Tuesday, December 17, 2013

The unstated problem with the Yankees: Brian Cashman is a bad GM

In the last 48 hours, the Yankees have signed Brian Roberts to a $2 million dollar, one-year contract to be their starting second baseman. They have signed left-handed reliever Matt Thornton - most recently seen being left off of the Red Sox postseason roster - to a two-year, $7 million dollar deal. And Rany Jazayerli, one of the best baseball analysts alive, wrote a fantastic piece over at Grantland about the Yankees problems and the lack of a coming correction. 

In his piece, which is quite long but deserves the full treatment, there were two passages that I found especially telling.


Cano was worth 7.6 Wins Above Replacement in 2013. McCann, Beltran, and Ellsbury were worth 10.4 bWAR combined. Losing Cano wipes out most of the gains made by signing the other three players, and while Cano will make $24 million in Seattle next year, the Yankees will pay the other three $53 million

 And, the conclusion:

The culprit in the Yankees' downfall is mundane, but real: They're simply not talented enough to contend. Talent was something the Yankees could always buy in the past, but no one's selling it anymore. With few ways to acquire that ability, it looks like the Yankees will be living unhappily — if not ever after, then certainly for a lot longer than their front office and fans are prepared to stomach.
Talent. That makes it sound so simple - but the piece overlooks the major point. Yes, it's less easy now to buy talent, but there is still talent available. The Yankees just don't have any of it. Why is that? Because they are failures at identifying talent. They can't draft. They don't sign international free agents of any quality. They don't get contributing scrap-heap pickups. They've been building their team, for 10 years, almost exclusively on paying top dollar for other teams free agents.

While a Red Sox vs. Yankees comparison may seem overwrought, it reflects an important point of how these teams have been built. A note about terms: "Blockbuster Free Agent" is anyone signed to an AAV of $20 million. "Big Free Agent" is anyone between $10 million. "Mid-level" is over $2 milliong. Bargains are less than that. I've taken all the players projected to be at least 1.0 WAR players from Fangraphs "STEAMER" projection. It's not perfect, but I'm not looking for a perfect projection, just to illustrate a point.



NameWARHow acquired
CC Sabathia 3.9Blockbuster Free Agent Signing
Jacoby Ellsbury3.7Blockbuster Free Agent Signing
Hiroki Kuroda3.5Big Free Agent Signing
Brian McCann3.3Big Free Agent Signing
Ivan Nova3.1Rule 5 Draft
David Phelps2.1Drafted 2008
Mark Teixeira 2.0Blockbuster Free Agent Signing
Brett Gardner2.0Drafted 2005
Carlos Beltran1.8Big Free Agent Signing
David Robertson1.4Drafted 2006
Derek Jeter 1.4Drafted 1992
Alex Rodriguez1.2Blockbuster Free Agent Signing
Kelly Johnson1.1Bargain signing




NameWARHow acquired
Dustin Pedroia 3.9Drafted 2004
Jon Lester3.5Drafted 2002
John Lackey3.4Big Free Agent Signing
Xander Bogaerts3.0International Signing
Shane Victorino 2.6Big Free Agent Signing
David Ortiz2.4Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Will Middlebrooks2.4Drafted 2007
Clay Buchholz2.4Drafted 2005
Jake Peavy2.4Trade
Felix Doubront2.4International Signing
Jackie Bradley2.1Drafted 2011
Mike Napoli2.1Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Koji Uehara2.1Mid-level Free Agent Signing
A.J. Pierzynski1.3Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Daniel Nava1.2Undrafted free agent
Jonny Gomes1.1Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Junichi Tazawa1.1International Signing
Brandon Workman1.0Drafted 2010
Ryan Dempster1.0Big Free Agent Signing

The first thing that stands out is how many more good players the Red Sox have than the Yankees. The second, though, is the varied ways the Red Sox acquired their talent. Some were drafted over a decade ago, others quite recently. There are international signings, mid-level free agents, everything. The Yankees? Their top four players were all major signings. Ivan Nova was the one "find" in the group. They have three chosen in the draft in the last ten years. Let's resort the list, filtering out all of the Big and Blockbuster free agents, and players drafted 10 years ago (note - this works quite well, since it eliminates both Jeter and Lester, who were chosen by previous regimes).



NameWARHow acquired
Dustin Pedroia 3.9Drafted 2004
Ivan Nova3.1Rule 5 Draft
Xander Bogaerts3International Signing
Clay Buchholz2.4Drafted 2005
Will Middlebrooks2.4Drafted 2007
Felix Doubront2.4International Signing
David Ortiz2.4Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Jake Peavy2.4Trade
David Phelps2.1Drafted 2008
Jackie Bradley2.1Drafted 2011
Mike Napoli2.1Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Koji Uehara2.1Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Brett Gardner2Drafted 2005
David Robertson1.4Drafted 2006
A.J. Pierzynski1.3Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Daniel Nava1.2Undrafted free agent
Kelly Johnson1.1Bargain signing
Junichi Tazawa1.1International Signing
Jonny Gomes1.1Mid-level Free Agent Signing
Brandon Workman1Drafted 2010

There is a lot more red there than blue, including seven of the eight best players. 

The Yankee problems are often attributed to the Steinbrenners or the nature of sports in New York or Alex Rodriguez's ego or other such things, but the only good players they can identify are the ones that the league has already identified as good. It doesn't take any skill at all to figure out spending more money than every other team on the best players.

Note: As Jazayerli points out, this offseason they failed even at that - they replaced their best player with a series of inferior expensive ones. The combination of Ellsbury, McCann, and Beltran will probably produce more than Cano, but they are being paid more than twice as much, and do it while taking roughly 2.5 times as many at bats. 

Instead of filling additional spots with minimum cost youngsters or flawed players looking for a shot, it seems Cashman's go-to player is simply old guys that aren't nearly as good as they used to be. In the last year and a half he's brought in Vernon Wells, Ichiro Suzuki, Travis Hafner, Alfonso Soriano, and now Brian Roberts. He's like Montgomery Burns, who tries to fill his company softball team with ringers, but only knows of players from the previous century. I'm waiting for the Yankee equivalent of Waylon Smithers to inform him that "your right-fielder has been dead for a hundred and thirty years."

The general managers job is talent identification. He doesn't do all of it himself, but he puts the team in place that does. Cashman's team has failed. The Yankees are bad not just because the economics of baseball have changed, but because their general manager can't identify good players. 

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