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Old 09-21-2025, 03:58 PM   #321
Syd Thrift
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Oakland A's., 78-84, 4th AL West







1973 Recap: The A's, not exactly a franchise with a long history of success, opened the year super strong, finishing April with 11 wins in 12 games and a 15-5 record. Then the bottom pretty much dropped out and they looked like a .500ish team the rest of the way. Unfortunately for them, even though .500ish was good enough to stay within a game of the AL West in 1972, in 1973 it put them deep in the back of the division, in the "second division" even (is that a thing anymore with 6-team divisions?). The pitching was dead last in the AL in strikeouts and struggled all year long, and the offense, in spite of a 4th-in-the-AL average (.262) struggled as well.

1974 Outlook: In spite of the 90 win season 2 years ago this just isn't a team with a lot of big upside, at least that we can see. They're not super young on offense (the pitching staff does, to be fair, have its share of youth), the influx of veterans last year - they helped pick Cleveland pretty clean - didn't pan out super-hugely, and the pitching staff outside of Vince Akright is not it. It's hard to see this team getting far enough over the hump to contend in the West now that there are two legit teams in there.

Vince Akright
RHP No. 2
SR, 5'9" 187 lbs.
Born 1943-06-06
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TEX MLB | 18     | 13     | 0       | 2.25     | 37     | 37      | 13      | 295.1   | 234    | 88     | 74      | 86      | 195    |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 14     | 17     | 0       | 2.95     | 35     | 35      | 10      | 256.0   | 220    | 88     | 84      | 91      | 201    |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 19     | 10     | 0       | 2.70     | 36     | 35      | 12      | 266.0   | 245    | 93     | 80      | 86      | 152    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
After an "off" season that maybe wasn't even that much of an off season, Akright returned in 1973 as good as ever, finishing 7th in the AL in wins, 9th in innings pitched, and 3rd in ERA, and oh yeah he made his 3rd All-Star Game too. The former Tigers star has pretty well settled down in Oakland now and those fears that he might wash out of the league now seem pretty unfounded. He did seem to tire in the 2nd half (2-2, 3.62 in August, 2-4, 3.83 in September) which cost him the ERA title but hey, he's still pretty good.

Akright's Ks were down but the thing that wasn't down for him - in fact, the thing he is known for more than anything else - was his ability to get weak outs in the field. In that respect, things were "down" for him as much as ever, as in down in the strike zone. His HR rate, which is never high, was only 11 in 266 IP last year, his lowest total since 1968 when he threw 84 fewer innings to get 9 HR allowed. Akright doesn't have insane stamina but he doesn't throw very many pitches in your average inning and that allows him to pretty consistently finish about a third of his starts. Ks were down across the board last year so we do expect those to rise back up a bit.

Akright is a guy who leads by example: he's got an extensive workout regimen and while he's not a guy to call other players in to work out with him, other pitchers see his success and want to emulate it. He's still only 30 and his career 110-95 record underestimates his real value to a team: he's a legitimate #1 starter.

Lee Barnard
LHP No. 10
LL, 6'2" 199 lbs.
Born 1943-07-19
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 OAK MLB | 11     | 13     | 0       | 3.45     | 35     | 35      | 8       | 250.0   | 240    | 112    | 96      | 80      | 150    |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 15     | 12     | 0       | 2.61     | 35     | 35      | 6       | 255.0   | 207    | 79     | 74      | 67      | 153    |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 11     | 11     | 0       | 4.73     | 35     | 30      | 4       | 201.2   | 231    | 107    | 106     | 69      | 98     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
The tandem of "Batty" Barnard and Rick Shelton has been a mainstay in the A's rotation since 1969. It's hard to see them continuing with these guys if they pitch like this, though. A year away from a very solid year - 15 wins, 7th best ERA in the AL - it all kind of fell apart for Barnard in 1973. Even though he's a lefty with all that goofy movement that lefties have and even though he throws absolute gas, he just plain could not generate Ks last year, falling under 100 for the first time since 1969. A move out to the bullpen in September did the opposite of pump new life, as he allowed more earned runs (13) than IPs (12) in that month.

Barnard has never quite generated the Ks you'd expect a guy with his profile to get but, well, he's already generated more than 4.4. Even in a down year for strikeouts league-wide, that's getting close to "you have to replace this guy now" level. And indeed the rest of his stats reflected the awfulness: the second worst opponents' BA in the AL (.293, behind just KC's Chris Regan), the 3rd worst ERA (behind Regan (5.54) and Baltimore's William Hart (4.97)), and the 2nd most HRs allowed with 40, behind only the "historical" season of Edgsar Molina.

Barnard could really be on his last legs in Oakland. Within the space of a year he went from a good, solid, middle of the rotation guy to one of the worst pitchers in the league. To say he needs to turn that around is underselling how dire his situation is.

Alex Canales
1B/3B No. 38
SR, 6'1" 200 lbs.
Born 1945-03-01
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SD MLB  | .260     | 144    | 572     | 73     | 149    | 24      | 0       | 14      | 72       | 43      | 79      | 0       |
| 1972 SD MLB  | .296     | 23     | 81      | 11     | 24     | 2       | 0       | 3       | 7        | 6       | 8       | 0       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .263     | 120    | 422     | 35     | 111    | 18      | 7       | 7       | 54       | 51      | 46      | 2       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .265     | 131    | 475     | 52     | 126    | 20      | 1       | 13      | 60       | 48      | 67      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Canales, a 4 time Gold Glover, found himself in and out of the lineup at times last year because, frankly, great glove or no, you usually want more than a .260s hitter with middling power at first base. He barely played in August and was pretty terrible when he did play - .129, 1, 2 - but recovered in September just fine, hitting a season-high 7 doubles to go with a .316 average that month.

As a hitter, Canales tries to hit the ball to all fields but sometimes falls a little too much in love with the low inside fastball. The 7 triples he hit in 1972 seem to have been a huge blip and in fact last year he seemed reticent to even stretch singles into doubles a lot of the time. All the power and that are... fine, probably not enough for a first baseman but he's not killing the A's or anything. Canales played 29 games at third base although 11 errors and an .875 fielding average probably put the end to that experiment (and might even cost him the GG at first base this year).

Canales is in the prime of his career and just kind of is who he is at this point: a 5/6 order hitter who's a little bit above average at everything and the best fielder in the AL at first base.

Mithun Chakraborty
RHP No. 46
RR, 6'1" 175 lbs.
Born 1950-06-11
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 APP A   | 0      | 1      | 1       | 1.17     | 4      | 0       | 0       | 7.2     | 5      | 1      | 1       | 2       | 8      |
| 1971 ASH AA  | 4      | 6      | 2       | 4.42     | 29     | 8       | 3       | 75.1    | 81     | 39     | 37      | 41      | 47     |
| 1971 TUC AAA | 0      | 0      | 1       | 0.00     | 2      | 0       | 0       | 4.0     | 5      | 3      | 0       | 3       | 3      |
| 1972 KNO AA  | 12     | 8      | 0       | 3.63     | 23     | 23      | 15      | 188.1   | 197    | 85     | 76      | 110     | 89     |
| 1972 TUC AAA | 1      | 3      | 0       | 4.79     | 7      | 4       | 0       | 30.0    | 34     | 18     | 16      | 16      | 14     |
| 1973 TUC AAA | 9      | 8      | 0       | 3.30     | 23     | 23      | 3       | 166.0   | 186    | 68     | 61      | 69      | 91     |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 4      | 5      | 0       | 4.16     | 11     | 11      | 1       | 71.1    | 82     | 38     | 33      | 28      | 32     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Chakraborty is an Indian actor with "star" written all over him, if not in Major League Baseball than in Bollywood. Like Ian Charleson last year, he capitalized on a good first half in AAA Tucson and wound up pitching in the major leagues. Also like Charleson, unfortunately, he struggled in his first taste of the big leagues, although he did finish his season on a high note: a 6-hit shutout of the Twins on September 25th.

Chakraborty throws gaaaaaaaaas. Scouts say that if he works at it, he could one day hit triple digits on the radar gun. So far his offerings have been a bit too straight for the majors; he'll definitely want to work with major league pitching coaches to try and add a bit of "pizazz" to his repertoire. He also had a liiiitle bit of a problem keeping his pitches out of the dirt, which is almost to be expected from a guy whose primary exposure to bat-and-ball games is the one where you get to throw the ball on a hop (cricket). With that stuff, you could definitely see this guy moving into short relief if starting doesn't work out for him.

Ian Charleson
RHP No. 19
SR, 6'0" 183 lbs.
Born 1949-08-09
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 APP A   | 3      | 6      | 0       | 4.23     | 12     | 12      | 8       | 89.1    | 81     | 48     | 42      | 37      | 61     |
| 1971 ASH AA  | 1      | 3      | 0       | 7.65     | 4      | 4       | 1       | 20.0    | 23     | 17     | 17      | 15      | 7      |
| 1972 KNO AA  | 6      | 11     | 0       | 3.07     | 18     | 18      | 15      | 152.0   | 118    | 60     | 52      | 88      | 63     |
| 1972 TUC AAA | 4      | 3      | 1       | 2.17     | 14     | 9       | 2       | 74.1    | 52     | 19     | 18      | 32      | 34     |
| 1973 TUC AAA | 5      | 5      | 0       | 2.26     | 12     | 12      | 4       | 95.1    | 77     | 26     | 24      | 29      | 59     |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 4      | 10     | 0       | 3.53     | 24     | 24      | 3       | 165.2   | 170    | 82     | 65      | 64      | 68     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
The Scottish music composer Ian Charleson had good success at pretty much every level before making his debut with the A's in June, and at first that success continued: he was only 2-3 in 12 starts over his first 2 months as the team kept him on a pretty strict pitch count but carried a 2.67 ERA over that time. Then he looked like he was tiring badly with a 1-4, 3.82 August and a 1-3, 5.35 September. This isn't super shocking given that he threw more innings last year than he ever has in his career (looking at it, I guess not *that* many more than in 1972) but you'd hope a future ace could last a little longer.

The more concerning thing, frankly, about Charleson was his ability, or rather lack thereof, to get major leaguers to swing and miss at his pitch offerings. Charleson throws a fantastic circle change and a curveball with some good late break which, combined with a cut fastball that hits the high 80s, ought to create at least *some* swings and misses. It really didn't and it seemed like things got worse as the year progressed. It also left him having to play a really close-run game out there, nibbling at the edges like an old veteran and doing his best to avoid long hits (which to his credit he did: just 7 HRA in the majors). Charleson threw 10 wild pitches last year, 10th most in the AL, which might indicate that he won't be able to keep up the control if left in games for longer.

The A's clearly want him to be a future part of their rotation but if he's going to be that guy for them he needs to do more.

Willis Chavez
LHP No. 25
LL, 6'1" 198 lbs.
Born 1939-01-04
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 WAS MLB | 1      | 0      | 3       | 0.00     | 7      | 0       | 0       | 10.0    | 7      | 1      | 0       | 3       | 7      |
| 1971 OAK MLB | 10     | 5      | 18      | 2.33     | 56     | 0       | 0       | 77.0    | 70     | 27     | 20      | 36      | 34     |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 7      | 4      | 27      | 2.74     | 67     | 0       | 0       | 95.0    | 86     | 34     | 29      | 45      | 66     |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 9      | 11     | 23      | 2.90     | 56     | 0       | 0       | 80.2    | 65     | 33     | 26      | 37      | 46     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Few pitchers have played more games than Chavez has for the A's the last 3 years (OOTP doesn't have a good way of showing this but I think it might be Paz Lemus, Geoff Saus, and Malcolm Post and that's it) and he's been efective, too, leading the league in saves in 1972 and finishing 3rd in that category last year. I guess one can say that the life of an ace reliever can be fickle, too, as Chavez blew 10 saves last season; that just happens when you lean on one guy that hard for that long an amount of time.

Chavez doesn't throw very fast but, in a weird move for a reliever, throws 5 pitches, 4 of them consistently for strikes. Last year he held opponents to a .223 batting average and he hasn't allowed one higher than .250 in the 1970s. With his profile and his stamina - Chavez has the "bounce-back" ability to appear in multiple innings in consecutive games - you'd have thought he'd be a starter but it just neer worked out that way for him and he's doing well enough in his current role, isn't he? Last season the A's heeeeavily relied on him to get them out of jams: he inherited *49* baserunners last season, more than 50% higher than his previous career high (30 in 1971), and for the 2nd straight year he had a leverage index of at least 2.

Chavez isn't getting any younger and I don't know that I want to call him "reliable", exactly, but he's a huge cog in the engine of this pitching staff. Fans love it when he comes in because they know things are going to be exciting for good or for bad.

Doug Ellis
RHP No. 34
RR, 6'0" 200 lbs.
Born 1945-05-21
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 WIC AAA | 0      | 0      | 2       | 0.00     | 3      | 0       | 0       | 4.0     | 0      | 0      | 0       | 3       | 1      |
| 1971 CLE MLB | 2      | 3      | 1       | 2.81     | 10     | 0       | 0       | 16.0    | 13     | 6      | 5       | 5       | 11     |
| 1971 TUL AAA | 0      | 1      | 1       | 2.34     | 12     | 0       | 0       | 15.1    | 11     | 5      | 4       | 9       | 8      |
| 1971 OAK MLB | 0      | 0      | 0       | 0.00     | 1      | 0       | 0       | 2.1     | 2      | 0      | 0       | 0       | 1      |
| 1971 STL MLB | 1      | 0      | 0       | 2.18     | 11     | 0       | 0       | 12.1    | 10     | 3      | 3       | 1       | 12     |
| 1972 TEX MLB | 3      | 0      | 7       | 1.18     | 46     | 1       | 0       | 60.2    | 41     | 8      | 8       | 22      | 38     |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 3      | 3      | 2       | 3.90     | 39     | 5       | 0       | 78.1    | 87     | 37     | 34      | 20      | 45     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Ellis really showed how fickle the life of a journeyman reliever can be. One year removed from havingga lockdown season with the Rangers, Ellis fetched a pretty heavy price to come back to the A's - pinch-hitting specialist Raul bueno and an OF prospect. He got off to a poor start - 0-1, 4.91 in an otherwise great April for the A's - got worse in May as they tried him in the rotation for a little bit (0-0, 5.68 and 3 starts that month) and basically spent the rest of the summer rehabilitating that ERA. Then, just when it did look like he'd gotten things squared away - as late as September 2nd he had a 3.01 ERA - Ellis got repeatedly torched in September to the tune of 11 runs allowed in 12.1 IP (8.03 ERA).

Ellis throws a mix of pitches that includes a nice curveball and a good 2-seamer. What he doesn't do particularly well is last long into games. It's curious that the A's chose to start him as much as they did; even the 2 spot starts he made later in the year required him to rest for a quite a while to get back up to snuff afterwards. In many ways the raw numbers you see above, which already aren't that good (a league-average ERA for a reliever?) tell a better tale than what actually happened, as Ellis came into games inheriting 39 runners and allowed more than half of them - 20! - to score.

By the end of the season Ellis was finding himself pitching in some of the lowest of low leverage situations the A's could find. That's not a great trend for a guy who cost them so much and who should be in his prime. At least some of the blame should be placed on the manager for starting him 5 more times than he ever should start. Still, you have to go by the results and the results were not great.

Matt Evenson
2B/SS No. 11
RR, 6'2" 201 lbs.
Born 1946-02-21
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 OAK MLB | .257     | 125    | 381     | 23     | 98     | 17      | 0       | 5       | 44       | 41      | 76      | 0       |
| 1972 IOW AAA | .250     | 10     | 32      | 6      | 8      | 2       | 0       | 1       | 4        | 2       | 7       | 0       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .271     | 41     | 96      | 6      | 26     | 5       | 1       | 2       | 12       | 13      | 18      | 0       |
| 1973 TUC AAA | .250     | 56     | 152     | 15     | 38     | 4       | 1       | 2       | 15       | 23      | 25      | 1       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .203     | 39     | 69      | 5      | 14     | 2       | 0       | 0       | 8        | 8       | 14      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Evenson has been riding the AAA to majors train for 4 years now. He did get a chance to start in 1971 but wasn't exactly gangbusters and now the A's are... I wouldn't say "satisfied" with the play of Brian Wilcox at short (well, not his bat) but he's been doing a job and keeping Evenson out of one. Evenson spent the first half of the year in AAA, not even seeing action in the majors until July. By September the A's were using him in a fairly lengthy role. Evensen didn't really hit in the time he was in the majors though and at this point in his career this known Canadian's best asset is his versatility: he's a solid defender at short and a plus defender at second.

Everyone needs a guy like this on their roster. This was Evenson's last option season so the A's won't be to let him ride on the train again. If he can hit like he did last year or the year before he's a solid change of pace from the good-field, no-hit Wilcox.

Sean Gabel
3B No. 8
RR, 6'2" 202 lbs.
Born 1944-05-11
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHC MLB | .290     | 144    | 601     | 80     | 174    | 26      | 10      | 0       | 46       | 19      | 61      | 30      |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .280     | 148    | 626     | 71     | 175    | 30      | 4       | 2       | 38       | 19      | 60      | 28      |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .284     | 124    | 503     | 61     | 143    | 29      | 7       | 3       | 44       | 8       | 46      | 3       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .286     | 17     | 70      | 7      | 20     | 5       | 0       | 1       | 5        | 4       | 9       | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Sean Gabel's speed, which led him to finish in the top 3 in steals in the NL 3 times, seems to have gone away last year. In spite of all of that he's still a really good player and it's kind of surprising the Cubs sold him to the A's in September for nothing but cash. In his new digs he just continued to do what he's done his whole career - save the steals, that is.

Gabel still has good natural speed on the basepaths that he can use to beat out base hits although truth be told everything that comes off his bat goes in a straight line so he's not a big leg-out-grounders guy. In Chicago it looks like they got tired of his caught stealing mistakes - he had 19 of them in 1972 and at the time of his traade to Oakland he was 3/11 on steal attempts - so hey, you know, maybe Chicago just nailed his foot to the bag. He was 3/3 in Oakland. Gabel doesn't hit for power and doesn't draw all that many walks so the average is pretty much all you're going to get. Well, that's unfair: Gabel is also a 5-time Gold Glove award winner at third - perhaps a 6th if the NL doesn't feel too sore about his leaving - with an 80-grade arm and soft hands that led to only 14 errors in 139 starts between two teams and a .965 FA.

Gabel will face a challence in the spring from Bobby Scott (see below) because he's at a point in his career where he can't keep his job for granted but if the A's are at all wise, it'll be his name in the lineup every day.

Zackery Hadley
LF/RF No. 18
RR, 5'8" 199 lbs.
Born 1939-01-04
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SD MLB  | .254     | 95     | 362     | 47     | 92     | 8       | 3       | 1       | 25       | 27      | 62      | 30      |
| 1972 SD MLB  | .273     | 67     | 176     | 22     | 48     | 1       | 3       | 2       | 10       | 15      | 32      | 19      |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .385     | 9      | 26      | 6      | 10     | 0       | 1       | 1       | 5        | 3       | 6       | 8       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .237     | 91     | 266     | 39     | 63     | 10      | 1       | 5       | 25       | 21      | 44      | 19      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
"Hoss" Hadley has been a bit of an enigma for the A's and it's now plain to see why the Padres were able to give up the 2-time NL steals champion for cash. There's no question that Hadley has speed. Even at 34 he's still one of the fastest men in the league. The issue is, in order to get steals and score runs from the leadoff position you have to also get on base and Hadley was just not great at that. Since he doesn't walk, he really needs to put up some kind of average in order to come through in that regard and last year's 237 BA meant that his OBP was under .300 (.297), which is just not going to cut it. The A's recognized this and plopped him onto the bench beginning in early August.

Hadley also isn't a really good defender for all of that speed. You'd expect a guy like this to be Gold Glove level or at least pretty decent but Hadley just plain doesn't get a good jump in the outfield and although he tries to study hitters to make up for it, he just seems to have a lot of natural clumsiness out there that makes him a minus fielder even in the corners.

If 1973 wasn't already Hadley's final chance, 1974 will surely be if he doesn't suddenly hit a whole lot better than he did this year.

Ray Hawkinson
1B/PH No. 36
LR, 5'12" 201 lbs.
Born 1942-10-03
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 MIL MLB | .333     | 26     | 45      | 4      | 15     | 4       | 0       | 0       | 4        | 2       | 5       | 0       |
| 1971 OAK MLB | .369     | 51     | 179     | 28     | 66     | 11      | 5       | 7       | 33       | 11      | 24      | 3       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .250     | 66     | 132     | 11     | 33     | 3       | 3       | 2       | 15       | 9       | 19      | 0       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .264     | 86     | 197     | 26     | 52     | 12      | 1       | 4       | 29       | 8       | 25      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Ray Hawkinson had a liiiiitle bit of a bounceback season compared to an awful 1972 but it still wasn't really adequate for a first baseman and it's hard to see a big future for the now 31 year old. He did hit .279 (12-45) with 8 RBIs as a pinch-hitter, which I guess is nice but that also means he was 255/293/386 as a starter and that, coupled with the fact that he was used against RHPs only the entire season (Hawkinson had all of 9 at-bats vs LHPs) really does not make him look like a major league player.

He's an okay defensive 1B I guess. On the other hand, for a guy who is barely hanging onto a job, he sure talks a big game in the locker room. This is a guy still riding the laurels of what was clearly a fluke 1971 and probably won't be around much longer.

Brian Jackson
RF No. 14
RR, 5'11" 205 lbs.
Born 1944-06-28
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 PIT MLB | .285     | 114    | 473     | 59     | 135    | 20      | 6       | 10      | 50       | 35      | 43      | 8       |
| 1972 PIT MLB | .267     | 131    | 524     | 65     | 140    | 19      | 9       | 9       | 50       | 45      | 38      | 10      |
| 1973 PIT MLB | .258     | 61     | 233     | 20     | 60     | 15      | 1       | 3       | 27       | 24      | 18      | 2       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .283     | 49     | 180     | 28     | 51     | 9       | 1       | 4       | 22       | 11      | 6       | 2       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Although Brian Jackson was a local fan favorite and the Pirates' #3 hitter, he'd never quite cashed in on the promise he showed as the 11th overall pick in 1967 and when the A's came a-calling at the trade deadling the cash-strapped Pirates were willing to let him go for pure monetary considerations. It's nice to have a moneybags owner. In Oakland, Jackson proceeded to hit in a way he hadn't really hit in the previous couple seasons and even demonstrated a bit more power than he had. All in all, it was more than enough to stamp this guy as the starting right fielder going into 1974.

Jackson is a guy who always tries to make the most out of RBI opportunities. He's one of the hardest men to strike out in baseball - actually, by the numbers, he was *the* hardest with a 5.3% K rate (Minnesota's Matt Highfield was 2nd with a 5.8%). He might benefit from hitting a little further down in the order, as last year he hit just 245/318/355 in the 3 hole. With all the good hitters on the Athletics roster that shouldn't be a problem. Jackson won a Gold Glove last year for his work with Pittsburgh but it was one of those sneaky Gold Gloves you win when there aren't 3 truly amazing fielders in the league. He's certainly the best defensive corner outfielder on his current team, at least. Jackson's been something of a stolen base threat in years past but it looks like he slowed up a bit last year with just 4 steals in 8 tries. The speed and his predilection for line drives did help to cut down his GIDP rate; just 9 last year in spite of all those balls in play.

Jackson is maybe just a bit below the level where you'd call a guy a star but he's still a really good player and getting him for cash was a major coup for the A's.

Ben Lamar
RHP No. 20
RR, 5'12" 189 lbs.
Born 1947-07-12
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CHW MLB | 3      | 4      | 4       | 2.51     | 51     | 0       | 0       | 64.1    | 51     | 22     | 18      | 25      | 59     |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 6      | 1      | 6       | 2.42     | 53     | 1       | 0       | 78.0    | 49     | 21     | 21      | 30      | 56     |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 2      | 3      | 6       | 5.61     | 46     | 1       | 0       | 73.2    | 74     | 51     | 46      | 39      | 46     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Lamar is a former union rep in Chicago who the A's signed for free after the penny-pinching White Sox cut him outright. Now they're contenders and Lamar is fighting to stay in the league. There is no justice in this world. Lamar is reportedly really unhappy with his usage - he thinks he should be a stopper - and the A's were equally unhappy with his performance in 1973. Lamar has a 4 seam fastball with some life and a pretty okay curve but he had a lot of trouble finding the plate with both of them last year. Even that would have been OK if he'd done like he did his last year in Chicago and struck out nearly a batter an inning but he barely K'd more guys than he struck out in 1973.

Lamar is still only 26 and could really easily bounce back. That bounceback might not come with the A's; Charlie Finley has as big a reputation as a miser as the White Sox do.

Josh Lewis
C/DH No. 5
SR, 6'4" 203 lbs.
Born 1948-08-23
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 OAK MLB | .293     | 128    | 508     | 62     | 149    | 31      | 1       | 14      | 66       | 35      | 49      | 0       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .288     | 119    | 480     | 58     | 138    | 19      | 1       | 18      | 73       | 39      | 32      | 3       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .290     | 128    | 500     | 60     | 145    | 30      | 4       | 10      | 52       | 51      | 51      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
"Texas Josh" Lewis has been a marvel of consistency in 3 full seasons in the major leagues, hitting between .299 and .293. If you zoom in, you'll see a guy who's just as prone to streaks and slumps as anybody else; it just all seems to work out in the end for him. Last year Lewis bad month came in August, right after he appeared in his 3rd straight All-Star Game (.209, 1, 2), followed by a great September (.381, 2, 14). And so it goes.

Lewis lost a bit of the power he'd established his first two seasons but he still had some and overall it's hard to be anything but impressed by his hitting ability as a catcher. Lewis was unquestionably the best player on the team. Whatever small advantages Tommy Pron or Casey Satterfield might have provided at the plate, Lewis made up for by playing one of the hardest positions in the field. He improved his walk totals for a 3rd straight year and now seems to be a much more selective hitter than the "hit everything that moves" guy he was as a prospect. He's slow but come on, he's a catcher. As a fielder, too, he's come into his own: he won the last 2 Gold Gloves, which is more of a sign of the lack of truly great backstops in the AL, but he was just as good this year. Lewis handles pitchers well, doesn't get on the bad side of umpires, and also blocks the plate pretty well, all of which help to make up for an only average throwing arm (average for a catcher! Still great for anyone else!).

Lewis only turned 25 in August and likely has another decade in this league at least. How many All-Star Games will this man play in when all is said and done?

David Mesa
CF No. 30
LL, 6'0" 201 lbs.
Born 1948-05-04
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 IOW AAA | .333     | 7      | 27      | 4      | 9      | 2       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 1       | 3       | 1       |
| 1971 OAK MLB | .282     | 67     | 252     | 32     | 71     | 18      | 2       | 1       | 25       | 16      | 45      | 9       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .231     | 100    | 407     | 46     | 94     | 21      | 1       | 4       | 17       | 23      | 66      | 14      |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .259     | 99     | 413     | 47     | 107    | 23      | 1       | 1       | 29       | 20      | 57      | 18      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Mesa, a 2nd round pick in the 1971 amateur draft, has already not only risen through the ranks in the Oakland system but has gotten to the point to where he's "established" himself and led the A's to start looking for a better answer in centerfield. Mesa has good speed - he stole 36/40 bases his senior season at LSU - but like his counterpart "Hoss" Hadley he doesn't get on base enough to make that count. Mesa's biggest issue is that he just does not like to allow pitches outside of the strike zone to go past him. He's actually pretty good at laying his bat on the ball, especially balls outside of the zone, considering, but the end result is a lot of soft fly balls into right field. Oh, right: Mesa, in spite of a complete lack of power, also tries to pull everything.

Mesa's a solid centerfielder. He's never going to win a Gold Glove but he won't kill you out there either. Possibly he looks a bit less than "all right" because the A's have a bad habit of surrounding him with guys who don't cover a lot of ground; however, it needs to be remembered that when a ball lands on the right-field side of right-center, even if Mesa is the closest guy to it, it's probably on the right fielder for not getting to that ball before it hits the wall. Mesa killed 14 baserunners in just 97 starts in center last year.

Unfortunately for all the flash Mesa hasn't shown an ability or willingness to work on his obvious offensive flaws and even at the young age of 25 he's probably a "what you see is what you get" guy for this roster.

Tommy Pron
RF/LF No. 9
LR, 6'1" 202 lbs.
Born 1942-08-02
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CLE MLB | .273     | 136    | 494     | 51     | 135    | 13      | 1       | 9       | 48       | 65      | 52      | 0       |
| 1972 CLE MLB | .326     | 141    | 506     | 77     | 165    | 18      | 1       | 16      | 58       | 73      | 51      | 0       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .304     | 138    | 493     | 62     | 150    | 27      | 0       | 12      | 76       | 85      | 41      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
After the A's acquired Pron in late March, the 31 year old outfielder had a good, solid Tommy Pron season, even returning to the All-Star Game for his 4th time and first time since 1969. The 1968 batting champion juuuuust finished in the top 10 in hitting (10th exactly) for the 5th time and the big outfield dimensions at Oakland Coliseum helped him to hit the most doubles he's hit since 1970 (35, also a career high). Pron has some of the best bat control in the league. When he doesn't swing at something you can be almost sure it's a ball. He'd probably hit for more power if he was a bit more selective with what he did swing at but would be a .300 hitter anymore? I'd say no and on top of that his power isn't terrible or anything.

Pron is a liability on defense. Weirdly, since it usually goes the other way around, he's a bigger liability in left than in right because in right he gets to use his cannon of an arm. Last year he only threw out 7 baserunners in 82 RF starts as runners just plain know not to run on him. The A's issue is that their stadium is so, so big that a guy who lacks range and natural speed like Pron is going to be giving up a lot of extra base hits wherever he plays, and for now DH is owned by an even worse fielder in Casey Satterfield. Pron is very slow and hasn't stolen a base since 1969 (when he had 1); he's 0-6 in attempts since then.

Pron provides a good amount of leadership to a clubhouse as well. Although the A's slipped a bit last year they definitely benefitted from his experience and hitting ability.

Bobby Scott
3B/OF No. 35
LR, 5'12" 191 lbs.
Born 1947-12-13
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ASH AA  | .191     | 36     | 110     | 10     | 21     | 3       | 0       | 6       | 13       | 23      | 29      | 0       |
| 1971 TUC AAA | .253     | 71     | 162     | 20     | 41     | 9       | 0       | 4       | 29       | 40      | 32      | 1       |
| 1972 KNO AA  | .224     | 34     | 107     | 13     | 24     | 2       | 1       | 4       | 15       | 27      | 22      | 0       |
| 1972 TUC AAA | .196     | 58     | 51      | 4      | 10     | 4       | 0       | 2       | 6        | 8       | 14      | 0       |
| 1973 TUC AAA | .253     | 72     | 194     | 26     | 49     | 3       | 2       | 11      | 18       | 22      | 50      | 1       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .300     | 65     | 200     | 30     | 60     | 7       | 1       | 8       | 33       | 34      | 47      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Perhaps the A's found a late bloomer in Bobby Scott? He'd never shown anything like the power he hit for last season and you have to go back to 71 at-bats in short-season A ball in 1970 to find a higher batting average but Scott was legit pretty good in the major leagues last year. Scouts do seem to think that the power increase at least is mostly legit. What may not be legit is his hands. I'm not saying they were great - Scott committed 10 errors in 57 games at 3rd for a .937 fielding average - but they have the reputation of being very stoney, which, .937 is not quite stone.

With this performance and the fact that the A's finally cut bait on Chase Jones (.207, 2, 15) in September, Scott looks like a contender for the starting 3B job or, failing that, something in the outfield.

Jagadguru Rambhadracharya
1B/DH No. 12
LR, 6'1" 200 lbs.
Born 1950-01-12
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 LEW S A | .337     | 72     | 255     | 39     | 86     | 17      | 0       | 5       | 61       | 54      | 60      | 1       |
| 1972 LEW S A | .340     | 77     | 297     | 53     | 101    | 15      | 2       | 9       | 63       | 35      | 47      | 0       |
| 1973 BIR AA  | .307     | 54     | 199     | 40     | 61     | 15      | 0       | 7       | 30       | 36      | 24      | 0       |
| 1973 TUC AAA | .330     | 35     | 91      | 10     | 30     | 7       | 1       | 3       | 12       | 8       | 16      | 0       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .227     | 23     | 66      | 11     | 15     | 2       | 0       | 4       | 16       | 17      | 11      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The 23 year old Indian guru climbed through 3 levels of the minors - kind of 5 if you count the fact that he skipped regular A ball and was in short A for all of 1972 - and only stopped hitting when he reached the majors in September. He still did a lot in spite of the low average - a .393 on-base percentage, for one, and good power that capped off a 14 HR season in 356 at-bats. He probably won't hit .300 in the majors anyway but he's still young and could still fill that part of his game in and even if he doesn't he is for now a pretty decent left-handed complement to Alex Canales.

Rambhadracharya is, it should be said, a guy who tends to insist that his methods of physical fitness are the best and that was reportedly something that annoyed his teammates in the minors. As he gets older, perhaps he'll get a bit less... strident. Still, if that's the worst you can say about the guy, he's still looking pretty good to me.

Casey Satterfield
DH/OF No. 39
RR, 5'12" 204 lbs.
Born 1946-02-24
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 STL MLB | .302     | 144    | 526     | 72     | 159    | 30      | 4       | 13      | 70       | 71      | 80      | 2       |
| 1972 STL MLB | .270     | 110    | 440     | 57     | 119    | 14      | 0       | 18      | 56       | 45      | 53      | 0       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .219     | 34     | 128     | 12     | 28     | 3       | 1       | 2       | 9        | 19      | 22      | 0       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .261     | 153    | 579     | 70     | 151    | 26      | 1       | 19      | 82       | 56      | 93      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Although the DH seemed practically tailor-made for the poor fielding Satterfield, it's not without its challenges. The biggest issue is that playing in the field helps you to keep your head in the game an while Casey Satterfield would never admit it, it did seem sometimes like he was a bit detached last year, especially in the last month of the season when the A's weren't doing much more than playing a spoiler role for the Rangers and White Sox. Satterfield hit just .110 in the final month, dropping his average from a respectable .286 to a less than respectable .261.

Although he played just 12 games all year in the field, Satterfield actually set personal highs in games and plate appearances last year, and, thanks to that, RBIs. 82 is still a low-ish total for a cleanup hitter in our book but even the 19 HRs worth of power was by far the best on the team so perhaps it was the park that suppressed the ribbies. Only Tommy Pron and Josh Lewis truly hit better than he did, even with the awful September. Satterfield could probably play left field if he had to but he's very slow and doesn't do anything special in the outfield to make up for that. He's willing to do whatever the A's want him to do though.

Satterfield has a core spot in the middle of the lineup every single day. Hopefully that September isn't a harbinger of things to come...

Alberto Sepulveda
2B/SS No. 15
RR, 6'1" 196 lbs.
Born 1948-08-29
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 STP A   | .348     | 6      | 23      | 0      | 8      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 2        | 0       | 0       | 0       |
| 1972 OKC AAA | .293     | 119    | 440     | 57     | 129    | 20      | 7       | 11      | 57       | 38      | 49      | 8       |
| 1973 BIR AA  | .141     | 17     | 71      | 1      | 10     | 2       | 1       | 0       | 6        | 7       | 7       | 0       |
| 1973 TUC AAA | .243     | 91     | 333     | 36     | 81     | 13      | 3       | 9       | 32       | 10      | 30      | 3       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .350     | 34     | 103     | 14     | 36     | 1       | 1       | 1       | 10       | 7       | 9       | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Second base was, shall we say, something of an unsolved position for the A's in 1973. The top two guys on the team in innings - Jon Reid (.242, 7, 49) and Israel Gaytan (.237, 1, 13) were both shipped off to other locales in August and July. That left the A's to aggressively promote Sepulveda, who only celebrated his 25th birthday in August and who started the year, frankly, awful in AA before injuries forced him ot get moved up anyway.

It seems like the most wishful of wishful thinking to think that this guy will hit anywhere near .350 again but scouts do think he has at least above-average contact, his minor league stats from this season notwithstanding. The A's aren't really headed anywhere any time soon; perhaps this is a good opportunity to take a season to see what they have in the Columbian.

Rick Shelton
RHP No. 16
LR, 5'11" 189 lbs.
Born 1940-12-09
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 OAK MLB | 15     | 15     | 0       | 3.71     | 36     | 36      | 6       | 259.1   | 227    | 125    | 107     | 144     | 174    |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 5      | 6      | 1       | 4.43     | 35     | 15      | 0       | 130.0   | 124    | 66     | 64      | 62      | 94     |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 11     | 14     | 0       | 4.34     | 33     | 30      | 9       | 215.1   | 223    | 108    | 104     | 77      | 111    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Shelton was the co-leader in wins for the 1969 Seattle Pilots with 10 and look, if I brought that up last year I will probably keep bringing it up until he retires. It's kind of his "thing". Unfortunately, retirement might not be too far off: Shelton was pretty bad last year, bad enough that he got taken out of the rotation in September. As his fortunes fell, so did the A's: he opened the year 4-0, 1.85 in April and immediately fell apart to 1-3, 6.07 in May.

Shelton throws heat and in the past has been able to use that velocity to rack up a lot of strikeouts. His fastball seemed a bit straighter than it's been in the past few years and the results weren't pretty: a K rate that was his lowest since he was put into rotations and a career-high 29 HRs allowed. The one upside, I guess, is that where Shelton has a reputation for being really, really wild sometimes - he even led the league in BBs in 1970 with 141 - his walk rates were pretty close to league average last year.

Shelton's now 32 years old and has pretty clearly established himself as a below average back of the rotation starter. The A's could probably still use his veteran presence but if he can't hitters to miss his pitches or if his control goes bye-bye again, his career could be coming to an end soon.

Cat Stevens
CF/RF No. 29
SR, 6'2" 205 lbs.
Born 1948-07-13
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 LEW S A | .334     | 79     | 302     | 56     | 101    | 11      | 7       | 1       | 44       | 56      | 35      | 25      |
| 1972 LEW S A | .348     | 76     | 319     | 67     | 111    | 14      | 13      | 7       | 48       | 29      | 22      | 24      |
| 1973 TUC AAA | .234     | 48     | 171     | 16     | 40     | 4       | 4       | 2       | 12       | 19      | 25      | 5       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .268     | 79     | 276     | 39     | 74     | 11      | 3       | 3       | 16       | 32      | 47      | 4       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Even though Stevens and teammate David Mesa are the same age, at this point Stevens is looked upon as the project / potential future star while Mesa seems locked into a "he's our guy for now" role. This in spite of the fact that Stevens actually came out of college a year before Mesa and was even signed for free after a fantastic season at the Angels' Northwest League affiliate in Bend in 1970. What did he say or do to get him that early release? Since he's come to Oakland he's been nothing but a nice guy, if a little overboard with telling people to "come on the peace train", whatever that means. Last year saw an aggressive promotion all the way from short-season A ball to AAA, where the raw numbers don't really tell the whole story. The big league second half numbers tell a better and arguably more accurate one though.

Stevens stole only 4 bases in 11 tries and probably will not ever have true leadoff man speed. That said, he does things that David Mesa and Hoss Hadley simply don't or can't do, namely get on base. Stevens posted a .343 OBP last year, which is "only" above average but looks fantastic compared to those guys. He also has an interesting amount of power for a guy who mostly excels in slapping at the ball and legging out base hits. Defensively he's a stud: in addition to covering a lot of ground in center, like David Mesa he caught a lot of runners as they tried to take extra bases on him: 8 OF assists in just 57 starts in centerfield (he had another 12 starts in the OF corners but somehow didn't record any further assists). Stevens will lay down a bunt to move his fellows along but strangely isn't very good at dropping a good drag bunt to help get himself on base.

You look at a guy with this kind of history and that early cutdown and you think "oh no, he must be a problem". All I can think is, the Angels hate peace and holy rollers. Stevens' lively play is already winning him fans locally.

Frederick Sumaye
OF/2B No. 22
SR, 5'12" 163 lbs.
Born 1950-06-10
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 BUR A   | .333     | 10     | 33      | 10     | 11     | 4       | 0       | 3       | 8        | 12      | 6       | 1       |
| 1971 BIR AA  | .264     | 51     | 182     | 32     | 48     | 11      | 2       | 8       | 31       | 30      | 33      | 3       |
| 1971 IOW AAA | .185     | 68     | 243     | 30     | 45     | 13      | 4       | 4       | 24       | 44      | 53      | 2       |
| 1972 BIR AA  | .148     | 8      | 27      | 4      | 4      | 0       | 0       | 2       | 4        | 8       | 3       | 0       |
| 1972 IOW AAA | .271     | 124    | 435     | 77     | 118    | 30      | 3       | 25      | 100      | 60      | 109     | 2       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .091     | 5      | 11      | 2      | 1      | 0       | 0       | 1       | 1        | 3       | 3       | 0       |
| 1973 TUC AAA | .236     | 75     | 276     | 38     | 65     | 14      | 0       | 15      | 35       | 33      | 46      | 5       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .343     | 20     | 70      | 16     | 24     | 4       | 1       | 4       | 9        | 13      | 12      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Sumaye is a young African (Tanzanian) politician who is also a pretty good hitting prospect. He's had some issues with strikeouts, although some of that might be an artifact of being really young for his league (in Iowa in 71 and 72) and still learning the game. His power sure seems for year though, and he had a beastly September that ought to make the A's think about where to put this guy. Sumaye played in 59 games at second base in the minor leagues and in spite of a repuation for having less than great hands he only committed 4 miscues for a .986 fielding average. He can also play in the outfield corners as he did when he got his September cup of coffee.

Sumaye is, well, a prospect. It's easy to project him into 20 HRs, which would be some real power for a middle infielder. One could just as easily project him into going back to his native Tanzania and starting a long career in politics.

Philip Trapasso
LHP No. 26
LL, 6'4" 200 lbs.
Born 1944-03-07
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 IOW AAA | 1      | 0      | 1       | 1.97     | 16     | 0       | 0       | 27.1    | 19     | 6      | 6       | 22      | 23     |
| 1971 OAK MLB | 0      | 0      | 0       | 0.00     | 1      | 0       | 0       | 1.0     | 0      | 0      | 0       | 1       | 2      |
| 1972 IOW AAA | 1      | 1      | 1       | 2.25     | 7      | 0       | 0       | 20.0    | 14     | 7      | 5       | 12      | 20     |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 3      | 0      | 0       | 3.48     | 43     | 2       | 0       | 59.1    | 41     | 23     | 23      | 36      | 63     |
| 1973 OAK MLB | 4      | 1      | 0       | 2.35     | 39     | 0       | 0       | 49.2    | 38     | 16     | 13      | 34      | 25     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Trapasso was wiiiiiiiild last year, sometimes seemingly unable to get any of his pitches over for strikes. Like a lot of wild pitchers, batters couldn't seem to locate his pitches well either and he finished with a really nice .212 opponents' batting average and allowed just 7 out of 36 runners he inherited to score. Trapasso tries to be as much of a lefty specialist as you can have in the early 1970s; he faced lefties around 40% of the time, although paradoxically he managed to get better results out of righties (lefties held an OBP of .388 against him). Ooooh, I just noticed this: he's a knuckleballer. Now it all makes sense!

Trapasso could definitely - maybe should - get a look-see in the rotation even though he doesn't have much experience there. The dancer is a hard pitch to capture and harder to capture when you're only pitching an inning or so every outing.

Brian Wilcox
SS No. 3
RR, 5'10" 190 lbs.
Born 1942-03-15
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 NYM MLB | .230     | 110    | 365     | 36     | 84     | 8       | 2       | 8       | 31       | 31      | 67      | 5       |
| 1972 STL MLB | .182     | 109    | 302     | 24     | 55     | 5       | 5       | 4       | 26       | 29      | 50      | 8       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .093     | 22     | 43      | 1      | 4      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 4       | 10      | 1       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .219     | 132    | 406     | 31     | 89     | 8       | 2       | 8       | 44       | 19      | 78      | 18      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Wilcox was... better last year but "better" was still not very good at least at the plate. It should surprise virtually nobody that the career .212 hitter hit .219 last year, and in later years that has been a very, very empty .219. Thanks to catchers being awful in this league, Wilcox's OPS+ is only the 3rd worst in baseball. What the heck, the bottom 5:

1. Khalil Tabb, C NYY 54
2. Mike Perez, C KC 62
3. Brian Wilcox, SS OAK 63
4. Justin Ramey, SS MIN 64
5. Justin Hearl, CF PIT 66

Most if not all of those guys are in serious jeopardy of losing their job next year, as well they should.

The reason Wilcox stays in the lineup, of course, is the defense. At 31, he's a 5 time Gold Glover who could probably win one in the AL if it wasn't for the reputation of Oniji Handa. He's got the softest of hands, with just 16 errors all year and a .977 FA, and wound up with a +24.7 zone rating at short, which, frankly, is a lot, enough all by itself to turn a replacement level to worse than that bat into a league average player or better. Wilcox is surprisingly not great at laying down the bunt; you'd think with his offensive "abilities" that would be something he works on. He is pretty fast; in spite of just 10 doubles and triples, he actually stole a career high 18 bases last year.

Wilcox is an offensive black hole but is an awwwwfully good defensive player. This is far from the weakest link on this team.

Emanuel Zamarripa
RF/LF No. 15
RL, 6'1" 194 lbs.
Born 1948-03-28
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 DEC A   | .260     | 37     | 123     | 10     | 32     | 5       | 0       | 2       | 11       | 10      | 27      | 0       |
| 1971 AMA AA  | .235     | 76     | 162     | 9      | 38     | 8       | 1       | 1       | 9        | 19      | 40      | 1       |
| 1972 AMA AA  | .273     | 76     | 183     | 26     | 50     | 4       | 0       | 11      | 37       | 40      | 29      | 2       |
| 1972 PHO AAA | .333     | 8      | 6       | 1      | 2      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 2        | 1       | 1       | 0       |
| 1973 TUC AAA | .261     | 44     | 115     | 16     | 30     | 4       | 3       | 6       | 17       | 19      | 23      | 3       |
| 1973 OAK MLB | .289     | 28     | 76      | 8      | 22     | 4       | 1       | 1       | 12       | 12      | 17      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Zamarripa made his major league debut last May and in spite of hitting .289 as a 4th/5th outfielder in June and July he found himself the victim of a numbers game as the A's sent him back down and didn't bring him up in September. Zamarripa is a bit of a "tweener": good speed and power but strikes out too often to hit for a good average, and as a fielder a guy who's best suited for left field or DH. He did hit and got on base at both levels he played at and that's nothing to sneeze at. Zamarripa is also a guy who's worked hard to get to where he is.

It's really hard to project stardom or even a long major league career out of this man but stranger things have happened to guys without his work ethic.
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Old 11-22-2025, 02:28 PM   #322
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1973 Recap: The Rangers - look, this is an evil team in an evil city, there's just no two ways about it - was in the catbird seat as of the end of July with a 63-40 record and a 3 game lead on the Chicago White Sox in the AL West. Everything was coming up Milhouse, as in Richard Milhouse Nixon, for the former Washington Senators who were also celebrating their first season in their new division. Sadly for their fans but happily for everyone else, the Rangers went 13-17(! 30 games!) in August and 15-14 in September to lose a total of 5 games to the Chisox, who weren't exactly amazing (16-13 and 16-12) but did keep their heads above water at least.

You'd expect a park located in the mdidle of Texas - at least one where they play their games outside - to favor hitters but nope, that's not the case for Texas. Arlington Stadium's HRs allowed rate was a stingy 0.88, with base hits being about average in the (fairly) roomy (I guess) park (alleys to 380 ft, 330 down the lines). Point being, the NARRATIVE is that this was the best defense in the AL (3.05 ERA) but the league worst offense (630 runs scored). That's already pretty crazy for a contending team but... at least it can be said that maybe the pitching wasn't *quite* as good and the offense ways maaaaybe not the worst.

1974 Outlook: The rotation is young, with Chad Daugharty the "old man" of the staff at 28, and the hitting... can't be as bad two years in a row, right? You've got to think these Rangers will be right there again in '74.

John Bonham
C No. 1
SR, 6'2" 202 lbs.
Born 1948-05-18
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 PFD AA  | .256     | 49     | 164     | 10     | 42     | 8       | 0       | 2       | 22       | 20      | 21      | 0       |
| 1971 DEN AAA | .206     | 43     | 141     | 18     | 29     | 4       | 0       | 1       | 16       | 13      | 17      | 0       |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .258     | 92     | 302     | 37     | 78     | 16      | 1       | 9       | 45       | 28      | 62      | 0       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .267     | 5      | 15      | 3      | 4      | 1       | 0       | 1       | 5        | 2       | 5       | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .224     | 85     | 210     | 15     | 47     | 3       | 0       | 2       | 16       | 14      | 36      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Bonham is pretty much your prototypical good-field, no-hit catcher. He debuted a bit late to be considered anything like a top prospect but guys like this can stick in the league for a long time. Well, if they do anything close to being able to hit. The jury is still out on that. Bonham hit double digit homers between AAA Denver and the majors last year, and look, I haven't messed with Denver's stadium to make it the massive hitter's park it is in real life. So his complete lack of any power whatsoever came as a real surprise to everyone. The .224 average looked fine but that came with a sub-.300 OBP and SLG and an OPS+ of 56. Pretty bad!

The best thing about Bonham is athleticism behind the plate. He doesn't have the kind of arm that would win you Gold Gloves - kind of a big "but" for a catcher - but otherwise he's as good as anyone in the league at framing pitches, handling bunts, preventing wild pitchees, and so on. The vagaries of the game are such that he caught 30% of all stealers, 2% more than batterymate Andres Gamez, but that's just because guys ran on him a lot more. He does a good job as a field general as well, perhaps informed by his "day job" drumming for some English blues band named Led Zeppelin or something or other.

Bonham could easily play in the league for the next decade and if that doesn't sound ominous I don't know what to tell you.

Robbie Coltrane
SP No. 20
RR, 6'5" 201 lbs.
Born 1950-05-30
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 JAX AA  | 2      | 1      | 0       | 1.28     | 3      | 3       | 3       | 28.0    | 27     | 4      | 4       | 3       | 18     |
| 1971 WIC AAA | 12     | 10     | 0       | 2.24     | 22     | 22      | 19      | 192.1   | 145    | 63     | 48      | 57      | 101    |
| 1971 CLE MLB | 5      | 3      | 0       | 3.33     | 8      | 8       | 2       | 56.2    | 60     | 29     | 21      | 14      | 34     |
| 1972 CLE MLB | 10     | 10     | 0       | 3.71     | 28     | 28      | 9       | 208.1   | 208    | 92     | 86      | 39      | 140    |
| 1973 CLE MLB | 2      | 2      | 0       | 5.20     | 5      | 5       | 1       | 36.1    | 40     | 21     | 21      | 7       | 11     |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 21     | 8      | 0       | 2.51     | 34     | 34      | 16      | 275.2   | 213    | 84     | 77      | 68      | 170    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
The Rangers have a real problem in their rotation: who's #1? It's a nice problem to have, and they've only brought it on themselves. Texas acquired Coltrane from the Cleveland baseball club, sending over beleaguered starter Kevin Freeman (14-14, 4.48) and 1B prospect / possible future Rangers owner George W. Bush (.174, 5, 18). To say the big, burly Coltrane won that trade outright is the understatement of the year: while Bush looks like a failed prospect and Freeman was one of the worst starters in the league, Coltrane won 23 games and is in the conversation for the 1973 Cy Young Award.

Coltrane throws a mid-90s fastball and likes to mix in a forkball that comes in looking just enough like the heater that pitchers swing over it a lot. Last year, in spite of spending a month with another team, Robbie finished just 6 Ks behind Chad Daugharty for the team lead (and finished 5th overall with 181). Unlike most power pitchers, "Hagrid" gets those whiffs without wildness, having finished 2nd and 4th in the league in fewest walks per 9 innings in his 2 full years as a starter.

Coltrane prides himself on being a "doer" more than a "thinker", although reporters don't ask him a lot of questions because that Scottish brogue of his can be impenetrable. I kind of wrote up Crystal and Daugharty before getting to this guy and I have to say, he might just be their top pitcher right now. 1974 will tell us for sure.

Billy Crystal
SP No. 23
LR, 5'11" 187 lbs.
Born 1948-07-01
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 IOW AAA | 9      | 17     | 0       | 3.35     | 27     | 27      | 15      | 217.0   | 193    | 97     | 81      | 102     | 106    |
| 1971 OAK MLB | 0      | 1      | 0       | 6.89     | 4      | 2       | 0       | 15.2    | 17     | 14     | 12      | 11      | 12     |
| 1972 TEX MLB | 13     | 15     | 0       | 2.85     | 34     | 34      | 10      | 255.0   | 197    | 85     | 81      | 94      | 164    |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 18     | 18     | 0       | 2.85     | 37     | 37      | 18      | 286.2   | 261    | 106    | 91      | 122     | 156    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
In his second full season in the league, Billy Crystal proved that he was a nice return for the 3-time All-Star Vince Akright, whom the team traded to the A's in the offseason of 71-2 for Crystal and reliever Doug Ellis (who I'll talk about in a second). Akright, as noted in the A's writeup, was typically great, but Crystal was no slouch himself. For better or for worse, the young comedian stayed in the game long enough to get the decision all but once on the season, leading the AL in complete games in the process. He's not the strikeout artist that "Dog" Daugharty is but he's reportedly spent some time in the clubhouse with the team ace learning his change-up. He'll want to work on controlling that and two other solid breaking pitches, a forkball and a curve, for strikes if he wants to become a star in this league.

Crystal did wear down from all the use, admittedly, finishing the season 1-5, 3.55 and 3-4, 3.78 as the team fell apart around him. At one point he was 14-7, 2.48, and that All-Star choice he got was much deserved. Crystal hypes himself up before entering games by telling himself that "you look mahvelous", which might be a bit but even if so it's endearing to fans. Still just 25 years of age, one more little move forward in his development makes him the top pitcher on this loaded staff.

Josh Damon
LF/RF No. 15
RR, 5'11" 195 lbs.
Born 1940-10-29
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ATL MLB | .259     | 122    | 459     | 61     | 119    | 18      | 1       | 18      | 61       | 44      | 67      | 3       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .261     | 115    | 387     | 48     | 101    | 12      | 3       | 13      | 47       | 37      | 42      | 2       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .264     | 118    | 435     | 53     | 115    | 22      | 5       | 8       | 43       | 30      | 40      | 11      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Damon, acquired from the Braves in exchange for left-handed closer Ron Shepherd (3-8, 3.86, 8 Sv), is currently Texas' oldest position player and, at 32, the 2nd oldest man on the roster to Tanzan Kihara. He's also one of the most consistent players in the league, hitting between .259 and .264 in each of the last 4 years. Texas, of course, would prefer he hit the way he did when he was a pinch-hitter and 5th outfielder in Atlanta (he hit .295 in 1970 in that role) but at this point I think it's fair to say that Damon is who he is.

Somehow Damon once upon a time earned the nickname "Dynamo" but there's really nothing hugely dynamic about his game. He's a good enough fielder to play some center if needs arose but with Norm Hodge as one of the best men in the game at the position, the needs didn't arise for that. Instead, he played some really, really nice left field, nice enough that he might have won the Gold Glove if I awarded it on a per-position basis instead of just handing it to the top 3 defensive outfielders in each league. Damon was one of three Rangers to top double figures in steals, albeit barely, and was... fine, I guess.

I wouldn't exactly call Josh Damon a leader per se but he's a good enough player that even with the diminishing power he should be able to do this for Texas for a few more years.

Chad Daugharty
SP No. 35, RR
6'4" 201 lbs.
Born 1945-03-01
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TEX MLB | 16     | 14     | 0       | 3.46     | 36     | 36      | 8       | 273.0   | 245    | 112    | 105     | 88      | 164    |
| 1972 TEX MLB | 18     | 10     | 0       | 2.36     | 34     | 34      | 15      | 266.0   | 223    | 74     | 70      | 77      | 144    |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 18     | 15     | 0       | 3.03     | 39     | 39      | 9       | 290.2   | 275    | 114    | 98      | 110     | 176    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Daugharty, as they like to say, has a bit of that "dog" in him. The right-hander was just a shade off of an amazing 1973 season but those 15 losses - the 2nd highest total of his career (Daugharty was 12-16, 3.62) was mostly due to his teammates not scoring enough runs for him. He continued to fool pitchers with one of the best change of pace balls in the league and he managed to buck a leaguewide trend and actually improve his K rate from 4.9 to 5.4. Those increased whiffs did come along with a career-worst 110 walks allowed that was partially due to his having thrown more innings than he ever had in the past but also the 3.4/9 rate was the worst of his career. That's still pretty good, though.

Daugharty does a good job of holding runners and had 10 men caught stealing under his watch in 25 attempts. He's not the best guy in the world at defending the bunt but then I guess he's not the worst either. He's not really the leader-y type, exactly, but when you're considered the first man up all year, you kind of are whether you like it or not. Look for another good, solid year for Daugharty in 1974 although he miiiight just lose his #1 starter mantle.

Donald Fagen
IF No. 14
RR, 5'12" 194 lbs.
Born 1948-01-10
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 BIR AA  | .270     | 59     | 233     | 28     | 63     | 13      | 0       | 3       | 19       | 22      | 32      | 1       |
| 1971 IOW AAA | .226     | 86     | 261     | 32     | 59     | 5       | 0       | 2       | 25       | 41      | 31      | 0       |
| 1972 BIR AA  | .296     | 24     | 81      | 13     | 24     | 1       | 0       | 1       | 7        | 20      | 9       | 1       |
| 1972 IOW AAA | .294     | 32     | 109     | 16     | 32     | 5       | 0       | 2       | 12       | 9       | 18      | 0       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .237     | 30     | 93      | 7      | 22     | 2       | 0       | 0       | 7        | 13      | 13      | 0       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .217     | 42     | 143     | 17     | 31     | 4       | 1       | 1       | 12       | 18      | 18      | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .179     | 73     | 173     | 13     | 31     | 3       | 1       | 2       | 13       | 12      | 24      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Just to show the great creator of this universe is not biased, Donald Fagen is the lead singer of the creator's favorite band ever (at least from this era) (until Queen shows up) but in-game he's a good-field no-hit utility infielder. Fagen hit nothing but singles last year and didn't hit very many singles. Scouts insist he could be a "fringe everyday player" but I just don't see how. Fagen does field well... enough to be a defensive replacement across the right side of the infield as well as left and center should the need allow (which it has not in Fagen's young major league career).

Hey, there's a use for a guy like this. If he comes back next year with 40 HR power or something, you'll know that the creator got tired.

William Faure
LF/RF No. 27
RL, 5'10" 176 lbs.
Born 1949-07-18
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ORL AA  | .297     | 56     | 175     | 23     | 52     | 3       | 0       | 4       | 16       | 22      | 22      | 2       |
| 1972 REN A   | .333     | 131    | 465     | 104    | 155    | 24      | 1       | 25      | 108      | 106     | 64      | 2       |
| 1972 SPO AAA | .095     | 5      | 21      | 1      | 2      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 2       | 2       | 0       |
| 1973 SPO AAA | .328     | 70     | 122     | 20     | 40     | 8       | 1       | 5       | 25       | 20      | 13      | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .227     | 21     | 66      | 8      | 15     | 0       | 0       | 2       | 7        | 8       | 11      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Every time I see this name I think of the guy who composed the Faure Requiem. But no, that's Gabriel Faure, who did his thing in the 19th century. This is William Faure, a (white) South African director most famous for doing the TV series "Shaka Zulu". There's not a massive amount of information out there not hidden behind paywalls so I can't really speak too much about him as a person, except that he did do work as an activist after "Shaka Zulu" before dying of kidney failure at only 45 years of age.

Here Faure is a corner outfielder with nice pop who, like Tom Petty, got rushed a bit and maybe didn't show all that he's capable of in the major leagues last year. He's a bit older than Petty and he's got those old man skills so he'd probably better show things quickly if he's going to stick around.

Andres Gamez
C No. 33
RR, 6'3" 203 lbs.
Born 1948-07-16
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ATL MLB | .318     | 81     | 173     | 22     | 55     | 6       | 1       | 5       | 32       | 15      | 30      | 1       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .278     | 121    | 449     | 41     | 125    | 16      | 1       | 5       | 44       | 20      | 73      | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .197     | 105    | 314     | 22     | 62     | 17      | 1       | 1       | 25       | 19      | 37      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Andres "Goofy" Gamez had a singularly awful season and should consider himself lucky - "lucky" - that his heir apparent John Bonham didn't hit either. The intent was definitely to use him and the switch-hitting Bonham in a semi-platoon situation where Gamez was supposed to still get most of the plate appearances. Problem was, Gamez hit just .172 last year against left-handed pitching. His average dipped all the way down to .163 as of June 6 and sent a message that hey, maybe it was time to use Bonham a bit more. Gamez hit .224 in June and .231 in July, still well below his production the previous two years but better. Then, given the chance to play more often again, he finished the year hitting .163.

In the past, Gamez has been adept at going with the pitch and concentrating more on getting the ball into gaps than ever hitting for power. What little power he had in the past just plain disappeared in Arlington Stadium last year and what used to be line drives or hard ground balls off his bat turned into a lot of pop-outs. Gamez still did a decent job of avoiding strikeouts but, like, is that really so great when the end result is a quiet out anyway? Defensively he's in the upper tier of catchers. He only threw out 28% of base-stealers last season but that was arguably due to his staff. He's not a guy to hype pitchers up but his calmness even when fans are screaming can be contagious.

Gamez has to be considered a backup going into this year. With John Bonham not exactly burning down the house last year, that's still an open question.

Dennis Green
3B/SS/OF No. 22
LR, 6'1" 209 lbs.
Born 1949-02-06
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 AND A   | .312     | 77     | 292     | 42     | 91     | 13      | 0       | 9       | 45       | 28      | 73      | 2       |
| 1971 PFD AA  | .375     | 5      | 16      | 2      | 6      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 3        | 5       | 3       | 0       |
| 1972 PFD AA  | .328     | 35     | 119     | 16     | 39     | 4       | 0       | 8       | 18       | 10      | 19      | 0       |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .323     | 45     | 167     | 27     | 54     | 13      | 0       | 6       | 23       | 23      | 36      | 1       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .248     | 65     | 210     | 27     | 52     | 13      | 0       | 7       | 35       | 37      | 44      | 0       |
| 1973 SPO AAA | .297     | 71     | 212     | 26     | 63     | 7       | 0       | 7       | 29       | 17      | 23      | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .200     | 33     | 70      | 8      | 14     | 4       | 0       | 1       | 5        | 8       | 18      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The big, burly Green was called up midseason to work a utility role for this team and promptly hit like a 140 pound weakling. Don't tell that to his face! A mid to late round pick in the 1971 draft (8th round, 180th overall), Green nevertheless pushed through the minors quickly and forced Texas to make a decision on him. Perhaps he even forced it too soon. He did look solid in 65 games last year so the Rangers were expecting more than this. He should bounce back. If he does, he should be able to man the infield and outfield corners and wield a good enough bat.

Roberto Hernandez
1B/3B No. 13
RR, 5'11" 201 lbs.
Born 1942-04-19
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CLE MLB | .252     | 63     | 127     | 13     | 32     | 6       | 1       | 4       | 25       | 7       | 17      | 0       |
| 1972 CLE MLB | .319     | 82     | 207     | 21     | 66     | 10      | 1       | 2       | 28       | 6       | 17      | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .269     | 150    | 579     | 64     | 156    | 22      | 4       | 14      | 81       | 13      | 66      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Roberto Hernandez was simply getting paid too much money to be a backup corner infielder and pinch-hitter and so Cleveland shipped him out as part of their big fire sale. Although Hernandez wasn't the biggest "get" for Texas this offseason, he was... fine. Batting 3rd or 5th most of the year, Hernandez finished 2nd on the team in homeruns and led the Rangers in RBIs in 1973. If the production was a little light for a first baseman, that's really more on the Rangers than on Hernandez, who's shown himself to be about capable of this level for a while now.

Hernandez swings at most anything that looks like it could one day be a strike. He's an especially big fan of pitches above the waist and on the inside half of the zone but he's not patient enough to wait for that particular pitch. He'll still get those just often enough to remind pitchers of his power. He's got a gun and really the only reason he's not the starting 3rd baseman is that the front office preferred to keep Bobby Ramirez in a regular, every day role. He's got good hands, which does well for him at either spot, and it's a lack of range that keeps him from playing the middle infield. For a guy who doesn't walk, he's awfully smart out there. I'm not saying he'll pull the hidden ball trick on someone, but he could.

Hernandez fills a role for this team. First base / DH is a prime spot for an upgrade, at least on paper, but Hernandez is clutch and gets the job done.

Norm Hodge
CF No. 4
LL, 6'0" 202 lbs.
Born 1941-10-18
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CAL MLB | .232     | 138    | 488     | 52     | 113    | 11      | 4       | 9       | 48       | 36      | 75      | 21      |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .206     | 116    | 437     | 38     | 90     | 7       | 3       | 2       | 20       | 26      | 71      | 15      |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .247     | 120    | 470     | 62     | 116    | 10      | 6       | 7       | 43       | 39      | 100     | 17      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Hodge had a nice bounce-back season off of a year that really made it look like his days in the major leagues are numbered. I mean, everybody's days are numbered but at least for Hodge it goes back to how long he'll continue to be an elite defensive centerfielder because he did just enough with the stick to justify everything. Hodge in fact had his best season since 1970, when he hit a perfectly adequate .260. Hodge is a slap hitter who sometimes forgets how he got into the major leagues, falls in love with the concept of the long ball, and swings through a lot of pitches. He doesn't really get on base enough to justify the Rangers sticking him in the leadoff spot - he did clear a .300 OBP at least (.305) and as a result also scored the most runs he's scored since that 1970 season.

Hodge isn't, like, "Death to Flying Things" levels of centerfield play but the 8 time Gold Glove Award winner is still very good, probably good enough to get number 9 in a couple weeks. He's still got excellent range - outstanding range, really, for a 31 year old - good hands and a great arm that led to 12 baserunner kills in center. Speed-wise he's not the demon on the paths that he used to be but 17/21 is pretty, pretty good for steals. About the only thing he can't do that you'd expect a guy with his skills to do is bunt: Hodge is just not good at it either to move runners along or to get on base himself.

Any year now you could see Hodge take that final step where he turns into a merely above average CF or a downright bad instead of just kind of below average hitter. Some thought it would be 1973 already.

Curtis Hope
OF No. 30
LR, 6'0" 195 lbs.
Born 1945-10-16
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 NYM MLB | .287     | 152    | 565     | 80     | 162    | 33      | 8       | 22      | 85       | 67      | 109     | 11      |
| 1972 NYM MLB | .211     | 145    | 508     | 55     | 107    | 21      | 4       | 7       | 46       | 56      | 130     | 22      |
| 1973 NYM MLB | .190     | 31     | 79      | 7      | 15     | 3       | 1       | 1       | 9        | 15      | 11      | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .224     | 21     | 58      | 5      | 13     | 3       | 0       | 0       | 7        | 4       | 12      | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
As recently as 1971 Curtis Hope was an All-Star with the Mets. Following a really horrible 1972 and a poor start to 73 that saw him lose his job to a young prospect, the Mets solid him off to the Rangers who might have secretly hoped that Hope was just in a long slump. It seems like no, that's not the case. Even if he did hit like hie did in 1970 and 1971, Hope isn't the defender that Norm Hodge is. What am I saying? If he hit like that, Texas would surely figure something out. He's only 27 so it can't be over yet.

Bill Iverson
CF No. 28
RR, 5'11" 188 lbs.
Born 1945-01-10
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 DEN AAA | .269     | 124    | 443     | 50     | 119    | 10      | 3       | 2       | 38       | 49      | 60      | 12      |
| 1971 TEX MLB | .167     | 4      | 12      | 1      | 2      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 1       | 3       | 0       |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .289     | 52     | 197     | 31     | 57     | 8       | 4       | 4       | 17       | 17      | 24      | 9       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .240     | 52     | 171     | 18     | 41     | 3       | 1       | 1       | 13       | 18      | 28      | 5       |
| 1973 SPO AAA | .300     | 56     | 140     | 10     | 42     | 3       | 0       | 1       | 9        | 11      | 22      | 1       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .213     | 26     | 80      | 6      | 17     | 1       | 0       | 0       | 7        | 6       | 14      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Every year Norm Hodge has a guy who comes in whose job it is to try and take Hodge's place, and every year, it seems, that guys falls off. In 1973 it was Bill Iverson, who followed up a "hey this looks good if you compare it to Hodge's 1972" type year with a season at the plate so bad that when the Rangers DFA'd him in July nobody snatched him up off the waiver wire. Iverson did hit .300 after being sent down, which is mostly a testament to small sample sizes.

Nate Kemp
MR No. 12
LL, 6'3" 201 lbs.
Born 1948-10-26
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 PFD AA  | 6      | 3      | 0       | 2.76     | 9      | 9       | 9       | 81.1    | 81     | 28     | 25      | 17      | 41     |
| 1971 DEN AAA | 10     | 9      | 0       | 3.60     | 22     | 22      | 13      | 179.2   | 179    | 77     | 72      | 44      | 90     |
| 1971 TEX MLB | 1      | 0      | 0       | 1.92     | 2      | 2       | 0       | 14.0    | 15     | 4      | 3       | 1       | 6      |
| 1972 DEN AAA | 6      | 10     | 0       | 3.94     | 17     | 17      | 12      | 139.0   | 149    | 63     | 61      | 27      | 70     |
| 1972 TEX MLB | 2      | 4      | 0       | 3.93     | 12     | 7       | 0       | 50.1    | 52     | 22     | 22      | 15      | 19     |
| 1973 SPO AAA | 4      | 3      | 0       | 2.12     | 8      | 8       | 5       | 67.2    | 63     | 17     | 16      | 12      | 25     |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 4      | 1      | 1       | 2.34     | 31     | 4       | 2       | 61.1    | 47     | 18     | 16      | 16      | 34     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Kemp made the 1973 All-Star Game, which is more of an indictment of what OOTP thinks of relief pitchers than a real endorsement of what he added to the Rangers. I mean, Kemp was great when he did pitch last year, don't get me wrong. He also got sent down to AAA Spokane shortly after his All-Star appearance and didn't pitch in the major leagues again after that point until rosters expanded in September, when he appeared as a lefty specialist 3 times and allowed more runs (2) than innings pitched (1.2).

Kemp's still just 24 and the fact that he pitched so much in relief was due less to any lack of stamina or pitches that can carry him through games and more of a straight-up numbers game. When he did get the chance to start in the majors, he was excellent: 3-1, 1.67 with 2 complete games and a shutout in 4 starts in June and July. Really, you've got to look at this guy as a starter next year, either with these Texas Rangers or with a new team after Texas send him out to shore up something on their offense. Pr they'll keep him. Yeah, look at me, Mister Commitment. It's just, he's the only lefty in the bullpen and this team needs a lefty reliever something awful.

Tanzan Kihara
CL No. 17
SR, 6'2" 200 lbs.
Born 1940-09-20
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CAL MLB | 2      | 7      | 10      | 3.49     | 54     | 0       | 0       | 77.1    | 78     | 33     | 30      | 18      | 71     |
| 1972 CAL MLB | 8      | 8      | 18      | 3.69     | 54     | 0       | 0       | 70.2    | 62     | 30     | 29      | 28      | 57     |
| 1973 CAL MLB | 0      | 1      | 7       | 1.19     | 11     | 0       | 0       | 15.0    | 13     | 2      | 2       | 5       | 8      |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 1      | 3      | 18      | 3.40     | 35     | 0       | 0       | 42.1    | 40     | 19     | 16      | 7       | 35     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Kihara seemed like the last piece to lock up this pitching staff when the Rangers acquired him from California along with Bobby Ramirez for 1B Chris Seek (.333. 15. 91), SP Bernd Eichinger (4-2, 2.15) and OF prospect Douglas Adams (.242, 5, 18 in AA El Paso). That trade cost them a pretty penny - Seek led the AL in batting - but with Ramirez we'd say the return was worth it. Kihara converted 18 out of 20 saves, struck out 7.4 batters per 9 innings, and "the Berserker" ("Beruserkeru" in Japanese) mostly looked the part as the high-octane late-inning stopper.

Kihara throws gas which he mixes with a 12-to-6 curve that keeps hitters from sending everything they can make contact with out of the park. Arlington probably helps out a bit too. He still allowed 6 HRs in 42.1 IP during his time in Texas - 5 of those dingers were on the road! - so this was and is an issue for the 33 year old. His 25 saves combined were far and away a career high; Kihara, who came up with the Angels all the way back in 1963, wasn't even really considered for the closer role until midway through 71. At this point, the Rangers will probably ride him for as long as that fastball holds up.

Michael Luna
SS No. 25
RR, 6'3" 200 lbs.
Born 1947-11-05
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 PFD AA  | .241     | 68     | 228     | 34     | 55     | 13      | 6       | 4       | 21       | 34      | 45      | 1       |
| 1971 DEN AAA | .255     | 63     | 216     | 28     | 55     | 15      | 0       | 3       | 27       | 33      | 37      | 1       |
| 1971 TEX MLB | .203     | 25     | 74      | 6      | 15     | 5       | 0       | 0       | 8        | 10      | 16      | 0       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .230     | 136    | 440     | 43     | 101    | 14      | 4       | 7       | 38       | 47      | 86      | 2       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .224     | 139    | 402     | 42     | 90     | 13      | 2       | 4       | 42       | 41      | 79      | 6       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
In 1972 Luna played the part of a back of the lineup hitter with a solid glove at short well enough to win a trip to the All-Star Game... somehow. I'm still having a hard time seeing it. Last year, when the rest of the league rebounded from a big off year offensively, Luna was maybe a touch worse than he'd been, dropping from "I guess that's good enough" to "oh wow no". Right when the team needed him the most, too, Luna hit just .182 in that terrible Texas August.

If he gets right - or maybe he just has to get good, period - Luna was kind of sort of close to a league average hitter in '72, which is good for a shortstop. He also had a bit of an off season in the field, speaking of which, with under 100 DPs turned (95) in 132 starts and a negative ZR (which hey let's pretend that's a thing people know about in the 70s) along with 18 errors. He's a guy you ideally want to kind of set and forget in his role, which isn't so great if he's not good enough to start. For now though, it's either him or Donald Fagen and somehow even Luna's a better hiter than that. He's currently one of the few Rangers who played in Washington, which is saying something about the roster turnover.

Robert Mchugh
MR/CL No. 19
RR, 6'0" 174 lbs.
Born 1946-12-22
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TUL AAA | 6      | 13     | 0       | 2.73     | 22     | 22      | 10      | 171.0   | 132    | 74     | 52      | 91      | 119    |
| 1971 STL MLB | 0      | 2      | 0       | 4.60     | 9      | 2       | 0       | 27.1    | 24     | 14     | 14      | 14      | 25     |
| 1972 DEN AAA | 15     | 9      | 0       | 3.45     | 26     | 26      | 9       | 200.2   | 169    | 79     | 77      | 62      | 214    |
| 1972 TEX MLB | 4      | 1      | 0       | 2.21     | 6      | 6       | 2       | 44.2    | 28     | 11     | 11      | 13      | 44     |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 15     | 15     | 0       | 3.44     | 34     | 34      | 12      | 251.0   | 225    | 112    | 96      | 95      | 170    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Someone's got to be the #4 starter on this team. Truth be told, Robert "The Rat" McHugh would be the #1 starter for a lot of clubs. Like Billy Crystal, he got used pretty heavily in the first half and like Crystal he kind of fell apart in the 2nd. Following a 4-1 win at the Brewers on July 8, the Rat was 11-6, 3.18. He finished that month 2-2 with 2 no-decisions and then went 2-5, 3.40 and 1-5, 3.43 over the final 2 months, turning what was looking like a good first full year into just another .500 season.

McHugh posted a nearly 2-1 K/W ratio on the basis of a splitter that hitters tend to miss instead of top out - he had a GB rate of just 44% last year - and a fastball that moves a lot and is trickier than the high-80s velo might suggest. The K rate was actually 4th in the league. He's got the reputation for holding runners well but man oh man the stats do not back that up: he allowed 18 out of 23 would-be base thieves to get their new sack.

McHugh is another Senators/Rangers acquisition, being part of the trade that sent Raul Mendoza (17-12, 3.14) to St. Louis. Mendoza has turned into the staff ace in the Gateway City but as a salary dump for an owner looking to sell his team, this move still worked out pretty, pretty well.

Billy Munoz
MR No. 3
RR, 6'1" 200 lbs.
Born 1941-06-11
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 STL MLB | 10     | 6      | 24      | 2.69     | 67     | 0       | 0       | 100.1   | 86     | 30     | 30      | 35      | 80     |
| 1972 STL MLB | 6      | 6      | 17      | 3.29     | 57     | 0       | 0       | 87.1    | 76     | 39     | 32      | 39      | 50     |
| 1973 STL MLB | 3      | 0      | 3       | 3.17     | 17     | 0       | 0       | 22.2    | 25     | 8      | 8       | 7       | 14     |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 2      | 2      | 1       | 2.76     | 21     | 2       | 0       | 39.0    | 41     | 13     | 12      | 18      | 15     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
My memory of this guy was as a journeyman and I guess in retrospect that's true: in 9 years in the league, Munoz has played for 5 different teams. On the other hand, he is a middle reliever / sometimes closer, which is a job prone to lots of travel, and he did manage to settle down for the previous 2 1/2 seasons before the Rangers snatched him away from the Cards for "The Nuge" Ted Nugent (1-2, 5.73) and a middle infield prospect. I also remember this guy being kind of hot and cold but truth be told he's been kind of consistent. In Texas, freed from worries of the longball, he posted a sub-2.00 ERA in spite of looking kind bad (0-1, 4.72) in his 2 starts.

The Rangers, presumably, have learned the lesson to not use this guy, who I guess technically can throw three pitches (a 2-seam fastball, a change, and a slider, although the change only comes out when he has to pitch more than an inning), in the starter role. If anything, his success in the middle relief role might entice them to use their pen more in general.

Kojiro Nakazawa
POS No. 18
RR, 6'1" 193 lbs.
Born 1946-06-12
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 BOS MLB | 5      | 3      | 2       | 3.21     | 28     | 6       | 0       | 75.2    | 65     | 30     | 27      | 14      | 54     |
| 1972 NYY MLB | 3      | 8      | 11      | 4.47     | 41     | 0       | 0       | 50.1    | 55     | 26     | 25      | 13      | 35     |
| 1972 TEX MLB | 1      | 0      | 0       | 2.25     | 4      | 0       | 0       | 4.0     | 4      | 1      | 1       | 0       | 3      |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 6      | 3      | 8       | 4.22     | 41     | 1       | 0       | 55.1    | 45     | 26     | 26      | 17      | 37     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Nakazawa started the year as the team's closer and if you wanted a reason as to why the starters pitched so much... well, here's your answer. The 27 yaer old Japanese national wasn't so much wall-to-wall terrible as he was just terribly inconsistent. A 1-0, 4 save, 0.82 April gave way to a 0-2, 3 save, 9.00 May (6 ER in 6 IP over 7 appearances). after which he gave the job up to Tanzan Kihara. 3 solid months followed but then Nakazawa ended the year with an 0-1, 15.88 (12 runs, 10 earned, in 5.2 IP) September.

As a reliever, Nakazawa mixes low to mid 90s heat with a solid enough slider. He hasn't started in a couple years now but he's got a couple of change of pace pitches he mixes in when that happens. Last year that slider sometimes didn't slide and the fastball, while good, just isn't the kind of pitch he can rely on all by itself. He also throws from a steep angle and might be more suited as a guy who faces righty hitters only. That's, um, not a role in the 1970s so instead Nakazawa might find himself out of a job if he can't figure things out.

Tom Petty
OF No. 56
LL, 5'10" 172 lbs.
Born 1950-10-25
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1972 PAR R   | .354     | 74     | 268     | 59     | 95     | 16      | 3       | 13      | 55       | 64      | 50      | 17      |
| 1973 SPO AAA | .298     | 107    | 383     | 57     | 114    | 11      | 10      | 9       | 33       | 55      | 74      | 3       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .252     | 41     | 119     | 10     | 30     | 4       | 1       | 3       | 15       | 24      | 20      | 2       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Man, you want to talk about a young man fast-tracked to the major leagues, look no further than the 4th overall pick in the 1972 draft, Tom "The Heartbreaker" Petty. He went into rookie ball right out of college (look, in this universe Tom Petty went to college COOL IT), went all the way up into AAA to open the season, and after a monster half season the Rangers called him up at the end of July... where, okay, he stopped looking quite so amazing. Come on now. The kid doesn't even turn 23 until the 25th of this month. Be a bit patient.

Petty played a bunch of centerfield in the minors, enough to convince the organization that Norm Hodge's job is safe for now (at least from a Petty-sized challenge). He's got decent range for a corner guy although his arm probably slots him into left field if not DH. He's also flashed good speed, albeit with less than great judgment - in 1972 he stole 17 bases in 36 attempts down in the rookie leagues. He works as hard as he sings and Tom Petty sings hard. Pretty soon you can expect to see baseballs free falling off his bat and he won't back down. Okay, I'll stop now.

Bobby Ramirez
3B No. 29
LR, 5'12" 189 lbs.
Born 1947-11-27
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CLE MLB | .344     | 142    | 515     | 84     | 177    | 20      | 10      | 15      | 67       | 66      | 54      | 32      |
| 1972 CLE MLB | .241     | 132    | 435     | 62     | 105    | 10      | 9       | 13      | 56       | 52      | 47      | 27      |
| 1973 CAL MLB | .368     | 33     | 114     | 20     | 42     | 7       | 0       | 4       | 12       | 23      | 11      | 8       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .312     | 119    | 445     | 68     | 139    | 26      | 7       | 8       | 49       | 67      | 40      | 28      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Bobby Ramirezx and Roberto Hernandez are... just linked somehow. Ramirez won the third base job in Cleveland over Hernandez in 1971, pushing the vet to backup corner infield duties, until he was moved along to Texas at the beginning of the year. Well... Ramirez was also moved off in the big fire sale, only to California in exchange for 2B Mauricio Mendez (.247, 10, 43). Really, this was a cost-cutting move more than anything else; nobody is ever going to mistake Mendez for the Ghost Runner. Hernandez' time alone in Texas lasted just a month and a half as the Rangers pulled off a blockbuster trade with the Angels in which they received both Ramirez and Tanzan Kihara for Chris Seek and prospects.

I'd say the trade worked out really, really well for the Rangers. Although Ramirez, the 1971 AL batting champ, lost out this year to Seek, he still finished 2nd in the league with a .327 average and - especially notable on a team with so many agressive hitters - led the AL in on-base percentage with a .415 mark. He also finished in the top 10 in hits (181, 9th), total bases (264, 10th), walks (90, 7th), and OPS (.888, 3rd). His numbers aren't necessarily MVP-like but he could legitimately make a case for best player in baseball. The one real downside of Ramirez, I guess, is that he's only kind of an average fielder; if the Rangers keep Roberto Hernandez on, they'll probably flip-flop their positions (in Cleveland, of course, first was occupied by one Ernesto Garcia).

Ramirez, true to his nickname, loves to run, and has a pretty extensive program he follows in the offseason. It must be nice! Somehow he never went to the All-Star Game before this season. Surely this won't be the last time.

Geoffrey Rush
2B No. 16
RR, 5'11" 176 lbs.
Born 1950-06-08
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 WIL A   | .333     | 1      | 3       | 1      | 1      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 0       | 0       | 0       |
| 1971 AND A   | .315     | 62     | 248     | 40     | 78     | 13      | 6       | 2       | 24       | 20      | 44      | 14      |
| 1972 PFD AA  | .303     | 80     | 310     | 34     | 94     | 9       | 7       | 6       | 29       | 34      | 28      | 11      |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .333     | 48     | 192     | 30     | 64     | 9       | 1       | 7       | 29       | 11      | 27      | 4       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .303     | 18     | 66      | 12     | 20     | 4       | 2       | 2       | 7        | 2       | 8       | 3       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .317     | 137    | 536     | 73     | 170    | 30      | 12      | 10      | 54       | 28      | 69      | 8       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Geoffrey Rush was lowkey not just a good, promising rookie, he was arguably the second best player on the team in 1973. No, it's not an argument, it's just a fact. Your classic 2 hole hitting second baseman, Rush finished 5th in the league in average and triples and led the team in hits, runs, and, somehow, slugging percentage. Rush even finished the year hitting .362 in August and .337 in September - no fatigue from this guy!

I don't *think* Rush's 1972 counts as his rookie season so he's a great choice for ROY of 1973. Everything that comes off his bat is a line drive and his swing seems especially well made for Arlington Stadium with all the long hits into both the right-center and left-center gaps. He's decently fast but was just 8/16 last year in steals. That might be a bit lower than it ought to be thanks to the Rangers trying to generate offense with the hit and run but still, that's not the greatest percentage. He's a very good fielder, maybe a touch worse than teammate Donald Fagen but pretty solid in his own right with plus range and a good knack for the pivot.

People often tell Rush he looks familiar, which I guess is a good quality to have for an actor. As a second baseman, he finds baseballs familiar I got nothin'. He went to the All-Star Game this year and could punch his ticket to 10 more if things play out right.

Amir Sudler
MR No. 6
RR, 5'12" 181 lbs.
Born 1945-06-15
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 SLC AAA | 2      | 1      | 0       | 1.66     | 17     | 3       | 1       | 43.1    | 25     | 10     | 8       | 33      | 30     |
| 1971 CAL MLB | 0      | 0      | 0       | 5.40     | 2      | 0       | 0       | 1.2     | 1      | 1      | 1       | 0       | 1      |
| 1972 SLC AAA | 2      | 1      | 2       | 2.84     | 18     | 0       | 0       | 19.0    | 19     | 6      | 6       | 12      | 7      |
| 1972 CAL MLB | 2      | 1      | 0       | 2.99     | 16     | 0       | 0       | 21.0    | 16     | 7      | 7       | 7       | 16     |
| 1973 STL MLB | 1      | 1      | 0       | 4.22     | 12     | 2       | 0       | 27.2    | 29     | 15     | 13      | 25      | 18     |
| 1973 TEX MLB | 0      | 2      | 0       | 6.55     | 7      | 2       | 0       | 23.1    | 16     | 17     | 17      | 16      | 11     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Following a pretty decent 1972, Sudler found himself on 3 teams in 1973 and he really had a rough time of it. The Cards purchased him from the Angels at the end of spring training, intending to use him as swing-man but he didn't exactly excel in the role, so come July they shipped him off to the Rangers in exchange for AAAA journeyman Garrett Elser (0-2, 4.20 combined). Elser wasn't a success in St. Louis but Sudler was a disaster in Texas. He's gone through stretches in the past where he can't get hitters to swing at his forkball. When this happens and they start keying in on his sinker, the result is a lot of walks and, since they're undercutting more than you'd expect, a lot of HRs too. Sudler allowed 5 in just 23.1 Rangers innings last year.

1974 will be a real make-it-or-break-it year for the 28 year old. His splits are kind of crazy - even though lefties hit only .237 against him (.234 vs righties), he allowed all 6 of his HRs against that side and a .500 SLG (all six of those HRs were on the road as well). Conclusion? This team needs a lefty specialist. Or at least Nate Kemp needs to get used a lot more...

Philippe Toussaint
RF/LF No. 11
LL, 6'2" 203 lbs.
Born 1949-06-25
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 WH A    | .243     | 50     | 185     | 19     | 45     | 5       | 4       | 5       | 21       | 25      | 36      | 5       |
| 1971 GAS A   | .223     | 28     | 103     | 10     | 23     | 4       | 1       | 1       | 6        | 8       | 18      | 0       |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .360     | 24     | 86      | 11     | 31     | 3       | 3       | 2       | 13       | 11      | 15      | 2       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .268     | 103    | 332     | 43     | 89     | 13      | 7       | 8       | 38       | 41      | 56      | 4       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .284     | 146    | 514     | 69     | 146    | 26      | 13      | 14      | 72       | 60      | 80      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Philippe Toussaint, a young Belgian who plays golf in his spare time, followed up a solid rookie season with a sophomore year that wasn't a slump at all. In fact it was good enough to earn Toussaint his first trip to the All-Star Game. It doesn't look like much but he was pretty clearly the team's #3 player on a very stars-and-scrubs lineup. It'd almost be easier to list the team stats Toussaint didn't finish 3rd in. If he didn't hit .222 in August... well, then he wouldn't be a Texas Ranger, now would he?

Toussaint swings hard like a slugger but hasn't developed the power yet. It's hard to say whether he'll find that or not. As it stands, though, he'll gladly take a base and seems destined for a lineup slot near the top of the order, or at least higher up than 7th, where he spent most of last year. Toussaint's solid, if not necessarily special, as a right fielder. A first step is apparently not something you learn from golf. He's got decent speed though to make up for that. A potentially bigger issue is some stony hands last year: he had 9 errors in 149 games in right for a .967 fielding average. He also didn't learn to bunt in Belgium... but why would you ask this man to bunt?

Toussaint seems pretty content finding his fame as a golfer and not a baseballist. If he doesn't watch out he might find fame in both.

Jimmy Washington
DH/RF No. 34
LL, 5'11" 202 lbs.
Born 1943-04-25
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 NYM MLB | .254     | 119    | 456     | 62     | 116    | 22      | 1       | 17      | 66       | 29      | 69      | 0       |
| 1972 NYM MLB | .100     | 17     | 50      | 3      | 5      | 0       | 0       | 1       | 1        | 8       | 4       | 0       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .271     | 135    | 498     | 60     | 135    | 24      | 2       | 19      | 75       | 50      | 60      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Hey, it wasn't thaaat long ago that Jimmy "Olsen" Washington was the big second banana on the Miracle Mets of 1969 team. Hitting behind Joshua "Superman" Waltenbery that year, Washington hit .290, slugged 29 homers, and drove in 113 batters, all of which were career highs. At the time there was hope this was a new normal. Since then, Washington has pretty well slid into a high teens HRs guy with a decent amount of clutch hitting. Following an injury-interrupted 1972 the Mets bid adieu to Washington and he kept doing the same thing he's been doing in Texas, save the last three weeks of the year that he missed with a back injury.

Washington tantalizes you by showing an ability to hit the ball in any part of the zone and striking out less than you'd expect a middle of the lineup slugger to strike out. Sadly, he just hits the ball really hard to second base insteead - he grounded into 22 double plays last year. After years of the Mets just kind of living with his fielding, Washington made the transition to the new DH position and not only didn't look mediocre in the field anymore, he also for the most part avoided injury.

Washington turned 30 this year, which sounds about right. It seems... unlikely that he'll make it to another All-Star Game unless things turn back around in a big hurry, but hey, maybe playing at the new "designated hitter" position will do that. In the meantime, he'll need to deal with a sudden glut of good young Texas players at the corner outfield spots.
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Old 01-15-2026, 12:49 PM   #323
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Atlanta Braves (83-78, 2nd NL West)

1973 Recap: Atlanta had gone in winning 3 out of the past 4 division championships in the West but something was really amiss: they'd won just 81 in 1972 and weren't really looking like that was going to be an outlier year. And as it turned out, it wasn't. The Braves finished 2nd but were very rarely ever in the actual lead, mostly going behind San Francisco early before they completely fell apart and then at the end of the year San Diego just ran away with things. The once-vaunted offense seemed beatable and the pitching, while better than it has been, was just plain not enough to make up for that.

1974 Outlook: Rumors are swirling that Atlanta is trying to deal away RF Henry Riggs, the all-time HR leader who has missed significant time over the last two years. If he goes, will the Braves embark on a full-scale rebuilding effort? Or will they try to be just good enough to contend yet again?

Michael Lee Aday
OF No. 9
LL, 5'10" 193 lbs.
Born 1947-12-01
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAV AA  | .247     | 88     | 275     | 35     | 68     | 14      | 5       | 2       | 22       | 27      | 59      | 8       |
| 1971 RIC AAA | .246     | 17     | 65      | 10     | 16     | 0       | 1       | 1       | 7        | 15      | 5       | 5       |
| 1971 ATL MLB | .000     | 7      | 7       | 1      | 0      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 0       | 2       | 0       |
| 1972 RIC AAA | .266     | 31     | 109     | 16     | 29     | 5       | 0       | 4       | 12       | 13      | 19      | 5       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .281     | 93     | 349     | 38     | 98     | 17      | 3       | 2       | 32       | 33      | 50      | 13      |
| 1973 RIC AAA | .230     | 52     | 200     | 27     | 46     | 7       | 2       | 5       | 13       | 22      | 28      | 7       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .229     | 34     | 131     | 14     | 30     | 3       | 1       | 2       | 5        | 8       | 11      | 2       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Following a promising rookie year in 1972, Aday, better known to the kids as "Meat Loaf", had the kind of rough sophomore season that removes you from the up and comers list. In his case, all the gap power he exhibited in 1972 just kind of went away and didn't even return when he got sent down to AAA Richmond. Aday is a guy who really needs to hit in the .280s to be a net positive for his team in centerfield, as he doesn't possess great range, and he lacks the power for the corners so at this point it looks like his future career is as a tweener/4th or 5th outfielder. It's a little early in his career to resign him to a pinch-hitting career - also, pinch-hitters need to, you know, hit - but that seems closer to his career trajectory than starting.

This is I'm sure something I've said 8,000 times already but 1974 is a real make or break season for Meat Loaf.

Pedro Almodovar
SS/IF No. 10
RR, 5'9" 168 lbs.
Born 1949-09-29
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAV AA  | .324     | 41     | 139     | 16     | 45     | 7       | 1       | 3       | 23       | 11      | 18      | 2       |
| 1971 RIC AAA | .256     | 36     | 121     | 17     | 31     | 5       | 2       | 2       | 21       | 12      | 16      | 3       |
| 1972 RIC AAA | .238     | 89     | 344     | 33     | 82     | 9       | 1       | 5       | 33       | 18      | 58      | 1       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .191     | 26     | 68      | 4      | 13     | 0       | 2       | 0       | 6        | 7       | 13      | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .254     | 118    | 355     | 34     | 90     | 17      | 1       | 2       | 41       | 32      | 43      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Almodovar leapt through the minor leagues after being drafted in the 3rd round in the 1971 draft. A rough September trial in 1972 notwithstanding, he manned the shortstop position more or less capably, taking more and more PAs as the season progressed. In August you could even say he looked great - .333/1/5 with 9 runs scored in 60 at-bats.

Almodovar's biggest asset is a plus-plus glove that will almost certainly win him multiple Gold Gloves if he's allowed to play enough to earn them. The only downside to his defensive game is an only good arm; everything else - his hands, his range, and his ability to pivot - are great. Offensively it's a different story: he doesn't look like Jon Timonen out there (who was a member of this Braves team for a while!) but he's never going to be even a league average hitter. Somehow he stole 31 bases in his senior year in college but that speed seems to have stayed in the academic world.

Almodovar thinks he's the best thing since... tapas (look, he's Spanish). He might not be all that but he is, um, a bag of chips.

Wolf Blitzer
RF/LF No. 67
LL, 6'4" 201 lbs.
Born 1948-03-22
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAV AA  | .277     | 56     | 159     | 22     | 44     | 13      | 4       | 7       | 26       | 29      | 34      | 0       |
| 1971 RIC AAA | .223     | 54     | 166     | 17     | 37     | 6       | 1       | 0       | 28       | 32      | 29      | 2       |
| 1972 RIC AAA | .314     | 76     | 274     | 35     | 86     | 10      | 0       | 17      | 52       | 28      | 44      | 1       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .322     | 49     | 115     | 18     | 37     | 4       | 2       | 7       | 23       | 11      | 20      | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .263     | 102    | 266     | 33     | 70     | 7       | 1       | 6       | 27       | 34      | 32      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
It was way past time to take Henry Riggs out of right field but is Wolf Blitzer really the long-term solution? The positives: he does have the arm for right field. Last year he hit well over .300 at 2 different levels including the major leagues. He's got some pop in his bat and can draw a walk. But the negatives: last year showed what's probably a truer level of his actual contact hitting ability, he's not particularly fast on the bases or in the field, and he profiles as more of a league average / platoon situation guy than a future Hall of Famer.

Blitzer has got some big, big shoes to fill. I don't think he's really going to fill them if I'm being honest.

T.C. Boyle
CF/OF No. 4
RR, 6'2" 195 lbs.
Born 1948-11-29
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAV AA  | .220     | 96     | 309     | 42     | 68     | 14      | 7       | 9       | 32       | 41      | 81      | 14      |
| 1971 RIC AAA | .283     | 12     | 46      | 12     | 13     | 3       | 0       | 2       | 5        | 9       | 10      | 2       |
| 1972 SAV AA  | .275     | 19     | 69      | 11     | 19     | 10      | 0       | 1       | 11       | 19      | 13      | 6       |
| 1972 RIC AAA | .200     | 56     | 145     | 19     | 29     | 4       | 4       | 7       | 21       | 14      | 41      | 4       |
| 1973 RIC AAA | .282     | 11     | 39      | 6      | 11     | 2       | 0       | 2       | 4        | 2       | 10      | 3       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .257     | 83     | 288     | 48     | 74     | 13      | 3       | 6       | 32       | 45      | 70      | 16      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Boyle was unspectacular but had good, solid production in his first full season in the major leagues, a season that saw him take over the starting CF more and more as the year progressed. Boyle has the speed to profile as a future leadoff guy, although that lack of a good ability to make consistent contact with the ball is a real shortcoming at that spot. On the other hand, he's shown signs of being really patient at the plate when he isn't choosing to make a big swing and poke a ball over the fence in Atlanta. He's also a solid, if not amazing, defensive center fielder and definitely an upgrade over a bunch of the other things the Braves stuck in the outfield last year.

Boyle works hard and should be a regular in this lineup next year and for years to come afterwards.

Felix Carranza
SP No. 31
RR, 6'0" 184 lbs.
Born 1944-04-21
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 ATL MLB | 16     | 9      | 0       | 3.92     | 35     | 32      | 8       | 238.2   | 247    | 108    | 104     | 75      | 138    |
| 1972 ATL MLB | 16     | 11     | 0       | 3.14     | 35     | 35      | 11      | 257.1   | 236    | 104    | 90      | 75      | 155    |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 11     | 14     | 0       | 4.02     | 34     | 33      | 6       | 228.0   | 256    | 113    | 102     | 69      | 131    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Felix Carranza has been a model of consistency since the Braves stopped trying to make him a reliever in 1970... well, at least when it comes to being there. The past 3+ years he's been on the mound every 4th day, both willing and able to pitch 6 or 7 innings before giving the ball up to the relief corps. Last year Carranza, who normally has pretty good control, started missing out over the strike zone and as a result he gave up a career high as well as a league high 39 home runs. That also led him to his worst ERA since 1970.

Carranza throws six pitches for strikes. Some would say he should concentrate on fewer but the past couple years it could be said that this was working for him and so one shouldn't mess with it. His fastball gets into the low 90s but is kind of straight and so he really does have to rely on a "wide variety" - his detractors would say slop - to get things done. He has one of the best pickoff moves in the game. He's not a super great fielder, although he only committed 2 errors last year, and as a hitter he's... fine, actually; last year, he hit for a .200 average which, trust me, is good for a guy like this.

Carranza seems destined to sit in the back of this Braves rotation or even find himself in a swingman situation if they decide they like one of their prospects. He's a guy who will be a Brave until the team decides they don't need him anymore.

Ernesto Carrillo
CL No. 21
RR, 6'6" 202 lbs.
Born 1944-01-31
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 NYM MLB | 21     | 10     | 0       | 3.16     | 39     | 39      | 8       | 289.2   | 219    | 109    | 102     | 156     | 252    |
| 1972 NYM MLB | 9      | 15     | 1       | 4.02     | 32     | 30      | 3       | 208.0   | 160    | 105    | 93      | 145     | 186    |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 5      | 4      | 19      | 3.48     | 58     | 2       | 0       | 85.1    | 74     | 37     | 33      | 41      | 58     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Carillo, a 2 time 20 game winner for the Mets, came to the Braves last November and transitioned to the bullpen for this team, where it was believed that his wild tendencies would be more of an asset than a liability. His K rate dipped, although everyone's did so maybe that's not so bad, and he went 19 for 24 in save tries, which is... good for the era, I guess? He still seems kind of volatile but hey, volatile is kind of what you want in a closer, right? Right?

Carillo is in the prime of his career and throws gas, although he doesn't throw a 4 seamer so the MPH looks a little lower (he does throw both a cut and a sinking fastball). His big out pitch is a filthy slider that, as a reliever, he's able to throw a larger percentage of the time now. As noted, control has always been an issue; the 4.1 BB/9 he allowed last year was a career low for Carillo and of course as a relief pitcher he was never going to lead the league in wild pitches the way he did 2 of the previous 3 years (with over 20 both of those seasons!). He's only average at holding runners and his hard throwing motion leaves him way off balance in the field when it comes to come-backers to the mound.

Carillo is not the brightest tool in the shed when it comes to the thinking man's game of baseball and it was considered that just sticking him in a role where he could throw nothing but smoke would be good for him. So far, it's been... okay at least. You'd love to see him get back to that comnbined 41-22 record he posted back in 1970-71 but it seems like the Braves are pretty content with keeping him in this role.

William Jefferson Clinton
3B/SS No. 6
RR, 5'11" 201 lbs.
Born 1946-05-20
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 RIC AAA | .256     | 65     | 223     | 34     | 57     | 9       | 3       | 2       | 29       | 34      | 30      | 3       |
| 1971 ATL MLB | .250     | 28     | 60      | 4      | 15     | 4       | 0       | 0       | 7        | 3       | 5       | 0       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .229     | 93     | 288     | 27     | 66     | 6       | 7       | 3       | 24       | 33      | 56      | 4       |
| 1973 RIC AAA | .231     | 102    | 308     | 29     | 71     | 8       | 0       | 12      | 35       | 21      | 73      | 3       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .182     | 27     | 77      | 7      | 14     | 2       | 1       | 1       | 7        | 14      | 15      | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
WELP this is where it can get problematic to name players after real-life people. UM. Bill Clinton at least doesn't seem like he's going to be around too terribly long for me to have to write about him and avoid "jokes" about Epstein or whatever. He's 27 years old now, failed in an August and September shot at third base, and doesn't really have a great role with this team. The scouts note that he comes to camp in great shape, which is kind of funny, right? If he hit a little better he coul be a pretty decent utility infielder if the team didn't already have a couple of those guys already.

Will Clinton even be on this team in 1974? The world may never know (the world will know by Opening Day).

Kevin Dwyer
2B No. 2
RR, 5'12" 193 lbs.
Born 1939-02-17
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ATL MLB | .314     | 125    | 509     | 89     | 160    | 29      | 5       | 19      | 77       | 44      | 47      | 1       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .329     | 137    | 516     | 91     | 170    | 29      | 4       | 18      | 77       | 65      | 49      | 2       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .290     | 143    | 576     | 68     | 167    | 34      | 1       | 12      | 71       | 59      | 70      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Dwyer is a 12 time All-Star and future Hall of Famer who's still in the prime of his career. Even though his runs and RBI totals were the lowest since the Year of the Pitcher in 1968 he was still a mainstay and stabilizing force in a Braves lineup that experienced a lot of turmoil in 1973. Back issues impeded his play in April and June and ultimately a .230 average in that second month kept his yearly BA under .300 for the first time since 1967.

Dwyer's always been a guy who dives in early and often at pitches. This past year he swung and missed at pitches more often than ever before, although the 15 of those career high 70 strikeouts came during that hard June and the Braves feel that he'll be back to normal in 1974. Perhaps Atlanta would be better suited sitting him when such flare-ups arise but on the other hand he's a hard guy to take out of the lineup. Dwyer used to have 20+ HR power and even belted 30 dingers in 1970 (how he didn't win the MVP that year, I don't even know) but that seems to be a thing of the past now, not that 12-18 HRs a year is anything for your average second baseman to sneeze at.

If there's any real sign that Dwyer is starting to get old, it's in his fielding. Dwyer has never been a fantastic second baseman but he really struggled afield in 1973, committing 20 errors (to be fair he's committed as many as 33 in a year in years past) and lacking some of the range that made up for an erratic arm. He's never been a threat to steal and that's not something that stands to change as he gets into his mid 30s. Dwyer has never laid down a sacrifice bunt in his entire big-league career and probably isn't going to start now.

You'd assume that a return to a more set lineup in 1974 will cause Dwyer's clutch numbers to climb back up. He's the Braves' team captain and is instrumental to any offensive success that they have.

Frank Evans
SP No. 33
RR, 6'1" 187 lbs.
Born 1948-02-10
Code:
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 PEN AAA | 9      | 10     | 0       | 2.68     | 22     | 22      | 13      | 191.1   | 160    | 70     | 57      | 83      | 79     |
| 1971 MON MLB | 3      | 4      | 0       | 3.89     | 9      | 9       | 1       | 62.1    | 61     | 33     | 27      | 21      | 29     |
| 1972 MON MLB | 14     | 9      | 0       | 2.73     | 32     | 28      | 7       | 214.0   | 188    | 71     | 65      | 85      | 102    |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 11     | 15     | 0       | 3.40     | 31     | 31      | 10      | 222.1   | 197    | 89     | 84      | 110     | 121    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Atlanta got very, very lucky last year in terms of their starters staying out there for the whole season. Their top 4 starters made 129 out of 161 starts and even that's underselling things as Colin Rose didn't join the rotation until May and both Evans and Carranza yielded to backups and prospects in September. Evans, in his first year with Atlanta, didn't look like a staff ace the way he did in Montreal; in fact, he got himself into a lot of trouble with control that he wasn't always able to find his way out of. He still wound up in the double digits in complete games and I guess a 3.40 ERA isn't half-bad in Atlanta. Ironically(?) Evans pitched much better within the confines of Atlanta Fulton County Stadium than without: 6-4, 2.03 at home vs 5-11, 4.38 on the road with more walks than strikeouts.

Evans, like teammate Colin Rose (although I swear I just noticed this), throws the knuckler, although unlike Rose his dancer behaves much more like you'd expect a dancer to... well, you don't expect a dancer to behave but you get the point. Rose only struck out 4.9 men per 9 innings but still managed to hold htiters to a .245 average and only 14 HRs. If you were to wipe away his horrible August (0-4, 6.47) when he was nursing an undisclosed injury, maybe you can even convince yourself that he's pretty good. Runners didn't go crazy on him the way they did in 1972 (19/20 steals!) but he wasn't super great at holding them (20/27 last year).

There's some hope that Evans will learn from Rose how to throw his pitch more effectively. Time will tell. The upside of this is, he's also the youngest starter on the roster...

Gianluigi Farinelli
C No. 11
RR, 6'0" 200 lbs.
Born 1941-09-23
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 DET MLB | .273     | 126    | 465     | 53     | 127    | 22      | 2       | 13      | 69       | 40      | 105     | 0       |
| 1972 DET MLB | .197     | 123    | 366     | 34     | 72     | 13      | 1       | 7       | 45       | 42      | 83      | 0       |
| 1973 DET MLB | .381     | 14     | 21      | 3      | 8      | 0       | 0       | 1       | 4        | 3       | 6       | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .231     | 93     | 346     | 24     | 80     | 16      | 0       | 3       | 34       | 25      | 70      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Up until the 1969 season the Braves had just two regular starting catchers in their post-war history, Marco Chacon, who filled the role from 1946 to 1957, and Pat Molina, who took over in 1958 and held it through 1968. Since then, they've gone through 4 catches in 4 years. That's when I started taking over these teams. Coincidence? In all probability it's going to be 5 guys in 5 years because Farinelli just doesn't seem like he's all that good. He rebounded from a terrible 1972 but only halfway back to the hitting levels he'd established in 70 and 71 and as a .230 hitter he just doesn't do any of the other things that make you want to say "hey, let's make this guy a starter for years".

Catching is a defense-first position, to be sure, but Farinelli is also not particularly great defensive catcher. He does have a deceptive arm that led to a 47% RTO% last year and soee kind of impressive numbers in his past but truth be told it's only average and he's unlikely to win throwing contests. He's only adequate at blocking balls in the dirt and isn't quite as smart and strategic as he thinks he is when it comes to calling games. He's turrible slow although that describes most catchers so it's hard to hold that against him at least. It's just... he carved out a role with the Tigers as a good-hit, okay-field backstop and now that that good hitting seems to have eroded as he gets into his mid 30s, he seems like a backup at best.

The Braves gave their 1970 1st round pick Christopher Guest (.282, 0, 7) a trial at the end of the year and liked what they saw, so chances are Farinelli will be competing with Dan Rigdon for the backup job this year.

Peter Frampton
1B No. 25
LR, 6'2" 200 lbs.
Born 1950-04-22
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SPA A   | .300     | 104    | 377     | 54     | 113    | 19      | 0       | 12      | 52       | 54      | 72      | 0       |
| 1971 REA AA  | .226     | 10     | 31      | 2      | 7      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 8       | 5       | 0       |
| 1972 SAV AA  | .375     | 9      | 32      | 3      | 12     | 2       | 0       | 2       | 8        | 11      | 3       | 0       |
| 1972 REA AA  | .241     | 24     | 87      | 11     | 21     | 3       | 0       | 3       | 9        | 14      | 17      | 0       |
| 1972 RIC AAA | .349     | 73     | 289     | 46     | 101    | 18      | 0       | 16      | 50       | 27      | 60      | 0       |
| 1972 EUG AAA | .308     | 47     | 172     | 21     | 53     | 10      | 2       | 5       | 28       | 22      | 23      | 0       |
| 1973 RIC AAA | .287     | 33     | 122     | 16     | 35     | 11      | 0       | 7       | 22       | 20      | 24      | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .267     | 61     | 225     | 32     | 60     | 11      | 0       | 3       | 17       | 28      | 38      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Frampton, acquired in 1972 in a trade with the Phillies mostly involving failed relief pitchers, got the call-up in late May. He did hit much better than the "incumbent" Jon Hernandez but the #100 prospect according to BNN as of the Opening Day 1972 didn't hit for power and looked kind of average as a hitter overall, not production you want out of your first baseman. On the other hand, the man's only 23 years of age. On the other other hand, like his teammate Jon Hernandez he bats lefty so there's no platooning going on there.

Frampton's shown the ability to hit for a .300 average or better in the minors, which is really what he needs to do to be a good major league baseball player. Although he hit 16 HRs in a half season at Richmond in 1972 after coming over from the Philadelphia organization, scouts don't think that power will translate and early ML results seem to agree. He does seem to have some issues with off-speed stuff - youngsters just don't see a lot of good breaking pitches in the minors after all - and there's some hope he'll work that out. Frampton is a better fielder than Hernandez - not that that's a high bar - but might be even slower on the bases even though he's 7 years younger. He's a born musician who just doesn't think much about baseball.

It's hard to say if Peter Frampton is Mr. Right for the Braves or merely Mr. Right Now. This year should be very informative.

Bob Geldof
SP No. 15
LR, 5'9" 187 lbs.
Born 1949-03-25
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 GRW A   | 6      | 3      | 0       | 3.51     | 11     | 11      | 5       | 87.0    | 99     | 43     | 34      | 28      | 85     |
| 1971 SAV AA  | 3      | 3      | 0       | 3.29     | 6      | 6       | 5       | 54.2    | 48     | 25     | 20      | 23      | 38     |
| 1972 RIC AAA | 14     | 6      | 0       | 3.64     | 28     | 28      | 3       | 202.1   | 189    | 88     | 82      | 93      | 119    |
| 1973 RIC AAA | 15     | 7      | 0       | 2.53     | 27     | 27      | 5       | 199.0   | 150    | 66     | 56      | 82      | 122    |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 3      | 0      | 0       | 3.65     | 6      | 6       | 1       | 44.1    | 43     | 20     | 18      | 16      | 23     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Bob Geldof, who as of this writing is a children's television presenter in Canada (no really!), is not as wholesome as you might think. For one thing, he's Irish. Okay, that's unfair. Anyway though the 1971 graduate of Blackrock College in Dublin got a September call-up after a second consecutive season putting up good starts and wins in AAA. He throws 4 pitches for... I don't want to say "strikes" per se as his control isn't the greatest, but they all get over the plate about equally well. He's still only 24 and might have a bit of potential still to achieve.

Geldof seems on the verge of being something special either as a baseball player or as a spokesman of some variety.

Justin Henderson
SS No. 43
RR, 6'0" 195 lbs.
Born 1938-08-15
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHW MLB | .233     | 115    | 317     | 23     | 74     | 9       | 3       | 0       | 24       | 27      | 50      | 2       |
| 1972 LAD MLB | .229     | 88     | 271     | 23     | 62     | 4       | 1       | 1       | 17       | 33      | 46      | 1       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .248     | 49     | 125     | 8      | 31     | 2       | 0       | 1       | 15       | 7       | 20      | 2       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Henderson played for his 3rd team in 3 years in 1973 and this is probably the end of the line for him. The three-time Gold Glove Award winner is now average at best as a fielder - the man's 35, you try playing shortstop at that age - and he's never been the kind of hitter (a .244 career average) who can hit well enough to where you'd want to hide him in the field somewhere. He can still steal and maybe be a bit of a pinch-runner and he did play 6 innings at second base last year but it just doesn't look like enough to justify a spot on a roster.

If this is it for Henderson, hey, it was a good career - more than 4,000 career at-bats and 1,285 games, and the lack of any hitting accolades only underscores how good of a fielder he was in his prime. He's no Hall of Famer and he never stuck around on any one team long enough to make a team HOF; still, he's in the Hall of Pretty Good Guys.

Jon Hernandez
1B/C No. 12
LR, 5'10" 197 lbs.
Born 1943-04-02
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 BAL MLB | .261     | 123    | 399     | 44     | 104    | 19      | 1       | 9       | 52       | 53      | 77      | 1       |
| 1972 BAL MLB | .254     | 127    | 401     | 56     | 102    | 31      | 2       | 13      | 67       | 58      | 101     | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .216     | 116    | 273     | 33     | 59     | 7       | 0       | 7       | 30       | 47      | 62      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The Braves picked up Hernandez in part of a big move with the Orioles sending out RF Dante Chairez (.238, 25, 81) hoping that they'd get some of that power back. He did after all lead the American League in doubles in just 401 at-bats and hey, the Launching Pad and all that. Instead, Hernandez' gap power cratered and the former catcher who was moved to first base due to an ability to hit, hit for the lowest average of his career.

Hernandez classically likes anything high in the zone. He's had issues with lefties in the past and so it seemed like a good idea to put him into a platoon situation; Hernandez had just 36 plate appearances vs left-handers. In spite of that, his tendencies to swing and miss at pitches that drop in the zone seemed even more pronounced than before and to make matters worse Hernandez seemed to stop hitting those screaming line drives into the gap that are so much a part of his game when he's hot. Defensively he's never going to be much of an asset and this level is probably as good as it's going to get. He's got the speed of a converted catcher, which is to say not much, and somehow managed to ground into 9 double plays last year in spite of the part-time ABs and all those whiffs.

Hernandez, who hit well enough to be a 3 time All-Star when he caught, is facing a real make or break year in 1974... assuming he gets the chance in the first place. This already might have been it.

George House
SP No. 7
RR, 6'6" 200 lbs.
Born 1942-11-17
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 ATL MLB | 23     | 9      | 0       | 3.11     | 38     | 38      | 9       | 277.2   | 259    | 114    | 96      | 69      | 195    |
| 1972 ATL MLB | 14     | 10     | 0       | 3.16     | 31     | 31      | 8       | 219.0   | 187    | 84     | 77      | 56      | 149    |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 13     | 14     | 0       | 3.51     | 35     | 35      | 10      | 253.2   | 243    | 106    | 99      | 71      | 188    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
After 2 20 win seasons in 1969 and 1971 it might be time to start coming to terms with George House: maybe he's just a .500 pitcher now. House was really up and down last season, leading the league in shutouts (6) and finishing 4th in strikeouts but also losing more games than he won for the first time in his career and looking pretty horrible in stretches (2-3, 3.78 in July and then 1-2, 4.67 in August). HRs are always going to be a thing you have to deal with at the Launching Pad but last year House allowed 26 of them, 15 at home... which, granted, isn't Edgar Molina levels of bad but still represented a career worst for a man who is usually pretty good about keeping the ball down.

House throws 4 pitches for strikes although the split-finger he likes to throw didn't get over quite as often as it has in the past, which created some issues for him in terms of allowing the longball. The good news is that 3 years removed from the torn tendon in his elbow that caused him to miss almost all of 1970, he's showing no signs of lingering injury. House had the 2nd highest games started and completed totals of his career and was just a couple innings off from having the 2nd highest raw IPs. He's always been a guy who wins with movement rather than speed and if anything his cut fastball is slightly faster than it was when he was moving up through the minor leagues. House won't hurt himself in the field, although he is a terrrrrible hitter, the kind of guy you point to if you're a fan of the DH.

By the end of the year it was starting to look like House lost his longtime "ace of the staff" role to the knuckleballing Colin Rose. Maybe this is a blessing in disguise for the 30 year old former Cy Young Award winner, as now he'll get more matchups against teams' middle of the rotation pitchers and with that, perhaps a bit more run support.

Rick Legere
MR No. 22
RR, 5'10" 184 lbs.
Born 1944-10-29
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 STL MLB | 7      | 4      | 8       | 2.54     | 57     | 0       | 0       | 77.2    | 76     | 25     | 22      | 25      | 45     |
| 1972 TID AAA | 0      | 1      | 2       | 2.84     | 12     | 0       | 0       | 19.0    | 17     | 6      | 6       | 5       | 8      |
| 1972 NYM MLB | 2      | 5      | 1       | 4.46     | 30     | 0       | 0       | 38.1    | 32     | 20     | 19      | 12      | 23     |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 7      | 0      | 1       | 2.01     | 37     | 0       | 0       | 53.2    | 40     | 15     | 12      | 11      | 37     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Legere was a throw-in in the Ernesto Carrillo trade and... why didn't this man pitch more? The 28 year old right-hander and native of Pittsburgh, PA sure threw well when he did play and okay, fine, 37 games and 53 IPs is not terrible for a middle reliever in the early 70s, but... man, you'd kind of want to carve out a bigger role for a guy like this, right? Legere is strictly a 2-pitch reliever who, even if he did start throwing a change of pace - at 28 he pretty much is who he is as far as that goes - probably lacks the stamina to go into the rotation, so that's out of the question. And I guess he is coming off of a pretty terrible 1972 season. Still, when he played in 73 he was fantastic, undefeated in 7 decisions.

Legere should at least fill a similar role for 1974. Ideally there will be more opportunities for him.

Vladimir Matorin
IF No. 38
RR, 6'0" 194 lbs.
Born 1948-04-30
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 FL A    | .294     | 36     | 136     | 21     | 40     | 3       | 2       | 2       | 17       | 14      | 21      | 6       |
| 1971 WH AA   | .263     | 92     | 346     | 40     | 91     | 25      | 3       | 3       | 35       | 35      | 51      | 4       |
| 1972 WH AA   | .300     | 9      | 40      | 5      | 12     | 1       | 1       | 1       | 5        | 2       | 8       | 0       |
| 1972 SYR AAA | .276     | 99     | 373     | 43     | 103    | 17      | 5       | 9       | 34       | 26      | 64      | 3       |
| 1972 NYY MLB | .270     | 43     | 148     | 17     | 40     | 3       | 1       | 1       | 14       | 10      | 23      | 0       |
| 1973 SYR AAA | .272     | 33     | 114     | 8      | 31     | 7       | 0       | 2       | 12       | 7       | 11      | 2       |
| 1973 NYY MLB | .143     | 7      | 14      | 1      | 2      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 3        | 1       | 4       | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .313     | 34     | 83      | 12     | 26     | 7       | 0       | 1       | 12       | 3       | 10      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Matorin was one of three prospects the Braves got in return for the AL 1972 ERA champion Santos Rodriguez (11-15, 4.58 combined) and the first of the three to see big-league time. RF Ace Frehley (.289, 3, 5), the second of that group, didn't get the PAs to qualify for this report, and the third, SP Rush Limbaugh (4-3, 1.95 at AAA Richmond), is a human piece of garbage. Quite a haul for a guy who quite frankly fell apart after he joined the Bronx Bombers.

Matorin is a second baseman who, like David Oddson below, probably won't see a lot of time at his natural position and so his versatility will really help him out in Atlanta. His best asset is a good arm so he can get by at third and short. He'll swing at everything that is near the plate and so rarely gets to 3 balls, let alone 4, but the approach seems to lead to a decent amount of singles and doubles.

Matorin might be a little up and down for 1974 - he still by my count has one option left - but he certainly fills a role in this organization.

Frank Menner
OF No. 42
RR, 6'2" 194 lbs.
Born 1943-04-06
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHR AAA | .225     | 10     | 40      | 4      | 9      | 1       | 0       | 1       | 3        | 5       | 5       | 1       |
| 1971 PIT MLB | .189     | 15     | 37      | 2      | 7      | 0       | 0       | 1       | 4        | 6       | 10      | 0       |
| 1972 PIT MLB | .228     | 55     | 92      | 6      | 21     | 2       | 1       | 2       | 9        | 14      | 20      | 2       |
| 1973 PIT MLB | .300     | 11     | 20      | 4      | 6      | 0       | 0       | 1       | 1        | 4       | 5       | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .205     | 71     | 239     | 29     | 49     | 7       | 3       | 9       | 32       | 30      | 61      | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
After years of being an organizational soldier in the Pirates organization the Braves purchased Menner on May 25th and he immediately went 5-6 vs the Cardinals in his Braves debut. That was pretty much the highlight of his season, as he showed why he never got a longer look at a starting job: lots of swings and misses, not nearly enough power to justify the Ks, and only decent as opposed to real starting CF quality range. Menner can play all 3 OF spots well, which will definitely help his chances of staying on the team next year; on the other hand, he used up all his options with Pittsburgh and that plus a career .214 BA sure make it look like this might be the last/only writeup this man gets.

Menner most certainly won't get 239 at-bats again in 1974 unless there are some severe injury issues on this team.

Mike Morrison
3B/1B No. 17
RR, 5'11" 202 lbs.
Born 1941-06-12
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 STL MLB | .260     | 59     | 215     | 21     | 56     | 6       | 3       | 0       | 25       | 20      | 20      | 0       |
| 1971 MIL MLB | .303     | 56     | 234     | 23     | 71     | 10      | 0       | 5       | 24       | 14      | 15      | 1       |
| 1972 BAL MLB | .300     | 20     | 40      | 5      | 12     | 2       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 1       | 3       | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .294     | 117    | 462     | 46     | 136    | 23      | 0       | 4       | 38       | 10      | 34      | 5       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Morrison rebounded nicely from a 1972 season that began with a fractured thumb suffered in spring training and ended with an abdominal tear that ended his season in June. The Sheriff managed to collect the most hits he's gotten since 1969 and while he didn't quite get to that .320ish level of hitting that got him into two All-Star Games in the mid-60s with the Cardinals, a .294 average is pretty nice for a third baseman. It'd be nicer if he did anything else at the plate but it's still nice.

Morrison is also a plus fielder. At 32, perhaps he's no longer a Gold Glove contender but a gun for an arm and soft hands make for a guy who's part of the solution rather than part of the problem in the infield. Like so many other guys on this team, Morrison is getting into his 30s now and whatever speed he might have had in the past is pretty well gone now, in spite of a career-high 5 steals. He got soft platooned a bit, sitting vs. some righty pitchers, and that's probably a good way forward for him in the future even if he does avoid the injury bug like he did last year.

All in all, this Braves team isn't getting any younger but Morrison was a nice bargain basement pickup who should still have a few years left in the tank.

David Oddsson
1B/2B/LF No. 13
RR, 6'2" 188 lbs.
Born 1948-06-24
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAV AA  | .258     | 28     | 97      | 13     | 25     | 1       | 2       | 3       | 11       | 11      | 23      | 3       |
| 1971 RIC AAA | .339     | 73     | 221     | 31     | 75     | 9       | 1       | 9       | 46       | 19      | 26      | 1       |
| 1971 ATL MLB | .400     | 3      | 5       | 2      | 2      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 0       | 1       | 0       |
| 1972 RIC AAA | .300     | 51     | 160     | 27     | 48     | 6       | 0       | 7       | 24       | 13      | 37      | 1       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .200     | 36     | 95      | 13     | 19     | 1       | 0       | 4       | 13       | 12      | 18      | 4       |
| 1973 RIC AAA | .255     | 92     | 318     | 30     | 81     | 9       | 0       | 13      | 33       | 23      | 81      | 2       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .259     | 27     | 81      | 9      | 21     | 1       | 1       | 2       | 15       | 7       | 18      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Oddson is blocked at his natural position of second base and so his role going forward on this team is as a utility man. Last season he got the call in the second half as the righty hitting side of a first base platoon although it doesn't seem like he's going to be able to hit for enough average to make that stick. Also, he's a pretty versatile player and you'd hate to see a guy like this get stuck at first: Oddson can handle left field well, second base decently, and even fill in at center if necessary. He only lacks the arm to play short, third, or right field.

It's hard to say what place, exactly, the 25 year old Icelander will play in 1974. It's clear he'll get in somewhere for this team though.

Bobby Orr
LR No. 35
LR, 6'0" 200 lbs.
Born 1948-03-21
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 GRW A   | 1      | 1      | 3       | 1.85     | 8      | 3       | 2       | 34.0    | 32     | 13     | 7       | 7       | 25     |
| 1971 SAV AA  | 2      | 2      | 6       | 2.07     | 20     | 0       | 0       | 21.2    | 16     | 8      | 5       | 9       | 23     |
| 1972 RIC AAA | 6      | 3      | 10      | 2.42     | 42     | 0       | 0       | 59.1    | 51     | 19     | 16      | 13      | 42     |
| 1972 ATL MLB | 2      | 2      | 1       | 4.37     | 19     | 0       | 0       | 24.2    | 28     | 12     | 12      | 9       | 18     |
| 1973 RIC AAA | 2      | 3      | 0       | 3.28     | 8      | 8       | 0       | 60.1    | 48     | 22     | 22      | 17      | 43     |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 5      | 4      | 1       | 3.30     | 28     | 5       | 0       | 62.2    | 52     | 27     | 23      | 15      | 47     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
How "convenient". Just as he was finishing up his second season in the majors and his first extended action, hockey star Bobby Orr went down with an elbow strain on September 30 just in time to start preparing for the upcoming NHL season with the Bruins. We hope the extra day or two of rest was worth it! Prior to the injury - "injury" - Orr was doing a credible job in and out of the bullpen for this club after an early-season promotion from AAA Richmond. He struck out a nice 6.8 guys per 9 innings in the major leagues, a rate that he was able to just about match as a starter (although he carried a 4.50 ERA in 5 games due to giving up a lot of singles and doubles).

Should Orr decide to take baseball as seriously as he's been taking hockey for several years now, the Stanley Cup champion might find that he's a pretty decent starting pitcher. If not, he'll probably still stick around for a few years as guys like this don't exactly grow on trees.

Dan Rigdon
C No. 46
RR, 6'3" 212 lbs.
Born 1943-08-23
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 HOU MLB | .268     | 128    | 496     | 58     | 133    | 36      | 3       | 6       | 52       | 33      | 81      | 0       |
| 1972 HOU MLB | .193     | 119    | 378     | 27     | 73     | 14      | 1       | 3       | 38       | 30      | 64      | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .132     | 18     | 38      | 3      | 5      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 3       | 7       | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .241     | 35     | 116     | 13     | 28     | 7       | 0       | 5       | 19       | 9       | 19      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The Braves traded for Rigdon a month into the season, which means that they opened the year with yet another guy behind the plate: Armando Flores (.257, 6, 52), who they sent away to Detroit for Gianluigi Farinelli in mid-May. Frankly, Flores might have been the best of the bunch. Rigdon was flailing after a really bad 1972 for the division rival Astros but the Braves broke normal protocol anyway and sent their former 3rd round pick Latimer Roy (.269, 0, 13) in exchange for the veteran presence of Rigdon. You could argue that Roy, too, would have been a better option, although here at least one can understand the desire to use a known quantity instead of a rookie (albeit a promising one).

Rigdon seems to have found his stroke in Atlanta but now looks like a backup option as he enters his 30s. He's still getting paid like a starter and if the rumors of an Atlanta rebuild are true, perhaps he'll also find his way out of the South.

Henry Riggs
LF/RF No. 32
LL, 6'2" 199 lbs.
Born 1935-09-28
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ATL MLB | .299     | 149    | 559     | 112    | 167    | 35      | 1       | 43      | 119      | 93      | 78      | 0       |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .263     | 105    | 396     | 57     | 104    | 18      | 0       | 22      | 59       | 59      | 65      | 0       |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .306     | 92     | 307     | 52     | 94     | 13      | 1       | 20      | 56       | 58      | 43      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Riggs ended what might have been his final year in a Braves uniform not with a bang but with a whimper. When he was on the field he hit as well as ever; however, he just couldn't stay on the field and ended with his fewest plate appearances in a season since he was a 19 year old kid in 1955. Riggs missed two months combined with hamstring issues and a sore elbow also kept him out of the lineup.

Riggs has always been a guy who has power to all fields. Even though he has the most HRs in MLB history he's simply not your standard dead-pull power hitter. He's still only 2 years removed from his 3rd of 3 MVP campaigns and although the 20 HRs are his lowest since 1964 he's still got middle of the order power, and NL teams know it: even with missing 70 games, Riggs still had 8 intentional walks, 3 off from his league-leading 11 in 1972. At age 38 he's now a liability in left field; he catches most everything he gets to but he just doesn't get to a lot. He's still got that cannon that got him more than 20 outfield assists 3 times in his career, although last year runners just didn't run on him.

The rumors abound that it's the Milwaukee Brewers, the city Riggs called home from 1954 until his team moved after the 1967 season, who are the main suitors for his talents. A move to designated hitter seems like the best use of Riggs at this point his career, as he can very much still hit but probably shouldn't play in the field any longer. Could he last another 5 years and wind up with, say, 650 HRs? He has 565 now... and also 2,951 hits - he should be the first to 3,000 if he doesn't get hurt next year - 1,617 RBIs, and 5,148 total bases, all of which are the most in MLB history.

Colin Rose
SP No. 14
RR, 6'1" 187 lbs.
Born 1944-04-01
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 RIC AAA | 5      | 5      | 0       | 3.92     | 11     | 11      | 7       | 91.2    | 82     | 43     | 40      | 27      | 31     |
| 1971 ATL MLB | 2      | 1      | 0       | 4.94     | 6      | 3       | 0       | 23.2    | 27     | 14     | 13      | 11      | 6      |
| 1972 ATL MLB | 11     | 11     | 0       | 3.55     | 27     | 27      | 8       | 202.1   | 175    | 86     | 80      | 64      | 107    |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 15     | 7      | 0       | 2.02     | 37     | 30      | 15      | 253.1   | 205    | 62     | 57      | 80      | 184    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Colin Rose is a practicioner of the rarest pitch in baseball: the knuckleball. Hitters hate him, fans love him, managers try to look away and stare at the box score the next day instead. Rose opened the year in middle to long relief but found his way into the starting rotation in early May and from then on was unquestionably the best pitcher on Atlanta's staff. That "dancer" already makes hitters make poor contact and when you actually make them miss as much as Rose did - 184 Ks, 4 fewer than teammate George House and 6th in the NL - the result is a .225 opponents' batting average and, in spite of the man looking like he's throwing slow-pitch softball out there, only 12 HRs allowed.

Rose baaarely has a fastball to speak of, throwing a pitch that looks an awful lot more like a forkball the way it dips when he needs a strike. He's had control issues in the past but he really seems to have gotten all of that under control the past two seasons. He looks like he could throw the ball all day long out there and indeed he was 3rd in the NL in complete games, finishing fully half the games he started. He's a solid defender who will charge down a bunt if teams try to pull that strategy on him, and he's a lot better than you think he should be at holding runners. Last year only 6 out of 15 guys who tried stole bases on him. He's very bad as a hitter, maybe even worse than teammate George House and that's saying something.

Rose turns 30 at the start of the year but 30 is practically a spring chicken in knuckleballer terms. He could do whatever it is that he does for the next decade, easily.

Ron Shepherd
MR No. 16
LL, 6'0" 193 lbs.
Born 1943-03-12
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TEX MLB | 2      | 2      | 0       | 3.03     | 31     | 0       | 0       | 32.2    | 34     | 14     | 11      | 12      | 20     |
| 1972 TEX MLB | 5      | 6      | 11      | 2.56     | 47     | 0       | 0       | 59.2    | 51     | 22     | 17      | 20      | 33     |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 3      | 8      | 8       | 3.85     | 53     | 0       | 0       | 70.0    | 74     | 33     | 30      | 23      | 49     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Shepherd, the team's designated lefty specialist, turned in a very on and off season in 1973. When he was on, he looked like the guy the Braves wanted as the lefty half of a closing option when they acquired him for OF Josh Damon (.264, 8, 43). When he was off, he made the team turn to the Wild Thing Ernesto Carillo a lot more than planned. A closer look at the numbers indicates that in terms of the rate stats Shepherd was equal or better than his 1972 numbers; it's just, in the Launching Pad your mistakes are highlighted a bit more.

Shepherd throws a 4 seamer and a splitter exclusively. The fastball, like the fastball of a lot of lefties, doesn't get all that up in velocity but he makes up for it with a lot of movement. The split-finger "fastball" is his out pitch and it does a decent job of keeping balls from being hit a long distance although Shepherd's groundball rate - 46% last year - has always been a bit lower than what you'd expect coming from a guy who throws that "dippy" (as the kids like to say) (look, it's 1973) pitch so much. I guess on the other hand a 4 seamer, even one that isn't thrown hard enough to rise per se, is going to counteract that effect.

There's no reason why Shepherd won't be the team's main man when it comes to getting lefties out again in 1974. Will he share the closer's duties? It's hard to say.

Chris Ward
RF/LF No. 37
LL, 5'9" 186 lbs.
Born 1946-05-21
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ATL MLB | .296     | 124    | 456     | 86     | 135    | 13      | 7       | 12      | 47       | 50      | 67      | 56      |
| 1972 ATL MLB | .267     | 107    | 438     | 69     | 117    | 15      | 12      | 11      | 35       | 36      | 58      | 35      |
| 1973 ATL MLB | .274     | 139    | 551     | 80     | 151    | 15      | 5       | 14      | 53       | 45      | 65      | 21      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
After leading the NL in steals in both 1971 and 1972, "Presto" Ward tailed off a lot in that department, only finishing 7th last year. Otherwise it was a pretty solid year that continued to build on what he's done in 3+ seasons. Ward's season would look even better if he didn't run out of gas in September: A horribad slump led to a .154 average and more strikeouts (18) than hits (14) in that final month. Before then he was really looking like the biggest outfield snub for the All-Star Game (which Ward has yet to play in).

Ward is pretty good at hitting the ball down when his team needs a single, at least when he does make contact. For a leadoff guy, Ward does have an issue with the K at times. He's also got deceptive power and clocked a career-best 14 HRs and 53 RBIs in 1973, the latter being a pretty impressive total for a guy who played mostly leadoff. His fielding leaves a lot to be desired: in spite of all that speed, Ward doesn't get a great jump on the ball and sometimes tries to make a splashy play in the field that only leads to extra bases. He's got a good enough arm that the Braves put him in right field for most of the year as they tried to transition Henry Riggs to left.

Ward is what they call a locker room lawyer and was reportedly unhappy that he wasn't allowed to run as much as he has in the past. He does still have every bit of the speed he had when he stole 56 bases in 1971 so maybe he's got something there.
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Old 01-16-2026, 02:24 PM   #324
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Chicago Cubs (77-83, 4th NL East)

1973 Recap: The Cubs run of perennial second-gunners seems to have come to an end with their 2nd losing record in 3 years sandwiched around a rather meh 84-71 campaign. Probably more detrimental to any hopes this team might have had was the sudden rise to power of the Phillies in the division. It's going to be really, really hard for this team to move past that.

This is a team whom you expect to be built on clubbing their opponents to death 3 homeruns at a time but they're kind of not: the Cubs hit just 107 HRs last year, 9th in the NL, en route to a kind of paltry 616 runs scored. The pitching, or should I say the defense, is what stepped up last season: in spite of being dead last in the NL at striking opposing hitters out, the Cubbies post 615 runs allowed, one fewer than they scored. They committed the fewest errors in the league and also featured some of the best range.

1974 Outlook: This is a team that has some young core pieces to it and isn't, as a whole, hugely old, so that's nice at least. The Phillies aren't old either though - I will talk about them when I get to them, and these Cubbies really need some comeback seasons from guys like 1B Antonio Lopez and SS Jeremy Taylor if they're going to even have a hope at challenging Philadelphia in 1974 or the forseeable future.

Charles Bradley
SS No. 2
RR, 6'1" 197 lbs.
Born 1948-11-11
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAL A   | .289     | 21     | 90      | 7      | 26     | 1       | 3       | 1       | 8        | 5       | 24      | 1       |
| 1971 MIA A   | .246     | 52     | 175     | 24     | 43     | 5       | 1       | 2       | 13       | 23      | 33      | 8       |
| 1971 MID AA  | .125     | 4      | 16      | 0      | 2      | 0       | 1       | 0       | 2        | 0       | 6       | 0       |
| 1972 ROC AAA | .286     | 30     | 105     | 17     | 30     | 5       | 1       | 7       | 20       | 13      | 19      | 1       |
| 1972 BAL MLB | .308     | 43     | 107     | 14     | 33     | 4       | 0       | 2       | 12       | 9       | 13      | 2       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .221     | 41     | 136     | 15     | 30     | 0       | 0       | 5       | 18       | 14      | 27      | 1       |
| 1973 WIC AAA | .224     | 34     | 125     | 19     | 28     | 2       | 0       | 7       | 16       | 13      | 21      | 1       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .180     | 58     | 161     | 12     | 29     | 2       | 2       | 2       | 13       | 13      | 31      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Charles Bradley (known in real life as the man who sang the theme song to the TV show "Barry" in its first 3 seasons) was traded to the Cubs from Baltimore in the summer of 1972 for former MVP Jason Workman (.241/12/46 last year so don't worry, he's bad!) in the expectation that he'd take over shortstop. He played there for the first 3 months of the season but just straight up didn't hit and now his career is in doubt. Bradley's not a fantastic fielder and the Cubs really needed him to be the .300 hitter as he'd shown he could be in flashes with the Orioles in order to justify things. Last year he just plain struck out far too often for that to be a reality.

There's still some hope, I guess, that as Bradley learns the NL style of pitching he'll cut down on the whiffs enough to become a major league regular. If he's going to make that turn, he'll need to do so quickly.

Raul Bueno
PH/OF/1B No. 23
RR, 6'3" 197 lbs.
Born 1938-06-18
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 OAK MLB | .278     | 67     | 90      | 19     | 25     | 3       | 4       | 3       | 21       | 4       | 9       | 6       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .291     | 97     | 127     | 15     | 37     | 3       | 3       | 2       | 16       | 4       | 12      | 7       |
| 1973 TEX MLB | .284     | 72     | 155     | 14     | 44     | 4       | 1       | 2       | 14       | 4       | 10      | 13      |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .317     | 35     | 41      | 3      | 13     | 2       | 1       | 1       | 8        | 0       | 6       | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Bueno was purchased by the Cubs in August, where the veteran joined his 3rd team in 2 years. Bueno at this point is pretty much a pure hitter and he excelled in the pinch-hitting role Chicago set up for him. He's blocked here at first base, where he's actually a pretty solid defensive player - he's got a popgun arm so he'll never even think of playing 3rd, but he gets to the ball relatively quickly at first and can turn an occasional 3-6-3 double play. Bueno still has that top grade speed he showed with the Kansas City and Oakland A's in the 60s, although he often had a runner ahead of him when he was on base in Chicago and so didn't get to showcase it all that often.

Bueno, now 35 years of age, isn't done yet, although he's probably better suited for the American League and a situation where he can maybe play some first base and DH and help a team with both his bat and his foot speed.

Antonio Carpio
C No. 13
RR, 5'11" 200 lbs.
Born 1949-10-26
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 REN A   | .323     | 8      | 31      | 5      | 10     | 1       | 0       | 1       | 5        | 2       | 5       | 0       |
| 1971 ORA A   | .270     | 10     | 37      | 2      | 10     | 1       | 0       | 0       | 7        | 1       | 4       | 0       |
| 1971 JAX AA  | .349     | 71     | 192     | 22     | 67     | 12      | 0       | 2       | 22       | 27      | 9       | 0       |
| 1971 WIC AAA | .250     | 10     | 28      | 2      | 7      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 4        | 3       | 2       | 0       |
| 1972 MID AA  | .405     | 12     | 42      | 4      | 17     | 1       | 0       | 2       | 6        | 6       | 1       | 0       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .370     | 80     | 146     | 20     | 54     | 5       | 0       | 7       | 28       | 10      | 19      | 1       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .263     | 41     | 133     | 10     | 35     | 7       | 1       | 0       | 11       | 12      | 12      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Carpio has the future ahead of him as a judge in his homeland of the Philippines. Will he be a rural jurist? He also clirted with .400 over 2 levels in the minors last year which earned him an early trip to the major leagues as Greg Darrow's caddy. That 1972 year might mean that the 23 year old's best value to the team is as a trade chip, though.

Carpio is a hit-first catcher who's just plain not the equal of Greg Darrow afield. He's slower to get out in front of pitches in the dirt than the starter and has a below average arm. As a hitter he should be a legitimate .270 or so hitter, although .300+ might be asking a lot. He showed a lot more power in the minors than the none he displayed last season so that ought to improve as well.

Teams looking for a hit-first catcher would do a lot worse than to acquire this guy at the right price.

Ryan Clements
CF/RF No. 7
RR, 5'11" 185 lbs.
Born 1943-07-19
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TAC AAA | .206     | 132    | 475     | 56     | 98     | 13      | 4       | 6       | 37       | 58      | 62      | 22      |
| 1971 CHC MLB | .000     | 1      | 1       | 0      | 1      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 2        | 0       | 0       | 0       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .249     | 107    | 341     | 50     | 85     | 13      | 4       | 12      | 50       | 38      | 55      | 22      |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .160     | 16     | 50      | 8      | 8      | 0       | 0       | 3       | 6        | 8       | 10      | 2       |
| 1973 WIC AAA | .169     | 25     | 83      | 8      | 14     | 0       | 0       | 1       | 2        | 10      | 14      | 5       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .269     | 96     | 327     | 41     | 88     | 19      | 2       | 11      | 44       | 34      | 47      | 19      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Wow, what a turnaround. Clements failed to hit in a cup of coffee in 1972, was continuing to fail to hit in AAA to open the year, and got a call up anyway because of a lack of depth in the majors and... what do you know, Clements actually hit the ball. Not only did he hit, he looked pretty good at it. I'm not about to call a 30 year old with 50 major league games to his name prior to 1973 a future starter but this was completely unexpected.

Clements was a speed demon in the minors and while he's lost a step or two that's still the biggest part of his game. The past couple years he's also started to hit for decent power in AAA and that new wrinkle followed him into the major leagues. He can control the bat throughout the strike zone and as a potential leadoff hitter can foul off enough of them to eventually draw a cheeky walk. He covers a ton of ground in center, enough to where a full season out there could earn him a Gold Glove if everything broke right.

Clements already did way more in 1973 than anyone hoped he could. The comedown and crashout in 1974 is inevitable but hey it was a fun time while it lasted.

Jon Cooley
2B No. 8
RR, 6'3" 200 lbs.
Born 1948-04-06
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 LOD A   | .262     | 123    | 466     | 72     | 122    | 19      | 3       | 7       | 50       | 67      | 87      | 14      |
| 1971 HAW AAA | .333     | 6      | 21      | 1      | 7      | 2       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 3       | 2       | 0       |
| 1972 ASH AA  | .309     | 45     | 152     | 20     | 47     | 7       | 1       | 1       | 15       | 36      | 20      | 7       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .263     | 94     | 331     | 39     | 87     | 10      | 4       | 5       | 30       | 45      | 55      | 11      |
| 1973 WIC AAA | .265     | 68     | 200     | 24     | 53     | 4       | 1       | 1       | 5        | 22      | 29      | 0       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .274     | 72     | 223     | 30     | 61     | 10      | 1       | 2       | 25       | 26      | 26      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Cooley is decidedly not a prospect but got the chance to start in the second half of the season after the incumbent Juan Perez went down with a torn rotator cuff in his throwing shoulder in mid-June. He did about what was expected: decent average, zero power, good strike zone recognition, plus defense. Cooley played exclusively at 2nd upon getting the call up from AAA Wichita but played extensively in the outfield in the minor leagues. Long-term he'd really need to up his bat a bit to justify playing out there consistently but hey, as backup OFer and right-handed utility bat? Sure, just don't expect too much.

Chance Cooper
OF No. 26
LR, 6'1" 192 lbs.
Born 1947-08-18
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TAC AAA | .239     | 24     | 67      | 12     | 16     | 2       | 0       | 2       | 7        | 26      | 8       | 2       |
| 1971 CHC MLB | .248     | 59     | 153     | 24     | 38     | 2       | 1       | 8       | 22       | 31      | 35      | 3       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .280     | 73     | 271     | 55     | 76     | 10      | 4       | 27      | 64       | 47      | 63      | 5       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .202     | 61     | 193     | 29     | 39     | 4       | 2       | 10      | 26       | 34      | 37      | 5       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .216     | 119    | 385     | 55     | 83     | 11      | 5       | 10      | 44       | 87      | 83      | 5       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Cooper's career to date has been of a decent prospect (#34 at one point) who's never quite been able to put everything together at the major league level. Last year he broke camp with the team, somehow managed to keep his starting job through a very rough April (.173/1/6), and wound up... well, he's as big of an enigma as he's ever been, let's face it.

Cooper has a big swing and misses too many pitches to hit for a good average. He's got really good power, although that kind of went missing last year, and pitchers are afraid of it enough that he'll also draw a lot of walks to make up for those low averages. Last year he managed to collect an OBP of .359 in spite of the .216 average. Even though he has good speed, that swing of his leads to as many popups as strikeouts and so it doesn't come into play all that often. He has no instincts for the outfield, either, making said speed more of a neat answer to a trivia question at this point than an actual baseball skill.

If Cooper can exhibit some of that glorious power he's shown in the minor leagues in the majors, he could be an All-Star. Given that he's already in Wrigley and is now 26, there's an awfully good chance that what you see is what you get.

Bill Daniels
SS No. 7
RR, 5'12" 199 lbs.
Born 1944-11-14
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 WIC AAA | .216     | 131    | 408     | 44     | 88     | 11      | 0       | 5       | 38       | 35      | 61      | 4       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .218     | 40     | 124     | 15     | 27     | 3       | 1       | 5       | 26       | 6       | 39      | 0       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .269     | 19     | 26      | 1      | 7      | 1       | 0       | 1       | 7        | 0       | 5       | 0       |
| 1973 WIC AAA | .136     | 17     | 44      | 2      | 6      | 0       | 1       | 1       | 4        | 7       | 7       | 0       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .139     | 38     | 79      | 5      | 11     | 2       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 4       | 15      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Sometimes a player deserves a long writeup and sometimes that player is Bill Daniels. Daniels played a chunk in the first half at short for the Cubs, completely failed to hit, and then got sent down where he failed to hit or even play that much in Wichita. He's a better fielder than Charles Bradley or Jeremy Taylor, I guess, but not a lot better and definitely not enough better to justufy playing a guy who hit like a pitcher last year. I'd peg his chances of appearing in a team writeup like this again at between 0 and 5 percent.

Greg Darrow
C No. 33
RR, 5'10" 203 lbs.
Born 1943-12-09
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHC MLB | .256     | 130    | 507     | 42     | 130    | 32      | 0       | 13      | 75       | 23      | 71      | 0       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .247     | 122    | 433     | 43     | 107    | 13      | 4       | 6       | 43       | 27      | 46      | 0       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .277     | 125    | 491     | 40     | 136    | 28      | 2       | 11      | 67       | 21      | 73      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Darrow's been with the Cubs for 4 years now and has played in the Midsummer Classic all 4 times. Those numbers may not pop out to you but this is one of the best if not the best catchers in the National League. Batting mostly 6th and 7th for the Cubs, Darrow hit for his highest average since hit breakout 1970 campaign (.329, 12, 71).

Greg Darrow specializes in hitting line drives into the gaps. He prefers the ball high and inside but doesn't absolutely have to have the ball there to do anything with it. For a catcher he doesn't walk much but he still manages to get on base with all the singles and doubles he collects. Don't expect many triples or steals though: Darrow is catcher-slow. He won the Gold Glove in 1971 in spite of a below average arm and even now it must be said that Darrow benefits greatly from a pitching staff with good pickoff moves: he managed to catch - well, his pitchers managed to catch - 33 would-be basestealers for a 44.6% CS rate. He's good with young pitchers and has done good job coaxing the last bits of stuff from vets like Martinez and Moon.

Yeah, no question Darrow's the brainy leader of this team and the starting catcher for the forseeable future.

Scott Coffey
SP No. 14
LL, 6'1" 189 lbs.
Born 1942-07-12
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TAC AAA | 2      | 7      | 0       | 4.57     | 17     | 17      | 2       | 114.0   | 115    | 65     | 58      | 48      | 63     |
| 1971 CHC MLB | 7      | 5      | 0       | 3.99     | 16     | 16      | 4       | 112.2   | 111    | 53     | 50      | 36      | 76     |
| 1972 CHC MLB | 13     | 10     | 0       | 3.68     | 34     | 33      | 5       | 244.1   | 246    | 105    | 100     | 80      | 152    |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 15     | 8      | 0       | 4.52     | 32     | 28      | 2       | 189.0   | 205    | 104    | 95      | 75      | 109    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Scott Coffey had the kind of year that the term "up and down" was made for and yet "up and down" doesn't quite get at the up-and-downness of his 1973. When he was good, as in April (3-1, 2.63) and September (4-0, 1.80) he was very, very good; when he was bad, as in May (2-3, 9.38, a .349 BAA) and August (2-3, 5.55), he was one of the worst pitchers in the game. Somehow his team managed to score a lot of runs behind him - well, they do play in Wrigley - so his won/lost record makes it seem like the lefty vet had a career year but the other stats, well, they tell you otherwise.

Coffey is a slow pitching lefty with a 12 to 6 curve. It unfortunately isn't as heavy as one would like; in his last 2 seasons as a full-time starter, Coffey's allowed 49 HRs, which in turn isn't I guess horrifically bad but it's not exactly great. He's also been trending steadily downwards in his ability to strike guys out, although last year... well, it's weird because his worst overall months were also the ones where he recorded the highest K rates, possibly because balls that plays were made on in April and September turned into base hits in those months. Coffey did get better at allowing the ding-dongs as the season progressed: he had 11 HRs by the end of May with an over-6 ERA but recovered after a stretch in long relief in June.

It would be a mild shock to see Coffey lead the Cubs in wins again in 1974. He could improve/recover a lot of his game and still wind up with a reverse of that 15-8 record.

John Hughes
SP No. 36
RL, 6'1" 185 lbs.
Born 1950-02-19
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 SAL A   | 11     | 1      | 0       | 2.65     | 16     | 16      | 8       | 129.0   | 124    | 44     | 38      | 53      | 104    |
| 1971 MID AA  | 1      | 0      | 0       | 0.00     | 1      | 1       | 1       | 9.0     | 5      | 0      | 0       | 4       | 6      |
| 1972 MID AA  | 11     | 11     | 0       | 3.61     | 24     | 24      | 15      | 201.2   | 166    | 87     | 81      | 115     | 94     |
| 1972 WIC AAA | 2      | 2      | 0       | 2.57     | 6      | 6       | 1       | 49.0    | 36     | 16     | 14      | 16      | 25     |
| 1973 WIC AAA | 10     | 8      | 0       | 3.74     | 22     | 22      | 3       | 156.1   | 149    | 72     | 65      | 52      | 98     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 5      | 3      | 0       | 3.89     | 11     | 11      | 1       | 74.0    | 75     | 34     | 32      | 30      | 34     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Don't leave Hughes, a 23 year old prospect and product of that 1971 draft that's looking pretty amazing for these Cubs, "home alone"; he was 4-1 last year at Wrigley but with a 4.50 ERA and a BAA 20 points higher than on the road (.274-.254). This team just loves slow pitchers who throw changeups and Hughes is no exception to that rule. He did have issues throwing strikes and that hurt his stamina but he's shown the ability to go long into games in the minors so if he fixes the control he should be fine in that regard. Hughes doesn't have the pedigree of Max Weinberg or Sting, having been drafted way back in the 9th round, but he did make the top 100 list going into the year (#81).

If Hughes has a good spring training he could very well break camp with this team. He could also use another year of seasoning in AAA. He's been rushed to the majors almost as hard as the big 2 in front of him and there's not really a pressing need to make him into a stud just yet.

Jesse Kelly
CL No. 9
LL, 5'11" 195 lbs.
Born 1937-10-15
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 NYY MLB | 8      | 7      | 12      | 4.89     | 48     | 0       | 0       | 68.0    | 75     | 38     | 37      | 10      | 50     |
| 1972 CHC MLB | 8      | 5      | 28      | 2.75     | 69     | 0       | 0       | 111.0   | 99     | 35     | 34      | 31      | 85     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 7      | 9      | 22      | 3.36     | 63     | 0       | 0       | 99.0    | 103    | 41     | 37      | 24      | 90     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
After getting kicked off the Yankees for his volatility, Kelly went from being everything one could ask for from a stopper in 1972 to being a bit on the volatile side again in 73. Kelly still looked great in spots but he also melted down 15 times last year, the 2nd highest total in his career. Some of that is just what you get from playing in Wrigley, although at that Kelly was way better at home (5-2, 2.96, 13/15 Sv opps) than on the road (2-7, 3.86, 9/16).

Kelly's strongest asset is a rubber arm that, when he's pitching well enough that you want to use him, allows him to pitch multiple innings every other day and sometimes even more often. He managed to collect a lot of whiffs last year - 8.2 Ks/9, which trust me, is really good for this era - although it should be said that his best K month - August, when he recorded 21 of them in 15.2 IPs - was also the month where he gambled and lost the most with the longball (4 HRs allowed). His HR rates were actually down last year. Stat nerds say the real reason he had an off season was because the defense that induced outs for everyone else did a bad job for him. Are you gonna listen to a stat nerd?

Kelly isn't your classic "come in late and throw smoke" guy but he's good at what he does and even at 35 he should be well able to continue in the role.

Scott Lammers
RF/LF No. 25
SR, 5'12" 202 lbs.
Born 1941-11-14
Code:
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHW MLB | .233     | 51     | 172     | 27     | 40     | 4       | 1       | 11      | 27       | 39      | 41      | 0       |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .342     | 10     | 38      | 10     | 13     | 3       | 0       | 4       | 9        | 8       | 5       | 0       |
| 1972 TEX MLB | .125     | 16     | 16      | 2      | 2      | 0       | 0       | 2       | 3        | 1       | 5       | 0       |
| 1973 SF MLB  | .186     | 48     | 102     | 12     | 19     | 1       | 0       | 5       | 11       | 12      | 18      | 0       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .074     | 11     | 27      | 4      | 2      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 2        | 9       | 1       | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
This looks like the end of the line for Scott Lammers, a one-time All-Star (1969) and cleanup hitter for the San Francisco Giants who saw his power go out in 1970. In Chicago he drew a few walks in his short time here but did basically nothing else. He's still only 31 so everything could come back, I guess. If it does it'd have to start in the Mexican League or something.

Mike Larsen
SP No. 11
RR, 5'11" 191 lbs.
Born 1940-03-03
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 MIN MLB | 14     | 12     | 0       | 4.01     | 34     | 34      | 8       | 239.2   | 283    | 116    | 107     | 69      | 96     |
| 1972 MIN MLB | 17     | 8      | 0       | 2.85     | 35     | 34      | 9       | 262.0   | 243    | 89     | 83      | 71      | 91     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 13     | 13     | 0       | 2.88     | 31     | 31      | 10      | 237.0   | 235    | 86     | 76      | 66      | 112    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Larsen, freed from a flailing Twins team, delivered good, solid production for the Cubs in 1973, leading the team in innings pitched, starts, and complete games. I wouldn't necessarily call him the ace of the staff - he's not really ace material - but as a guy who specializes in pitchign to contact he really, really fit in on this team.

Larsen throws just about every pitch you can conceive of a pitcher throwing, with his bread and butter pitch a circle change that lefty hitters have more problems tracking than righties do. He doesn't throw particularly fast, although he's far from the slowest pitcher in the league, and everything hits the corners and the bottom half of the strike zone. In Minnesota he was one of the hardest pitchers in the league to hit HRs against; in Chicago, his 17 HRs allowed last year were the highest of his career since his rookie campaign back in 1963... but 17 HRs is still not a lot at Wrigley. Larsen's a pretty good hitter for a pitcher so that was a nice little side effect of moving to the Senior Circuit - I'm not saying that a man with a career .166 average is anything super exciting but hey, it's something of a plus for him and he even hit his first homerun in almost a decade last season. Larsen is a crafty guy with a mean pickoff move that led to 7 caught stealings in just 16 attempts on him last year.

Yeah, "crafty" is the right word for him. He'll be a solid #2 starter for this Cubs team, no doubt.

Antonio Lopez
1B No. 10
LL, 6'3" 202 lbs.
Born 1945-11-16
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHC MLB | .312     | 161    | 631     | 105    | 197    | 34      | 2       | 42      | 125      | 67      | 92      | 0       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .290     | 152    | 576     | 79     | 167    | 28      | 2       | 27      | 68       | 81      | 95      | 2       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .259     | 128    | 491     | 57     | 127    | 20      | 1       | 15      | 72       | 52      | 57      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
1973 was a tough, tough year for the 1969 NL MVP (.315, 43, 123). A fractured hand caused him to miss a month and a half of the season and when he returned he just wasn't the "Walrus Gunboat" (I know I gave him that nickname because he got big when "Come Together" was out but still, UGH) of old. Lopez hit just .224 and .248 the final 2 months of the season and finished the year with the lowest hit and HR totals since his rookie season.

When Lopez is on, he can make contact with just about anything and turn it into a line drive. He'll still foul off enough pitches to draw a decent amount of walks and supplemented that last season by getting hit by pitches a league-high 11 times. That method of getting on is probably not something the Cubs would prefer to see more of in 1974. Last year an awful lot of those line drives turned into weak popouts and midrange flies instead of doubles and homeruns. It's hoped that a full year of full health will help arrest the poor play in the 2nd half of last year. Lopez is defensively speaking a hit-first guy; his best attribute in the field is relatively soft hands and he lacks the speed or arm to play in the outfield.

Lopez is prone to running his mouth to reporters and that does not exactly endear him to fans, who treat him more as an inevitability than a fan favorite. Last year when the HRs weren't as inevitable the boos came raining down. Here's to a bit less of the booing in 74.

Antonio Martinez
MR No. 17
SR, 5'9" 200 lbs.
Born 1935-07-22
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CHC MLB | 4      | 5      | 10      | 3.35     | 52     | 0       | 0       | 67.0    | 65     | 27     | 25      | 22      | 49     |
| 1972 WIC AAA | 0      | 0      | 0       | 0.00     | 1      | 0       | 0       | 1.0     | 1      | 0      | 0       | 0       | 0      |
| 1972 CHC MLB | 1      | 1      | 0       | 2.84     | 17     | 0       | 0       | 19.0    | 21     | 6      | 6       | 6       | 5      |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 3      | 1      | 2       | 3.20     | 42     | 0       | 0       | 53.1    | 50     | 21     | 19      | 19      | 16     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Antonio "Sugar Bear" Martinez is a Cuban ex-pat who didn't escape the Castro regime until he was already 30 years old in 1966. He's been a solid relief pitcher ever since, although at 38 years of age he's probably just about done. Martinez at this point has perhaps the slowest fastball on the team, which is saying a lot, and relies on guile and the defense of his teammates for success. He did rebound from the shoulder issues that decimated his 1972 campaign, although his heater, which once popped into the mid 90s, is not coming back. This is still a guy who can give you an inning or so, provided you don't need that inning that much: when he did go into high leverage situations last year opponents hit 282/349/487 against him.

Martinez won't have the kinds of career numbers that you look at and go "wow, this guy was awesome". As of this writing he has a career ERA under 3 (2.90) and that's nice at least.

Suk-min Moon
MR No. 20
SR, 5'9" 197 lbs.
Born 1935-11-05
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CHC MLB | 4      | 3      | 2       | 2.33     | 51     | 0       | 0       | 73.1    | 59     | 21     | 19      | 34      | 54     |
| 1972 CHC MLB | 4      | 6      | 1       | 3.22     | 44     | 0       | 0       | 58.2    | 54     | 21     | 21      | 19      | 46     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 0      | 3      | 3       | 3.57     | 38     | 0       | 0       | 50.1    | 56     | 22     | 20      | 16      | 28     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
It seems fitting for Moon to come right after Martinez on this list because both guys fill the same role: aging reliever who used to rely on a great fastball but now makes do with whatever they can. Moon is also an ex-pat although he got here from Korea and made it in a few years before Sugar Bear. He's also got a little bit more left in the tank, as he's been able to turn to a changeup as his fastball has slowly eroded. Moon also hit higher highs than Martinez did, perhaps only due to happenstance: Moon was the Twins' stopper from 1966-1968 before he was weirdly left unprotected in the 69 expansion draft and picked up by the Seattle Pilots.

I suspect Moon, who fans have also granted a "sugar" based nickname ("Sug"), will still stick around for another season or two whereas this is the last we'll be seeing of Martinez.

Bill Nighy
3B No. 1
RR, 6'2" 201 lbs.
Born 1949-12-13
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAL A   | .262     | 32     | 122     | 17     | 32     | 2       | 0       | 7       | 18       | 18      | 20      | 0       |
| 1971 MIA A   | .278     | 9      | 36      | 6      | 10     | 1       | 0       | 0       | 5        | 8       | 6       | 0       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .286     | 79     | 325     | 48     | 93     | 19      | 0       | 12      | 36       | 27      | 55      | 1       |
| 1973 WIC AAA | .264     | 113    | 405     | 46     | 107    | 18      | 2       | 7       | 23       | 65      | 44      | 4       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .259     | 28     | 85      | 10     | 22     | 9       | 0       | 1       | 7        | 17      | 12      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The Cubs sold longtime third baseman Sean Gabel to the A's in September and so for now at least it's 23 year old prospect Bill Nighy's job to lose. Nighy was the #22 prospect in baseball as of the beginning of the year so it's not a terrible choice. Another product of that great (for the Cubs) 1971 draft, Nighy has .290 contact potential, mid-teens homerun power, and good pitch recognition skills. Defensively he's got a great arm but really struggled with fielding groundballs to his left; he finished September with 6 errors in 26 major league games and a .919 fielding average.

It's in the air whether or not Nighy can stick at third base. If he can, he'll be a good solid starter for years. If not, he's still got value as a corner infielder and maybe an outfielder as well in a backup role.

Javy Obregon
SP/LR No. 85
RR, 6'0" 202 lbs.
Born 1939-11-25
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TAC AAA | 5      | 1      | 0       | 1.74     | 8      | 8       | 4       | 67.0    | 49     | 18     | 13      | 21      | 33     |
| 1971 CHC MLB | 5      | 9      | 0       | 5.66     | 22     | 19      | 0       | 130.1   | 155    | 86     | 82      | 51      | 58     |
| 1972 CHC MLB | 16     | 8      | 0       | 3.90     | 32     | 32      | 7       | 221.1   | 214    | 100    | 96      | 79      | 114    |
| 1973 WIC AAA | 0      | 0      | 1       | 2.07     | 4      | 0       | 0       | 8.2     | 12     | 2      | 2       | 3       | 6      |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 8      | 9      | 1       | 5.01     | 32     | 15      | 2       | 127.1   | 135    | 76     | 71      | 38      | 71     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Obregon, the Cuban ex-pat, has a tendency to have good even-year seasons and bad odd-year ones. His last 2 odd-year seasons have both looked "get him out of the league" levels of bad and while he did rebound well in 1972 it's hard to see the Cubs at least giving him a shot at continuing the trend in 1974. He did rebound OK in the second half of the year, spent mostly in relief, and had a 3.86 ERA in that role, which isn't great but is at least better than "possibly worst in the league" levels he was at in his 15 starts (6-7, 5.23). On the other hand when Obregon was tasked with pitching in higher leverage situations - to be fair, these mostly came as a starter, but it speaks to his clutch or lack thereof - oppnents hit .352 against him with a .611 SLG. Is this a guy you can trust out of your bullpen?

Obregon throws slow, so slow that his best pitch is a really deceptive change. That pitch also meant righties hit him better (.285 BAA) than lefties (.259). His fastball has trouble breaking glass but he does, at least, throw strikes. Even when times are going well, he gives up HRs and he seemed like an especially bad fit for the park last year with 16 HRA in his 127.1 innings. Obregon managed to catch 3 of 6 baserunners last year but the 14/19 rate he allowed in 1972 is probably closer to his true ability in terms of holding runners.

What's next for Obregon? You usually want to reserve long relief for younger players. Chicago could I guess take another chance with him at the back of the rotation if they're feeling particularly superstitious. More than likely he'll be with someone else if not out of baseball entirely next year.

Juan Perez
2B No. 6
LR, 6'2" 198 lbs.
Born 1938-06-04
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHC MLB | .248     | 67     | 202     | 20     | 50     | 4       | 1       | 6       | 27       | 22      | 30      | 0       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .286     | 122    | 454     | 66     | 130    | 16      | 3       | 26      | 72       | 45      | 66      | 3       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .295     | 60     | 224     | 34     | 66     | 6       | 1       | 13      | 37       | 24      | 27      | 7       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Last year Perez tore his rotator cuff on June 17 and missed the final 102 games of the year. Yikes! Good thing you don't need an arm to play second, right? It's really a big bummer that "The Cat" has become so injury prone - the last time he played more than 122 games in a season was 1968 - because when he's healthy he still brings a great deal to the table.

Perez provides plus power from a position where you don't often get a lot of pop. Last year the Cubs mostly played him in the 2 hole because, you know, he's a 2nd baseman and also because they have Jeremy Taylor and Antonio Lopez on the team but with both of those guys regressing a bit he could easily move into the power part of the order... if he stays healthy, of course. Perez is also fast enough to beat out base hits and is pretty selective at the plate - he sported a .370 OBP last year, one more reason to stick him at 2nd. Defensively he's a wizard and it's very surprising that Perez has never won a Gold Glove in his career. I took a look and it's just a case of there always being one guy better than him in the NL - Justin Henderson for a few years, Pedro Ortiz the last 3. But Perez is really, really good and could have been a good shortstop had things broken just a little differently.

If, again, he's healthy then Juan Perez is one of the best second basemen in baseball. He's 35 now so probably the health is not something you can count on anymore.

Aurelio Rodriguez
UT No. 30
RR, 5'11" 191 lbs.
Born 1947-12-28
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 REN A   | .354     | 23     | 82      | 20     | 29     | 5       | 1       | 2       | 16       | 16      | 13      | 5       |
| 1971 JAX AA  | .206     | 107    | 393     | 42     | 81     | 10      | 2       | 8       | 39       | 46      | 69      | 4       |
| 1971 WIC AAA | .229     | 12     | 35      | 6      | 8      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 3        | 8       | 6       | 0       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .290     | 111    | 404     | 62     | 117    | 19      | 0       | 13      | 47       | 47      | 71      | 6       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .298     | 16     | 47      | 7      | 14     | 0       | 1       | 1       | 6        | 2       | 10      | 2       |
| 1973 WIC AAA | .323     | 21     | 62      | 6      | 20     | 5       | 0       | 2       | 7        | 4       | 15      | 0       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .230     | 86     | 265     | 29     | 61     | 7       | 3       | 4       | 20       | 24      | 45      | 4       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Oh how art imitates life ("art?"). In real life Chi Chi Rodriguez was your classic good-field, no-hit shortstop for the Tigers in the 70s. In my OOTP game, he's a good-field, no-hit... utility guy. Okay, he's not an amazing shortstop by any stretch but he did play every position in the field other than pitcher and catcher last year and that's something, right? Rodriguez sprays the ball all over the field and has more pop than you might expect. His "true" position is probably second base as he lacks the (infield) arm to play short or third (great OF arm though) and the combined hitting skills to play in the outfield consistently.

I kind of love utility guys like this, not gonna lie.

Jason Sanders
SP No. 35
RR, 6'2" 200 lbs.
Born 1940-04-26
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CHC MLB | 16     | 11     | 0       | 3.44     | 32     | 32      | 9       | 240.1   | 221    | 105    | 92      | 95      | 154    |
| 1972 CHC MLB | 3      | 1      | 0       | 1.45     | 4      | 4       | 2       | 31.0    | 24     | 5      | 5       | 3       | 19     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 8      | 7      | 0       | 3.47     | 20     | 20      | 5       | 134.2   | 132    | 55     | 52      | 58      | 71     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Sanders is a 4-time All Star and the 1966 Cy Young Award winner (15-9, 2.49 - what was OOTP doing?). At 33 he's now a guy with a lot of injury history whose made just 24 appearances in the past 2 seasons. In 1973 things were going along pretty well before he strained his elbow at the end of July and missed the season. I guess the semi-good news is that the injury that caused him to miss all of 1972 was a shoulder injury - we never got any better word than "inflammation" - so maybe it's not compounded (note: it is)?

When he did pitch last year, Sanders lacked a lot of the movement and unhittability that characterized his arsenal in the past. He still throws harder than the rest of the rotation - not that that's a big accomplishment - and at least tries to keep the ball down but last year he did have a worrying tendency to miss both outside of the zone and over the plate (18 HRs allowed). With this team fielding that was still good enough but the K rates have been dropping every year since 1970 and now it's getting into the danger zone. Sanders is a rarity among pitchers, a natural leader, and will do the little things to help his team win even if they hurt his batting average.

Sanders should be fully rehabbed from his elbow by spring training in 1974. The real question though is how good is he going to be?

Mike Schurke
OF No. 24
SR, 5'10" 193 lbs.
Born 1947-06-14
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 OAK MLB | .280     | 54     | 189     | 19     | 53     | 9       | 2       | 1       | 21       | 13      | 23      | 3       |
| 1971 CHC MLB | .368     | 10     | 38      | 6      | 14     | 4       | 0       | 0       | 4        | 2       | 2       | 1       |
| 1972 WIC AAA | .216     | 34     | 111     | 16     | 24     | 6       | 0       | 0       | 7        | 11      | 6       | 3       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .209     | 39     | 110     | 18     | 23     | 4       | 2       | 2       | 12       | 9       | 11      | 1       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .293     | 140    | 549     | 77     | 161    | 35      | 5       | 3       | 46       | 46      | 50      | 16      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Schurke's experienced some extreme highs and lows over the past few years, going from starting in Oakland to getting traded to Chicago for the underrated Adam Groves (.279, 16, 60, albeit with the Yankees, not the A's), then getting sent down to AAA Wichita for a spell in 1972 when he really struggled to adjust to a 4th outfielder role, and then finally last year when he returned to everyday play and excelled. This guy's only 26 and already he's got a lifetime of experience, it seems.

Schurke is a slap hitter who specializes in hitting the ball on the ground and beating out hits with his feet. He's not a world class speedster but he's got a ton of hustle and is rarely if ever at anything other than 100% when he's on the field in any fashion. Last season that hustle led him to finish in the top 10 in the NL in hits (9th), doubles (5th), and batting average (10th) and he actually co-led the league in hit by pitches (11). Power is not part of his game although he'll sometimes hit some long drives into the gaps. Schurke did get caught 13 times in 29 attempts last year and it does seem like when he's allowed to run a lot he'll make a few too many hard plays out there. On the other hand, in spite of putting the ball into play on the ground so much, he hit into just 6 double plays all season. Defensively he's an excellent left fielder who can also play in center or right depending on need.

Now that he's in an established role, there's no reason why Schurke won't be able to stay in it for the next 5 seasons.

Gordon Summer
SP No. 16
RR, 5'11" 179 lbs.
Born 1949-12-05
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 MIA A   | 0      | 3      | 0       | 3.82     | 5      | 5       | 2       | 37.2    | 36     | 18     | 16      | 14      | 39     |
| 1971 SAL A   | 3      | 3      | 0       | 5.31     | 6      | 6       | 2       | 40.2    | 53     | 29     | 24      | 23      | 38     |
| 1971 MID AA  | 3      | 6      | 0       | 3.60     | 9      | 9       | 5       | 67.1    | 68     | 31     | 27      | 28      | 36     |
| 1972 MID AA  | 0      | 3      | 0       | 2.76     | 3      | 3       | 2       | 26.0    | 29     | 9      | 8       | 14      | 16     |
| 1972 WIC AAA | 12     | 7      | 0       | 3.13     | 21     | 21      | 5       | 158.0   | 141    | 60     | 55      | 47      | 92     |
| 1972 CHC MLB | 2      | 4      | 0       | 4.24     | 7      | 7       | 1       | 46.2    | 46     | 23     | 22      | 15      | 24     |
| 1973 WIC AAA | 3      | 2      | 0       | 1.92     | 5      | 5       | 3       | 42.0    | 33     | 10     | 9       | 11      | 28     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 10     | 12     | 0       | 2.62     | 26     | 26      | 9       | 198.2   | 166    | 64     | 58      | 87      | 137    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Yeah, this is going to make you oldheads feel old. This is in fact Sting, the bass player/singer with the Police; he's also a young phenom who emerged as the ace of the Cubs in his rookie year. Just the fact that he's in the league... anyway, as a baseball player he pitched a lot of innings and threw a lot of pitches, which sort of caught up to him in the 2nd half: his July and September ERAs were his two worst of the season, although 3.23 and 3.11 are still pretty good. The one thing he just needs to tweak a little is getting his offense to score behind him: that 10-12 record belies an ERA that was 8th best in baseball in 1973.

Sting doesn't throw all that fast but the thing that got him drafted 13th overall in 1971 and then fast-tracked is a big, knee-buckling curveball that's already considered one of the best in baseball. Sting just needs to learn to get it over the plate a bit more often, is all. He does have a history of throwing strikes in the minors and it's possible that he was just a bit overwhelmed / tried to be a little bit too fine in his second taste at the bigs. He's solid at holding runners although they were 4/4 when they did steal on him; there's only so much that a watchful eye and a solid pickoff move can do when you throw as slow as Summers does. He hit .209 last year and so is one of the best hitting pitchers in the league, too.

Sting will more than likely stay in the league for a long time to come and constantly torment guys who swear that "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic" just came out a few years ago.

Jeremy Taylor
SS/RF No. 19
RR, 5'10" 196 lbs.
Born 1944-08-14
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHC MLB | .268     | 145    | 537     | 82     | 144    | 13      | 16      | 29      | 85       | 51      | 99      | 9       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .246     | 145    | 561     | 84     | 138    | 19      | 5       | 35      | 100      | 46      | 99      | 16      |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .245     | 100    | 363     | 46     | 89     | 15      | 0       | 16      | 56       | 54      | 77      | 14      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
A year removed from winning the 1972 NL MVP award, Jeremy Taylor had a very rough year last year. It started out well enough with him going .301/7/16 in April but a sprained ankle that kept lingering caused him to miss almost all of both May and June and he just wasn't the same hitter when he returned. Taylor was downright awful in July - .175/0/2 - and although a better September (.266/3/16) indicated that maybe he found his stroke again, it's a tough one.

When he's on his game, Taylor is a pre-eminent power hitter, so good in fact that the Cubs tried moving him out of shortstop for a while so he wouldn't have to worry about defense as much. He'll go after anything as long as it's high in the strike zone. He's got good speed, not that he gets to use it that often in the heart of the Cubs' order, and his long, uppercut stroke means that double play balls are very rare. Taylor would make a decent second baseman but 2B isn't really open and as a shortstop his somewhat stony hands (20 errors last year, a .949) make him a guy you employ in spite of rather than because of the glove.

Taylor is still very much an MVP type player, assuming all the power returns. A move back to the outfield might also be in the cards although then the issue becomes who'd replace him at shortstop.

Alex Vallejo
RF/CF No. 12
LL, 5'11" 187 lbs.
Born 1943-06-28
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 OAK MLB | .301     | 66     | 249     | 40     | 75     | 9       | 1       | 5       | 23       | 27      | 25      | 10      |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .315     | 88     | 349     | 46     | 110    | 17      | 8       | 8       | 33       | 35      | 36      | 9       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .338     | 53     | 198     | 34     | 67     | 9       | 1       | 5       | 21       | 18      | 11      | 10      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Alex Vallejo is one of the most frustrating guys to have on your team. When he's healthy, as he was for the first half of 1972, the Venezuelan-born Columbian is not just an All-Star but a potential MVP candidate. The problem is, he's never, ever healthy. The last time Vallejo played more than 100 games was 1969 and that year he played 101.

Vallejo has a career .306 average in spite of having so much of the healthy part of his career happen during the dead ball era. The contact hitting seems to be there as much as ever. Vallejo will make contact with the ball high or low in the strike zone and turn it into a line drive. The injuries also don't seem to have affected his speed that much although he doesn't attempt steals quite as often as other guys as fast as he is do. Really, you'd hope that this was out of some newly found conservative play but no, Vallejo plays at one speed and one speed alone and has little regard for himself in the field. That includes on defense - let's just say that he's a very, very bad guy to put out in a field that still has literal brick walls.

It would surprise nobody to know that Vallejo is also a fan favorite - for the 60 or so games he does play every year, nobody is more fun to watch. He's 30 years old now and, much as it pains me to say it, a good candidate to get traded to the league that doesn't require him to literally run into walls every few games.

Max Weinberg
SP No. 27
SR, 6'2" 192 lbs.
Born 1949-07-11
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 REN A   | 0      | 1      | 0       | 11.11    | 1      | 1       | 0       | 5.2     | 10     | 7      | 7       | 3       | 2      |
| 1971 JAX AA  | 6      | 9      | 0       | 2.66     | 16     | 16      | 11      | 135.1   | 129    | 50     | 40      | 69      | 74     |
| 1971 WIC AAA | 0      | 1      | 0       | 5.68     | 2      | 2       | 0       | 12.2    | 16     | 8      | 8       | 14      | 4      |
| 1972 MID AA  | 0      | 6      | 0       | 5.48     | 6      | 6       | 2       | 42.2    | 44     | 26     | 26      | 33      | 27     |
| 1972 WIC AAA | 8      | 9      | 0       | 5.05     | 23     | 23      | 0       | 142.1   | 152    | 86     | 80      | 70      | 93     |
| 1973 WIC AAA | 3      | 1      | 0       | 1.12     | 5      | 5       | 2       | 40.0    | 22     | 7      | 5       | 12      | 33     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 7      | 14     | 0       | 3.37     | 29     | 23      | 6       | 176.0   | 151    | 72     | 66      | 92      | 99     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Weinberg is the slightly less bright prospect on a music-heavy Cubs rotation. The former Cleveland draft pick somehow made it onto this Cubs roster and has consistently been a top 25 prospect since he was drafted out of college in 1971. In fact, even though he came up to stay at the end of May, the BNN still saw fit to call him the #16 overall prospect at midseason. Weinberg had a rough time of it in the majors, finishing the year 2-11 with a 3.91 ERA after a 5-3 start. He's still got a lot to go on.

Weinberg, like Sting and like, it seems, every other starter on this staff, is not a guy with a blazing fastball but instead a guy who throws breaking pitches with a ton of movement. In his case he throws a good - not Sting levels but still good - curve and an even better split-fingered "fastball" that he uses as a change of pace. He also mixes in a regular 4-seamer that hits 90 on a good day, a 2-seamer, and that crazy "cut" fastball the kids are using so much nowadays. Weinberg had some real issues finding the plate in the second half, allowing 41 walks in his last 70 IPs vs 43 strikeouts. That's got to improve if he's going to rise to Sting's level. One thing he's ahead of Sting at is hitting: Weinberg hit .288 last year and was called on to actually hit a lot more than to lay down the sacrifce. He's not super fantastic at fielding balls in front of him but he'll get the job done, and he could also learn to hold runners a bit better.

Weinberg is still only 24 years old himself. No, his future doesn't look Sting levels of bright but you should wear, I don't know, light prescription sunglasses when looking at this guy's future.

Elijah Wright
OF No. 29
LL, 6'1" 200 lbs.
Born 1946-08-23
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 IOW AAA | .247     | 110    | 388     | 60     | 96     | 13      | 1       | 1       | 26       | 63      | 52      | 17      |
| 1971 OAK MLB | .444     | 5      | 9       | 3      | 4      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 1       | 0       | 0       |
| 1972 IOW AAA | .243     | 73     | 230     | 31     | 56     | 13      | 1       | 0       | 21       | 23      | 32      | 5       |
| 1972 OAK MLB | .000     | 2      | 1       | 0      | 0      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 0       | 0       | 0       |
| 1973 CHC MLB | .269     | 56     | 134     | 19     | 36     | 4       | 2       | 0       | 16       | 13      | 18      | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Yet another product of the Oakland-to-Chicago pipeline, Elijah Wright got his first significant action last season as a 5th outfielder with some ability to hit from the left handed side of the plate. He's got absolutely zero power and in spite of blazing speed - he stole 56 bases at AAA Columbus in 1970 - he doesn't get a great jump on the ball in the outfield and so is not a good fit for centerfield, the only place that would accept this. As much as I like speed guys, it's hard to see his role increasing that much.
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Old 01-18-2026, 01:34 PM   #325
Syd Thrift
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Cincinnati Reds (81-81, 4th NL West)

1973 Recap: Cincinnati had that fun run in 1970 that was followed by two last-place finishes. In 1972 they showed new signs of life, even leading the NL West for a few days in mid to late August, before a season-ending tailspin (10-17 in September, 11-21 to end the year) took them all the way down to needing to beat the lowly Giants on the final day of the year to finish with an even record.

The tale of this season was of some great front-line play, highlighted by RF Jaden Weaver (.258/38/117) and SP Steve Waiters (19-13, 3.34), covering over poor team defense and and iffy pitching. Normally you expect a stars-and-scrubs type setup from a larger market team.

1974 Outlook: This team does not look like they're going to become the Big Red Machine of real life any time soon. They just need an awful lot of secondary help in tne lineup - after Weaver and #2 guy RJ Dominguez their 3rd place man in RBIs was leadoff hitter Pedro Ortiz with 50 - and around 4 or 5 more pitchers.

Rodrigo Aguilar
SP No. 32
LL, 6'4" 191 lbs.
Born 1942-04-27
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 SD MLB  | 11     | 10     | 0       | 3.47     | 27     | 27      | 5       | 196.2   | 198    | 83     | 76      | 68      | 59     |
| 1972 SD MLB  | 18     | 9      | 0       | 3.57     | 32     | 32      | 7       | 242.0   | 198    | 100    | 96      | 89      | 96     |
| 1973 SD MLB  | 5      | 6      | 0       | 4.61     | 12     | 12      | 3       | 80.0    | 82     | 44     | 41      | 28      | 29     |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 6      | 7      | 0       | 4.72     | 18     | 14      | 2       | 99.0    | 96     | 53     | 52      | 42      | 40     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
The Reds paid a pretty penny to pry the 1972 18-game winner Aguilar away from their division rivals, a prospect to be named later and their starting catcher in Oliver Williams (who finished the year .218/10/43). Aguilar won games on smoke, mirrors, and guile in 72 and flat out wasn't able to repeat the performance in either San Diego nor Cincy. He throws a fastball with some speed but it's relatively straight and easy to track and he doesn't always hit his spots with it or an okay but not world-beating curve. Hitters sent that curve out of the park a combined 24 times last season including 14 after he joined the Reds.

Aguilar is now 5 time double-digit winner with 4 of those years coming with an expansion team. It can't all have been luck, can it?

Veit Bieler
C No. 20
RR, 5'11" 200 lbs.
Born 1946-10-15
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 DEN AAA | .236     | 57     | 157     | 23     | 37     | 3       | 1       | 3       | 19       | 24      | 24      | 0       |
| 1971 TEX MLB | .229     | 14     | 48      | 0      | 11     | 2       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 2       | 16      | 0       |
| 1972 PFD AA  | .250     | 36     | 88      | 10     | 22     | 1       | 1       | 2       | 10       | 12      | 16      | 0       |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .155     | 21     | 58      | 2      | 9      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 6        | 7       | 10      | 0       |
| 1973 IND AAA | .288     | 24     | 66      | 6      | 19     | 5       | 0       | 2       | 15       | 6       | 17      | 0       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .198     | 53     | 121     | 6      | 24     | 4       | 0       | 1       | 9        | 23      | 30      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The Reds acquired Veit Bieler, who as far as I can tell was just a game-generated guy from Austria, in December assuming he'd be able to work out whatever issues he had in Denver in 1972 and become the team's new backstop. He hit well enough in Indianapolis to convince the team to send the incumbent Oliver Williams away in exchange for pitching help. Once promoted, Bieler struggled to hit and now the Reds don't really have a great answer behind the plate.

Bieler wound up losing out on catching opportunities because his mate behind the plate Leron Lee is a better defensive catcher. Bieler has a poor arm and caught only 27.3% of runners attempting to steal on him last year. He's okay at getting in front of wild pitches but he'll never be anything close to a Gold Glover back there. He's as slow as you'd expect a catcher to be and in fact just about the only skill he did show in 1973 was some pretty nice pitch recognition that pulled his OBP all the way up to .322 in spite of an average below the Timonen Line.

If Bieler could add even a little bit of power or cut down on the strikeouts he could be a solid performer. Those are kind of big things to need to add, and if nothing else Cincy has a couple of interesting looking guys, Keke Roosberg (.284/7/23 at Indianapolis) and an as-yet-unnamed top 200 prospect in AAA (.317/11/23 in 59 games at that level) who will compete for the job.

Dennis bin Naim
OF No. 13
LL, 6'2" 201 lbs.
Born 1947-02-14
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TR AA   | .264     | 59     | 220     | 28     | 58     | 3       | 5       | 6       | 22       | 35      | 26      | 9       |
| 1971 IND AAA | .194     | 22     | 67      | 8      | 13     | 2       | 1       | 0       | 6        | 13      | 7       | 4       |
| 1971 CIN MLB | .269     | 27     | 67      | 8      | 18     | 2       | 0       | 0       | 5        | 4       | 12      | 0       |
| 1972 IND AAA | .265     | 32     | 132     | 18     | 35     | 5       | 1       | 1       | 14       | 10      | 17      | 8       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .213     | 79     | 268     | 30     | 57     | 6       | 4       | 1       | 11       | 32      | 38      | 5       |
| 1973 IND AAA | .203     | 50     | 172     | 16     | 35     | 3       | 2       | 4       | 15       | 25      | 30      | 7       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .277     | 52     | 141     | 17     | 39     | 5       | 1       | 1       | 10       | 18      | 25      | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
One of four men to play substantial games in centerfield for the Reds last year, bin Naim created as many new questions as he answered. Offensively he was... fine. The knock on him in 1972 was that he was hitting too many popups and strikeouts and not taking enough advantage of his natural speed. In 1973 at least he seemed to do a lot better than that. This sort of batting profile will never produce much in the way of power but at least he hit for contact well. Defensively it was another matter. Bin Naim caught most of the balls that he got to but he exhibited a really slow first step and the Israeli didn't seem to do a great job of anticipating when the ball was going to fly into the gap. He was better in right than in center after he was sent down to AAA Indianapolis in May but even then he didn't record a single baserunner kill against minor league baserunners.

It's hard to really say for sure what bin Naim's future is with this team. He doesn't field well enough to play a lot of center and he doesn't hit anywhere near well enough to play in the corners... plus, the Reds already have the corners pretty well full. A new city might be the best course of action for this guy.

R.J. Dominguez
LF No. 33
RR, 6'0" 198 lbs.
Born 1944-12-10
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 KC MLB  | .284     | 150    | 518     | 99     | 147    | 24      | 1       | 26      | 85       | 124     | 91      | 2       |
| 1972 KC MLB  | .251     | 113    | 394     | 49     | 99     | 20      | 2       | 19      | 77       | 62      | 72      | 3       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .279     | 156    | 566     | 96     | 158    | 37      | 8       | 25      | 100      | 98      | 68      | 4       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Dominguez had an off year for the Royals in 1972 and the Reds swept in to take him off their hands. They paid a high price for the slugger's services - 1B Alonzo Rivera (.322, 8, 79), who contended for the batting title over in the junior circuit, and Joe Hagan (3-4, 5.40), who'd been a part of the Reds' rotation the season prior (8-13, 4.48) - but oh boy was he worth it. Dominguez finished 6th in HRs, 3rd in RBIs, and led the league in walks, generally terrorizing his new league.

Dominguez is more of a line drive hitter than a guy with a big uppercut swing and he manages to keep his average relatively high by avoiding easy strikeouts on breaking pitches. He's studied the game pretty hard and won't dive out of the way of a curveball thrown by a same-handed pitcher, to the point that last year he actually hit RHPs better than LHPs (.286 with 20 of his 25 HRs coming off of northsiders). He was hitting close to .300 before a late-season slump pushed his average down to .279, which is still great for what the Reds want him to do; still, a longer look at his stamina might be in order for 1974. Defensively Dominguez has one of the best outfield arms in the league, although it's somewhat wasted in left field (the argument for Weaver in right is a. he's a bit rangier and b. that's just where he plays).

Dominguez is an absolute stud and he and Weaver make one of the best 1-2 punches in the game today.

MC Gainey
1B No. 44
LL, 6'1" 200 lbs.
Born 1948-01-21
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 ASH AA  | .220     | 89     | 314     | 40     | 69     | 8       | 0       | 11      | 38       | 55      | 65      | 3       |
| 1971 TUC AAA | .222     | 37     | 99      | 23     | 22     | 0       | 0       | 9       | 13       | 23      | 17      | 1       |
| 1972 IND AAA | .307     | 112    | 323     | 42     | 99     | 15      | 1       | 18      | 64       | 45      | 57      | 0       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .214     | 9      | 14      | 1      | 3      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 1       | 3       | 0       |
| 1973 IND AAA | .204     | 36     | 93      | 11     | 19     | 5       | 1       | 2       | 8        | 15      | 17      | 0       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .264     | 102    | 356     | 47     | 94     | 20      | 2       | 11      | 45       | 58      | 87      | 2       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Can horror comic books become a thing? Can MC Gainey turn into the "Swamp Thing" of the major leagues? These are two good questions. Trust me. Gainey was a low-round draft pick who has kind of suddenly turned into a potential player for the Reds since they traded for him in the winter of 1971, and 73 was his coming out party. Gainey showed some signs of being a middle of the order hitter for this team.

Gainey's best attribute is that he loves to take a pitch that's out of the zone. Sometimes he'll take a pitch inside of the zone as well and in fact he will swing and miss a bit too often to hit for a good average. Still, that plus some possibly 20+ HR power can make him an above average starter at first base. He's neither fast nor a good defender but that's not really why you have a guy like this in your lineup. For a guy who likes the high inside fastball as much as Gainey does, he did a pretty decent job of hitting across the splits last year with a .269 average vs RHPs and a .250 vs lefty throwers.

With the former first baseman Alonzo Rivera (.322, 8, 79) gone to Kansas City, finding a guy like MC Gainey on the scrap heap - the swamp heap? - was a really fine turn of events for these Reds.

Robert Hopkins
OF No. 17
RR, 6'0" 199 lbs.
Born 1945-07-26
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TR AA   | .302     | 29     | 86      | 12     | 26     | 3       | 0       | 2       | 8        | 12      | 12      | 0       |
| 1971 IND AAA | .348     | 52     | 132     | 14     | 46     | 8       | 0       | 3       | 19       | 17      | 13      | 5       |
| 1971 CIN MLB | .000     | 1      | 1       | 0      | 0      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 0       | 0       | 0       |
| 1972 IND AAA | .237     | 13     | 38      | 3      | 9      | 1       | 0       | 2       | 7        | 4       | 11      | 1       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .254     | 46     | 118     | 11     | 30     | 6       | 1       | 1       | 10       | 9       | 21      | 1       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .242     | 73     | 207     | 19     | 50     | 9       | 1       | 5       | 25       | 16      | 36      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Hopkins, like teammate Leron Lee, just kind of showed up to camp in Quebec in the spring of 1971 and got a job. Like Lee, he's very much a AAAA type of player with not a lot of great upside. He flashed a little bit of pop last year but also had a worrying tendency to go looking for the high inside fastball to the detriment of anything else. The Ks cut into his average and he doesn't walk much so his OBP over the past 2 seasons has hovered around .300 (.308 last year, .298 this year); getting on base is not his strong suit. He's not terribly fast although good instincts afield make him a good corner outfield and a guy you can kind of pass with in center. He is barely any threat to steal and doesn't handle situations well on the bases.

Cincinnati had some huge issues with team defense last season and Hopkins playing 49 games in center was, quite frankly, one of them. With the continued development of Manny Trillo, the Reds hope to not have to use Hopkins as much next season.

Alonzo Huanosta
1B No. 29
RR, 6'2" 202 lbs.
Born 1941-01-10
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CLE MLB | .261     | 141    | 591     | 80     | 154    | 27      | 4       | 13      | 57       | 46      | 70      | 2       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .276     | 142    | 537     | 69     | 148    | 27      | 0       | 6       | 63       | 45      | 62      | 11      |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .273     | 48     | 187     | 34     | 51     | 6       | 1       | 5       | 23       | 16      | 23      | 9       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Alonzo Huanosta was a 3 time All-Star in Cleveland before the Reds picked him up for virtually nothing prior to the 1972 season. He made his 4th All-Star Game (how, I can't tell you - those are not AS numbers to me, even as a left fielder) in 72 and then was having a similar looking year in 73 before he broke his kneecap on June 4th and missed the rest of the season. MC Gainey came in for him and now Huanosta's role is unclear.

First base was actually a transition spot for Huanosta; he's a natural outfielder with more than 1000 games in the 3 OF positions in his career. He could move back there, I guess, although the Reds' outfield is pretty full as well. As a hitter, Huanosta carries a .303 career average including a batting title in 1970 (.345/20/92). He hasn't hit higher than .276 since then though and that power in particular appears to be a thing of the past. Huanosta has good speed and doesn't strike out much. He also doesn't walk a massive amount and what power he does have goes to the gaps rather than over the walls. He didn't prove to be a very good defensive first baseman but is at least historically speaking adequate in the outfield corners should he return to those spots.

It seems too early for the 32 year old Huanosta to be relegated to a new career as a pinch-hitter and backup. Where do you put him though? With MC Gainey at first, you have the team's two best hitters in RJ Dominguez and Jaden Weaver in left and right. Another trade seems like the most viable option.

Tracey Larazabal
SP/LR No. 14
LR, 6'0" 201 lbs.
Born 1945-01-20
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TR AA   | 3      | 3      | 0       | 3.17     | 13     | 5       | 3       | 56.2    | 53     | 25     | 20      | 18      | 22     |
| 1971 IND AAA | 2      | 2      | 1       | 6.49     | 13     | 2       | 0       | 34.2    | 46     | 26     | 25      | 15      | 12     |
| 1972 IND AAA | 7      | 6      | 0       | 3.85     | 22     | 22      | 1       | 149.1   | 163    | 76     | 64      | 44      | 78     |
| 1972 CIN MLB | 2      | 2      | 0       | 5.49     | 7      | 5       | 0       | 36.0    | 46     | 22     | 22      | 13      | 20     |
| 1973 IND AAA | 3      | 4      | 0       | 3.92     | 9      | 9       | 0       | 59.2    | 42     | 26     | 26      | 14      | 42     |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 1      | 8      | 0       | 4.20     | 24     | 13      | 2       | 107.0   | 117    | 58     | 50      | 38      | 59     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Larazabal wasn't quite as bad as that 1-8 record would suggest but it can't be said that he was all that good either. He allowed 11 HRs in 91.1 IP as a starter, which happens when you have to nibble at the plate with iffy stuff to get hitters out - sometimes his curve just didn't curve enough and hitters sent it a long way. He's done a decent job over the last couple of years from increasing his velocity from not even close to major-league viable to a point where he now gets to 90 on the radar gun every now and then.

Larazabal is as hard a worker as anybody on this team. Is that enough? Right now I'd say no but I guess stranger things have happened.

Leron Lee
C/1B No. 18
LR, 6'0" 199 lbs.
Born 1948-03-05
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TR AA   | .226     | 67     | 230     | 16     | 52     | 6       | 0       | 3       | 23       | 19      | 48      | 0       |
| 1971 IND AAA | .259     | 26     | 81      | 11     | 21     | 6       | 0       | 0       | 11       | 16      | 10      | 0       |
| 1972 IND AAA | .285     | 95     | 319     | 36     | 91     | 10      | 0       | 10      | 43       | 33      | 73      | 0       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .216     | 15     | 37      | 3      | 8      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 6       | 4       | 0       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .258     | 113    | 325     | 26     | 84     | 3       | 0       | 4       | 32       | 26      | 71      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Lee just kind of showed up at the training camp of the Trois Riviers Aigles in 1971 and since then he's risen through the ranks by doing what the Reds needed him to do. Lee is a good defensive catcher although not blessed with a great arm. That and the fact that he bats left will probably keep him in the league for years in spite of a lack of real offensive skills. He did have double digit power in Indy in 1972 but there was no sign of that in the major leagues last year.

There's a great chance that 1973 will be the high water mark of Lee's career but backup catchers live forever so he also probably won't be going away any time soon.

Jake Leone
CF No. 28
LL, 6'1" 200 lbs.
Born 1946-02-07
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TUL AAA | .253     | 22     | 83      | 11     | 21     | 4       | 0       | 1       | 6        | 9       | 13      | 3       |
| 1971 STL MLB | .156     | 14     | 45      | 5      | 7      | 1       | 1       | 1       | 3        | 2       | 13      | 2       |
| 1971 SD MLB  | .249     | 68     | 269     | 42     | 67     | 10      | 4       | 5       | 29       | 33      | 55      | 12      |
| 1972 HAW AAA | .228     | 74     | 259     | 30     | 59     | 8       | 2       | 8       | 33       | 33      | 51      | 15      |
| 1972 SD MLB  | .202     | 29     | 109     | 12     | 22     | 1       | 3       | 2       | 10       | 11      | 24      | 4       |
| 1973 IND AAA | .209     | 65     | 230     | 24     | 48     | 6       | 2       | 7       | 25       | 21      | 67      | 15      |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .172     | 34     | 99      | 8      | 17     | 2       | 4       | 1       | 5        | 10      | 28      | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
It's easy to see why Jake Leone keeps getting chances: the 27 yaer old Pennsylvania native has got 80 grade speed. If only he could make consistent contact, the feeling goes, he could be a great leadoff hitter. Reds hitting coach Brian Lavoie was the 3rd guy to try and solve this problem in three years and far from getting better, it seems like Leone is getting worse as he enters the prime years of his career. Last year he struck out in nearly a third of his at-bats (which is bad for 2026 but this is "last year of Mike Zunino" levels of bad for 1973). He's all right in the field but can get lackadaisical at times and miss the easy ones.

It'd be cool to see Jake Leone learn some pitch recognition. Stranger things have happened I guess.

Erico Liserio
3B/2B No. 9
RR, 5'11" 199 lbs.
Born 1945-11-15
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TR AA   | .257     | 28     | 105     | 12     | 27     | 7       | 0       | 1       | 9        | 16      | 16      | 0       |
| 1971 IND AAA | .197     | 78     | 213     | 19     | 42     | 5       | 0       | 3       | 27       | 27      | 31      | 3       |
| 1972 IND AAA | .260     | 125    | 419     | 55     | 109    | 10      | 0       | 13      | 52       | 44      | 71      | 4       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .375     | 3      | 8       | 0      | 3      | 0       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 1       | 0       | 0       |
| 1973 IND AAA | .235     | 52     | 183     | 23     | 43     | 0       | 1       | 5       | 15       | 20      | 31      | 16      |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .261     | 61     | 184     | 18     | 48     | 6       | 0       | 3       | 20       | 12      | 40      | 6       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The Reds finally got fed up with 3B Bobby Kralcevic (.234/4/38) and sent him off to the Angels in June, handing 27 year old organizational soldier Erico Liserio the job in his place. Liserio has never looked like a starting caliber major leaguer and hit an empty .260 in the role. He's a decent if not great fielder and does have a bit of speed although he's unlikely to get on base enough to use it a lot.

The Reds don't have a lot going on at third in their minor league system. There's Roberto Duran (307/6/39 at AA TR), who got promoted aggressively this year and hits more like a shortstop than a third sacker, 27 year old non-prospect Nick Weber (.231/18/55 at AAA Indy), who at least has some pop in his bat, and a few guys who aren't ready yet. It's not impossible that Liserio will open the year as the team's 3B.

Theodore Long
3B/IF No. 5
LR, 6'2" 204 lbs.
Born 1947-09-15
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 TAM A   | .243     | 116    | 416     | 39     | 101    | 13      | 2       | 1       | 40       | 25      | 54      | 0       |
| 1971 TR AA   | .216     | 12     | 37      | 2      | 8      | 1       | 0       | 0       | 1        | 0       | 5       | 0       |
| 1972 TR AA   | .293     | 29     | 99      | 12     | 29     | 4       | 0       | 4       | 14       | 10      | 9       | 0       |
| 1972 IND AAA | .324     | 77     | 299     | 32     | 97     | 16      | 0       | 5       | 32       | 16      | 21      | 0       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .269     | 24     | 78      | 5      | 21     | 3       | 0       | 0       | 12       | 1       | 7       | 0       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .241     | 61     | 170     | 12     | 41     | 7       | 0       | 1       | 25       | 4       | 22      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Theodore Long is another Reds farmhand who finally got a chance to play after 4 years in the minor leagues. He can play all around the infield passably and can cover ground pretty okay in left and center field as well. A former 11th round draft pick, he doesn't do anything really spectacularly. On the downside of things, he's no threat to steal and isn't fond of drawing walks or hitting for power. A utility / 25th man on the roster role is about the maximum level of Long's abilities.

Pete Lynn
SU No. 8
RR, 6'1" 202 lbs.
Born 1945-10-02
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 MIN MLB | 6      | 9      | 19      | 3.31     | 69     | 0       | 0       | 100.1   | 93     | 49     | 37      | 29      | 92     |
| 1972 CIN MLB | 6      | 11     | 11      | 2.95     | 55     | 4       | 1       | 94.1    | 90     | 32     | 31      | 31      | 80     |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 3      | 4      | 3       | 2.66     | 54     | 1       | 0       | 77.2    | 67     | 29     | 23      | 21      | 59     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Lynn, the former closer for the Twins when they were consistent contenders, proved to be a bit too up and down in that role in his first year with the Reds but settled into a good job as a setup man for teammate Brian Yates. Lynn throws as hard if not harder than Yates and has a varied enough arsenal that he could conceivably be called on to start on occasion - he does have 17 career starts, including 1 last year (a 7 inning quality start vs the Padres) so it's not out of the question. He seemed to wilt in high-pressure situations last season, allowing a .300 average with 15 RBIs in 50 at-bats with the game on the line.

Lynn himself is still just 28 in spite of a 4 1/2 year career as a closer, so he's still got time for a career change.

Bastien Maurice
LHR No. 41
RL, 6'2" 204 lbs.
Born 1944-08-23
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 IND AAA | 11     | 7      | 0       | 2.41     | 22     | 22      | 2       | 156.1   | 133    | 53     | 42      | 70      | 62     |
| 1971 CIN MLB | 3      | 2      | 0       | 4.66     | 14     | 6       | 0       | 46.1    | 42     | 26     | 24      | 18      | 23     |
| 1972 CIN MLB | 1      | 0      | 0       | 3.07     | 36     | 0       | 0       | 38.0    | 25     | 14     | 13      | 14      | 21     |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 3      | 0      | 0       | 5.21     | 45     | 1       | 1       | 48.1    | 53     | 31     | 28      | 16      | 34     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
The job of a lefty specialist can be a hard one sometimes. You don't get to play all that often and so if you get blown up once or twice it can really affect peoples' perceptions of you. Maurice gave up 3 runs on 4 hits in an inning of work on Opening Night and never really recovered from that, ERA-wise. He pitched pretty well in May and June but had another couple of month-destroying rough outings in July and September. Maurice throws 5 pitches, not always for strikes, but incudes a lot of swings and misses. Lefties hit just .215 againt him last year but unfortunately he has to play right-handed batters too and they tattooed him to the tune of a 320/348/492 triple slash.

Bastien did get to start a game last year but his role on Cincinnati is something like a left-handed one out guy. In 1973 you can't just be a one out guy, though.

Dusty McCully
SS/3B No. 38
RR, 6'0" 193 lbs.
Born 1946-06-07
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 STL MLB | .253     | 149    | 549     | 53     | 139    | 19      | 3       | 9       | 58       | 35      | 73      | 0       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .242     | 138    | 496     | 43     | 120    | 21      | 3       | 8       | 50       | 41      | 75      | 0       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .259     | 123    | 486     | 54     | 126    | 24      | 3       | 9       | 43       | 21      | 89      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Dusty McCully spend the final month of the season on the IR thanks to a severe hip strain he suffered on September 7. Before then he was turning in a second solid if unspectacular season as the Reds' starting shortstop.

McCully is a pull hitter who has a tendency to swing at everything which, in spite of not bad power for a shortstop, will serve to keep him towards the bottom of the order. He laid down 13 sacrifice bunts last year but in spite of the volume he's not really very good at making contact with the ball on bunts. He's surprisingly slow afield so the tendency to pull the ball and hit it into the air isn't as bad for him as you might think. He's got a good first step and a nice arm at shortstop that make him an above average fielder as well as a guy who could possibly make the move to 3rd base later in his career (that would require some improvement as a hitter though).

McCully is probably not going to be making a trip to the All-Star Game any time soon but it wasn't a coincidence that the bottom fell out of the team defense when he was laid up in September. He and Ortiz make up one of the better double play combinations in the league.

Pedro Ortiz
2B No. 21
RR, 5'11" 181 lbs.
Born 1943-10-05
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CIN MLB | .265     | 148    | 622     | 77     | 165    | 31      | 6       | 6       | 43       | 68      | 79      | 28      |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .258     | 146    | 594     | 64     | 153    | 31      | 6       | 4       | 37       | 62      | 46      | 35      |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .248     | 153    | 630     | 97     | 156    | 30      | 6       | 5       | 50       | 67      | 69      | 23      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
In a pretty tumultuous year, Pedro Ortiz was the Reds' most consistent member of the infield and he put together another Pedro Ortiz type season at the top of the lineup. Although he was an All-Star snub, ending his consecutive appearances at the Midsummer Classic at six, Ortiz nevertheless led the National League in at-bats and plate appearances and finished 2nd in runs.

Cincinnati fans call him "Speedy Ortiz" and for good reason: he led the league in steals in 1972 and he's finished in the top 10 in that category ever since he started playing 2nd for Cincy in 1967. Now 30 years old he's still as fast as ever on the basepaths. He's got a smooth swing that's geared more for line drives than groundballs, although last year there were a few more popups thrown into the mix, especially during a midseason slump that lasted throughout June (207/0/7) and much of July (237/0/10) and pulled his batting average to the lowest of Ortiz's career. Ortiz has the mentality of a leadoff man and will often foul off a pitch and coax a long at-bat just to let his teammates see a pitcher's stuff. He's a good defensive player, perhaps not worthy of having won the past 3 Gold Gloves but he does go out there every day and that counts.

Ortiz should rebound with the bat and be at least a .270 hitter in 1974. That should also give him another pass to the All-Star Game.

Graham Panarello
SP/LR No. 7
RR, 6'0" 202 lbs.
Born 1944-10-31
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CIN MLB | 1      | 5      | 1       | 3.82     | 34     | 6       | 2       | 75.1    | 69     | 32     | 32      | 39      | 47     |
| 1972 IND AAA | 4      | 7      | 0       | 5.29     | 12     | 12      | 4       | 88.1    | 86     | 56     | 52      | 38      | 59     |
| 1972 CIN MLB | 8      | 9      | 0       | 4.58     | 21     | 17      | 4       | 125.2   | 118    | 69     | 64      | 58      | 91     |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 11     | 5      | 0       | 3.20     | 35     | 23      | 6       | 193.2   | 175    | 73     | 69      | 83      | 130    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Graham Panarello has been in and out of the rotation with the Reds and Angels his entire career. Last year he set career highs in starts, wins, and innings pitched but still finished the season in the bullpen as the team took a long look at some younger arms. Panarello didn't help his cause much with a 2-3, 3.98 August. All in all though it was a very good year for the 28 year old.

Panarello was very good in low leverage long-relief situations, which make his year look a little better than it was (he was 0-1, 2.12 in 29.2 relief innings). Still, 11-4, 3.40 is nothing to sneeze at as a back of the rotation starter and Panarello showed some signs that he could pitch late into games when asked to. Panarello throws in the low to mid 90s and has a very good curveball and change. He can get into spells where he has trouble controlling his breaking pitches and when that happens he turns into a 2-pitch pitcher and boom, there goes the ability to last. Still, he had 15 quality starts in 23 tries, which is pretty good overall. He's a career .218 hitter who managed to hit .254 with 8 RBIs last year - nice for a pitcher.

If Panarello can locate his curve just a little bit more often he could easily be a middle of the rotation guy for this team in 1974 and in years to come.

Manny Trillo
CF No. 12
RR, 6'1" 184 lbs.
Born 1950-12-15
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1972 TAM A   | .250     | 13     | 56      | 4      | 14     | 2       | 0       | 1       | 3        | 2       | 17      | 5       |
| 1973 TR AA   | .246     | 33     | 126     | 21     | 31     | 6       | 1       | 3       | 6        | 25      | 25      | 4       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .236     | 68     | 212     | 22     | 50     | 10      | 0       | 1       | 20       | 20      | 46      | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
This iteration of Manny Trillo was rushed heavily through the minors leagues after being drafted 5th overall in 1972. Just 46 games into his pro career he found himself starting for the Reds in centerfield. Predictably, he got tied up by the curveball in the big leagues and never got an opportunity to showcare the speed that saw him steal 30+ bases three years running in college. Defensively he's got good hands but range-wise he doesn't look like he'll ever be a fantastic centerfielder so the Reds are going to need improvement from him offensively.

Trillo is still very young and very raw. He's got a good head on his shoulders and was named the #4 prospect in all of baseball at midseason so everyone sees the potential.

Bill Vanover
SP No. 24
SR, 5'12" 173 lbs.
Born 1941-06-12
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CIN MLB | 13     | 14     | 0       | 3.77     | 32     | 32      | 6       | 231.1   | 250    | 110    | 97      | 48      | 94     |
| 1972 CIN MLB | 13     | 15     | 0       | 3.44     | 32     | 32      | 10      | 238.0   | 221    | 98     | 91      | 41      | 107    |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 16     | 11     | 0       | 3.11     | 34     | 34      | 9       | 251.0   | 225    | 91     | 87      | 60      | 153    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Bullet Bill Vanover has been a real mystery wrapped inside of an enigma in seasons past. In spite of throwing one of the hardest fastballs in the game - his 4 seamer regularly tops 95 on the radar gun - he's never been much of a strikeout merchant. Last year in fact was not only his career high in Ks but it's 42 more than his next highest total, and even that was only around a league average number.

Vanover's stuff is relatively easy to track; if anything, his fastball is his best pitch for the velocity alone and everything else, including a slider, change, curve, and occasional cutter, just kind of come along for the ride. That said, Vanover is very, very good at keeping pitches both in the strike zone and on the corners. He's led his league in lowest BB/9 rate 5 times and finished 2nd this year. He also had the 10th lowest HR rate in 1973, with only 12 HRs allowed all season long. Cincinnati is not exactly a bandbox but it's not Dodger Stadium either. Vanover managed to lead the team in complete games due to teammate Steve Waiters sometimes having troubles staying out there. He got there with economy rather than endurance. Vanover's one real weakness outside of just throwing pretty straight is that he sometimes forgets there are runners on base. Last year he allowed 23 men to steal on him in 32 tries.

If Steve Waiters is a prototypical ace, Bullet Bill is a prototypical #2 starter.

Steve Waiters
LL, 6'4" 202 lbs.
Born 1943-11-20
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 CIN MLB | 21     | 12     | 0       | 2.74     | 38     | 38      | 12      | 294.2   | 261    | 101    | 90      | 83      | 200    |
| 1972 CIN MLB | 11     | 13     | 0       | 2.59     | 31     | 31      | 13      | 242.2   | 192    | 73     | 70      | 74      | 164    |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 19     | 13     | 0       | 3.34     | 35     | 35      | 7       | 261.0   | 243    | 103    | 97      | 71      | 179    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Whether you call 1973 a return to form, a quiet downturn, or just more of the same from a great lefty pitcher depends on how much of and exactly what kind of a stat nerd you are. On the one level, Waiters won 3 of his last 4 decisions - the 4th was a game on September 19th where he got shelled by the Giants of all teams - to just miss his 3rd 20 win season in 4 years and that was a nice bump from 11 wins the previous year. A level one stat nerd sees the big bump in his ERA, which indeed was the worst of his career as a starter. A level two stat nerd sees that his peripherals were pretty much exactly what they were the year before and the only reason his ERA climbed was that a porous defense gave up a lot more hits behind him.

Whichever way you cut it, Waiters is one of the best left-handed starting pitchers in all of baseball. He throws a 2-seam fastball that hits the low and occasionally mid 90s and dips in and out of the zone, a good changeup, and a 12 to 6 curveball that does what it's advertised to do. He throws all three of those pitches for strikes and indeed consistently has one of the best K/BB ratios in the league (10th last year, 2.52). He did allow a career high 23 HRs last year but by and large, and in sharp contrast to most strikeout artists, "The Hulk" is not a feast-or-famine guy at all. He's got a herky jerky motion that puts him off balance in his follow through. If you can make contact, Waiters can be bunted on. He did fall below 10 complete games for the first time since 1967, which is one potential red flag going forward, although the stat nerds tell me that he was still throwing 111 pitches a game last year, comparable to 1972's 113 and just behind the 118 and 117 he threw in 70 and 71.

Waiters is the classic case of a guy who you trot out there every 4th or 5th day and expect wins. However he does it, he'll get you there.

Jaden Weaver
RF No. 3
LL, 6'2" 199 lbs.
Born 1942-07-11
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 HOU MLB | .303     | 131    | 501     | 77     | 152    | 27      | 2       | 37      | 104      | 52      | 85      | 1       |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .234     | 132    | 495     | 73     | 116    | 20      | 1       | 32      | 88       | 54      | 90      | 1       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .256     | 149    | 559     | 78     | 143    | 25      | 2       | 38      | 117      | 68      | 103     | 3       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
It's now been 2 full seasons since the Reds engineered that inter-divisional trade for Houston's star slugger Jaden Weaver and if there was ever any question who won that deal, there's no question anymore. Weaver led the league in HRs and RBIs and if it weren't for the presence of Philadelphia's Alberto Juantorena he'd be the easy pick for MVP - as it is, he could win it.

Weaver is your classic pull hitting power hitter. If you give him anything inside and on the upper half of the plate, you had better get your binoculars out because that ball is going a long, long way. He eclipsed the century mark in strikeouts for the first time since 1970 although that was less of an issue with his actual K rate and more of a consequence of him playing more than he has the last couple years. Breaking .300 again seems unlikely but you'll take a slightly lower average when it means you get all of these HRs - which, speaking of, Weaver is 21 dingers away from 400 in his still-young career. He's got deceptive speed although he rarely steals. Defensively he's probably better suited for left than right but Weaver is a creature of habit and the Reds feel it best to keep him where he is.

Weaver once hit 48 HRs in the Astrodome. 48! The National League HR record is 65. Can Weaver get there?

Mike Wendt
SS/OF No. 25
RR, 6'1" 201 lbs.
Born 1944-04-05
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CIN MLB | .236     | 143    | 471     | 44     | 111    | 14      | 6       | 10      | 54       | 26      | 83      | 17      |
| 1972 CIN MLB | .202     | 42     | 124     | 11     | 25     | 3       | 2       | 3       | 12       | 10      | 27      | 5       |
| 1973 CIN MLB | .242     | 55     | 128     | 15     | 31     | 6       | 2       | 1       | 6        | 11      | 30      | 10      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Wendt, a former first round pick (1966) and 3 year starter for the Reds from 1969 to 1971, has seen seen his role and playing time curtailed over the past few seasons. He's reportedly not happy about this and one can understand why. Still, he hasn't been unhappy enough to quit the team - yet - and in this pre-free agency era that's the cards he's been dealt. Wendt has shown nice pop for a shortstop in the past but has a career .245 average and outside of the occasional HR has never hit well enough to justify being played somewhere else. He struck out 136 times in 1970 and that inability to make consistent contact has been a real issue for him all of his career. He's an okay but not great shortstop who's better as a fill-in than a starter with his level of defense.

The Reds could and probably should trade Wendt but let's be honest, he probably doesn't have a lot of options anywhere eise either. At this point in his career he's no more than a backup.

Brian Yates
CL No. 30
SR, 6'2" 191 lbs.
Born 1944-09-02
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 TR AA   | 2      | 0      | 1       | 1.66     | 13     | 0       | 0       | 21.2    | 17     | 5      | 4       | 8       | 18     |
| 1971 IND AAA | 0      | 1      | 1       | 6.13     | 7      | 0       | 0       | 14.2    | 15     | 12     | 10      | 18      | 9      |
| 1971 CIN MLB | 0      | 0      | 0       | 13.50    | 2      | 0       | 0       | 1.1     | 3      | 2      | 2       | 2       | 2      |
| 1972 CIN MLB | 3      | 4      | 9       | 2.45     | 53     | 0       | 0       | 66.0    | 54     | 19     | 18      | 33      | 56     |
| 1973 CIN MLB | 9      | 8      | 26      | 1.70     | 62     | 0       | 0       | 84.1    | 58     | 23     | 16      | 45      | 63     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Sometimes when a team underperforms what you'd expect their record to be by runs vs runs allowed - the Reds scored 656 runs last year and allowed 648, yet only finished .500 - it's because of a bullpen that fritters away wins. At least on the front line that was just not the case in 1973. Brian "Sonny" Yates stepped into the stopper role and was just plain great at it, finishing 3rd in the NL with 26 saves in 32 opportunities, recording 39 shutdowns vs just 9 meltdowns, and getting the job done an inning at a time.

Yates has that Kaz Sasaki arsenal - a 4 seamer and a splitter that comes out looking like the 4 seamer until it slows down and dips out of the strike zone. He had some problems keeping the split-fingered "fastball" in the strike zone but that's part of the charm of that pitch and of the way you want a stopper to throw. The one mark against him as a 2nd year guy is that Yates hasn't proven to be a guy who can give you 2+ innings when you need him. He'll never be a guy you'll want to send through a lineup more than once unless he learns a 3rd pitch but he's thrown just 19 and 21 pitches per outing in his 2 years in the bigs and that can improve. You wouldn't expect a guy who throws as hard has he does to leave himself in a position to field well and he does not.

Yates is a late bloomer and is already 29 years old in spite of having just 118 appearances to his name so far. He lacks that fiery attitude you expect from a stopper but what he lacks in the tude he makes up for with the heater.
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Old 01-21-2026, 01:26 PM   #326
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Houston Astros (83-79, 3rd NL West)

1973 Recap: I admit that I have a hard time reconciling this team with the modern-era Evil Team of Evil. No, I'm not talking about the Dodgers. Why would I care about the Dodgers? I'm talking about the cheatin' Astros. Except that during the Astrodome era they're... I don't know, quirky? Bill James always brought up these guys in the context of a team whose stadium meant they had to play a completely different brand of baseball than the rest of the league. It's them, KC, and St. Louis, but the Astrodome is far and away the most extreme version of that.

All that said, this team has not gotten that memo. The Astros rode the 2nd best offense in the league - 3rd in homeruns (126)! - to 83 wins and a 3rd place finish in the NL West. They were even leading the division going into late June before their pitching started to bring them down. Which... yeah, the pitching was kind of awful for an Astrodome team - 9th in runs allowed, and with middle of the pack defensive numbers. They even finished 2nd in the NL in strikeouts with 981 but they also finished with just 7 fewer walks allowed than the expansion Expos (well, we're 5 years on; maybe it's time to stop making excuses, especially given that their counterpart Padres just won this division).

1974 Outlook: This is, weirdly, an older team built on power. They're really not a great fit for their park, like, at all and .500ish seems about their proper level at this point. Still, the Pads weren't that much better than the rest of this division: they could get hot in September of 74 themselves and be the sacrificial lamb for the Phillies powerhouse if everything works out. On the other hand, they were just 40-43 from July onwards; a second-division finish is also not out of the realm of possibility.

Ernie Alvarez
SP No. 7
LR, 6'4" 193 lbs.
Born 1944-07-02
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 STL MLB | 16     | 18     | 0       | 4.40     | 39     | 38      | 6       | 263.2   | 286    | 140    | 129     | 81      | 139    |
| 1972 HOU MLB | 14     | 9      | 0       | 3.04     | 37     | 37      | 9       | 272.1   | 246    | 94     | 92      | 92      | 138    |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 17     | 17     | 0       | 3.56     | 38     | 38      | 14      | 278.0   | 259    | 121    | 110     | 88      | 164    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Ernie Alvarez had one hell of an up and down year last year with Houston. The 29 year old Mexican is always game to get out there every 4th day and stay in games until his arm's about to fall off and perhaps the Astros leaned on that a little bit too hard last season. He held opponents to a pretty solid .243 average last year but from the 7th inning onwards, when most pitchers put up better numbers due to selection bias (i.e. when you're pitching late, usually it's because your stuff is rocking), Alvarez's BAA ballooned to .260 with a SLG that climbed over .400. On a left-to-right rather than top-to-bottom plane on that stamina, two of his worst months were August (3-4, 3.71) and September (3-2, 4.20).

Alvarez throws a 4 seam fastball that climbs into the mid 90s and has nice movement, a decent enough curveball, and a "show me" slider. He's never been a big strikeout king but under the tutelage of 2nd year pitching coach John Albarez he set a career high in whiffs as well as K/9 rate (5.3). Alvarez cuts against the grain of the team a little by being more of a finesse pitcher. He did have some real issues with the longball last year, finishing with the 8th most HRs allowed in the NL in spite of the Astrodome's effects. He's not super great at keeping runners on: he allowed 26 steals, 2nd worse in the National League (to San Francisco's Obke Olthof, who allowed 31) on 32 attempts. Some of that can be blamed on the weak arm of the starting catcher but truth be told, Alvarez just doesn't concentrate on runners all the time. Alvarez is not a good hitter, even for a pitcher.

Alvarez finished 5th in the league in complete games and it would probably be better for the right-hander if, as he enters his 30s, he's asked to do that less often. At the same time, Houston's bullpen forces their hand a lot of the time.

Rowan Atkinson
SP No. 16
RL, 6'2" 184 lbs.
Born 1950-06-11
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 AND A   | 6      | 3      | 0       | 2.91     | 12     | 12      | 5       | 83.1    | 79     | 29     | 27      | 39      | 88     |
| 1971 WIL A   | 1      | 1      | 0       | 0.40     | 2      | 2       | 2       | 22.0    | 14     | 1      | 1       | 4       | 23     |
| 1971 PFD AA  | 2      | 0      | 0       | 0.00     | 2      | 2       | 2       | 18.0    | 10     | 0      | 0       | 5       | 12     |
| 1972 PFD AA  | 12     | 12     | 0       | 2.70     | 25     | 25      | 23      | 233.0   | 183    | 75     | 70      | 94      | 139    |
| 1972 DEN AAA | 2      | 3      | 0       | 4.97     | 6      | 6       | 3       | 47.0    | 46     | 27     | 26      | 15      | 50     |
| 1973 DEN AAA | 3      | 2      | 0       | 2.43     | 7      | 7       | 3       | 55.1    | 42     | 15     | 15      | 22      | 57     |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 14     | 7      | 0       | 3.38     | 27     | 27      | 5       | 189.0   | 187    | 82     | 71      | 70      | 138    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
No, Mr. Bean isn't actually as old as Sting. This Rowan Atkinson will go on to become the Archbishop of Canterbury. The 1969 first round pick finally started to put everything together after 5 years in the minor leagues and earned a call-up in May. He started out rough: 2-1, 4.74 in his first three games, but then settled down and was pretty okay for the rest of the year. That 14-7 record is mostly built on run support and a 3.38 ERA isn't incredible for the Dome but hey the kid's still 23.

Atkinson throws Anglican levels of gas. I don't know what that means. He throws fast even though he puts a little cut into his fastball that allows lefties to track it a bit better than righties. His out pitch against LHPs especially is a knee-buckling curveball. Atkinson wasn't called on to finish games a lot in his rookie season but he's shown the ability to throw a lot of pitches in games - you can see that 1972 spent in Pittsfield, and bear in mind that that's the stadium where everyone has to take half an hour off for sunset because the field's built in the wrong direction (note: the game doesn't track that; just thought I'd share)! One thing that did keep him from going longer - he actually threw more pitches per game than teammate Ernie Alvarez - was sometimes iffy control, coupled with a desire to strike everyone out that extended at-bats. Atkinson lays down a mean bunt and hit .250 last year - 17 hits in 68 at-bats.

Rowan Atkinson probably isn't going to supplant Tony Rivera as the team ace but he fills a sorely needed spot in this rotation. A full season plus just a little more control could see him become one of the pre-eminent strikeout artists in baseball.

Allen Bailey
SP No. 5
RR, 6'1" 196 lbs.
Born 1948-06-03
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 WAT AA  | 2      | 1      | 0       | 3.31     | 4      | 4       | 3       | 35.1    | 34     | 13     | 13      | 10      | 15     |
| 1971 OMA AAA | 9      | 10     | 0       | 3.28     | 26     | 26      | 10      | 205.1   | 179    | 91     | 75      | 78      | 88     |
| 1971 KC MLB  | 1      | 0      | 0       | 2.99     | 3      | 0       | 0       | 3.0     | 5      | 1      | 1       | 1       | 1      |
| 1972 OKC AAA | 10     | 9      | 0       | 3.46     | 22     | 22      | 7       | 166.1   | 178    | 72     | 64      | 34      | 101    |
| 1972 HOU MLB | 1      | 0      | 0       | 1.84     | 2      | 2       | 0       | 14.2    | 8      | 3      | 3       | 0       | 5      |
| 1973 DEN AAA | 7      | 6      | 0       | 2.59     | 17     | 17      | 8       | 142.1   | 108    | 44     | 41      | 39      | 99     |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 6      | 5      | 0       | 2.67     | 15     | 12      | 3       | 94.1    | 81     | 34     | 28      | 38      | 54     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Even though he's already 25, Allen Bailey was still considered a strong enough prospect to make the top 100 list going into the year. He was promoted in midseason because, frankly, Houston needed pitching very, very badly, and he did pretty well for himself. Bailey's control sometimes hung up on him and prevented him from pitching further into games than the Astros would have preferred (this is getting to be a common refrain). When he's on, he throws 3 pitches for strikes, although the former 9th round pick doesn't have any one big "out" pitch you can point to. He's a poor fielder and seems to completely ignore runners when they reach base.

Bailey should have a lock on one of the spots in the back end of this rotation. If the Astros go with a 4-man, then he's #4 after Rivera, Alvarez, and Atkinson.

Adam Eastin
CL No. 34
RR, 6'0" 201 lbs.
Born 1939-12-03
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 OKC AAA | 0      | 0      | 0       | 0.00     | 3      | 0       | 0       | 3.0     | 1      | 0      | 0       | 1       | 1      |
| 1971 HOU MLB | 1      | 1      | 1       | 4.82     | 7      | 0       | 0       | 9.1     | 11     | 5      | 5       | 2       | 4      |
| 1972 HOU MLB | 3      | 3      | 5       | 2.86     | 42     | 0       | 0       | 53.1    | 44     | 17     | 17      | 20      | 26     |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 5      | 7      | 15      | 3.08     | 57     | 0       | 0       | 67.0    | 67     | 26     | 23      | 35      | 35     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Even though Houston was in desperate need of pitching all year long, they chose to mostly keep stopper Adam Eastin to an inning a game in 1973. On the one hand you'd hope for more; on the other, even when he did pitch, Eastin allowed 4.7 walks per 9 innings and a .262 batting average on top of that. He's a fastball-slider pitcher who throws practically underhanded. Usually that makes a guy vulnerable to opposite-handed hitters but somehow Eastin had some pretty severe reverse splits in 73 (210 BAA vs LHP, 298 vs RHP).

Eastin's got a long history in this league and Houston hoped that his veteran presence would close things out. Instead, he blew 7 out of 22 save opportunites and, frankly, the main reason he's still on the books as this team's closer is that the Astros don't have anyone better at the moment.

George Foreman
CF No. 31
SR, 6'4" 226 lbs.
Born 1949-02-08
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 OKC AAA | .309     | 94     | 320     | 61     | 99     | 23      | 9       | 5       | 45       | 73      | 29      | 14      |
| 1971 HOU MLB | .380     | 56     | 208     | 42     | 79     | 16      | 5       | 9       | 39       | 24      | 27      | 8       |
| 1972 HOU MLB | .313     | 144    | 553     | 90     | 173    | 33      | 3       | 19      | 76       | 74      | 54      | 20      |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .310     | 147    | 558     | 93     | 173    | 35      | 4       | 23      | 94       | 70      | 42      | 15      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Big George Foreman heard tell of the sophomore slump but the boxer slugged his way right through it, leading the Astros in average, homeruns, and RBIs and making his 2nd All-Star appearance in as many full seasons. He's... good.

Foreman manages to toe the line between hitting for a lot of power - he actually led the NL in doubles in 1972 and finished 5th this year - and making good, consistent contact with the ball. That means he's a pretty sure bet to finish up among the leaders in average every season. Last year he finished 4th. 94 RBIs are actually good clutch numbers for Houston, ahead of the next best guy by 15, so if you were looking for a weakness you're not gonna find it there. He's also a good baserunner, good enough, actually, to hit leadoff if it wasn't for that massive power. In centerfield, you don't want to get in the way of this man; he'll charge that ball and use his natural talent to get to a lot even if he doesn't get the greatest jump in the universe.

The Rumble in the Jungle won't happen until next October so there is zero bloom off of this man's rose, none whatsoever. In baseball terms this man isn't even 25 yet, he's a multi-time All-Star, and he even gets to play for his hometown team (Foreman hails from Marshall, Texas, a small town near the border between Texas and Arkansas). Life is good!

Jason Gilmer
MR No. 4
RR, 6'1" 201 lbs.
Born 1941-08-08
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 SD MLB  | 14     | 16     | 0       | 3.69     | 31     | 31      | 13      | 231.2   | 233    | 104    | 95      | 93      | 116    |
| 1972 HOU MLB | 12     | 13     | 0       | 3.48     | 38     | 38      | 6       | 271.1   | 270    | 115    | 105     | 129     | 141    |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 4      | 9      | 3       | 4.58     | 52     | 9       | 2       | 110.0   | 124    | 69     | 56      | 42      | 69     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Jason Gilmer is a big-time groundball guy and the Astros decided to take him out of the rotation last year and put him into a set-up role on the staff where he could use his cutter and down-breaking slider to induce some rally-ending double plays. He took a while to get used to this: after losing the starting job in May, he posted 2 straight months of double-digit ERAs (10.57 for May, 13,.50 for June) before he settled down. In fact, September was even his best montH (0-1, 2.02), although by that point the Astros had stopped using him in higher leverage situations (where he turned opponents into All-Stars with a 337/430/505 triple slash allowed).

Gilmer is also not too pleased about the move. I guess from his perspective he's been a pretty capable middle of the rotation starter going back to the mid-1960s. You can see Houston's side too, though, as he clearly was not working out in the rotation this year. What will become of Gilmer in 1974? Will it even be spent in Houston?

Jordan Green
2B/SS No. 1
RR, 5'11" 205 lbs.
Born 1945-10-22
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 HOU MLB | .277     | 140    | 527     | 64     | 146    | 23      | 1       | 9       | 60       | 48      | 87      | 0       |
| 1972 HOU MLB | .258     | 144    | 551     | 71     | 142    | 20      | 0       | 10      | 57       | 58      | 65      | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .297     | 128    | 509     | 64     | 151    | 22      | 2       | 12      | 60       | 46      | 74      | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
In spite of never really getting settled at 2nd or shortstop - in his career, Green has now played 270 games at 2nd and 255 at short - Green developed both his hitting and his defense enough to reach his first All-Star Game in 1973. He missed almost a month with a herniated disc in his back at the end of April but when healthy Green hit as well as any shortstop in the league.

Green doesn't have any really special hitting style or approach to the plate. He just approaches each at-bat aggressively and takes advantage of pitchers who try to sleep through his slot in the order. Green spent the first part of the season batting lower in the order but when the Astros decided he was worth hitting leadoff he excelled in that role to the tune of a 288/347/410 triple slash. As implied by that slugging average, Green has solid pop for a middle infielder, too. He doesn't have the kind of speed or baserunning ability you'd expect from a leadoff hitter and with Pete Little holding down the 2 hole it does seem like a move down in the order is coming up. Still, you want to give your best players the most at-bats, right? Defensively Green has a great arm and could transition to third base later in his career. That arm of course is wasted at 2nd, where he played most of the year last year.

Green isn't one to come up and tell you how good he is but... he's good, definitely one of the plusses on this team.

Masanori Hattori
SS/2B/OF No. 6
RR, 5'12" 200 lbs.
Born 1945-10-19
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 HOU MLB | .290     | 78     | 252     | 31     | 73     | 9       | 1       | 7       | 41       | 20      | 34      | 3       |
| 1972 HOU MLB | .223     | 126    | 376     | 44     | 84     | 14      | 7       | 9       | 26       | 42      | 59      | 3       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .236     | 79     | 267     | 25     | 63     | 12      | 0       | 5       | 37       | 21      | 39      | 6       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Masanori Hattori is a "glue guy" and a tweener who doesn't really field at short well enough to make a manager feel OK putting him there but doesn't really hit well enough to play somewhere else. It'd be more palatable if he just had iffy range but Hattori's biggest issue was some stone hands: in 52 starts at the position he committed 16 errors for a .943 fielding average. Not good! He's better about holding onto the ball in the outfield but then you run into that issue of why would you ever play him in the outfield? On offense he will draw a walk and has 8ish HR pop but that's about it.

Hattori treats baseball like a job rather than a way of life. While we appreciate people who can think like this, it also means that the 27 year old is never going to be a star or even an above average player.

Dusty Hill
SS/2B No. 24
RR, 5'12" 191 lbs.
Born 1949-05-19
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 MOD A   | .333     | 2      | 6       | 1      | 2      | 0       | 0       | 1       | 1        | 1       | 1       | 0       |
| 1971 CR A    | .337     | 23     | 86      | 6      | 29     | 3       | 0       | 2       | 4        | 6       | 13      | 2       |
| 1971 ARK AA  | .283     | 47     | 187     | 24     | 53     | 6       | 5       | 1       | 14       | 9       | 25      | 6       |
| 1972 PFD AA  | .280     | 93     | 353     | 38     | 99     | 15      | 1       | 3       | 37       | 25      | 37      | 11      |
| 1972 DEN AAA | .447     | 11     | 38      | 8      | 17     | 2       | 0       | 1       | 9        | 3       | 3       | 2       |
| 1973 DEN AAA | .274     | 30     | 106     | 9      | 29     | 5       | 0       | 1       | 6        | 6       | 19      | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .289     | 86     | 322     | 30     | 93     | 18      | 1       | 4       | 37       | 8       | 31      | 4       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
You know, OOTP needs hair modeling and also longer beard modeling. How else are we supposed to sim those House of David teams from the beginning of the 20th century, and more importantly, how do we truly encapsulate the members of ZZ Top such as Dusty Hill here? Hill was in the Senators organization but found his way over here in a minor league transaction. Good move for the Astros! He was called up in mid-May and immediately made an impact on this team. Hill isn't a power bat but scouts really like his potential to hit for contact. He struck out less than 10% of the time he reached the plate last year in the major leagues so early results seem to back that up. Hill is a good defender who can handle either short or second. He mostly played SS last year but could become the 2B since his double play partner Jordan Green has the stronger arm and weaker pivot move.

Yeah, look for this, ah, sharp dressed man in these writeups in the future.

Jonathan Hyde
C No. 23
RR, 5'11" 198 lbs.
Born 1948-05-01
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CR A    | .204     | 94     | 314     | 30     | 64     | 8       | 1       | 4       | 30       | 34      | 71      | 0       |
| 1971 ARK AA  | .241     | 17     | 58      | 3      | 14     | 4       | 0       | 0       | 8        | 5       | 13      | 0       |
| 1972 TUL AAA | .297     | 47     | 155     | 19     | 46     | 6       | 1       | 4       | 16       | 19      | 27      | 0       |
| 1972 STL MLB | .213     | 41     | 141     | 7      | 30     | 6       | 0       | 1       | 12       | 12      | 25      | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .216     | 111    | 342     | 23     | 74     | 16      | 0       | 5       | 31       | 35      | 78      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
I'm not saying that Daniel Rigdon was anything great but this is who you're replacing him with? Jonathan Hyde tries hard, he really does. He's too quiet to be a leader but he comes to games ready to go, calls a good game, and keeps balls in the dirt in front of him well. He can't hit and has a bad arm - you can blame Houston pitchers for not doing their job in holding runners but the fact is that he posted a well below average 31.1 RO%. 152 games into his big league career he has an OPS of below 600. Okay, sure, he is 25... but what's the upside?

Hyde seems like a career backup or AAAA guy at best and the faster the Astros realize this the better off they'll be.

Justin Jensen
RF No. 33
RR, 6'3" 201 lbs.
Born 1935-07-21
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1972 HOU MLB | .206     | 106    | 326     | 29     | 67     | 8       | 1       | 7       | 33       | 58      | 103     | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .263     | 137    | 475     | 78     | 125    | 15      | 1       | 21      | 79       | 80      | 136     | 1       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Justin Jensen defied the odds and all of the pundits who said that he was donezo following a a bad first year with the Astros that followed missing all of 1971 with a fractured ankle that wouldn't heal. Jensen didn't have that 40 HR power that he'd displayed with the Reds - come on, look at the parks - but he did finish 2nd on the team in RBIs and 3rd in HRs, and he got on base a lot with the base on balls, too. He did lead the league Ks for the third time in his career. That's part of the charm of Jensen. Maybe a little less charming is his defensive "ability"; that bad ankle has really impeded his range and he's no longer even an average right fielder. He's also not fast and at age 38 is starting to develop a bit of the old veteran belly.

Jensen got a late start to his career and is now close to 40. Every year he produces at this point should be considered unexpected. He's got just over 1,100 hits and 311 HRs so no, the HOF is not in the cards for this guy. He looked awfully, awfully good sometimes though and that should be remembered.

Pete Little
3B No. 43
RR, 5'10" 187 lbs.
Born 1944-11-14
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 HOU MLB | .230     | 138    | 499     | 64     | 115    | 19      | 1       | 15      | 69       | 58      | 92      | 1       |
| 1972 HOU MLB | .283     | 143    | 519     | 45     | 147    | 25      | 1       | 6       | 62       | 63      | 78      | 3       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .282     | 146    | 577     | 70     | 163    | 35      | 1       | 10      | 63       | 70      | 76      | 5       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
2 years ago there were real questions as to whether or not Pete Little was washed up at the age of 26. Now, having just completed his age-28 season and his 2nd straight All-Star Game, it's clear that those fears were unfounded. Little did a great job of belting line drives into the gaps at the Astrodome, finishing 5th in the NL in doubles, and served the Astros well as their #2 hitter throughout the season.

Little is a guy you just plug into the lineup and let him do his work. He now seems like a sure bet to hit .280ish whether the league is hitting .240 or .260. In 1972 that .283 average was actually 5th in the NL(!). He managed to find his way home 70 times, a high-water mark since 1969, which granted is mostly thanks to the big hitters behind him but it's nice to see for Little too. Little is good enough to win a Gold Glove and maybe he'll start his own streak now that 5-time winner Sean Gabel is no longer a Chicago Cub. He has one of the best infield arms in baseball and has some nice, soft hands. He isn't the greatest in the world at moving to his right but then, if he was he'd be a shortstop. Little isn't a big threat to steal in spite of playing a "speed" position in the lineup and gets caught a lot (5/10 last year) when he does.

Little will be entering his 8th season with the team and is already their #2 man all-time in base hits with 927 (well behind #1 guy and recently departed John Lopez with 1,527). He should have that record by the time he's done... at least until George Foreman passes him.

Nick Miller
OF/1B No. 19
LL, 5'9" 179 lbs.
Born 1945-05-25
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CIN MLB | .269     | 106    | 301     | 37     | 81     | 11      | 3       | 6       | 33       | 33      | 50      | 16      |
| 1971 CLE MLB | .278     | 14     | 18      | 4      | 5      | 2       | 0       | 0       | 2        | 2       | 2       | 0       |
| 1972 HOU MLB | .250     | 108    | 312     | 35     | 78     | 12      | 1       | 5       | 38       | 34      | 47      | 16      |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .242     | 100    | 186     | 26     | 45     | 6       | 1       | 5       | 27       | 19      | 37      | 7       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Nick Miller's real position is pinch-hitter, a role he was used in 61 times last year. He did a good job of getting on base in place of the pitcher and setting the table for the power part of the order. If anything, in the rare instances Miller was given the chance to start, he pressed a bit too much and tried to make too much happen: he had a sub-.300 OBP as a starter vs a .360 mark in the pinch. He doesn't have a lot of power and at 28 is unlikely to acquire any; anyway, he's a speed guy, not a power guy who'd probably steal 30+ bases for you if you decided to give him a full-time job. Miller doesn't have a good first step and has problems tracking the ball in the outfield. He does have a good arm that partially makes up for his range-related issues.

It's not inconceivable to see Miller's role expand although he'll have to figure out how to cool down when he does earn a spot in the lineup if that happens.

Alex Ochoa
MR No. 27
RL, 5'12" 183 lbs.
Born 1945-12-23
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 OKC AAA | 0      | 0      | 0       | 2.89     | 2      | 2       | 0       | 9.1     | 9      | 3      | 3       | 3       | 9      |
| 1971 HOU MLB | 4      | 0      | 1       | 1.25     | 6      | 3       | 1       | 28.2    | 23     | 4      | 4       | 11      | 22     |
| 1972 OKC AAA | 3      | 4      | 6       | 2.84     | 26     | 3       | 0       | 44.1    | 33     | 16     | 14      | 12      | 52     |
| 1972 HOU MLB | 0      | 1      | 1       | 3.78     | 11     | 0       | 0       | 16.2    | 10     | 8      | 7       | 8       | 17     |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 3      | 1      | 1       | 1.69     | 48     | 0       | 0       | 53.0    | 45     | 13     | 10      | 19      | 41     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Alex Ochoa served as Houston's lefty specialist out of the bullpen but had a really great season, the kind of year that makes you think that he could/should be able to handle more in 1974. Unlike most lefties, Ochoa throws hard and I mean HARD: we're talking mid to high 90s here. None of his five pitches are particularly notable, and Ochoa lacks the stamina to start, but that speed got him a ton of Ks and unlike the rest of the staff he managed to push the ball over the plate pretty well.

It's looking like Ochoa, a longtime minor league veteran ever since he was discovered out of the Dominican Republic in 1962, has made the transition from pitcher to thrower. With that, perhaps he can team up with Adam Eastin to provide this team with the late-inning pitching they so sorely need.

Roberto Ortiz
SP/MR No. 18
RR, 6'2" 189 lbs.
Born 1946-01-29
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 OAK MLB | 13     | 17     | 0       | 3.70     | 36     | 36      | 5       | 242.2   | 197    | 111    | 100     | 164     | 260    |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 5      | 3      | 0       | 3.66     | 15     | 15      | 2       | 108.0   | 78     | 45     | 44      | 71      | 104    |
| 1972 ATL MLB | 5      | 7      | 0       | 4.45     | 18     | 14      | 2       | 103.0   | 94     | 55     | 51      | 62      | 93     |
| 1973 ATL MLB | 0      | 0      | 1       | 0.00     | 3      | 0       | 0       | 4.0     | 2      | 0      | 0       | 4       | 4      |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 8      | 13     | 0       | 4.70     | 31     | 27      | 2       | 178.0   | 162    | 103    | 93      | 108     | 150    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Roberto Ortiz has been an all-or-nothing style pitcher his entire career. In fact, it's hard to believe he's still only 27: this guy's been in the league since 1967 and has already put together several big if enigmatic seasons. The Astros picked him up from the Braves for nothing more than pinch-hitter Nate Ringstad. I guess it's more the case that he's the Astros' headache now.

Ortiz throws one of the fastest, if not the fastest ball in the league. He technically throws 4 other pitches but that's pretty much it and it's been enough to strike out 260 batters in 1971. He actually led the NL in strikeout rate but a lack of ability to pitch deep into games meant he didn't even reach the top 10 in that category. He's also led his league in walks 3 times, including this year. Last year he also allowed 27 HRs playing in the Launching Pad but he seems to have benefitted from the Astrodome and lowered that number to 15. Still, the control was a real issue and outside of the Dome he was just plain bad: 3-5, 5.33 on the road last season.

Ortiz finished the year mostly on the bench as the Astros looked at different, if not necessarily more talented, pitchers. You might think that a move to the bullpen would suit this guy the best, as he has exactly the right profile for a lights-out closer. Ortiz walked 13 men in 11 relief innings last year so that might not work out either.

Elijah Patton
2B/SS No. 41
RR, 6'2" 196 lbs.
Born 1938-01-29
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 HOU MLB | .225     | 40     | 80      | 7      | 18     | 3       | 1       | 0       | 5        | 5       | 16      | 0       |
| 1972 HOU MLB | .224     | 44     | 49      | 4      | 11     | 1       | 0       | 1       | 5        | 4       | 3       | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .306     | 27     | 72      | 5      | 22     | 4       | 0       | 0       | 8        | 2       | 10      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
It's the end of the line for Patton, a 14 year major league veteran who reached his highest point his cup-of-coffee 1960 season when he won the World Series with the Yankees. He's never been a starter but somehow me managed to carve out a pretty long career as a backup middle infielder. Unfortunately he no longer has the arm to make the throw from shortstop to first base and he's really only a passable second baseman. He hit for the highest average of his career since a .338 mark in 1966 but nobody is really fooled by this and his .306 was an empty .306.

Patton seems like a great bet to be a coach if you ask me.

Tony Rivera
SP No. 13
LL, 6'0" 195 lbs.
Born 1943-07-31
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 HOU MLB | 25     | 9      | 0       | 3.20     | 42     | 42      | 13      | 328.2   | 307    | 124    | 117     | 128     | 207    |
| 1972 HOU MLB | 23     | 13     | 0       | 2.57     | 41     | 41      | 20      | 328.2   | 275    | 99     | 94      | 106     | 189    |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 20     | 9      | 0       | 2.30     | 37     | 37      | 15      | 293.0   | 225    | 78     | 75      | 93      | 203    |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
The NL West is blessed with top of the line left-handed pitching, just wow. The Reds have Steve Waiters, the Astros have Tony Rivera. Rivera might have cost himself the Cy Young Award by failing to completely carry the team on his back after a monstrous 7-1, 1.48 July but he was still awwwwwfully good: 2nd in wins, 3rd in strikeouts, 3rd in ERA, and a league leading 6 shutouts. Maybe he's the Cy Young winner after all.

Rivera only hits the low 90s on the radar gun but has one of the best changeups in the league and an awfully good curveball to boot. Oppenents hit just .211 against him last season and neither lefties (.206) nor righties (.213) had much of an edge. He had some control issues in April and May with more than 4 BB/9 both months but seems to have completely solved that in the second half. The non-stat nerds will cite that he was "only" 4-3 in the final two months (when the team was 4 games under .500) but here I have to side with the nerds: he also posted a 2.23 ERA in that time and even that includes a terrible outing at Atlanta on the 2nd to last game of the season when the division was decided (3.2 IP, 5 ER in an 11-3 blowout loss to the Braves). Rivera also allowed just 7 HRs all season. You can give some of that over to the Astrodome but not all of it.

Nobody in baseball has won more games over the last 3 years than Tony Rivera. His only issue, really, is that he can't do it all by himself.

John Rohrbough
OF No. 14
LR, 5'11" 192 lbs.
Born 1947-09-08
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 OKC AAA | .264     | 22     | 87      | 12     | 23     | 4       | 3       | 2       | 19       | 13      | 10      | 1       |
| 1971 HOU MLB | .280     | 86     | 257     | 38     | 72     | 16      | 5       | 2       | 35       | 30      | 39      | 4       |
| 1972 STL MLB | .204     | 71     | 93      | 4      | 19     | 3       | 2       | 2       | 10       | 6       | 11      | 0       |
| 1973 TUL AAA | .242     | 37     | 120     | 11     | 29     | 2       | 0       | 2       | 9        | 9       | 14      | 4       |
| 1973 STL MLB | .360     | 12     | 25      | 2      | 9      | 3       | 0       | 0       | 0        | 1       | 2       | 1       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .258     | 67     | 213     | 30     | 55     | 8       | 4       | 3       | 16       | 16      | 24      | 6       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Left field was a big mess last year, big enough that Houston picked up John Rohrbough from the Cards, parting with 26 year old 2B Rob "Meathead" Reiner (RIP) to get him. Rohrbough had long looked like a tweener type who combined centerfield hitting with corner outfield defense. That was pretty much exactly what he did for Houston in 1973. He's got no power and if anything he hit a little better than anyone thought he would. There's some hope for plate discipline and speed if he did play more and at the top of the lineup... but then you're hoping that the .258 average isn't a mirage. The Astros have Big George Foreman in center so they don't need to worry about Rohrbough's lack of ability to track balls at that position and can live with above average play in left or right.

The more I look at Rorbough the more I'm convinced that he'll carve out a spot in this lineup in 1974, especially with old men Jason Workman and Justin Jensen currently projected to start in the OF corners. He's easily the best defender of the three and the Astros desperately need to upgrade their defense if they're to contend next year.

Latimer Roy
C No. 2
LR, 5'11" 203 lbs.
Born 1947-11-29
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 SAV AA  | .283     | 82     | 276     | 32     | 78     | 24      | 1       | 6       | 41       | 30      | 55      | 0       |
| 1971 RIC AAA | .247     | 48     | 150     | 28     | 37     | 5       | 1       | 4       | 17       | 31      | 18      | 0       |
| 1972 RIC AAA | .273     | 94     | 256     | 29     | 70     | 13      | 0       | 7       | 37       | 33      | 50      | 1       |
| 1973 CBS AA  | .167     | 6      | 12      | 1      | 2      | 0       | 1       | 1       | 3        | 1       | 2       | 0       |
| 1973 RIC AAA | .242     | 27     | 62      | 6      | 15     | 1       | 0       | 4       | 10       | 9       | 10      | 0       |
| 1973 DEN AAA | .315     | 26     | 92      | 10     | 29     | 6       | 0       | 3       | 12       | 5       | 8       | 1       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .269     | 43     | 104     | 13     | 28     | 7       | 0       | 0       | 13       | 20      | 26      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
The Astros got sick and tired of their longtime incumbent Dan Rigdon (.214, 5, 20) so they traded him at the end of May for this guy, a former 3rd round pick who also drove his minor league managers crazy with some very un-catcherlike, dunderheaded plays. We can argue the merits of cutting loose your starting catcher without having anything behind it, not to mention of trading one bad locker room guy for another, but here we are. Credit where it's due: Roy took over the "tools of ignorance" for around half the time starting in July and acquitted himself pretty well.

Latimer Roy seems like he's going to be a guy with a solid hit tool for a catcher. His biggest attribute is quick, strong wrists and the ability to lay off a pitch outside of the strike zone. He'll be batting down in the order and so a lot of those walks will be intentional - 8 of them last year - but he demonstrated that ability in the minor leagues too. He's shown an improved ability to make contact in the past couple years, although when he came up to the major leagues it seemed like said contact came at the expense of power. A rare lefty-batting catcher, Roy saw basically no time vs LHPs last season; with the other guy on this team being Jonathan Hyde, there's a better than even chance he'll see a lot more southsiders and it's an open question as to whether or not he can hit them. He will never be confused with a Gold Glove quality catcher but Roy does have a better arm than his current backstop-mate (although the stats don't show it - he only caught 26.6% of runners).

Roy has a better chance than Jonathan Hyde to be the team's long-term catcher. It's still not a great chance. A platoon role might be the edge of what he can do.

Joshua Waltenbery
1B No. 81
LL, 6'2" 200 lbs.
Born 1940-08-05
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 NYM MLB | .313     | 154    | 588     | 112    | 184    | 41      | 4       | 25      | 99       | 91      | 75      | 0       |
| 1972 NYM MLB | .245     | 149    | 518     | 71     | 127    | 18      | 1       | 24      | 78       | 96      | 79      | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .274     | 148    | 555     | 95     | 152    | 26      | 3       | 22      | 74       | 86      | 77      | 13      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Waltenbery had a solid comeback season after seeing his average dip all the way down to .245 in 1972. The power and the clutch hitting continued to decline and not all of that can be blamed on the Astrodome - 12 of his 22 HRs happened in Houston and if anything he looked like more of the former superstar in the Dome than on the road. He also may have been playing injured in the final month, too: Waltenbery finished the year with a .205, 3, 9 September that dropped his batting average from .286 to .274 for the year. I think if he'd have finished the year hitting .290 and had 20 RBIs instead of 9 we'd just be saying "yep, that's another Superman season".

Waltenbery is no longer a guy who can completely change the course of a season from the middle of the lineup but as the veteran slugger he still very much has a role. He split his PAs between 3rd and 4th in 1973; with all the times he draws walks, 3rd might be the better slot for him even as he gets further away from those .300+ seasons. He showed some crazy new-found life on the basepaths last year: the Mets never asked him to steal more than 4 times in a season but with the deadball era stadium, I guess, he tried taking the base 24 times last season. Defensively he lacks range and committed 8 errors on balls he did get to but look, this man isn't in there for the defense.

Time marches on for the now 10-time All-Star. Waltenbery is sitting on 1,914 hits so he's not far off from reaching a batting milestone. He still has a few years left.

Chris Wilson
RP No. 11
RR, 6'1" 199 lbs.
Born 1936-07-08
Code:
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| yrtmlvl      | w      | l      | sv      | era      | g      | gs      | cg      | ip      | h      | r      | er      | bb      | k      |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
| 1971 OAK MLB | 6      | 0      | 4       | 1.69     | 43     | 4       | 0       | 85.0    | 54     | 18     | 16      | 40      | 68     |
| 1972 OAK MLB | 9      | 9      | 1       | 3.95     | 39     | 16      | 1       | 136.2   | 119    | 61     | 60      | 74      | 80     |
| 1973 CHC MLB | 0      | 0      | 2       | 2.73     | 20     | 1       | 0       | 29.2    | 20     | 10     | 9       | 11      | 14     |
| 1973 HOU MLB | 1      | 2      | 1       | 3.45     | 17     | 1       | 0       | 28.2    | 23     | 11     | 11      | 14      | 23     |
+ ------------ + ------ + ------ + ------- + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------ +
Wilson has been in this league forever, first seeing appearances with the Milwaukee Braves in 1959. He showed flashes of stardom early in his career, including an 18-4 record in 1963 that got him his first and only All-Star appearance, but mostly he's been a a pretty decent guy to have around in some way, shape, or form. At his age, his role is as much of a second pitching coach as it is a (pretty heavily managed) relief pitcher. Wilson throws both a curve and a screwball and so has pretty even splits. He's not always the best at keeping those pitches over the plate though. He started 16 games as recently as 1972 but at this point in his career if you're using Wilson in that role it's only because you have nothing else to put out there.

Chris Wilson ought to provide the Astros with another 40ish games and 60ish innings in 1974, plus some pitching-oriented veteran leadership.

Jason Workman
LF/1B No. 12
LL, 6'4" 201 lbs.
Born 1937-03-28
Code:
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| yrtmlvl      | avg      | g      | ab      | r      | h      | 2b      | 3b      | hr      | rbi      | bb      | so      | sb      |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
| 1971 CHC MLB | .248     | 147    | 565     | 75     | 140    | 18      | 1       | 26      | 84       | 38      | 57      | 0       |
| 1972 BAL MLB | .245     | 40     | 155     | 19     | 38     | 2       | 0       | 8       | 22       | 2       | 18      | 0       |
| 1972 CHC MLB | .264     | 65     | 235     | 25     | 62     | 6       | 0       | 9       | 30       | 10      | 30      | 0       |
| 1973 BAL MLB | .221     | 74     | 267     | 33     | 59     | 5       | 1       | 10      | 31       | 9       | 29      | 0       |
| 1973 HOU MLB | .279     | 42     | 136     | 11     | 38     | 4       | 0       | 2       | 15       | 4       | 12      | 0       |
+ ------------ + -------- + ------ + ------- + ------ + ------ + ------- + ------- + ------- + -------- + ------- + ------- + ------- +
Oh, how the mighty have fallen. Workman won the NL MVP in 1970 with the Cubs, but hasn't been that kind of player since. It reached the point last year where the Orioles released him in July. He signed with the Astros 2 weeks later and hit for his highest batting average since the 1970 season but it came at the expense of power. Now he's going into 1974 with the Astros wondering if he's good enough to use regularly in left and if not if he'll willingly make the end-of-career transition - and if he has the kind of bat to make it happen - to pinch-hitting specialist. Workman doesn't have range but you can put him in left or right and not destroy things. He hasn't stolen a base since the 1960s.

Workman made 4 All-Star Games in his career and that along with the MVP makes him a candidate for the Hall of Very Good, not the Hall of Fame. A highly theoretical return to his power profile of old could see him hit 300 HRs - he has 267 - but that seems like yesterday's news.
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