2006 NL West EWSL Report

The fifth of six division previews, using Established Win Shares Levels as a jumping-off point. Hopefully, I can get the NL Central done before we’re too far into the season.
EWSL is explained here, and you should read that link before commenting on the method; 2006 revisions to the age adjustment are discussed here. Bear in mind as always that (1) EWSL is a record of past performance, adjusted by age to give an assessment of the available talent on hand; it is not an individualized projection system; (2) individual EWSL are rounded off but team totals are compiled from the unrounded figures; and (3) as demonstrated here in some detail, nearly all teams will win more games than their EWSL total because I’m only rating 23 players per team. Further disclaimers are in my AL East preview here.
Los Angeles Dodgers
Raw EWSL: 199.33 (66 W)
Adjusted: 224.00 (75 W)
Age-Adj.: 208.02 (69 W)

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 22 Dioner Navarro* 2 9
1B 22 James Loney+ 0 12
2B 38 Jeff Kent 25 21
SS 28 Rafael Furcal 24 26
3B 35 Bill Mueller 17 13
RF 30 JD Drew 20 19
CF 39 Kenny Lofton 13 10
LF 32 Jose Cruz 13 12
C2 40 Sandy Alomar 2 1
INF 32 Nomar Garciaparra 11 9
OF 25 Jason Repko* 3 6
12 35 Olmedo Saenz 7 5
13 33 Ramon Martinez 4 4
SP1 28 Brad Penny 9 10
SP2 33 Derek Lowe 10 7
SP3 29 Odalis Perez 7 6
SP4 29 Jae Seo 7 6
SP5 33 Brett Tomko 8 6
RP1 28 Danys Baez 9 10
RP2 26 Yhency Brazoban# 3 4
RP3 31 Lance Carter 5 4
RP4 36 Takashi Saito+ 0 4
RP5 24 Franquelis Osoria+ 1 4

First of all, the NL West absolutely stinks; the Dodgers are a very unimpressive team, and it gets worse from here. I tend to think the Diamondbacks might just be the team to run this division this year, but in any event I can’t disagree with the assessment of EWSL that there are four mediocre teams bunched relatively close together here, and then the Rockies.
Second, more than any other – even the AL East – this division’s story entering the season is dominated by players whose injuries or injury histories, in several cases combined with advanced age, make them enormous question marks – on the Dodgers, that’s Eric Gagne, Cesar Izturis, Drew, Garciaparra, Penny, plus on a lower level Jayson Werth. The Dodgers’ EWSL figure would have looked more impressive if I’d got to them before Opening Day, when I could still have listed Gagne. Of course, Bonds and Schmidt with the Giants are the other two huge question marks.
It has to be frightening for a pitcher to look down the barrel of a season knowing a 38-year-old second baseman and a 39-year-old center fielder have his back.
Arizona Diamondbacks
Raw EWSL: 195.67 (65 W)
Adjusted: 211.40 (70 W)
Age-Adj.: 193.86 (65 W)

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 30 Johnny Estrada 11 10
1B 24 Conor Jackson+ 0 12
2B 28 Orlando Hudson 16 17
SS 35 Craig Counsell 16 11
3B 26 Chad Tracy# 13 18
RF 33 Shawn Green 18 15
CF 30 Eric Byrnes 14 13
LF 38 Luis Gonzalez 18 14
C2 25 Chris Snyder# 3 5
INF 34 Tony Clark 12 11
OF 32 Jeff DaVanon 7 6
12 36 Damoin Easley 7 6
13 28 Andy Green# 1 1
SP1 27 Brandon Webb 15 14
SP2 40 Orlando Hernandez 6 5
SP3 32 Russ Ortiz 6 4
SP4 35 Miguel Batista 10 5
SP5 28 Claudio Vargas 5 5
RP1 26 Jose Valverde 9 9
RP2 26 Brandon Lyon 1 1
RP3 27 Juan Cruz 2 2
RP4 31 Luis Vizcaino 5 4
RP5 28 Greg Acquino# 2 2

If Eric Byrnes is half as bad as his defensive reputation, puttting him in center is a frightening concept, and doubly so next to an aging Luis Gonzalez. On the other hand, in the infield you have Orlando Hudson; I’ve been a fan of Hudson for some time and think this might be the year when he steps up his offensive game after some disheartening steps backwards last season.
There’s an awful lot not to like in Arizona’s starting rotation after Webb (and I don’t know that I’m sold on the Baseball Prospectus’ Cy Young hype for Webb in 2006, either).
San Diego Padres
Raw EWSL: 199.33 (66 W)
Adjusted: 216.23 (72 W)
Age-Adj.: 188.40 (63 W)

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 37 Mike Piazza 12 8
1B 24 Adrian Gonzalez* 1 1
2B 23 Josh Barfield+ 0 12
SS 26 Khalil Greene 15 17
3B 38 Vinny Castilla 13 10
RF 35 Brian Giles 29 21
CF 33 Mike Cameron 15 13
LF 34 Dave Roberts 12 11
C2 35 Doug Mirabelli 5 3
INF 31 Mark Bellhorn 10 8
OF 39 Eric Young 7 5
12 35 Ryan Klesko 16 12
13 29 Termel Sledge# 6 6
SP1 25 Jake Peavy 15 18
SP2 27 Chris Young# 6 6
SP3 39 Woody Williams 6 5
SP4 33 Shawn Estes 6 4
SP5 26 Dewon Brazleton 2 2
RP1 38 Trevor Hoffman 8 6
RP2 29 Scott Linebrink 10 8
RP3 36 Alan Embree 2 2
RP4 33 Chan Ho Park 4 3
RP5 26 Clay Hensley* 3 5

Adrian Gonzalez, of course, will do better than this . . . Last year, I called the Pads “a deceptively old team”. Now, with the addition of Piazza, Castilla, Cameron, Estes, Mirabelli and Embree, the deception has been dropped. And really, what is starting Vinny Castilla but an admission that you are out of ideas and (more to the point) in such a snit with Sean Burroughs’ lack of development that you’d rather bring in a guy with no upside to miss?
I’m very excited about Chris Young’s possibilities at Petco. Brazleton is another matter – maybe the scouts see something, but where’s the evidence of him showing any ability to pitch at the major league level?
San Francisco Giants
Raw EWSL: 221.67 (74 W)
Adjusted: 231.73 (77 W)
Age-Adj.: 184.24 (61 W)

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 35 Mike Matheny 14 10
1B 27 Lance Niekro* 3 6
2B 34 Ray Durham 16 15
SS 39 Omar Vizquel 17 13
3B 31 Pedro Feliz 10 7
RF 39 Moises Alou 21 17
CF 32 Randy Winn 21 18
LF 41 Barry Bonds 25 11
C2 35 Todd Greene 3 2
INF 38 Jose Vizcaino 5 4
OF 41 Steve Finley 12 5
12 36 Mark Sweeney 7 5
13 28 Jason Ellison* 3 7
SP1 33 Jason Schmidt 15 11
SP2 25 Noah Lowry# 10 14
SP3 31 Matt Morris 9 7
SP4 21 Matt Cain* 3 7
SP5 31 Jamey Wright 4 3
RP1 33 Armando Benitez 9 7
RP2 38 Tim Worrell 7 5
RP3 33 Steve Kline 4 3
RP4 30 Tyler Walker 5 4
RP5 25 Kevin Corriea 2 2

I could also have listed 43-year-old Jeff Fassero, yet another of baseball’s growing legion of well-past-40 hurlers, at the end of the staff.
The injury to Noah Lowry had to be a particularly frustrating setback; with age eating away at this roster from all directions, the last thing the Giants needed was an injury to their one good, established player in his mid-20s, and the optimist’s case on the Giants rests heavily on Schmidt, Lowry and Cain providing a top-shelf 1-2-3 punch at the top of the rotation. (Benitez’ injruy was more par for the course).
Bonds, of course, is way beyond anyone’s predictive abilities, but presumably he wouldn’t have a .472 OBP if someone wasn’t still afraid of him.
Colorado Rockies
Raw EWSL: 140.67 (47 W)
Adjusted: 167.83 (56 W)
Age-Adj.: 160.96 (54 W)

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 31 Danny Ardoin* 2 2
1B 32 Todd Helton 29 25
2B 28 Jason Smith 1 1
SS 27 Clint Barmes* 5 9
3B 26 Garrett Atkins* 7 15
RF 27 Brad Hawpe# 4 5
CF 26 Cory Sullivan* 5 12
LF 26 Matt Holliday# 12 16
C2 31 Miguel Ojeda 3 2
INF 27 Luis A. Gonzalez# 7 8
OF 26 Choo Freeman+ 0 6
12 32 Eli Marrero 5 5
13 31 Jamey Carroll 7 6
SP1 27 Jason Jennings 7 7
SP2 29 Josh Fogg 5 4
SP3 28 Zach Day 3 4
SP4 25 Jeff Francis# 4 5
SP5 27 Aaron Cook 6 5
RP1 30 Brain Fuentes 9 7
RP2 40 Jose Mesa 6 5
RP3 32 Ray King 5 3
RP4 35 Mike DeJean 4 2
RP5 27 Byun Hyung Kim 5 5

I could have listed more pitchers if I gave myself the flexibility to add more and subtract some position players, as guys like Sun-Woo Kim and Tom Martin are in the mix. I assume the second base situation will remain fluid between Smith, Gonzalez and Carroll. As my older brother pointed out, while paying a 40-year-old Jose Mesa millions to pitch in Coors Field is wrong in too many ways to count, the upside is that Mesa isn’t going to be bothered by giving up a lot of runs.
If you’re an optimist you can point to the fact that many Rockies are right in their prime (26, 27), healthy, and just getting their first or second full shots at regular playing time – precisely the profile of a team poised to take a big step forward. If you’re a pessimist that means 2006 is likely to be about as good as the current youth movement gets (there’s no high upside 22 and 23 year olds on hand), and that’s probably not too good, especially with the pitching still in its perpetual state of disarray.

One thought on “2006 NL West EWSL Report”

  1. Does this division really have to have a playoff representative?
    BTW, imagine just how bad this division would look were it not for the unbalanced schedule. As it is, there’s a better than outside chance at a sub-.500 team winning it.

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