Jesse Chavez: Atlanta Braves 2010 Player Preview
This player preview was written by Paul Christmas, who posts here as samxrm.
Jesse Chavez is one of the newest Braves players. and quite possibly the least known -- having only recently arrived when Rafeal Soriano, who surprised everyone and accepted arbitration, was traded to the Tampa Bay Rays. Braves General Manager Frank Wren was pleased to acquire a strong arm for the bullpen in return for Soriano, saying that in addition to the luxury of adding another power bullpen arm, "this is better than having a Draft pick, from our point of view."
Chavez struggled at times in his first full season in the big leagues last year, but he has the potential to be an above average set-up man in the Braves bullpen. His fastball regularly clocks in at 94-96 on the radar gun, and many feel his slider is actually his best pitch. Jesse also throws an above average change-up, which could be called his out pitch, especially against left handed hitters.
Jesse's effectiveness thus far has been better against lefties than righties. His splits are a bit odd with an OPS of .690 against lefties and a .907 against righties. He also had an ERA of 2.88 against LH's in 34 IP, and an ERA of 5.18 in 33 IP against RH's. He pitched far better prior to the All-Star game (3.19 ERA) than after (4.99 ERA), but finished strong with an ERA of 3.27 in the final month of the season.
Chavez spent the entire 2009 season with the Pittsburgh Pirates. In 67.1 IP he compiled a 1-4 record and a 4.01 ERA. He also surrendered 11 HR's while striking out 47 and walking 22. The HR number is a bit high, but most of those (7) came during a two month period (25IP) towards the end of the season. Some claim fatigue, or injury, but if not for the two month regression, he had a fine season and recorded 15 Holds.
Jesse also had a brief five week stint for the Tampa Rays in the off season. He was traded to the Rays for Akinori Iwamura right after the World Series.
Jesse Chavez should be able to make the Braves out of spring training. He has a full year of experience under his belt and knows what a Major League season entails. Add the positive influence of a more veteran bullpen in Atlanta than he had in Pittsburgh, and he should progress nicely, but if it is deemed that a bit more seasoning is needed in the minors, he still has options available. The Braves crave that kind of roster flexibility as much as anything else.
A little extra bullet-pointed background:
- Jesse was originally drafted by the Chicago Cubs in 2001 (39th round). But he opted to not sign and was drafted again the next year by the Texas Rangers in the 42nd round. He was traded to the Pirates for Kip Wells at the trade deadline in 2006. He was then traded to the Rays right after the WS and made his way to Atlanta five weeks later on Dec. 10, 2009.
- Chavez is also under team control until 2014 and still has minor league options available should he struggle in Spring Training. Jesse made the league minimum and is not eligible for arbitration until after the 2011 season.
- While attending at different times, he and Tommy Hanson both attended Riverside (Ca.) Community College.
- Jesse was born in 1983, and at 6'2" and 170# (according to mlb.com) he is a long drink of water. He hails from Victorville, California.
- Jesse was also named to the Arizona Fall League All-Prospect team in 2006 and in the same year was named an AFL Rising Star after going 3-0 with 4 saves and a miniscule 0.64 ERA in 14 IP.
- Was named Pitcher of the year in 2008 for AAA Indianapolis. Major League debut was that same year and he retired the first three Cubs he faced on Aug. 27th.
Thanks to Paul for a nice preview of our unknown relief candidate.
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Nats get Wang
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.
I was under the impression that his LH/RH splits were do to the fact that his slider is not as good as his fastball/change combo. That being said, if he can make his slider better, though consistancy or bite, he will be armed with a heater and a change to get lefties and a slider to get righties making him a very valuable late inning arm.
Remember that time that Major Leaguer posed as a fan blogger and posted a player preview about himself?
Paul Christmas?
You can do better than that Mr. Chavez…
"Hey Fat Kid...the monster is right behind you! RUNNNN!!" -The Host
by bwellnjonesco on Feb 16, 2010 2:30 PM EST reply actions 1 recs
Makes me want to come up with other holiday names, John Thanksgiving, Frank St. Patrick’s Day, Adrian Mardi Gras.
I wrote a novel, it's about baseball, you should buy it: https://www.createspace.com/3407939
www.dropoutproductions.com
You mean Andy Marte Gras? Fictional cousin of Yankee relief pitcher/blog poser Damaso Marte Gras.
"Hey Fat Kid...the monster is right behind you! RUNNNN!!" -The Host
by bwellnjonesco on Feb 17, 2010 7:52 AM EST up reply actions
Interesting stuff
Since he’s one of the newer Braves, a lot of this stuff hasn’t been analyzed to death yet. I don’t like it when guys with “power arms” post poor k-rates, but it sounds like he has the arsenal to be an effective late inning reliever.
Offbeat question...
Remember hearing somewhere he and McLouth were actually good buddies while both in Pittsburgh. Any truth to this?
Yunel'ed Her? I hardly knew her!
Really can't say
I cannot comment on this guy b/c I have yet to see him in action period. I hope he is alittle better than his past ERA’s and record indicate. Soriano really screw the Braves out of a draft pick and was just to lazy to have his agent get him a deal on the free agent market b/c the reliever market was so deep and full.
Either way Soriano is doubtful to finish the year as a Ray; more than likely will be part of a trade at the deadline if not before. Carl Crawford would be nice however but we will have to get in line.
by Holty_Panthers_Fan on Feb 16, 2010 8:21 PM EST reply actions
Soriano really screw the Braves out of a draft pick and was just to lazy to have his agent get him a deal on the free agent market b/c the reliever market was so deep and full.
“Hey, buddy, we’re going to offer you arbitration, sure it makes you less attractive to other teams and hurts your negotiating position, but we’re looking out for ourselves and really want that draft pick.”
“Oh, okay, well I don’t think I’ll get a better deal on the market, so I’ll just take that arbitration offer.”
“What? No! You’re screwing us by thinking of yourself and your own best interests! How dare you, sir!”
by Lennox on Feb 17, 2010 3:14 AM EST up reply actions 1 recs
Paul,
thanks for this player preview on Chavez. I knew nothing about this guy or what he had to offer. I hope he lives up to his potential.
When asked what aspects of Heyward’s game need improvement, one scout simply replied, "Nothing."
Stick him and Heyward on the opening day roster...
that leaves one open bench slot, and one spot in the bullpen.
regulars
McCann
Glaus
Prado
Esco
Larry
Heyward
McLouth
Diaz
bench
Ross
Hinske
Infante
Cabrera
TBD
rotation
Hudson
Lowe
Hanson
Jurrjens
Kawakami
bullpen
Wagner
Moylan
Saito
O’Flaherty
Medlen
Chavez
TBD

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