- Carlos Marmol continues his unfortunate Rob Dibble Impersonation. Any trade value he may have had evaporated when he lost his slider. For compassion, here is Rob Dibble’s stat sheet. Note his age when he finally lost it. Carlos Marmol is 29 this year.
- Johnny Danks forgot how to pitch for some reason. His season ERA sits at a paltry 6.51 and he should thank the rest of the staff for taking the focus off of him for the time being. Danks isn’t fooling anyone anymore as evidenced by a career low 6 K/9 and a career high 3.9 BB/9.
- The Knicks last playoff victory happened during a time in which Lifehouse and Train were relevant bands.
- For the first time since 1996 the Yankees will have a name other than Mariano Rivera top their season saves leader board.
Posts Tagged ‘rob dibble’
Friday Roundup
Posted: May 4, 2012 by Mauricio Rubio Jr. in Baseball, Basketball, MLB, NBA, SportsTags: a drinking town with a sports problem, baseball, Basketball, Bryce Harper, carlos marmol, Chicago, Chicago A Drinking Town With Sports Problem, Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox, John Danks, Lifehouse, Mariano Rivera, MLB, NBA, New York Knicks, New York Yankees, rob dibble, Train, Washington Nationals
Through Both Lenses – Cubs Pitcher Depth and Synopsis
Posted: March 25, 2012 by Mauricio Rubio Jr. in Baseball, Columns, MLB, Sports, Through Both LensesTags: 2008 playoffs, a drinking town with a sports problem, Ace, baseball, carlos marmol, Chicago, Chicago A Drinking Town With Sports Problem, Chicago Cubs, Chris Volstad, cutters, fastballs, Hendry, Jay Jackson, Jeff Samardzija, kerry wood, LA Dodgers, Logan Morrison, Marcos Mateo, Matt Garza, Mauricio Rubio Jr., MLB, Paul Maholm, Pitchers, Randy Wells, rob dibble, Ryan Dempster, sliders, stud, trade talks, Travis Wood, Trey McNutt, walks
by Mauricio Rubio Jr.
Email: mr@99sportsproblems.com
Twitter: @MRubio52
Part one, which focuses on the infield, can be found here.
Part two, which focuses on the outfield, can be found here.
Pitchers
1. Matt Garza – It’s unfortunate that Garza is a legitimate ace because the Cubs aren’t ready to reward his talent. He’ll be 28 this year and he’s an absolute stud. There’s been a lot of talk that the cubs need to trade Garza and get a good haul of prospects back for him. I’m moving into the camp that thinks it’s not absolutely necessary. I wouldn’t be mad if it did happen, but I think that Garza will still be effective into his mid 30’s when the Cubs should be ready to compete. He won’t ever be considered an elite pitcher due to his penchant to give up the home run, but you can certainly make the argument that he should be. He’s actually maintained velocity on his fastball, but he works his offspeed stuff well enough that a slight dip won’t matter.
2. Carlos Marmol – Marmol will always played a dangerous game with the base on balls, but it’s crawling into scary territory now. His historic 2010 season was probably him at his peak, and I believe the Cubs would have done well to trade him then. Marmol’s top comp has always been Rob Dibble. That’s kind of an issue because Dibble’s production fell off the table at age 28 and was done with baseball at age 31. Marmol’s production did taper off in 2011, his age 28 season, as he didn’t induce more batters to swing at his White Castle Slider (it’ll make you shit your pants). That’s the issue with slider dominant relievers that rely on the strikeout, the careers are short as batters just lay off the garbage. He’s losing velocity on his fastball as well and the window to trade him may have closed already.
3. Ryan Dempster – I don’t like the guy’s personality and I think too many fans give him a free pass because he’s “funny.” He caught very little grief for being a no-show to the 2008 playoffs and that really turned me off to the dude. All that being said he’s a decent middle of the rotation option for contending teams, but on the Cubs he starts opening day. Don’t look at the ERA from last year too much, bad defense was to blame for being over 4, but if the Cubs are looking to get any value from him they need to move him now. He’s a crafty righty who mixes pitches well enough to be solid, but his average stuff keeps him from being elite.
4. Jeff Samardzija – Just when you think you can ridicule a product from Notre Dame and write him off completely, he comes around and does that for an entire season. I remember this being the one draft pick and subsequent signing that made me start hating Hendry. He’s confounding, he never was a strikeout artist in the minors, but he almost struck out a batter per inning in the majors. He’s always had a good fastball, but he learned a cutter last season and relied less on the heat with good results.
So of course it makes sense that he’s competing for a rotation slot and has a decent chance of winning the job. I don’t know what to make of him anymore, he wasn’t worth the money that Hendry dished out to him, but his second career as a starter, which was what he was drafted as to begin with, might actually be successful.
5. Paul Maholm – He doesn’t strike anyone out and he gives up a lot of hits. That’s a bad combo for any pitcher, but it’ll be especially bad for Maholm in a Cubs uni. The Cubs defense is still trying to improve and it won’t do any favors for a Livan Hernandez like pitcher. Maholm isn’t quite the workhorse that Livan was, and he can’t handle the bat like him either. Maholm shouldn’t last long with the Cubs, he’s effectively holding the spot for someone else.
6. Travis Wood – He was much better in 2010 than he was in 2011 when he became much more hittable and saw his K-rate get slashed. LoMo vouches for Wood’s stuff, but as we all know, baseball is one big nasty game of adjustments. The league clearly adjusted to Wood and the tape is out on him, it’s up to Travis to adjust back. He’ll need to if he wants to find significant big league success. He’ll be 25 this year.
7. Chris Volstad – He’s slowly been lowering his walk rate and he posted the highest strikeout rate of his young major league career last year, but he was more hittable than ever in 2011 and he saw an uptick in his HR/9 ratio. That’s a bad combo for the Cubs. Volstad filled out physically last year, but his stuff didn’t. He’s likely to make the rotation, but the 25 year old will need to work hard to avoid the “Rotation Filler” tag that he seems destined to acquire.
8. Randy Wells – Remember him? There were the whispers that he was enjoying the North Side night life a little too much in 2010 and the allegations carried into 2011. He’s not fooling anyone with his stuff and his walk rate has been climbing since 2009. He was blasted for 23 HR’s in 135 ip last year, that’s awful. He’s a curious case and he’s going to have to find some answers in 2012 if he wants to stick around with the big club.
9. Marcos Mateo – There’s a lot of ifs with Mateo. If he’s healthy and if he can cut his contact rate, he can close if Marmol implodes. He has a good strikeout rate for a late inning reliever, but he doesn’t avoid many bats yet. He has the stuff, and he has moderate command, if he takes a step forward he can be a sleeper candidate for the closer’s role moving forward in a post-Marmol time. At the time of this writing an MRI showed no damage to his elbow but he is getting shut down for 10 days.
10. Trey McNutt – I was a fan of the McNutt experience since he was drafted, but as we all should know, AA ball is nut cutting time for prospects, and McNutt looks lost there. He needs a third pitch (and eventually a fourth) to deliever on his SP promise, but the first item on the docket is to find his mechanics again. McNutt still has age on his side, but as Chili Davis once said, “Growing old is mandatory; growing up is optional.” Time to grow up, McNutt.
11. Jay Jackson – Jackson has been sliding backwards since his promotion to AA in 2009. If he ever figures “it” out, he can be a useful back of the rotation option, but for now he looks like a reliever. Jackson has average stuff and a plus fastball, but he has a good combo of pitches that would be more useful in the rotation than in the pen.
12. Kerry Wood – This speaks more to the lack of organizational depth than Kerry Wood’s importance to the 2012 Cubs. I like Wood, I always have. He was a warrior and he wanted to be out there, but his body consistently failed him as he threw with an unhealthy delivery that cut his career down. He’ll be solid in 2012, but he’s likely to be done after that. I don’t know why the Cubs resigned Wood, I won’t complain too much about it since he’s a cheapish option for the ‘pen, but he won’t be on the next Cubs contender.
Synopsis
This organization is pretty bare. It’s not on the level of the White Sox (that’s not a shot kids, the Sox system is universally panned as the worst in baseball), but there isn’t a lot of help down on the farm that can compete for starting jobs. Jay Jackson is a significant prospect in the system, and that’s an issue. As for the big league club, they will struggle to win 72 games this year. The future of this team lies in the amateur drafts that take place in June. The Cubs need pitching help the most as the system is noticeably bare of impact SP talent. Effective relievers can be found through various means, but finding a solid #1 or #2 starter is difficult. The makeup of this team should be drastically different by September as Cub fans should be introduced to young talent that can make a difference at the Major League level. Anthony Rizzo is the best prospect on the team in my opinion, and his call up date should be around May-June, depending on what Bryan LaHair is up to. Brett Jackson should be a star, but not necessarily a superstar. I would be happy with his development if he ended up being Curtis Granderson before the HR explosion, or Mike Cameron. Trey McNutt is the best pitching prospect with the departure of Cashner and Carpenter, and that’s worrisome. Dillon Maples is a name to pay attention to, but he is yet to make his pro debut.
There’s a lot of work to do, but I do trust in TheoCo. to get it done.
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Episode 008 – ALEXEEEEIII! YES, YES, HISTORY!
Posted: February 6, 2012 by Mauricio Rubio Jr. in PodcastTags: 2005, 2005 never dies, addison reed, AL Central, Alexei Ramirez, Appreciate the Game, autograph stories, Babe Ruth, Bad As I Wanna Be, BALCO, Ball Four, baseball, Baseball Chicago Style, Baseball Prospectus, Bearing the Black Sox, Bill Veeck, Billy Beane, Binny's beverage depot, Blackhawks, books, Boxing, Boys of Summer, Brett the Hitman Heart, Bulls, Buzz Bissinger, carlos marmol, cheesy poofs, Chicago, chicago a drinking town with a sports problem, Chuck Klein, Cigars and Stripes, closer, Controversy Creates Cash, Cooper, Cuba, Cubs, culture, d20, Dayan Viciedo, Dennis Rodman, DnD, Dungeons and Dragons, Eight Men Out, Friday Night Lights, gambling, Game of Shadows, Gozamos, Have a Nice Day, Home Runs, interview, Jake Peavy, Jason Dubois, Jeff Manto, jesse crain, Jim Bouton, Joe Crede, Joe Torre, Jose Canseco, Juiced, Kenny Williams, kerry wood, Kiki Cuyler, Krankshaft, Mark Grace, matt thorton, Metropolitan Brewing Inc, Mick Foley, MLB, Moneyball, My Life in the Cartoon World of Wrestling, My Life Is Baseball, NL Central, Prince Fielder, reading, rebuilding, rib tips, road beef, rob dibble, robin ventura, Roger Kahn, rosetta stone, SF Chronicle, Silver Slugger, slump busters, southpaw, soxfest 2012, spoken word, sports literature, spring training is almost here, steriods, Steve Stone, Stone Pony, terrible slogans, the bellagio, The Bill James Historical Abstract, The Death of WCW, The Very Famous Tyler Huffman, The Yankee Years, Tim Duncan, Ty Cobb, UFC, vampires, Veeck as in Wreck, Victor Martinez, Vindicated, werewolves, White Sox, wrestling
In this episode, we forget football ever happened, we review Soxfest, interview Alexei Ramirez and Dayan Viciedo, review a great Chicago brew (not Ronnie Brewer), discuss a lot of baseball, and reveal our favorite sports books of all time.
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