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Archives for 2011

When The 40/60/80 Arbitration Rule Doesn’t Work

By Ben Nicholson-Smith | August 2, 2011 at 10:30am CDT

If you’re interested in contracts between teams and players, there’s a good chance you’ve heard of the 40/60/80 rule (see below for explanation). It’s easy to remember and easy to use, but there’s a problem. It doesn’t work – at least not to the extent that some suggest it does. There’s a broad selection of arbitration eligible players – Michael Bourn, Brett Gardner (pictured) and Clayton Kershaw for example – for whom the approximation will not work this offseason.

Brett Gardner

So why do we use it? First of all, the alternative’s a whole lot more complicated. To accurately project arbitration earnings for individual players, teams and agencies use comparable players and traditional stats instead of the 40/60/80 rule. Yes, 40/60/80 works as a guideline, but too many players and types of players are exceptions for it to provide consistently accurate projections. Though that’s probably not reassuring for saber-minded readers and writers, it’s all in the name of more accurate estimates for players’ salaries.

Before we go too much further, let’s briefly return to the origins of the 40/60/80 rule. David Studenmund showed in the 2007 Hardball Times Baseball Annual that, as a group, arbitration eligible players earn about 55% of what free agent players do (on a per win basis). 

Tom Tango then built on Studenmund’s research and determined that, generally speaking, we can say first year arbitration eligible players earn about 40% of what free agents earn, second year arbitration eligible players earn about 60% of what free agents earn and third year arbitration eligible players earn about 80% of what free agents earn.

The points Studenmund and Tango make are convincing – the 40/60/80 rule works to describe what has happened to groups of players. “It’s a rule of thumb, and should be used generally speaking,” Tango explained in late July.

But when I asked Tango about the rule, he acknowledged that it has its limitations.

“If you look at specific players, you really should look at ‘comps,’” he said. 

That’s what Major League teams and MLB agents do each winter. To prove that the player in question deserves the salary their side is proposing, executives and agents point to comparable players. If the player goes to arbitration, the arbitrators who hear the case and provide the verdict take into account salary and service time information and, according to baseball’s collective bargaining agreement, must consider “all comparable players.” 

In other words, those in the baseball industry ensure that their comparisons are accurate by looking to the specifics. Generally speaking, the 40/60/80 rule works, but it doesn’t account for the nuances of baseball’s arbitration system. 

“If you are trying to figure something more robust, I would not rely on the rule of thumb,” Tango wrote on his blog. “You’d have to come up with something not so linear,”

That could mean a sliding scale that would adjust for role players, superstars and award winners. 

“Or, more likely, you can forget about WAR altogether,” Tango continued. Instead, we could do something similar to what teams and agents do – value players based on RBI, homers, saves, wins and other back of the baseball card stats.

Using WAR to project earnings can be deceptive for many types of players. Superstars don’t come close to earning 40% of their ‘market value’ as first time arbitration eligible players. Versatile utility types also pose problems. According to WAR, the Cardinals should have non-tendered Ryan Theriot after he posted negative WAR last year. Instead they traded Blake Hawksworth for Theriot and gave the infielder a $3.3MM contract. Since elite defenders aren’t particularly well-compensated in arbitration, you wouldn’t want to use WAR to project earnings for a player like Bourn or Ben Zobrist. The same goes for players with OBP-driven value; arbitrators don’t reward high on base percentages nearly as well as WAR does. Closers, on the other hand, can earn as much as position players through arbitration, even though WAR suggests they’re far less valuable. Super twos, the players who go to arbitration four times instead of three, complicate the 40/60/80 rule as well.

When there are this many exceptions to the rule, it's time to start questioning its effectiveness. Though it does work as a descriptor of the past, as Studenmund and Tango showed, it isn't a reliable predictor for individuals. The 40/60/80 rule starts with free agent value and works backward. But in reality, arbitration cases look back to performance, not forward to free agent value. As a result, significant discrepancies emerge when we use the 40/60/80 rule for individuals. 

Wins above replacement is a more sophisticated and meaningful statistic than saves or runs batted in, yet WAR’s role in arbitration is limited at best. The 40/60/80 rule describes earnings for groups of players from the past, so using the rule to anticipate earnings for individuals in the future will not produce accurate results. It may seem old-fashioned, but the best way to establish a framework for a player’s earning potential is the same as it's ever been: comparing him to his peers with traditional stats. 

What is the 40/60/80 rule?

The sabermetric principle suggests arbitration-eligible players earn roughly 40% of their free agent value as first-time arbitration eligible players, 60% of their free agent value their second time through arbitration and 80% of their free agent value while third-time arbitration eligible. Value, in this case, is determined by calculating the cost of obtaining wins above replacement on the free agent market (usually $4-5MM per win above replacement).

Photo courtesy Icon SMI.

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Olney On Bell, Yankees, Pirates

By Ben Nicholson-Smith | August 2, 2011 at 9:56am CDT

As ESPN.com's Buster Olney points out, the American League Cy Young race is shaping up to be a compelling three-way contest. Justin Verlander, C.C. Sabathia and Jered Weaver rank first, second and third, respectively, in MLB in innings pitched and are among the leaders in just about every other category. Here are Olney's latest notes from around the league…

  • The Padres kicked around the idea of signing Heath Bell to a multiyear deal as they got closer to the trade deadline without seeing offers they liked for their closer. Bell says he would accept an offer of arbitration from San Diego, so Olney outlines the Padres' options. They could work out a trade involving Bell this month (with less leverage than before), they could sign him to a multiyear deal or, they could offer arbitration in the offseason and be prepared for Bell to accept if another club doesn't dangle a major deal.
  • The Yankees are well-positioned to pursue the next starting pitcher who becomes available on the trade market, since they kept their top prospects this July. They also figure to pursue Weaver when he hits free agency after the 2012 season.
  • The Pirates made modest upgrades (Derrek Lee and Ryan Ludwick) instead of paying more for better players and Olney says the approach makes sense given their modest chances of winning the NL Central.
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New York Yankees Pittsburgh Pirates San Diego Padres Heath Bell

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Elias Rankings For Free Agents Who Switched Leagues

By Ben Nicholson-Smith | August 2, 2011 at 9:07am CDT

Every summer prospective free agents on non-contenders get traded to new teams and, sometimes, to different leagues. The Elias Rankings for free agents are separate for the American and National Leagues, so players who projected as Type Bs in the American League won't necessarily project as Type Bs if they are dealt to the NL. Here's an update on the Elias Rankings for the prospective free agents who were traded between leagues last week (current projections, last week's projections):

  • Edwin Jackson, Cardinals – A Type B in the American League, Jackson remains a Type B with St. Louis.
  • Octavio Dotel, Cardinals – He was a Type B with Toronto and his status hasn't changed.
  • Orlando Cabrera, Giants – He remains unranked in the NL. He's close to Type B status, however.
  • Derrek Lee, Pirates – Like Cabrera, Lee remains unranked, but within striking distance of Type B status.
  • Kosuke Fukudome, Indians – Though Fukudome cannot be offered arbitration, his projected ranking changed from a Type B to unranked.
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Uncategorized Derrek Lee Edwin Jackson Elias Rankings Kosuke Fukudome Octavio Dotel Orlando Cabrera

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Rockies Notes: O’Dowd, Pomeranz, Giambi

By Ben Nicholson-Smith | August 2, 2011 at 8:11am CDT

The Phillies tied the Rockies in the ninth inning of yesterday's game when John Mayberry hit a two-run home run. Shane Victorino led off the tenth inning with another homer and Colorado lost 4-3. Here's the latest on the Rockies, who are 51-57…

  • Woody Paige of the Denver Post says the Rockies won't contend next year and argues that GM Dan O'Dowd should take the blame for "his failure at the deal deadline to get rid of the veteran players who have proven they're incompetent."
  • Drew Pomeranz, the player to be named in the Ubaldo Jimenez deal, told Troy E. Renck of the Denver Post that he didn't expect to be traded from the Indians, even though he heard some rumors.
  • Jason Giambi told O'Dowd that he doesn't mind getting traded this month, as long as it doesn't hurt his chances of re-signing in Colorado after the season, according to Jim Armstrong of the Denver Post. Giambi hopes to re-sign with the Rockies this offseason, instead of pursuing a DH job or joining a different National League team.
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Colorado Rockies Drew Pomeranz Jason Giambi

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Elias Rankings Update

By Ben Nicholson-Smith | August 2, 2011 at 7:38am CDT

After the season the Elias Sports Bureau will take all players over the 2010-11 period, divide them into five groups for each league, and rank them based on various statistics.  Then each player will be labeled a Type A, B, or none.  Those designations and the possible accompanying arbitration offers determine draft pick compensation (click here for a refresher).

Eddie Bajek has reverse-engineered the Elias rankings, and he's providing that information exclusively at MLB Trade Rumors.  Here's a look at how the players rank for the period beginning with the 2010 season running through August 1st, 2011.

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Draft Signings: Red Sox, Rays, Royals

By Mike Axisa | August 1, 2011 at 11:07pm CDT

Now that the trade deadline is behind us, the next big event is the draft signing deadline on August 15th. We'll keep track of any draft signings here…

  • The Cubs have signed ninth rounder Garrett Schecht for an above-slot $235K, reports Callis on Twitter. The high school outfielder from Illinois received the largest bonus in the ninth round so far.
  • The Red Sox have signed third rounder Jordan Weems according to Baseball America's Jim Callis (on Twitter). Weems, a catcher from a Georgia high school, received a $500K bonus. MLB.com's slot recommendation was $275K.
  • Callis tweets that the Rays have signed fourth rounder Riccio Torrez for $180K, just above MLB's slot recommendation of $169K. Torrez is a third baseman from Arizona State.
  • The Royals have signed their second-round pick, catcher Cameron Gallagher, according to a team press release. Callis says (on Twitter) he received a $750K signing bonus, well above MLB's slot recommendation of $563K.  The club has now signed 26 of their 50 selections in this year's draft.
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Boston Red Sox Chicago Cubs Kansas City Royals Tampa Bay Rays Transactions

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Quick Hits: Mets, Overbay, Springer, Storen, Stewart

By Tim Dierkes | August 1, 2011 at 10:24pm CDT

Thanks to our loyal readers, MLBTR generated 3.1 million pageviews over the weekend!  We appreciate you making MLBTR a regular stop, and have a lot of cool things planned in the coming months.  On to today's links…

  • Mets GM Sandy Alderson told ESPN New York's Adam Rubin that he tried to acquire a reliever before the deadline, but to no avail (Twitter link). He would not rule out a trade before August 31st.
  • The Red Sox will not have interest in Lyle Overbay, reports Nick Cafardo of The Boston Globe (on Twitter). The Pirates designated Overbay for assignment today, and as Cafardo notes, he has great numbers in Fenway Park: .323/.395/.500 in 177 plate appearances.
  • Anthony DiComo of MLB.com (via Twitter) doesn't envision Jason Isringhausen re-signing with the Mets this offseason.
  • The Astros are very confident that they'll sign first-round pick George Springer, but it may come down to the last week, tweets MLB.com's Alyson Footer.  Last week we learned that Springer's father met with the independent league Long Island Ducks.
  • ESPN's Jerry Crasnick names a bunch of waiver trade candidates in his latest article.
  • The Twins wanted closer Drew Storen and minor league second baseman Stephen Lombardozzi for center fielder Denard Span, and the Nationals declined, according to MLB.com's Bill Ladson.  I think that would have been a solid deal for Washington.
  • The Indians announced they signed infielder Argenis Reyes to a minor league deal; he'd been playing independent ball.  In slightly more important news, Ubaldo Jimenez will debut for the Tribe Friday in Texas.
  • The extent of Boston's interest in Ubaldo?  Scott Lauber of the Boston Herald says exec Allard Baird put in a call on Thursday and the Red Sox weren't in touch after that.
  • Both sides have denounced the $30MM figure that was floated for Dylan Bundy, tweets MLB.com's Brittany Ghiroli.  Talks are expected to start this week for the Orioles' fourth overall pick.  Ghiroli has more on the topic here.  Bundy is advised by Jay Franklin at BBI Sports Group; the company also employs his father.
  • The Rockies were close to trading third baseman Ian Stewart to an undisclosed National League team yesterday, reports Troy E. Renck of the Denver Post, but the deal fell apart with a half hour to go.
  • The Mariners and Red Sox are sharing the costs of Erik Bedard's incentives, reports Geoff Baker of the Seattle Times.
  • Newly-acquired players Zack Wheeler and Jonathan Singelton head updated top ten prospects lists for the Mets and Astros, courtesy of Baseball America's Jim Callis.
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Baltimore Orioles Boston Red Sox Cleveland Guardians Colorado Rockies Houston Astros Minnesota Twins New York Mets Seattle Mariners Washington Nationals Argenis Reyes Denard Span Drew Storen Dylan Bundy Erik Bedard George Springer Ian Stewart Jason Isringhausen Lyle Overbay Ubaldo Jimenez

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Minor Moves: Flores, Stokes, Ward, Carson

By Mike Axisa | August 1, 2011 at 9:30pm CDT

Let's keep track of the day's minor moves here…

  • The Yankees will release Triple-A left-hander Randy Flores tomorrow according to Danny Knobler of CBSSports.com (on Twitter). Both sides agreed to the move. Flores pitched to a 2.54 ERA in 28 1/3 innings for New York's top minor league affiliate, but he gave up 14 hits in 14 innings against lefties.
  • The Diamondbacks have signed Brian Stokes and assigned him to Triple-A Reno according to the team's Twitter feed. The righty reliever spent last season with the Angels organization, throwing 16 2/3 innings in the majors and 17 2/3 innings in the minors.
  • The D'Backs also signed infielder Daryle Ward according to the club's Twitter feed. The 36-year-old had been playing with the independent Newark Bears, and he hasn't appeared in the big leagues since 2008. He's headed to Double-A Mobile.
  • The Rays have acquired Matt Carson from the Athletics according to the Triple-A Pacific Coast League transactions page. The 30-year-old outfielder hit .285/.338/.538 with 19 homers and 11 stolen bases in exactly 400 plate appearances for Oakland's Triple-A affiliate this season. He's seen time with the A's in each of the last two seasons, posting a .200/.210/.370 batting line with five homers in 105 plate appearances from 2009-2010.
  • The Astros have released right-hander Brad Hennessey according to Zachary Levine of The Houston Chronicle (on Twitter). The 31-year-old pitched to a 7.76 ERA in 26 2/3 innings for Houston's Triple-A affiliate,
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Arizona Diamondbacks Houston Astros New York Yankees Oakland Athletics Tampa Bay Rays Transactions Brad Hennessey Brian Stokes Daryle Ward Randy Flores

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Bell Will Accept Arbitration Offer If No Extension

By Mike Axisa | August 1, 2011 at 8:38pm CDT

8:38pm: Padres owner Jeff Moorad told XX1090 sports radio that they don't mind if Bell accepts arbitration after the season. "In some ways [it's] even preferable from our point of view … We certainly don’t mind going to year-to-year, though we are willing to guarantee a couple of years with him." 

Dan Hayes of The North County Times passed along Moorad's quotes (Twitter links).

7:49pm: The Padres did not move closer Heath Bell prior to yesterday's trade deadline, instead keeping the right-hander with hopes of signing him to an extension or getting two draft picks after the season. The latter will not be possible though, Bell told Bill Center of The San Diego Union-Tribune that he intends to accept arbitration after the season if the two sides have not worked out a contract extension…

"If I don't have a multi-year deal and they offer me arbitration, I will accept arbitration," said Bell. "My wife and I talked about all the scenarios last night … There is no downside to me accepting arbitration and the family staying in San Diego for at least another year. My kids love it here. My family is happy here. And I'm in a position where I can make some decisions right now … The ball is in my court. I want to stay in San Diego. And I want to win here."

Bell, 34 in September, has indicated a willingness to take a discount to stay in San Diego long-term. He comfortably projects to be a Type-A free agent, but with a $7.5MM salary this season, an arbitration award could push his 2012 earnings north of $10MM. Here's what the right-hander said about terms of a potential contract extension…

"I'd like to get a three-year contract with the Padres," said Bell. "But I think I'm in position to come back no matter what … If they offered me three years at $27 million, we'd talk. If they offered me three years at $30 million, I would really have to consider it. Maybe I could get an All-Star bonus. I'd like that."

Center says the team is willing to discuss a two-year contract with an option for a third year. Bell is still highly effective, pitching to a 2.28 ERA and 30 saves in 32 chances, but it's worth nothing that his strikeout rate has plunged more than four full strikeouts per nine innings this season (from 11.1 to 6.9), and left-handed batters have handled him well. A three-year contract would take him through age 37.

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San Diego Padres Heath Bell

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O’Dowd, Shapiro Talk Ubaldo Jimenez

By Mike Axisa | August 1, 2011 at 7:26pm CDT

As our Transaction Tracker shows, the Rockies and Indians have gotten together for a number of trades throughout the years, but none were more significant than yesterday's Ubaldo Jimenez swap. Colorado acquired four young players in exchange for the greatest pitcher in franchise history (by WAR), and as Troy Renck of The Denver Post explains, a number of factors contributed to the team's decision to trade Jimenez.

First and foremost was performance. Ubaldo has pitched to a 3.98 ERA in 203 1/3 innings over the last calendar year, which is very good put not what the Rockies had come to expect from him. Jimenez's fastball velocity has dropped noticably this season, another factor. The team's recent whiffs in the draft, including failed first rounders Greg Reynolds (2006) and Casey Weathers (2007), took away from their depth, also contributing to the trade. GM Dan O'Dowd was much more diplomatic when asked about why they made the decision to part ways with Jimenez…

"This isn't rebuilding, this is restocking," said O'Dowd to Renck. "Even if we were 10 games up instead of 10 games back, it would have been hard to say no to this deal … We felt to maximize [Jimenez's] value, this was the time to do it. The closer he got to free agency, you would see a falloff in what clubs would offer."

As for the Indians, it's easy to understand why they'd want to add a 27-year-old pitcher with Ubaldo's credentials. Team president Mark Shapiro took to Twitter to explain their end of the trade, saying it was a "rare [and] unique [opportunity] to acquire [a front] of [the] rotation [starter with] multiple [years] of control." He added that Jimenez's contract aligns with some of their best players, "giving us a multi [year opportunity] to field teams we feel can contend."

As Cot's Baseball Contract shows, the Tribe controls their top three starters (Jimenez, Fausto Carmona, and Justin Masterson) through 2013. Travis Hafner, Shin-Soo Choo, and Asdrubal Cabrera will also be under team control through that season. Ubaldo will make his Indians' debut on Friday against the Rangers as Cleveland remains 2.5 games back of the Tigers in the AL Central heading into tonight.

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