With Opening Day in the rear view mirror and much of the
season still to come, every MLB team should be focused on one thing: winning
the World Series this fall. Of course, with half of
the teams in the league seemingly tanking, this isn’t the case.
The Big Picture: The best path to win a World
Series isn’t what it used to be. Splurging on big name free agents doesn’t
often bode well for the supposed benefactors. In today’s baseball world, the
keys to winning the Fall Classic lie in drafting well, trading smart and adding
pieces at the deadline.
This is the blueprint the Royals, Cubs, Astros, and
Red Sox have used to win the last four World Series titles.
LOSE NOW, WIN LATER: A path forward for losing
teams.
- There
are probably about a dozen teams that know they don’t really stand a
chance at making the postseason this year, much less the Fall Classic. The
Tigers know they aren’t winning the AL Central. The case is the same of
the Blue Jays in the AL East and the Rangers in the West and the Marlins
and the Giants and the … you get the point.
- Trying
to get the highest possible pick in the draft next season and sitting
ready and willing to flip any and every asset they have at the deadline
for controllable talent.
BUILDING THE FARM: Drafting today’s brightest stars,
yesterday.
- Tanking
teams don’t seem likely to contend for a World Series this season, but in
three or four years, they’ll be right in the thick of things. At least
that’s the idea.
- The
key to winning, as we’ve seen in the last four World Series, is building
from within.
- The
Royals did it in 2015. Just four not-so-long years ago, they built a
contender the right way. Or at least, the only way a small market team
can: by drafting well. Guys such as Eric Hosmer, Mike Moustakas and Alex
Gordon came via the draft.
- You
don’t even have to have a true star such as Mike Trout or Bryce Harper.
Kansas City’s starting lineup was full of
All-Stars without one single superstar.
BEYOND THE DRAFT: Going internationally to grab
budding stars.
- Drafting
might be the most sure-fire way to build your farm. The Royals did it with
Hosmer and company. The Cubs did it with Kris Bryant in 2016. The Astros
did it with George
Springer, Carlos Correa and Alex Bregman in 2017. And the Red
Sox did it with Mookie Betts and Jackie Bradley Jr., among others, last
October.
- The
international route can prove to be effective. Kansas City’s 2015 World
Series MVP, Salvador Perez, came that way. So did Yordano Ventura, as did
Yuli Gurriel for the Astros.
BEFORE THEY WERE BIG: Making savvy moves to put
a contender in place.
- A few
of the last four Fall Classic winners were able to find key pieces before
anyone realized how key they were. The Cubs trading
for Jake Arrieta long before he was the NL Cy Young winner
in 2015 was savvy.
- The
Royals picked up Lorenzo Cain and Alcides Escobar — the 2014 and 2015 ALCS
MVPs, respectively — in the Zack Greinke trade. They were both respected
up-and-comers in their own right at the time, but with KC, they developed
into All-Stars.
DEADLINE DEALING: Midseason improvements have
proved vital to success.
- Each
of the last four World Series winners have made improvements at the
deadline in July. The Royals traded
for Ben Zobrist and Johnny
Cueto in the middle of the 2015 season.
- The
Cubs trading
for the flame-throwing Aroldis Chapman in July of 2016 proved
to be vital in their World Series that went into extra innings in a
do-or-die Game 7 against the Cleveland
Indians.
- The
Red Sox made a rather under-the-radar move before last June when they
traded with the Toronto Blue Jays for Steve Pearce, and he went
on to win the World Series MVP.
TANKING FOR TOMORROW: History says losing
predates winning.
- The
Cubs lost 96 games in 2013 and 101 the year before. The Royals lost at
least 90 games every year from 2009-2012. The notion? In today’s baseball
world, you’ve got to lose a lot before you can win
- Just
four years before winning the title, Houston lost 111 games. The team’s
years of meddling in mediocrity led to the draft classes that brought in
Springer, Correa and Alex Bregman — the core of their championship team.
- Boston
lost 91 games in 2014. The Sox won 93 just two seasons later, and two more
after that they claimed the World Series title.
INVESTING WISELY: Frugal financing is another
major key.
- The
days of spending absurd amounts of money all across the diamond like the
Yankees and Red Sox did for decades is over. Trying to throw a contender
together by heavily utilizing free agency and lavish trades is no longer a
model for success. It’s obsolete. It doesn’t work.
- The
highest-paid player on the Royals’
2015 payroll was Alex Gordon at just $14 million. For the
Astros in 2017, it was Carlos Beltran at $16 million.
- Paying
out huge contracts doesn’t bode well for winning. The
Orioles paid Chris Davis nearly $23 million while losing
115 games last season. The Angels have made the postseason once since
signing Albert Pujols to a 10 year, $240 million dollar deal in 2012.
BEHIND THE CURVE: Some teams still aren’t doing
it right.
- The
Mariners, led by GM Jerry Dipoto, think
they’re going to win every season. But singing guys such as
Robinson Cano and Nelson Cruz didn’t work. And trading for guys such as
Mike Leake and Dee Gordon probably won’t either.
- There
are probably a dozen other teams that have been slow to adapt.
Baltimore, after
making the ALCS in 2014, has been rather unsuccessful since due
to its inability to draft well. The same is true for the Blue Jays. And
the Reds. And the Padres. The list goes on.
GET WITH THE PROGRAM: Teams that aren’t doing it
right really ought to be.
- Times
have changed. The teams that have changed with it are the teams you see
winning now, or the teams losing now because they know what it takes to
win later.
- If
your favorite team is winning now, you’ve got nothing to worry about. And
if it's last in its division, it is probably in good shape too. But if
your favorite team is meddling around .500 today without any clear
direction for tomorrow, you might want to send it a link to this article.
FINAL THOUGHTS: Conventional wisdom in baseball
has changed over the last half-decade or so. The teams that have changed with
it – those that are drafting intelligently and building from the inside up —
are the same teams that’ll be competing for a title this fall and beyond.
No comments:
Post a Comment