Improvement, meaning again being in the playoff hunt at the end, but perhaps it being far less of a longshot/surprise.
The juggling of the pitching staff works perfectly, with Smokey Joe Williams and Watty Clark Orel Hershiser joining Don Drysedale and Frank Knauss to provide a dependable, top of the league rotation helped by a continually improving Sandy Koufax. This implies that Eric Gagne‘s conversion to closer goes well.
The offense finds its soul, helped by the acquisition of Pedro Guerrero.
Knauss, Clark, and Koufax regress and Williams doesn’t step up, leaving only Drysedale as a dependable starter and the offense continues to just meander along without any real oomph. The acquisition of Guerrero fails to deliver.
Unsure? There is a bit of a logjam in the OF right now, maybe that could be solved.
Instead, the Royal Giants doubled down on the logjam, adding Guerrero to the mix. It’s unlikely Clark’s value is ever higher than it is right now, so it’s not a bad moment to make the move.
POS | Elite | Strong | Solid | Meh | Weak | Unknown |
C | Piazza | Bertell | ||||
1B | Robinson | |||||
2B | Isbell | |||||
3B | Cey | |||||
SS | Dandridge | Wills | ||||
LF/ RF | Becker Guerrero | |||||
CF | Briggs Snider White | Griggs | ||||
SP | Drysedale | Knauss | Hershiser Koufax | Williams | ||
End | Gagne | Dreifort Von Ohlen | ||||
RP | Forster Grimes Mateo Valenzuela |
Very middle of the road imo. There is a lot of uncertainty on the mound, with a bunch of new faces and others whose ability to replicate their success from last season remains firmly in doubt.
WBL | Minors | |
Raw Power | OF Duke Snider | 1B Jim Gentile |
Batting Eye | OF John Briggs | C Jim French |
Contact | OF Pedro Guerrero | 1B Dan Brouthers |
Running Speed | SS Maury Wills | SS Sonny Jackson |
Base Stealing | 2B Frank Isbell | 2B Davey Lopes |
IF Defense | IF Jackie Robinson | 1B Eric Karros |
OF Defense | OF Roy White | OF Chicken Wolf |
Stuff | SP Sandy Koufax | RP Lefty Thomas |
Control | CL Eric Gagne | RP Trevor Hildenberger |
Velocity | CL Eric Gagne | SP Walker Buehler |
Rank | Age | POS | Name |
1 (3) | 20 | 2B | Ed Delahanty |
2 (5) | 23 | P | Smokey Joe Williams |
3 (15) | 21 | P | Doc Newton |
4 (51) | 22 | P | Walker Buehler |
5 (84) | 21 | OF | John Briggs |
6 (108) | 22 | P | Dazzy Vance |
7 (125) | 24 | OF | Terry Moore |
8 (147) | 24 | P | Fernando Valenzuela |
9 (162) | 24 | P | Dustin McGowan |
10 (165) | 20 | OF | Al Simmons |
Williams, Briggs, and Valenzuela all break camp with the WBL team. Given the scarcity of offense in the system, both Delahanty and Simmons may see time this season.
Most | Least | |
Age | 2B Julio Franco, 39 | P Odalis Pérez, 19 P Hilly Flitcroft |
Height | P Don Drysedale, 6’6″ P Tommy Hanson, 6’6″ | P Bobby Shantz, 5’6″ |
OPS | 1B Justin Smoak, 1.101 (—) | SS César Izturis, .527 (AAA/AA) |
HR | 1B Justin Smoak, 64 (—) | SS César Izturis, 0 (AAA/AA) OF Art Griggs, 0 (WBL/AAA) |
SB | OF Beals Becker, 49 (WBL) | |
WAR | 1B Jim Gentile, 5.0 (—) | SS Germany Smith, -1.0 (WBL/AAA) |
W | Josh Outman, 14 (—) Jordan Zimmerman, 14 (AAA) | Tom Phoebus, 2 (—) Dick Redding, 2 (WBL/AAA) |
SV | Red Evans, 23 (—) | |
ERA | Darren Dreifort, 2.03 (WBL/AAA) | Tom Sullivan, 8.09 (—) |
WAR | Bobby Shantz, 5.9 (—) | Tom Sullivan, -2.0 (—) |
A couple spots in the bullpen are open, but most of the attention will be on the position players, where in addition to the bench, starting roles at C and 1B are unsettled.
Ed Delahanty and Al Simmons (Brooklyn’s first and second round draft picks) are probably a year away, but either could make a strong push in Spring Training.
Trevor Hildenberger is likely to miss the start of the season with a back injury, opening up another spot in the Royal Giants’ bullpen and SS Germany Smith–the early favorite to start at that position–will be out until very close to opening day with a broken bone in his foot.
Both Doc Newton and Tom Sullivan were longshots to make the team, and neither showed enough to stay in camp past the first round of reassignments; nor did Ted Blankenship, Lew Krausse Jr., Nap Rucker, or Dustin McGowan. Dave Van Ohlen has pitched as poorly as the rest of them, but being an established WBL arm has its privileges.
Likewise, Al López and Mike Piazza have both struggled, but it’s Al Todd and Jeff Torborg who are reassigned. The axe also fell for Tommy Everidge, Marco Hernández, Hank Majeski, and Ken McMullen. These moves preserve spots for Ray Dandridge and Ed Delahanty, despite their mighty struggles so far.
The OF remains an incredibly tangled puzzle. Assumed starters Duke Snider and Beals Becker have combined for only 2 hits, while Matt Holliday, Ron Fairly, George Selkirk, and Jermaine Dye–all considered relative long shots to make the team–are pounding the ball with OPS’ over 1.000. Even Morrie Arnovich and Raúl Mondesi, who have not hit well, remain in camp, largely based on their performances in the minors last year.
Clearly, figuring out the OF spots is the major concern of the next week or so for Brooklyn.
Walker Buehler and Jordan Zimmerman head to minor league camp, as do Ron Fairly and Dan Brouthers. Phenom Ed Delahanty heads to minor league camp for at least a year of seasoning while only Germany Smith‘s injury keeps Tim Foli in camp. In the OF, Raúl Mondesi heads down along with veteran Jermaine Dye.
Rick Aguilera, Tim Foli, George Selkirk, Davey Lopes, and, perhaps most surprisingly, Al López were all sent down.
This means that the catching duties will fall to some mixture of Mike Piazza and Duke Farrell (assuming Dick Bertell cools off at some point), and indicates that the Royal Giants are looking to play Ray Dandridge at 2B with Maury Wills earning a strong look at SS in Germany Smith‘s absence.
The Royal Giants have some very hard decisions. Their first cut comes from the outfield, where 20 year old Al Simmons has hit well, but clearly needs to spend some time as a fulltime player, something he’ll be able to do at AA. Morrie Arnovich follows Simmons, clearing up some space in the OF.
Part of Duke Farrell‘s value was his ability to fill in at 3B as well; with Pedro Guerrero‘s arrival, that means a bit less. Combine that with Farrell’s struggles and Dick Bertell‘s excellent Spring, and Farrell becomes expendable, off to start the year at AAA. Some see this as a clear sign that the Royal Giants are going to go with Mike Piazza behind the plate; others insist that Bertell still has a shot to seize the starting role.
Jim Gentile is the only true 1B on the roster. And he’s posted an OPS over .800 this Spring. But roster space is scarce, and Gentile only plays 1B, so off he goes to AAA.
Trevor Hildenberger had struggled mightily before being shut down with back spasms. The Royal Giants got to 30 players by placing Hildenberger on the DL–he may be off by opening day, but a rehab stint in the minors to regain his form is needed regardless.
This is so hard at the end. Two or three more arms have to be sent down from Burleigh Grimes, Orel Hershiser, Juan Mateo, Dick Redding, Fernando Valenzuela, and Dutch Leonard. The problem is none of them have pitched badly. Leonard has struggled the most, so he’s the first, followed by young Dick Redding, who was solid last year, but gave up a lot of hits this Spring.
Germany Smith was placed on the DL.
Everybody else hit really well all Spring, making these final two choices very difficult. The Royal Giants sort of fell in love with Maury Wills and in the end, despite almost equal production, Dickie Thon‘s in ability to play other positions sends Thon to AAA. Finally, Matty Alou had a strong Spring, but it’s all just too crowded, to the veteran heads to the minors.
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