the same thing, KY right and left
Senator, we have another old saying,"Don't piss down my back and tell me it's raining." Fletcher
Firefox browser with the Ad-blocker add-on. No silly advertisements like this.
by Bronn on Feb 12, 2010 1:17 PM EST up reply actions 1 recs
Seems like a strange ad for Kentucky, what are they trying to say?
Senator, we have another old saying,"Don't piss down my back and tell me it's raining." Fletcher
I wonder if it improves rosterbating?
"Sometimes I wonder what'd it be like to be outside and not hear the birds chirping...I think it'd be kind of nice."
by alligatorimpersonator on Feb 12, 2010 12:47 PM EST up reply actions 4 recs
rec’d
"Jason Heyward is more than the top prospect in baseball. He's the player who could transform the Braves from a modest threat into a World Series contender."
by Scott Coleman on Feb 12, 2010 2:30 PM EST up reply actions
Makes the website look more professional, seem much more slick now.
The Angels blog, Halos heaven has a fanpost and poll up about these ads
Senator, we have another old saying,"Don't piss down my back and tell me it's raining." Fletcher
3rd catcher
why not add an extra catcher to the roster so ross can get some pinch hit opportunities…at least that was my thought before we added hinske, but honestly, ross is a better hitter
If he is 190...
he must be wearing a chest protector UNDER the jersey.
"My God! Good news fans, the Braves are showing signs of life for the first time in weeks. As a matter of fact, they appear to be beating the crap out of each other."
Let Heyward play Catcher, and then when Chipper needs a day off, move him over to 3rd.
That way Diaz gets some playing time.
The base paths belonged to me, the runner. The rules gave me the right. I always went into a bag full speed, feet first. I had sharp spikes on my shoes. If the baseman stood where he had no business to be and got hurt, that was his fault. -Ty Cobb

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