Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Curses! Tyler Flowers signs one-year deal with White Sox

Make no mistake about it, the 2013 White Sox roster had holes in it like Swiss cheese. The catching situation was perhaps the biggest hole of them all.

Both Tyler Flowers and Josh Phegley received an extended look behind the plate. Neither man showed much, and I'm not sold that either can be a long-term answer for the White Sox at that position.

As Monday's 11 p.m. deadline to tender contracts to arbitration-eligible players approached, I found myself wishing the Sox would non-tender Flowers and his .195 batting average and send him on his way.

Instead, the Sox signed Flowers to a one-year deal worth $950,000.

Ugh.

Sox GM Rick Hahn sounds inclined to give the Flowers-Phegley catching combo another chance in 2014.

"In Tyler's defense, there was a bit of an injury issue that may well have factored in to his performance," Hahn told reporters on Monday. "And in Josh's defense, it was his first exposure to the big leagues, and obviously the league adjusted to him fairly quickly and he was unable to adjust.

"So you're hesitant to write either guy off, given the upside that we have seen in the past. That said, this is the big leagues and eventually you run out of opportunities. I know we believe they're both capable of reaching their upside. As to precisely what role and how many at-bats they're going to get in 2014 to prove us right about that upside, that's still to be determined."

Double ugh.

I don't know that I've seen that much upside from either of these two guys. I can live with Flowers defensively, but shoulder injury or not, he's never shown me much with the bat. Yes, he hits some home runs, but he doesn't hit near enough of them to make up for his low-contact, low-average approach. Ask yourself, with men on second and third and one out, do you want Flowers at the plate? I sure don't. I feel like he's has no chance; a strikeout is inevitable. He's just too poor a hitter to play every day in the big leagues.

Last year was Phegley's first taste of the major leagues. He struggled both with the bat and with the glove, but he did hit in the minors. He's young enough that there is still some hope, but honestly, I think he would benefit from another season in Triple-A.

I was really hoping the Sox would add a veteran catcher to the mix this offseason, even if it was just a replacement-level player who could provide some experience and stability. The idea that the Sox are thinking of going with Flowers and Phegley again next year makes me shake my head in despair. I guess now is the time I need to remind myself the offseason isn't over yet. Opening Day isn't until March 31, and there is still plenty of time for Hahn to change his mind and bring another catcher in here.

But right now, I'm beating my head against the wall, especially after the news Tuesday that former White Sox catcher A.J. Pierzynski has signed with Boston.

Triple ugh.

Now, I'm not necessarily saying the Sox should have brought back Pierzynski, who will be 37 years old by Opening Day. At that age, who knows how much he has left in the tank? But what I am saying is that the Sox have failed to acquire or develop a suitable replacement for Pierzynski, and that's the part that stinks.

13 comments:

  1. It's still early. Though maybe this indicates the Sox really believe the injury held Flowers back.

    I'm not sure Phegley really has much more to show at Charlotte. Last season was his third in which he spent time at that level. He did show improvement, particularly with his batting average and power, but he's not likely to improve on the .316/.368/.597 line he showed there last year.

    I'm pretty sure Phegley will be the guy to go when (or if !?!?) the Sox did up a real alternative.

    Fortunately it won't be Jarrod Saltalamacchia. The Marlins are giving him the John Buck Special ($21 million, three-years for a catcher coming off a career season). Which is weirdly appropriate for this conversation because Buck and Saltalamacchia are both like older versions of Flowers.

    Unfortunately, there aren't many options left on the free agent market. I think if I had to pick one guy out of all of them that are still available, I'd pick Lou Marson. Seriously. Lou F ing Marson.

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  2. Another year of TFlow behind the plate? "Awesome!" said no Sox fan ever. The issue with the catching situation is that the Sox did nothing more than replace A.J. with a warm body that has a beating heart. If that was going to be their approach, they should've contacted me, as I'd gladly strike out 225 times a season for $950,000! Heck, I'd take the league minimum to do that!

    I wonder if it has ever crossed the mind of anyone in the organization that, when Kenny Williams first had his eye on TFlow back in his Atlanta days, the dude was on 'roids! Perhaps that's why he was so "good" when he was acquired.

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  3. I know Phegley has hit well in Charlotte, but I don't feel he's a major league catcher from a defensive standpoint. I thought he was downright poor as a catch-and-throw guy last season. If he were even average in that area, I might be more willing to say, "OK, put him back there 130 games and see if the bat develops."

    In any case, I'd rather Phegley be the guy than Flowers if I had to pick, but that's damning with faint praise.

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  4. Also, shame on the Sox for not having a better backup plan in place going into 2013. If Flowers was hurt, management must have known it, and they should have prepared for the possibility he would be ineffective, or not make it through the whole season. Yet they didn't have a better fallback veteran than Hector Gimenez? Fail.

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  5. I don't know that it's entirely fair to blame the Sox for not having a starting-quality catcher hanging around as a Plan B in case of injury or ineffectiveness by the starter. Not when half the teams in baseball look like they don't have that starting-quality guy as a Plan A.

    Sox fans have maybe been spoiled by how good, consistent and healthy Pierzynski was. Between Carlton Fisk and Pierzynski, what did the Sox put up with for a decade and a half? A few good Ron Karkovice seasons. Way too much of prospects who didn't pan out (Mark Johnson, Josh Paul), retreads (Ben Davis) and veteran filler (Jorge Fabregas, Charlie O'Brien, Sandy Alomar).

    During Pierzynski's stay, we also never had to find out what guys like Ramon Castro, Toby Hall or Chris Widger would have done (or not done) when pressed into something resembling full-time play.

    This is just how the other half lives.

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  6. They didn't necessarily have to have a starting-quality catcher hanging around as a fallback. If they had somebody like that, he would have been starting ahead of Flowers. But they should have had somebody who was at least a major league player. Gimenez is a career AAA player. Veteran filler would have been fine. As much as people made fun of the Sox for acquiring Alomar over and over again, at least Alomar was good enough to play in the big leagues. Gimenez, not so much.

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  7. Alomar with the White Sox: .257/.291/.384 for an OPS+ of 74.

    Flowers with the White Sox: .200/.279/.372 for an OPS+ of 74.

    Gimenez with the White Sox: .228/.297/.354 for an OPS+ of 75.

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    1. Alomar with the White Sox: 68 Ks in 834 plate appearances. (1 for every 12.2 plate appearances)

      Flowers with the White Sox: 201 Ks in 592 plate appearances. (1 for every 2.95 plate appearances)

      Gimenez with the White Sox: 25 Ks in 91 plate appearances. (1 for every 3.64 plate appearances)

      I'll take the player who makes contact.

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    2. I'd like to ask for a better option before making a selection. And I hope Rick Hahn does before spring training, too.

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    3. Plus, I don't think Alomar's contact rate really elevates him to any level of competency that Flowers can't attain. Not when his defensive game had deteriorated by the time he got to the Sox.

      Both guys are just really examples of how awful non-Pierzynski catchers have been for the Sox over the last two decades.

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    4. Of course, the best answer is none of the above, which goes back to my original point: It was lunacy to get rid of a durable, reliable catcher like Pierzynski without having a suitable replacement in the system.

      My opinion of Flowers is apparently lower than yours and lower than that of Sox brass. Basically, I think he's the epitome of crap. I can live with a high K rate if I'm getting 30 HRs and 90 to 100 RBIs. I'd be stunned if Flowers ever approached those numbers. For somebody who is going to hit 8 or 9 in the order, I'd rather have a hitter with a decent contact rate.

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    5. I wouldn't say my opinion of Flowers is "high." Maybe "higher than most other available options." I mean, yeah, Jarrod Saltalamacchia would have likely played better next year, but I'm not sure he's worth a commitment about 22 times what the Sox have invested in Flowers for next year. Not when he could regress and turn into basically the same player that Flowers might be without injury.

      I think I can live with the strikeouts if he had 20 HRs and kept his on-base percentage above .300. That would be plenty good for a catcher.

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  8. Maybe Konerko can get back behind the plate.

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