Eyewitness reliability

If this is what we depend on for convictions, we are totally screwed.

My eyes play tricks on me all of the time. I am nearsighted, but I have very good glasses that provide me with nearly 20/20 vision in both eyes (one does have astigmatism). My daughter has the same issues, same eyes, with a similar prescription.

“Mom, why does it look like I have two hands when I wave my hand really fast in front of my face?” she asked me at dinner the other night. I tried my best to explain how her fast hand was too fast for her eyes to see, how our eyes really process images upside-down, and that she was seeing both where her hand was as well as where it is now every time she waved, but I think I did a pretty poor job of it. Even so, she seemed to get it, and remarked how our eyes sure play tricks on us sometimes.

They sure do. And if that motion alone makes us see something that’s not really quite there, can you imagine how so many other variable also make our own sight untrustworthy? Think of the times you’ve woken up to think someone was there when really it was nothing, or the times you saw something underwater, or blearily upon waking, or even just when really, really tired. Would you be an expert eyewitness—or could your eyes really be that trustworthy?

Now think if you were under severe stress—say, you had a gun to your head, or you were driving erratically, or you were drunk. Could your eyes work at full capacity then as well?

I’m not saying to discount eyewitness statements at all. They can be helpful, and they should especially be taken seriously when they come from victims. That said, our eyes are just as human and fallible as the rest of us, and this simple conversation with my seven-year-old made me think of just how often we rely on “I saw it with my own two eyes!” as the only piece of evidence we ever really need.

We base entire religions or alien encounter reports or government reports on it. We have convicted people on this simple eyewitness testimony and nothing else statement. We have even put people to death, sometimes not even allowing DNA tests to be run that could prove otherwise, relying instead wholly on a lineup.

It’s kind of chilling, when you think about it.

4H Versus Girl Scouts

We really enjoy both, but so far, the verdict is…

4H is better.

To be fair, this is our third year in 4H and only our fist in Scouts, but it’s not for lack of trying. I tried to contact the GS for over a year to try and get my daughter in, but without a school contact it was ridiculous—jumping through hoops, multiple calls and emails only to be told to call this person or to email that person. It took some complaining and even more pushing to finally get us into a meeting—and after that meeting, another two months before we even had a troop. What gives?

I figured the Girl Scouts would be super organized, but so far, it doesn’t seem to be that way. Our troop leader—it’s her first year, by the way—is fantastic. She is well organized, kind, and open-minded, and the kids love her. I couldn’t ask for a better person to lead them. That said, the city or county or whatever group doesn’t seem to be so organized. We’re always getting invites to do this or that, and these consist of a piece of paper telling you what and how much the event is, without any other details, expecting us to just fork over a check to do something when we have no idea what it entails! From getting our troop off the ground to cookie sales, background checks to more, everything takes for-ev-er and just doesn’t run very smoothly.

I am happy to report that our own troop runs smoothly, however, and we are happy with that! 4H, on the other hand, is so easy. There’s only one piece of paperwork for the entire year, if you want there to be, and there’s SO much freedom. Of course, it’s coed, which we like, and it’s so organized. I had my volunteer training the week I requested it! They are totally on top of everything, and like our Scouts leader, I absolutely love our coordinator.

The thing is, the activities are really similar. They’re both based on the kids’ interests, which I love. The Girl Scouts costs a little less to sign up, but they cost more in the long run between projects, group dues, and other fees. 4H only charges one fee for the whole year, which includes insurance, and they have all kinds of things—banquets, trainings, leadership days, etc.—where they pay for not just all of the activities, but the food, too! And we don’t even have to sell cookies or anything.

Both groups are great for kids and I recommend either to families wanting to make friends and get more involved in the community.

Parents As People

I don’t think our children really see us this way.

The thing is, it’s not their job, either. We make a big deal about how kids should respect their parents and behave and all of this baloney, but the fact is kids don’t ask to be born. They don’t owe us anything. If they choose to have kids, they owe them, sure, but us? Nada. I’m in George Carlin’s camp and agree that respect needs to be earned and should be based on parents’ performance.

All of this said, I still think it’s kind of funny when our kids don’t see us as people. They see us as—well, I’m not quite sure what they think we are. But when my daughter dumps her jacket on me at the park to go run off with her friends, or climbs on me to get a better view of something, or thrusts her half-eaten Reece’s peanut butter cup in my hand in the darkness of the movie theater (something that made me laugh so hard I actually couldn’t speak or breathe—I still giggle thinking about it, and how I tried to give it to her father, who thought it was poop), I can’t very well be a person, can I? A coat rack, a step stool, or a table, maybe, but not a person.

It’s just a funny observation among so many I am enjoying during this whole parenting adventure. My role continues to shift in her life—I can remember when she asked me to marry her when she was three!—and I look forward to its constant growth throughout both our lives.

Slightly Late Movie Reviews

The Raid: Redemption & Starship Troopers: Invasion

The Raid: Redemption-Sometimes you just feel like watching a movie where a lot of people die truly violent deaths in heavily choreographed fight scenes.  For those moments, may I recommend The Raid? Because people die. A lot. And you will probably wince at some of their deaths, which is saying something considering how desensitized we are to violence these days.

The great thing is that this movie doesn’t even pretend to be anything else or pander to a demographic that probably wouldn’t care to watch it anyway. There is no romance or over complicated mystery. The plot is pretty straight forward, focusing on a police raid on a building that’s owned and operated by a criminal overlord. Once the invasion is obvious to him, he announces that it’s open hunting season to everyone living or operating in the building. Violence ensues. A couple plot twist here and there, and then pretty much just more violence.

The fight scenes are great and fast paced, allowing for a bit more believability than your usual action movie. They are also exceptionally brutal, particular when the main character starts utilizing a knife. The final fight is truly impressive, and I actually wanted to root for the bad guy despite all the, y’know, murder.

The acting was solid, special effects short but well done, and the overall plot entertaining. Well worth checking out. A-

Star Ship Troopers: Invasion- I didn’t bother to watch the sequels to the first movie because, well……why? The first movie has a place in my heart for its overall shlockiness, but I never liked Casper Van Dien or Denise Richards. The great news is that this doesn’t even feature their voices, so their characters are actually bearable and kinda interesting. This does feel like an over glorified collection of video game cut scenes, but the animation is nice enough that it doesn’t really come off as a bad thing. . I was going to say I’m not sure when everybody decided to turn into Master Chief, but then I realized it was probably the best way to get some extra sales.

Also, at some point the character of Johnny Rico turned into Snake from Metal Gear with a whole bunch of cool ninja moves and a mecha.

The sad thing is there is no Neil Patrick Harris, however the character he played is really creeptastic and a whole lot more interesting.

A lot of the other characters are just one note tropes introduced for the sole purpose of dying, but you should have guessed that going into this so there’s no real surprise or disappointment. Pretty much, if you want to see an action sci-fi animation with a simple enough plot and a couple minor twists, this is perfect for you.  It can’t be any worse than having to watch a movie with Denise Richards, so embrace the blood and guts be thankful. B

 

Rick Porcello - the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Of pitchers, and blogs, in search of transmogrification

.

=== The UGLY ===

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BIll your thoughts on Brandon Webb. Yes he did have a short career but he did dominate to an extent. You can't hold a guy at fault for an injury unless he did something stupid to cause it. If he never throws another pitch again do you think he deserves some sort of recognition/respect from the HOF/MLB? Not saying he deserves his name on a plaque in Cooperstown but the guy was on the way to having one
Asked by: Anonymous
Answered: 8/24/2010
1) I believe that you're exaggerating what he has accomplished. There are a dozen pitchers who have careers like that in every generation. 
2) In terms of special recognition, he would rank far behind Saberhagen, David Cone, David Wells, Dwight Gooden, Orel Hershiser and others. They were more dominant than he was, and they lasted longer. 
3) Let's not assume that Webb is finished. 
4) I've said it a thousand times, but. . .I don't believe in ground ball pitchers. I don't trust them, I don't want them, and I don't believe one should ever invest money in them. 
In theory, a ground ball pitcher with a good strikeout rate is the best of both worlds. But the problem is, there just aren't any pitchers like that who are consistently good; they all either get hurt or they lose home plate. The only pitcher like that who has had a great career in the last 30 years was Kevin Brown. The overwhelming majority of the consistently good pitchers are the guys who live off of the high fastball--Clemens, Schilling, the Unit, Pedro, Santana, King Felix, Verlander, Sabathia, etc.

 

There are a lot of things I'll disagree with James on.  I *think* that I, and Tango, just somehow managed to eke out a 4-3 extra innings score against the Grand Old Man on the Wil Myers Incident.  But I sure don't want to be on the other side of him when he's bringing huge, over-arcing, Baseball Almanac type perspectives like this one to bear.

Anyway, groundball pitchers got a Big Idea to let the batter HIT the ball.  Vot a Kountree! 

They're betting their paychecks on the idea that "I bet I can make you hit it kinda bad."  They're telegraphing the timing of the pitch, letting the hitter load up, and they're saying "I can locate it so that you are swinging at a pitcher's pitch."

Does that sound, sound to you?

Anyway:  me, personally, I have a rough time watching guys who can't put a hitter away with two strikes.  I hate to watch them pitch.  Baseball shouldn't be such a chore.  Now, Drew Smyly, there's a guy who's easy on the eyes....

If the Tigers shopped Porcello to the Red Sox, James would certainly do all he could to talk them out of it.

I'm biased against Rick Porcello, and biased against him a lot.  Get that straight.

.................

Also ugly:  the fact that the very moment that Paxton and/or Hultzen and/or Maurer and/or Taijuan have six Erasmo Ramirez starts, six blinkin' starts if they impress, we won't be having this conversation any more.  Of course, one of them might be gone.  For Rick Porcello.

.................

Also in this sub-header:  if Porcello were to plateau-leap in Seattle, he'd have to do it with Jesus Montero catching him.

..............

Okay, so... 

.

=== The BAD ===

Jason Vargas and Rick Porcello, as this song goes, are roughly equal in quality.  However, Jason Vargas is a flyball lefty who is skittering away from Green Monster West, whereas Rick Porcello is a groundball righty would would be throwing 3.50 ERA's in front of baseball's best SS glove (for sure) and one of its best 2B gloves (according to the stats, but Dr. D demurs).

Vargas was in his walk year; Porcello has three years of arb left.  Prest-O Change-O, we just threw Jason Vargas into a Calvin & Hobbes Trans-Mog-ri-Fier and got a considerably better version.

:: shrug:: It could happen.

Why's that bad?!  The bad news is, an enhanced Jason Vargas is no ball of fire.  Especially when you got K-Pax and Deuce Hultzen whose innings he is going to be swiping.  But, we've got to admit:  Rick Porcello is better than Jason Vargas.  His WAR, by the way:

Year WAR
2009 2.0
2010 2.0
2011 2.7
2012 2.9

John Benson Roto Rule:  judge a pitcher by his WORST recent season.  Do you have any idea how many pitchers would have a "better worst" year than Porcello, 2009-12?  I'm guessing that Porcello is on a list of about fifteen or twenty pitchers who have notched 2+ WAR in EVERY season since 2009.

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NEXT

 

Rick Porcello - Agent 006, Dept.

Somebody talk Dr. D into a finesse pitcher? Vot next?

.

006.  Do you know what that MEANS? - Clive Owen, ominously

Yes.  It means you are one short of zee Big Time.  - Steve Martin, Pink Panther

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=== The GOOD ===

I've got to admit that Porcello physically looks like he's on the verge of taking a Doug Fister plateau leap, or could be, conceivably.  For starters (heh) check him on this video rat cheer.  Don't those tall, overhand, angled, located pitchers kinda remind ya?

...........

Bullet two on the Plateau Leap Talking Points:

Year K/9
RADKE NUMBER 5.6
Porcello, 2009 4.7
2010 4.7
2011 5.1
2012 5.5

The Radke number being Ron Shandler's rule of thumb:  when a finesse guy's K's get near 6, he can become a star.  For a little while.

Let me put the above chart in English:  objectively speaking, Porcello is the very definition of a Doug Fister type on the verge of a bustout.

Dr. D don't say that he buys in.  He just works here, passing along the info-tainment as it hits his monitor.  That's what rotisserie baseball and Bill James 1995 Player Handbooks were invented for in the first place:  finding K trends exactly like the one above.  And here you've got one that is 0.1 K shy of the big time.

.........

Bullet three:  Porcello actually throws a straight change that looks great at times, real great.  It's not clear to me why he doesn't throw it more, for more swingthroughs.

And he USED to have a wipeout hammer -- the Tigers demanded that he stop throwing it, and focus on groundballs.  (Thank you, Jim Leyland.)  It's completely feasible that Porcello could find his curve again, and then what?

The seeds are certainly there for an offspeed game that moves several yards forward.  Porcello has been pretty decent, just throwing the sinker.

Jim Leyland is probably Dr. D's least fave manager, from a results standpoint, and it's entirely possible that he's been a pair of cement overshoes for the drowning Mr. Porcello.  We mean it in a good way.

Seriously, this is just the kind of change-of-scenery candidate who could return a Gil Meche-style bounty with a new org.  Porcello's approach has been unnecessary, and it's been extreme, and it's been very questionable.  There could be a different pitcher in there somewhere.  Doug Fister had 5.3 strikeouts in 2009 and there was a totally different pitcher lurking behind the facade of "pitching to contact."

.........

Bullet four:  Porcello just gained a bunch of velocity.  Which, eerily enough, is just what Doug Fister had done right before we flushed that 6'8" piece of sewage.

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=== Dr's R/X ===

1.  He shares James' disdain for the pitcher template.  He'll try to breathe through his mouth while cleaning this saber spill.

2.  Dr. D also loathes the idea of blocking this entire barn full of truly premium pitching talent with a meatball who gets 5 K per game.  The intersection of 1. and 2. here would appear to make the non-Porcello a no-brainer.

3.  Porcello as a concept --- > would be a win-now attitude, a statement that we don't have two months to wait.  Wow, we haven't seen any of that this winter, huh ... guess we know what's coming next.

4.  As journeyman finesse pitchers go, Rick Porcello is as good as it gets.  With upside.  

The Fister Scenario is not at all farfetched here.  (You know what we mean -- a good fraction of Fister.  Nobody's going to be Doug Fister; that ship has sailed.)  Gotta get the yakker goin', or at least crank the Erasmo change from 15% to 25% plus.

The kid has been trying to hit bats.  Dr. D would be intrigued by the Porcello v2.0 that was attempting to miss them.

.

Take yer pick,

Dr D 

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Unschooling really works

I see it every day.

I used to doubt unschooling. I know many other parents who sometimes did, too, until it finally “clicked” one day while their kids were reading by themselves, or getting into college, or acing classes without having spent a day in a classroom before… Normally I can trust my kiddo these days, too, but sometimes I still have doubts. Who wouldn’t, in the culture we were raised in, where education by “professionals” rather than experience is hailed as the be-all, end-all?

But every day my child proves to me, over and over again, that she can learn without my help. She’s seven and she’s teaching herself to read and write. Without me. I’m almost jealous as I watch her figure out the words on her own, sounding them out, occasionally asking me how to write a letter or sound out a word she wants to know. It’s kind of amazing, too.

Sometimes I’ll be doing laundry or working in my office, and I’ll think, “Boy, there are so many kids in classrooms right now doing worksheets and learning about math. What about my kid?” And I don’t panic, not yet, anyway, and I slink off into the living room or the front yard (where I can easily see her outside my office window) or the kitchen only to find her doing things that reassure me—true experiments with altering variables, solving problems, reading, building boxes out of Legos with secret passageways and hidden compartments, designing buildings. She’ll show me something she’s made or explain how something works and all I can do is scratch my head and almost say, “Duh.” This kid is smarter at seven than I was at ten, maybe even twelve.

She’s full of ideas. Brimming with them. Ideas about how to solve world problems or just how to make the car warmer in the morning before the heat works in it. She has even written the president. She is seven. She’s into mythology and Star Wars, Harry Potter and monster books, all kinds of animals and herbs and dirt and bike riding and sports and—well, at her age, I don’t think I had even a third of her interests, and if I did, I sure as hell didn’t have time to explore them. Compulsory school took care of that! I was too busy cutting pictures and pasting them and making little paper clocks and memorizing incorrect “facts” about Christopher Columbus and putting on genocidal plays for white parents to smirk at.

Ahh, I sound bitter. I don’t mean to. I went to college to become a teacher, after all, and teachers have good intentions in their hearts. The system, however, is designed to make us average. We need to change our entire culture. I think any child given the time to explore his or her own interests like this with so much passion and encouragement could be exceptional—and imagine where we could be if we allowed all of our children to be exceptional.

Hey Jealousy

Ever wonder if your kid has it better than you do?

Today I realized something that absolutely mortified me, made me ashamed of myself—yet also helped me understand my sometimes passive-aggressive behavior. I am actually jealous of my kid.

I guess that’s a compliment to me as a mom, right? After all, I’m jealous that she gets to do activities that my family could never afford—there were three of us kids growing up, after all—and of all the comforts she has as my kiddo, like me tucking her in at night in a special “nest” of blankets, or the rituals she has for eating, teeth brushing, even getting up in the morning. All of her special nicknames—my sisters both had them but I never did, not with my parents, anyway—and her being able to pursue her own interests and being given choices and other special elements in her life are things that I wish I could say I had in my life, too.

But I also know that my parents did the best they could raising me and my sisters. I know that they had it harder than I do, and they worked hard to provide for us each day. And maybe one day my daughter will have an even bigger advantage than the one I had when raising her. I should be proud that she’s able to have this life, that I am able to give it to her.

 

Smoak and Mirrors, and Olerud and Jaso

Time out for a brief essay on OBP guys

On-base percentage, as you probably know by now, is one-half of OPS, and, therefore, one-half of OPS+.  It is even more than half of the "hip and sophisticated" wOBA and wRC+.

Now, don't get me wrong.  I'm a huge proponent of "Plate Skills" up and down the lineup, and I've been super-downbeat about guys like Carlos Peguero and Casper Wells for precisely that reason.

On the other hand, I have now come to believe that guys whose value is heavily weighted toward OBP can become overrated and miscast, in part due to the influence of these composite stats.

Cases in point: Justin Smoak and John Jaso.

  • Here's the thing with Justin Smoak.  He's big and strong and he has that big-ol'-country-boy persona (see commercial embedded above).  But he's been miscast from the beginning.  Let's get this straight:  Justin Smoak has never been a .200 ISO hitter.  Ever.  Smoak has never had a full season with a .200 ISO, and I'm not sure he ever will.
  • Smoak's plate skills in the minors "covered up" the fact that he didn't quite hit for the power that folks were expecting.  His OBP skill made him look like a guy ready to step into the middle of the order, but he wasn't.
  • Smoak came to the majors and attempted to "fulfill his destiny" as the slugging first baseman.  He was trying to be Prince Fielder, when he's really just a "thicker" version of John Olerud.  It didn't work.

So what about John Olerud?

  • Olerud proves that one can be a successful MLB 1b even if your value is heavily weighted toward OBP over SLG.  Olerud was over .200 ISO just once, in his near-MVP age-24 season.  He knocked on the door a few other times, but his career ISO is .170.  (Smoak right now is at .153, but I bet he'll end his career around .170 as well.)
  • But ... every successful Mariner team with Olerud had three other guys with .200 ISO -- Edgar, Boone and Cameron.  Indeed, Edgar's massive value was that he brought perhaps the best Plate Skills of any right-handed hitter ever, and a career .204 ISO.
  • So ... would Olerud have been as valuable without Edgar and Boone?  No way.  He would have been miscast as the key MOTO bat, as Smoak was, and folks would have been disappointed.

Enter Mike Morse, who had .229 and .247 ISO in his last two healthy seasons.

Enter Kendrys Morales, with a .263 ISO in his breakout year, and .197 and .194 is his last two part-healthy seasons.

Now Eric Wedge says Smoak can be his everyday 1b.  And he can, if he's just asked to be super-sized Ole, and not the MOTO beast.  The Mo-betta boys will need to bring the bigger lumber.

Which brings us to John Jaso.

  • Jaso was second on the team with a .180 ISO (Saunders had .185), but we know from his minor-league track record that's about as high as he'll ever get.
  • Jaso's value is strongly weighted toward OBP, and that is a great thing, particularly from a catcher (and a left-handed catcher at that).  Compare to, Olivo, Miguel.
  • But, my understanding is that the catching experts determined that Jaso was not athletic enough to catch more than two days in a row.  The word was "gassed," if I recall.
  • So Jaso's value would have to come as a part-time catcher and part-time DH.
  • And the ruling of the field is: as a DH, Jaso would not bring enough ISO to the table.

Accordingly, the more I look at it, if, in fact, the Mo-betta boys bring their .200 ISOs to the table, then the Jaso trade was right.

And, again, that's not denigrating OBP.  I love OBP, and I want my sluggers to have it. But I also need my sluggers to have ISO, and leaving Smoak and Jaso to be the middle of the order wasn't going to do it.

We appreciate your interest, but are unable to offer you a position ... OUTFIELDERS

They got a look, but they missed the cut

More guys who got their resumes looked at, but then put into the wrong pile.

Jabari Blash, Age: 22, Pos: RF

Plate Skills Index: 92  Production Index:  87  Composite Index:  79

He's got the tools.  He's got the name.  He's got the occasional flashes of brilliance.  He's got his own photo-illustration.

But, alas, if he were on his way to MLB success, he almost certainly would have rocked the house at Low-A at age 22, or would be playing CF every day.  He wasn't doing either.  He falls out of the 26intheMix, but we're still rooting for him.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff G PA AB H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
2010 20 Pulaski APPY Rk SEA 32 127 109 29 6 1 5 20 1 1 13 44 .266 .362 .477 .839
2011 21 2 Teams 2 Lgs A--A SEA 99 391 319 84 21 4 14 56 15 5 66 108 .263 .396 .486 .882
2012 22 Clinton MIDW A SEA 113 471 400 98 20 5 15 50 13 7 60 134 .245 .355 .433 .787
3 Seasons       244 989 828 211 47 10 34 126 29 13 139 286 .255 .372 .459 .831
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/25/2013.

***

Cavan Cohoes, Age: 19, Pos: CF

Not enough stats to measure

Cohoes is the mystery wrapped in a riddle wrapped in an enigma.  The toolsy CF was taken in the 9th round in 2011 out of a military high school in Stuttgart, Germany.  Since then he's played in a grand total of two games, and gone 0-for-4.  Maybe he's awesome.  How would we know?  He was in the 26intheMix last year, and maybe will be again.

***

James Jones, Age: 23, Pos: CF

Plate Skills Index: 89  Production Index:  100  Composite Index:  89

I truly hate to drop Jones from the 26intheMix, but he was fairly decisively passed by Leon Landry, who is a year younger, played at the same level, and plays the same position.  Strong High Desert stats without the Plate Skills component don't count for much, especially when you are old-ish for the level.  I don't rule Jones out, but he needed to shine more at High Desert than he did.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff G PA AB H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
2009 20 Everett NORW A- SEA 45 186 164 51 12 2 3 24 0 3 19 40 .311 .392 .463 .856
2010 21 Clinton MIDW A SEA 132 560 491 132 24 10 12 65 24 10 62 122 .269 .356 .432 .788
2011 22 2 Teams 2 Lgs A+-Fgn SEA 128 535 462 124 27 6 13 54 22 8 62 126 .268 .365 .437 .802
2012 23 High Desert CALL A+ SEA 126 559 493 151 28 12 14 76 26 17 54 124 .306 .378 .497 .875
4 Seasons       431 1840 1610 458 91 30 42 219 72 38 197 412 .284 .369 .457 .825
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/25/2013.

***

Nathan Melendres, Age: 22, Pos: CF/2b/SS

Plate Skills Index: 77  Production Index:  97  Composite Index:  74

Melendres is one of my new favorites, and I may live to regret not putting him in the 26intheMix.  He's speedy and toolsy, with a strong arm, and they have him playing all over the diamond, Bloomquist-like.  And he went to Australia and hit five home runs.  Maybe we didn't need to put all those pitchers in the top 66 after all, but we did.  Then again, he'll be 23 and he has barely any games under his belt. Melendres is definitely on the "watch list" however.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff G PA AB H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
2011 21 Everett NORW A- SEA 46 180 165 47 5 6 1 19 11 5 9 27 .285 .341 .406 .747
2012 22 3 Teams 3 Lgs A-A+-Rk SEA 23 97 88 27 3 3 2 15 9 1 5 13 .307 .351 .477 .828
2 Seasons       69 277 253 74 8 9 3 34 20 6 14 40 .292 .344 .431 .775
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/25/2013.

***

Carlos Peguero, Age: 25, Pos: RF

Plate Skills Index: 77  Production Index:  108  Composite Index:  85

C-Peg has always been our poster boy for the "beware of sluggers who lack plate skills" rule.  He got his MLB shot nevertheless, but I think the window of opportunity is sliding shut.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff G PA AB H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
2006 19 2 Teams 2 Lgs Rk-A- SEA 59 245 227 61 14 8 9 39 3 4 15 83 .269 .318 .520 .838
2007 20 Wisconsin MIDW A SEA 79 321 297 78 21 6 9 50 4 3 16 97 .263 .315 .465 .779
2008 21 High Desert CALL A+ SEA 92 385 371 111 25 3 12 74 6 4 10 96 .299 .317 .480 .797
2009 22 High Desert CALL A+ SEA 126 544 491 133 21 14 31 98 3 4 42 172 .271 .335 .560 .895
2010 23 West Tenn SOUL AA SEA 130 553 488 124 23 5 23 73 7 9 56 178 .254 .340 .463 .803
2011 24 Tacoma PCL AAA SEA 57 258 240 76 15 2 13 47 8 0 15 82 .317 .364 .558 .923
2012 25 Tacoma PCL AAA SEA 76 322 281 80 13 1 21 54 2 2 29 103 .285 .366 .562 .929
7 Seasons       619 2628 2395 663 132 39 118 435 33 26 183 811 .277 .336 .512 .848
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/25/2013.

***

James Zamarripa, Age: 18, Pos: CF

Plate Skills Index: 47  Production Index:  57  Composite Index:  3

Zamarripa's stats are misleading, since he was playing at both Everett and Clinton at 18, and that's aggressive placement.  He's got a long way to go, and he'll have plenty of time to get back into the 26intheMix, but there wasn't quite room for him this year.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff G PA AB H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
2011 17 Mariners ARIZ Rk SEA 35 156 139 37 5 2 0 13 6 3 13 38 .266 .329 .331 .660
2012 18 3 Teams 3 Lgs Rk-A-A- SEA 41 159 143 34 9 2 0 13 3 2 12 40 .238 .297 .329 .625
2 Seasons       76 315 282 71 14 4 0 26 9 5 25 78 .252 .313 .330 .643
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/25/2013.

 

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