Why You Should Ignore OffSeason Winner

Post on: 12 Август, 2015 No Comment

Why You Should Ignore OffSeason Winner

Why You Should Ignore Off-Season Winner/Loser Recaps

by Dave Cameron — February 10, 2015

With James Shields finally signing, the off-season is probably closed for business now. Sure, there are a few veteran relievers still out there, and Rickie Weeks still has to find a new home, but most of the money has been spent and the trades have been made. Well see a few more deals in Spring Training, but with pitchers and catchers reporting next week, the Hot Stove is now more of a pile of smoldering coals.

And that means youre about to be inundated with various lists and rankings of off-season moves. Youre going to read about the best and worst individual moves of the winter Ill likely have my own posts on those at the end of the week as well as the always popular winners and losers of the off-season. In general, I find the winners/losers recaps to be a little bit formulaic, as they could almost always just be rewritten as teams that made the most win-now moves and team that made the fewest transactions.

For instance, in the linked video above granted, this is from a month ago, so the list might be different today Ken Rosenthal lists his off-season winners as the San Diego Padres, Chicago White Sox, and Miami Marlins. Id imagine pretty much every iteration of the topic will contain the Padres and White Sox, as they both made a lot of moves and several high profile acquisitions, propelling themselves from mediocrity into potential Wild Card contenders. The Marlins will show up on a decent amount of lists as well, though their spot could also be absorbed by the Blue Jays, Cubs, or Red Sox, depending on the preferences of the person compiling the list.

In pretty much every one of these cases, the teams exchanged future assets prospects, draft picks, salary commitments, or a combination of the three in order to boost their chances of winning in 2015. And with very few exceptions, teams who spend the off-season exchanging future value for present value are lauded for that choice. Teams who intentionally get worse, even if they do so because they were correctly responding to a sellers market created by so many teams currently demanding win-now upgrades, almost never appear on these lists.

Im not trying to pick on people who write these columns, because this isnt a baseball-specific problem. Our culture has a strong positive bias towards borrowing from the future in order to live more comfortably in the moment; note that the American Dream is based around home-ownership, not having a robust 401k. Celebrating a team for signing a major free agent or making a few splashy trades isnt that different from praising someone for taking out a mortgage. Im pretty sure Ive never been invited a party to reward someone for downsizing and putting the savings into a low-cost index fund, however.

But theres a reason that lending is a highly profitable business to be in, especially when the economy is strong and everyone wants to be a buyer. Baseballs economy is absolutely booming right now, but because most talent is already distributed throughout the league, teams cant simply head to the bank and take out a loan to finance their new purchases. Instead, when demand rises as it has this winter, other teams can effectively become banks for their competitors, charging ever higher rates for talent while the strong market exists.

But these winner/loser columns dont acknowledge that lending is often more profitable than selling in a high-demand market. Instead of focusing on the magnitude of the change in value for a franchise, they often focus solely on the direction. And thats why I think so often the team that wins the off-season ends up as a regular season bust.

Yes, the Padres and White Sox got better this winter, and maybe the Marlins did too, though Im a little skeptical on that one. The As, Rays, and Braves all got worse on purpose, and Id be happy to wager that none of those three will end up on any off-season winners list. But if you look at the projected standings. OAK and TB both still project as better teams in 2015 than SD and CHW, even though they spent their off-seasons moving in opposite directions. Of course, that doesnt mean that OAK/TB had better off-seasons they were starting from much stronger positions to begin with but we should at least be willing to acknowledge that it is possible to degrade your team in the short-term while adding long-term value and retaining your status as a contender.

If were going to celebrate the White Sox and Padres moves towards decency because the consensus is that they didnt mortgage their futures in order to achieve the upgrades, why not acknowledge that putting a decent potential contender on the field while actually upgrading the organizations future can also be an admirable pursuit? Why are we only ever rewarding the buyers side of the equation, when theres only something to buy because the market incentivized selling to a degree that lured teams into acting as a lender?

Maybe were just not programmed to like bankers, especially after the last five or six years. Maybe our culture will just always value buying over saving for the future, regardless of the wisdom of owning a McMansion versus having a well-funded retirement account. But I dont know that we have to accept these same ideas when it comes to grading each teams off-season.

Acting as a buyer is absolutely the right way forward for some franchises in a certain year. It would also be absolutely the wrong way forward for other teams in that same year, and for another swath of franchises, the wisdom of buying or selling can depend upon what the market is demanding at the moment. Its never as clear cut as short-term upgrades are good and building for the future is bad, or vice versa. The goal should be to maximize value to an organization, and trade-offs always have to be made.

Sometimes, teams should trade future for present. When they do that and do it well, absolutely, lets celebrate a job well done. I think the Blue Jays did an excellent job of that this winter, for instance, adding Russell Martin. Josh Donaldson. and Michael Saunders to their starting line-up, plus an underrated Devon Travis as a low-key acquisition. They spent some money and traded some real talent in order to make those moves, but overall, I think the Blue Jays organization is in a better place now than they were at the start of the winter.

But I think I could make a case for the Rays having had a nearly equally strong off-season. Their moves werent as flashy the likes of Asdrubal Cabrera. Rene Rivera. John Jaso. and Steven Souza werent demanding attention but as much as I like Torontos off-season, Im not sure theyre significantly better than Tampa Bay for 2015, and yet Tampa built up their future asset base rather than diminishing it. Thats a notable accomplishment, but one that is mostly lost in the process of rewarding teams for making win-now moves.

I think its great that so many baseball teams are legitimately trying to win in 2015. That said, I dont think we should box ourselves into thinking that the only way to have a good off-season is to focus solely on making your team better next year. We shouldnt pretend that lending is never a good idea, or that a franchise cant move forward by first taking a small step backwards.


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