Thursday, September 4, 2008

Are the Padres Tanking Games?

Stephen Strasburg, is, at this time, widely recognized as the most promising talent eligible for the 2009 MLB draft. He is a SP who combines a fastball that reaches the mid to upper 90s with quality secondary pitches. He is seen as being close to major league ready, perhaps ready to assume a rotation spot within 2 years of being drafted. While there are certainly other intriguing prospects, the number one prize in the '09 draft is clearly Strasburg.

With the Padres well out of contention, it would seemingly behoove them to finish with the worst overall record, allowing the team to draft Strasburg. Recent moves such as starting Will Venable in CF, Matt Antonelli at 2B, and employing a 6 man rotation do not seem to have been made with the goal of winning ballgames.

With that said, many of those moves may have other explanations. Jody Gerut is probably not the long-term answer in CF. Venable may be. Giving him a chance to experience life in the big leagues, and face major league pitching could help him progress as a player. Same with Antonelli, who although he had a miserable overall batting line in AAA, has been hitting better of late, and could very well be the Padres opening day second baseman in '09.

The six-man rotation is a little trickier to explain. The Padres have had trouble fielding 5 good starters, let alone 6. Adding Wade LeBlanc and Josh Geer to the rotation makes some sense, with the logic being similar to that of playing Venable and Antonelli every day. On the other hand, adding Sean Estes to the rotation makes little sense. Estes had his last reasonably solid year in 2001 with the Giants. Since then, his performance, when healthy has been miserable. Of course, he has rarely been healthy. Estes has pitched 30 innings since 2005-not exactly a guy a team can count on to be healthy in the future. It is unlikely Estes will provide much value to the Padres in '09, so the only reason I can think of for him to be pitching every 6 days is to give Peavy extra rest.

Jake Peavy pitching every 6 days, rather than every 5 days does two things: it helps avoid unnecesarily overtaxing Peavy, and it also transfers some innings Peavy would have otherwise pitched to a (probably worse than) replacement level pitcher. One explanation implies the Padres are tanking games, the other merely suggests the Padres are being cautious with one of their most valuable assets.

Personally, I don't think the Padres would risk the hit to their reputation that would result from overtly tanking games. Rather, I believe the Padres primary motive is introducing some of their prospects to the majors in a relatively stress-free atmosphere, and protecting Peavy's arm. The fact that losing more games may actually benefit the team is just an added bonus which has allowed the Padres to be more aggressive in making September lineup and rotation adjustments at little cost.

I liken the situation to playing poker without money on the line. Going all-in on every hand, or otherwise disrespecting the game, is no fun for anybody involved. This type of behavior will draw the ire of others at the table. At the same time, with little to lose, it is likely everybody will play more aggressively, and even try out a new strategy or two (or in the Padres case-3 or 4).

5 comments:

cjger31 said...

Except it's unethical. Tanking, as you put it, means that games aren't played with your best available nine players. This is the Majors and you use your best. The standings in the playoff race are at stake. It is axiomatic that no team "tanks."

Daniel Gettinger said...

I'm not sure doing what the Padres are doing is unethical. It would be different if players were ordered to purposely strike out in key situations, or Buddy Black was told to have slow runners steal bases at will.

The players on the field are trying their best, and Buddy Black is making in-game decisions with the goal of winning ballgames. Plus, many of the Padres top players are still out there (Adrian, Kouz, Peavy every 6 days).

getaclueorgetoffthebus said...

Tanking games on purpose!!! have you ever put on a jockstrap in your life. You actually think any halfway competitive individual, let alone professional athlete would lose on purpose. what about earning next years salary, especially for a young player. Yeah playing Will venable shows they are trying to tank it...whats he hitting since they put him in the lineup? Did hairston try to break his thumb and gerut try to hurt his hand so veneble could start and "stink up the line up. Oh yeah they want to lose thier positions so they can get traded. Get a clue or get off the bus!

Daniel Gettinger said...

I think you missed the point. At no point did I ever suggest the players on the field are not trying their best. Obviously the players have a strong incentive to compete as hard as possible.

What I did was mention the possibility that management is not fielding the best possible starting lineup, pitching rotation, and 25 man roster. Of course, I stopped short of saying management is in fact tanking games. Rather, I tried to lay out the arguments on both sides, and then suggested the truth lie in somewhat of a "compromise" position.

getaclueorgetoffthebus said...

And exactly who are the better players on the roster that "management" isn't playing. The injured ones? the ones that are hitting .206. Oh yeah, they are the ones WE DONT HAVE!!! I forgot we are just supposed to go get them because everyone wants to trade their good players for your underperfomers. Or their prospects for your players that are going off contract and won't agree to trade so you can build for the future. Is the manager part of management? You imply his pre game decisions don't line up with his in game ones.Does he want to keep his job? Does he want to be a stooge or a loser? I get it, the Padres should play with..... the ANGELS roster. Now there is a winning strategy. Lets call Mr Moreno and ask him if he minds. I think the idea is WE ARE IN LAST PLACE find out what the kids can do. then you can base your decisions for next year on that. One more thing, the first pick is always a guaranteed superstar for a 7 million dollar price tag. And if you believe that........get a clue or get off the bus!