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When the Yankees traded for Lance Berkman, many wondered whether they would give him a chance to hit against left-handed pitching, considering his deterioration in that area over the last few seasons. With a lefty-mashing player in Marcus Thames at his disposal, Joe Girardi has answered that question with an emphatic “no.” It seems pretty clear at this point that Berkman is unlikely to see any important at-bats against lefties in the postseason, as he will platoon with Thames and be pinch hit for if a lefty reliever enters the game. In fact, Joe has shown that if a lefty is on the hill, he would prefer to substitute Thames for Berkman even if it means that the opposing manager will change pitchers and bring in a righty to battle Thames.

Being that Lance had always been adequate against left-handers, some have been searching for a way to explain his inability to hit them over the last few seasons. At the request of friend-of-the-blog Jamal Granger (@JamalGr), I reached out to Steve Carter (@SteveCarterPP), senior scout at Project Prospect, to ask if he could see anything different in Berkman’s swing from the right side. The following is his scouting report:

From the right side, he’s always been pretty much a dead pull hitter. Really opens up with his front side. That I knew. What I didn’t know was how bad it had become. Looked it up on TexasLeaguers.com’s spray charts, and since the beginning of 2009, he has a total of 5 hits to the right of dead center. Five. (One infield hit, but with his legs, ain’t nothin but a fluke.)

He’s never been a great hitter from the right side, but now that he’s older and his bat is slowing, his natural tendency to open up with his front side is hurting him big time. He’s basically early on everything that isn’t a fastball, but can’t generate enough bat speed to catch up to the fastball. Caught in between on everything. And since pitchers are seeing the slow bat, they’re pounding him in with hard stuff and then attacking away with soft stuff. And him being early isn’t really a timing issue. It’s a swing issue that leads to a timing issue. He’s not giving himself a chance to be on time because his own actions aren’t properly executed/timed up.

Swing wise- His first move from the right side has pretty much always been to open up with his front hip/oblique. Good when the pitch is middle-in, not so much when it’s away. He could get away with that when he was younger, not so much anymore. He also never really has been able to work his hands right from the right side. He has a very pronounced ‘hit down on the ball’ move with his hands, which doesn’t really allow him to build up bat speed behind him before committing to the pitch. All of his bat speed is late and out in front, and pretty much all his energy is directed out to left field- by that I mean the energy he builds up by loading doesn’t get built up in time, and what little he has built up doesn’t get expelled into the ball. Last thing about his swing from the RH side, it’s always been rather ‘armish’. A lot (more than there should be) of arm involvement, not enough hips/core/hands. Arms mean slow actions and slop in the swing, neither of which are good. Also, in his case, he extends his arms out away from his body too soon, further slowing him down and putting him in weaker positions to both create bat speed and drive the ball with authority.

As it stands, I’d avoid using him as a RHH if at all possible. Unless you face Cole Hamels, then I’d force him to sit the whole game on Cole’s change up.

Thank you to Steve for contributing, and check out Project Prospect for more of his work.

One thing I wanted to add to bolster this analysis is that Berkman is hitting 9% more line drives when hitting left-handed (18.8 to 9.5%). As Steve noted, his righty swing is not allowing him drive the ball, a major issue that is likely at the core of his poor performance against left-handers. I am uncertain whether this is something that he can fix, as it sounds like age and bat speed are major factors in his decline. Regardless, he is unlikely to get a chance to alter his mechanics and then test the changes during his tenure with the Yankees. When lefties take the hill against the Bombers in September and October, it will be Marcus Thames manning the DH spot.

There are three things that are certain in life: death, taxes, and the need for left-handed pitching help.  Being a lefty is recession-proof; if you’re a lefty reliever your lifespan in baseball can get extended well beyond what a similarly talented right-handed reliever would expect.  Seriously, if my future son takes a liking to baseball I’m going to teach him to throw left-handed.

Enter Royce Ring.  In addition to having a comical-sounding name, Ring is a lefty reliever. Ring was actually the first round draft pick of the White Sox in 2002, but was dealt a year later to the Mets along with Edwin Almonte and Andrew Salvo in exchange for Roberto Alomar.  Ring didn’t do well in New York, and was left exposed to the Rule V draft after the 2004 season.  There were no takers, and rumors of a bad attitude (much like Jesus Montero, amirite?) and lack of physical conditioning severely dimmed this prospect’s outlook.  Over the next few years, Ring bounced back and forth between AAA and the bigs, never able to establish himself as a solid option out of the bullpen.  After the 2006 season, the Royce Ring-New York Mets experiment ended when Ring was dealt to the Padres along with Heath Bell in exchange for Ben Johnson and Jon Adkins.

No, seriously, the Mets gave away Heath Bell.

After another trade to Atlanta, Ring became a minor league free agent and signed with the Cardinals before the 2009 season.  He cleared waivers, and spent the season pitching for the Memphis Redbirds, the Cardinals’ Triple A affiliate.  Along came the Yankees.  After the season, Ring signed a minor league deal with New York and was optioned to Triple A Scranton.  Ring’s performance was noteworthy.  He struck out 39 batters in 42 innings, walking only 9 and yielding only 2 home runs.  His ERA was 1.93 and his FIP was 3.10, and his K/BB ratio of 3.5 represented his highest mark since notching a 4.0 over 31 innings with the Padres in 2007.  When Damaso Marte went down for the season with yet more shoulder pain and the team relying heavily on Boone Logan to do the heavy-lifting out of the pen, the Yankees finally called up Ring to the bigs two days ago to be the second lefty out of the bullpen.

One of the best parts about Ring is his ability to generate ground balls. In his past two years, Ring has gotten ground balls at a 51.4% and 57.1% clip in a sample of around 90 innings.One of the weirder things about Ring, though, is the fact that he’s not exactly a platoon-type pitcher.  From 2008 to 2010, he faced 202 left-handed batters and 207 right-handed batters.  He posted a 3.57 FIP against the lefties and a 3.34 FIP against the righties.  He struck out an identical amount of batters, 43, and walked 2 more left-handed batters than righties (18 vs. 16).  In other words, he doesn’t profile as a LOOGY.  You can see Ring pitch in this Spring Training video clip on MLB.com.  He looks a bit like Boone Logan in his delivery, although he appears slightly quicker to the plate.  You can see him throw a decent curveball and run a high-80s fastball up and in on a left-handed batter.  It’s nothing too impressive, to be honest.  There’s a reason he was a free agent this past winter.

As I detailed early this week, the final one or two spots in the bullpen are up for grabs.  Javier Vazquez and Ivan Nova (or Chad Gaudin) have the best shot at grabbing them, but it’s possible that Ring could work his way into the mix over the next few weeks.  If the Yankees are the Wild Card team, they will face the Twins in the first round.  The Twins feature a lefty-heavy lineup with Joe Mauer, Denard Span, Jim Thome and possibly Justin Morneau, as well as switch-hitter Orlando Hudson.  If the Yankees win the AL East, they’ll face the Rangers in the first round, and the Rangers have a fair amount of lefties themselves with Josh Hamilton, the seriously under-rated David Murphy, Chris Davis and Julio Borbon. Beyond that, the Rays feature Carl Crawford, Carlos Pena,Yankee-killer Dan Johnson, Matt Joyce and John Jaso.  It’s no easier in the National League.   The Phillies have Chase Utley and Ryan Howard and the Braves have Brian McCann, Jason Heyward and Melky “murder you from either side of the plate” Cabrera.  Elsewhere, the Reds have Jay Bruce and Joey Votto,  and the Padres feature Adrian Gonzalez and nobody.  A second lefty isn’t a must, but it is certainly nice to have the option.

It’s true that David Robertson and Boone Logan can both handle lefties, and they’ve proven themselves to be very solid options out of the bullpen.  But Royce Ring’s performance over the next few weeks may give the Yankees another left-handed option out of the pen come playoff time. Making the postseason roster would certainly be quite the career accomplishment for this burned out prospect with the funny name, and maybe he could end up contributing something to the Yankees’ October run.

Sep 172010

How’s your week been? Mine’s been stressful and will only get worse next week. Let’s re-live the madness.

I’m going to start with my biggest omission. As readers–and Tweeters–pointed out, I left out Adrian Beltre in my discussion of A.L. MVP:

ADRIAN BELTRE:
.328/.373/.568, .399 wOBA, 150 wRC+, fWAR 7.1, bWAR 6.1

His case: He’s been the only light of consistency in Boston’s lineup, and without him, they’d be even worse off. Of course, it’s also worth noting that in terms of fWAR, he’s higher than both Cano (5.9) and Cabrera (6.2) and is ahead of Cano (6.0) in bWAR. Beltre’s hit incredibly well this year and has fielded at an outstanding level–as he usually does–so he’s obviously going to have a high WAR. He should probably get more consideration than he will, but since Boston likely won’t make the playoffs, I don’t see him getting much love (which is unjust).

the rest of the posts were about the crappiest week of Yankee baseball we’ve seen this season. There really isn’t a need to revisit this awful week, so let’s just say this: this week sucked. We haven’t seen them play this badly all season. Still, all the games have been close and the Yankees have just missed opportunities. Those things have a way of correcting themselves, so I think (hope) we’ll see that soon. There is literally no way this coming week could be worse than the last one.

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