2011 NL Central EWSL Report

Part 6 of my very-belated preseason previews is the NL Central (last as always); this is the sixth and last of six division previews, using Established Win Shares Levels as a jumping-off point. Notes and reference links on the EWSL method are below the fold; while EWSL is a simple enough method that will be familiar to long-time readers, it takes a little introductory explaining, so I’d suggest you check out the explanations first if you’re new to these previews. Team ages are weighted by non-age-adjusted EWSL, so the best players count more towards determining the age of the roster.
Prior previews: the AL West, AL East, AL Central, NL West, NL East.
Some players are rated based on less than three seasons or given a rookie rating. Key:
+ (Rookie)
* (Based on one season)
# (Based on two seasons)

Milwaukee Brewers
Raw EWSL: 220.00 (87 W)
Adjusted: 232.93 (91 W)
Age-Adj.: 223.33 (88 W)
WS Age: 28.94
2011 W-L: 88-74

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 25 Jonathan Lucroy* 2 5
1B 27 Prince Fielder 27 28
2B 28 Rickie Weeks 20 20
SS 29 Yuniesky Betancourt 10 10
3B 28 Casey McGehee 17 21
RF 29 Corey Hart 15 14
CF 25 Carlos Gomez 6 7
LF 27 Ryan Braun 28 29
C2 33 Wil Nieves 3 3
INF 40 Craig Counsell 9 5
OF 30 Nyjer Morgan 10 9
12 35 Mark Kotsay 5 4
13 30 Jeremy Reed 1 1
SP1 27 Zack Greinke 17 15
SP2 25 Yovanni Gallardo 9 10
SP3 29 Shaun Marcum 9 8
SP4 34 Randy Wolf 10 8
SP5 29 Chris Narveson# 4 4
RP1 28 John Axford* 6 10
RP2 29 Kameron Loe 3 2
RP3 41 Takashi Saito 6 4
RP4 30 Sergio Mitre 2 1
RP5 23 Zack Braddock* 2 3

Subjective Adjustments: None. Greinke’s missed some time, but then EWSL probably underrates Gallardo and Marcum due to injury risks.
Also on Hand: Position players – George Kottaras, Brandon Boggs, Erick Almonte.
Pitchers – Brandon Kintzler, Sean Green, Marco Estrada, Mitch Stetter, LaTroy Hawkins.
Analysis: Just look at the ages of the Brewers’ starting lineup to see why EWSL rates them the class of the division – having a whole bunch of guys right in their prime is sometimes more important than having the most talent in the abstract.
Cincinnati Reds
Raw EWSL: 214.17 (85 W)
Adjusted: 230.53 (90 W)
Age-Adj.: 219.32 (86 W)
WS Age: 29.42
2011 W-L: 86-76

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 35 Ramon Hernandez 12 9
1B 27 Joey Votto 28 29
2B 30 Brandon Phillips 19 17
SS 28 Paul Janish# 6 7
3B 36 Scott Rolen 17 12
RF 24 Jay Bruce 12 16
CF 26 Drew Stubbs# 11 14
LF 30 Jonny Gomes 13 11
C2 30 Ryan Hanigan 10 9
INF 37 Miguel Cairo 3 2
OF 30 Fred Lewis 10 9
12 35 Edgar Renteria 8 6
13 27 Jeremy Hermida 8 8
SP1 34 Bronson Arroyo 13 11
SP2 27 Ednison Volquez 5 4
SP3 25 Johnny Cueto 9 10
SP4 24 Travis Wood* 3 7
SP5 25 Homer Bailey 4 5
RP1 36 Francisco Cordero 11 10
RP2 23 Aroldis Chapman+ 1 5
RP3 26 Logan Ondreysuk* 3 5
RP4 29 Nick Masset 8 6
RP5 23 Mike Leake* 4 8

Subjective Adjustments: None.
Also on Hand: Position players – Chris Heisey, Juan Francisco, Yonder Alonso, Chris Valaika.
Pitchers – Jordan Smith, Bill Bray, Matt Maloney, Carlos Fisher.
Analysis: The Reds’ starting rotation remains unsettled, but there’s definitely pitching talent there.
Francisco Cordero is now second on the active saves list – he’s never really been a spectacular closer, but his low HR rate more than anything else, especially in the parks he’s worked in, has kept him steady year in and year out.
St. Louis Cardinals
Raw EWSL: 224.33 (88 W)
Adjusted: 239.50 (93 W)
Age-Adj.: 217.52 (86 W)
WS Age: 30.70
2011 W-L: 86-76

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 28 Yadier Molina 18 18
1B 31 Albert Pujols 35 29
2B 31 Skip Schumaker 16 13
SS 31 Ryan Theriot 14 12
3B 28 David Freese# 4 5
RF 35 Lance Berkman 20 15
CF 24 Colby Rasmus# 13 20
LF 31 Matt Holliday 24 21
C2 31 Gerald Laird 9 8
INF 33 Nick Punto 8 7
OF 26 John Jay* 4 9
12 26 Allen Craig* 1 2
13 27 Tyler Greene# 1 1
SP1 36 Chris Carpenter 14 12
SP2 24 Jaime Garcia* 6 14
SP3 33 Jake Westbrook 5 4
SP4 32 Kyle Lohse 3 2
SP5 27 Kyle McClellan 7 6
RP1 27 Mitchell Boggs 3 2
RP2 29 Jason Motte# 4 4
RP3 26 Fernando Salas* 1 1
RP4 40 Miguel Batista 4 3
RP5 38 Ryan Franklin 11 9

Subjective Adjustments: None.
Also on Hand: Position players – Daniel Descalso, Mark Hamilton.
Pitchers – Adam Wainwright (out for the season), Eduardo Sanchez, Brian Tallet, Bryan Augenstein.
Analysis: The current division leaders, still hoping they can outrun the loss of Wainwright. Pujols’ slow start this season is yet another reminder of the pitiless march of age, but Tony LaRussa still always manages to find some veterans – so far, Lance Berkman – who buck that trend long enough to contribute. Meanwhile, Matt Holliday has been worth every penny of his enormous salary. I was high on David Freese before the season, but he’s yet to prove he can make it through a full season.
The weak point, by EWSL, is the bullpen, so if LaRussa and Duncan can work some magic in getting more out of an unimpressive assortment, the Cards could continue overachieve.
Chicago Cubs
Raw EWSL: 204.50 (81 W)
Adjusted: 229.37 (90 W)
Age-Adj.: 213.68 (84 W)
WS Age: 29.91
2011 W-L: 84-78

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 28 Geovany Soto 14 14
1B 33 Carlos Pena 17 15
2B 25 Darwin Barney+ 1 11
SS 21 Starlin Castro* 6 15
3B 33 Aramis Ramirez 16 14
RF 34 Kosuke Fukudome 15 13
CF 33 Marlon Byrd 18 16
LF 35 Alfonso Soriano 14 10
C2 30 Jeff Baker 6 5
INF 25 Blake DeWitt 10 12
OF 34 Reed Johnson 5 4
12 25 Tyler Colvin* 5 11
13 32 Koyie Hill 4 3
SP1 34 Ryan Dempster 13 11
SP2 27 Matt Garza 11 10
SP3 30 Carlos Zambrano 12 10
SP4 28 Randy Wells# 9 10
SP5 24 Andrew Cashner* 1 2
RP1 28 Carlos Marmol 13 13
RP2 28 Sean Marshall 7 7
RP3 34 Kerry Wood 6 5
RP4 32 John Grabow 3 3
RP5 23 Casey Coleman* 2 3

Subjective Adjustments: None, although obviously the injuries to Wells and Cashner have been costly.
Also on Hand: Pitchers – Marcos Mateo, Jeff Samardzjia, James Russell, Justin Berg, Jeff Stevens.
Analysis: The Cubs are not a bad team, and they’re good enough to swipe a title in a weak division with a few breaks (a harder thing to swing when the division has six teams) but – not to harp on age again here – they’re a rebuilding team. Seriously: EWSL rates Marlon Byrd as their best player, once you apply the age adjustments. (Byrd may still be a solid glove but compared to the other center fielders in this division he’s in awfully fast company).
Thus far, they’ve been laboring without Wells and Cashner, both injured.
Houston Astros
Raw EWSL: 172.00 (71 W)
Adjusted: 191.31 (77 W)
Age-Adj.: 172.28 (71 W)
WS Age: 30.10
2011 W-L: 71-91

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 31 Humberto Quintero 5 4
1B 24 Brett Wallace* 1 1
2B 31 Bill Hall 8 7
SS 27 Angel Sanchez* 4 7
3B 26 Chris Johnson* 8 16
RF 28 Hunter Pence 19 20
CF 28 Michael Bourn 18 18
LF 35 Carlos Lee 17 13
C2 27 JR Towles 1 1
INF 32 Clint Barmes 11 9
OF 35 Jason Michaels 5 4
12 31 Jeff Keppinger 14 12
13 33 Joe Inglett 5 4
SP1 30 Brett Myers 11 9
SP2 32 Wandy Rodriguez 12 10
SP3 28 JA Happ# 8 9
SP4 26 Bud Norris# 3 3
SP5 37 Nelson Figueroa 6 5
RP1 31 Brandon Lyon 12 9
RP2 26 Mark Melancon* 1 2
RP3 31 Jeff Fluchino# 3 3
RP4 25 Enerio Del Rosario+ 1 4
RP5 25 Fernando Abad* 1 2

Subjective Adjustments: None.
Also on Hand: Position players – Jason Bourgeois, Matt Downs, Brian Bogusovic.
Pitchers – Aneury Rodriguez, Wilton Lopez, Jose Valdez.
Analysis: The Astros’ Defensive Efficiency Rating, at this writing, is .648. No team has finished a full season below .650 since the 1930 Phillies (the 2007 Rays were the closest in recent decades, at .652 – which they followed with a historic one-season improvement to the best in MLB in 2008 – although the Cubs also had some appalling defenses in the 70s). Unless they can fix the infield (Johnson and Sanchez have been horribly error-prone, contributing to the low DER), it’s gonna be a long season for the Houston pitching staff.
Pittsburgh Pirates
Raw EWSL: 136.83 (59 W)
Adjusted: 165.50 (68 W)
Age-Adj.: 181.48 (74 W)
Subj. Adj.: 176.48 (72 W)
WS Age: 27.75
2011 W-L: 72-90

POS Age PLAYER Raw EWSL Age Adj
C 30 Chris Snyder 8 7
1B 34 Lyle Overbay 14 12
2B 25 Neil Walker* 8 19
SS 28 Ronny Cedeno 8 8
3B 24 Pedro Alvarez* 7 18
RF 30 Garrett Jones# 10 11
CF 24 Andrew McCutchen# 17 26
LF 22 Jose Tabata* 7 27
C2 30 Ryan Doumit 9 8
INF 26 Brandon Wood 1 1
OF 33 Matt Diaz 8 7
12 28 Steven Pearce 2 2
13 26 Xavier Paul* 0 0
SP1 30 Kevin Corriea 3 3
SP2 29 Paul Maholm 6 5
SP3 27 Charlie Morton 1 1
SP4 28 Ross Ohlendorf 6 5
SP5 28 Jeff Karstens 2 2
RP1 29 Joel Hanrahan 6 5
RP2 28 Evan Meek# 6 7
RP3 30 Jose Veras 4 3
RP4 34 Joe Beimel 5 4
RP5 28 Daniel McCutchen# 1 1

Subjective Adjustments: I cut Tabata from 27 to 22; the projected leap based solely on his age just looks too steep. Absent that, the Bucs would have ranked ahead of the Astros. No others, although Ohlendorf has been out of action for a while, with James McDonald filling his slot in the rotation.
Also on Hand: Position players – Jason Jaramillo, John Bowker, Josh Rodriguez.
Pitchers – James McDonald, Chris Resop, Michael Crotta, Garrett Olson, Danny Moskos.
Analysis: You know the perennial Pirates storylines; this year, it’s back to letting the kids play and build on their good starts. Optimism will only set in when we see proof the kids will not just develop but develop in Pittsburgh.
And the pitching still stinks, so even a surprise by the offense won’t deliver any glass slippers to PNC Park.


The Method
For those of you who are unfamiliar, EWSL is explained here, and you should read that link before commenting on the method; 2011 revisions to the age and rookie adjustments are discussed here.
Bear in mind as always that (1) EWSL is a record of past performance, adjusted by age to give a probabalistic assessment of the available talent on hand; it is not an individualized projection system – EWSL tells you what you should reasonably expect to happen this year if there are no surprises, rather than shedding light on how to spot the surprises before they happen; (2) individual EWSL are rounded off but team totals are compiled from the unrounded figures; and (3) as demonstrated here, here, here, here, here and here in some detail, nearly all teams will win more games than their EWSL total because I’m only rating 23 players per team. (I’m not convinced going to 24 or 25 would make the system more useful, since it would tend to overrate teams that stuff their back bench slots with aging ex-regulars). That said, I also don’t adjust for available playing time, since as a general rule, teams that have excess depth of players with established track records are better off than those that are stretching to cover their whole roster with guys who have proven they can do the job. The line for each team’s estimated 2011 W-L record adds EWSL plus 39.8 Win Shares, which is the average number of Win Shares by the rest of the team’s roster (i.e., the players other than the 23 listed before the season) over the teams I have tracked the past five seasons (it went up this season, as explained here).
As always, the depth charts here are drawn from multiple sources (my starting point was the depth charts at Baseball Prospectus.com, as well as USA Today’s Baseball Weekly, and I’ve also worked from the actual playing time thus far in April, all modified by press reports and my own assessments) to list the guys who will end up doing the work. I take responsibility for any errors.
Prior NL Central roundups here: 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010.