The Good, The Bad, and The Kotsay
I'm past my upset phase of the Mark Kotsay deal and I've moved on to acceptance. One reassuring comment that helped ease my pain came from Tyler Bleszinski of Athletics Nation. For those of you who don't know, Blez is one of the preeminent baseball bloggers around the web and one of the driving forces behind SB Nation, as well as a rabid A's fan. He had this to say when I asked him to reassure me that there was an ounce of value in Kotsay:
At the same time he's a little slower now and back surgeries haven't helped. I think he could have a good season if he's healthy, but I'm not sure if it's going to last.
Thanks and best of luck to him. I'm going to have to retire my Kotsay tee. (cries)
This is the part of Kotsay's game that we can't read about in a box score and something that doesn't show up in his end of season stats. I had heard that he was a good defender, but perhaps we need to upgrade that to above average defender. Still, we have to "hope" that Kotsay is healthy and that he hasn't lost a step.
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For What Its Worth
Kotsay. The last column is that of Andruw Jones
2003 21 21
2004 15 16
2005 -7 8
2006 -12 2
2007 -1 13
This suggests he is quite good but losing a step. I think BP's numbers undervalue Andruw somewhat -- although they do confirm that he was one of the best in baseball history in his prime.
Does anyone have the Fielding Bible?
by mhsiegel14 on
Jan 17, 2008 2:20 AM EST
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Kotsay's back
Based on those numbers, he's nearly as good as Andruw when he's healthy.
by kray1000 on
Jan 17, 2008 5:44 AM EST
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Andruw
A few years ago Andruw had over 500 putouts in CF...no other outfielder even had 400. Thats more than a 20% increase in putouts over the next Gold Glove outfielder. Granted, he is not that fast anymore but he gets a good jump and the Bravos have always positioned their defense well.
by jadarm on
Jan 21, 2008 3:07 PM EST
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