Showing posts with label Keith Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Keith Law. Show all posts

Friday, June 29, 2012

Keith Law Doesn't Like The Lipstick On This Puig

Keith Law over at ESPN references Goldie Hawn movies when describing how the Dodgers went overboard signing Yasiel Puig (insider only):

The most surprising news in the baseball world today is that the Los Angeles Dodgers have signed Cuban outfielder Yasiel Puig to a seven-year deal worth $42 million.

Puig's contract is the largest ever given to a Cuban free agent.This would be the most money ever given to a Cuban defector, surpassing the four-year, $36 million deal Oakland Athletics outfielder Yoenis Cespedes received in February. It's also much more -- both in terms of overall dollars and average annual value -- than the nine-year, $30 million contract the Chicago Cubs gave to outfielder Jorge Soler earlier this month.

The impetus for these enormous deals seems to be the impending international spending cap, which will kick in this summer and will allow teams to spend just $2.9 million on international free agents from July 2 to July 1, 2013. This cap stands to affect Cuban players more than those from other countries, as we've seen, with three eight-figure deals given to Cuban players in the past eight months.

The cap also will make it much harder for a big-money team to swoop in and blow away the competition with an outrageous offer, which is what the Dodgers are doing here.

Based on what I've heard about Puig, this is a bizarre overreaction to the upcoming international spending cap, and a huge bet that, despite a stiff swing and less athletic body than Soler, Puig's bat is good enough to justify an investment of this size. I've also heard that Puig was badly out of shape in his recent workouts in Mexico, and that his throwing arm is not as strong since it was last seen in games. And unlike Soler or Cespedes, Puig barely has played in games outside of Cuba, so major league scouts have not had much of an opportunity to evaluate him properly.

I'm not sure what other team was willing to offer Puig anything close to what L.A. did. The Dodgers' peace dividend won't matter if they squander it on deals like this and the Andre Ethier extension.

Yikes, and Law takes a swipe at Ethier on the way out! Must be a Giants fan.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Keith Law: Guerrier Deal Overlooks Gangrenous Wound

Chavez Ravine is a warm-temperatured stadium location. It is 340 feet above sea level. It is said to be home to one of the most beautiful stadiums in the Major Leagues. Its gleaming jewel is called "Dodger Stadium," the house of Tommy Lasorda and Kirk Gibson. Beyond the left-field fence, there is a tall, block-lettered frozen carcass of a "THINK BLUE" sign. No one has explained how that sign was constructed on that hillside.

Sorry about that epigram. Keith Law's reference of a "gangrenous wound in left field [left to] fester" triggered some high-school English class memories (link insider only). But I digress:

Apparently the three-year deal for the middle reliever is the new black. First Joaquin Benoit, then Scott Downs, and now Matt Guerrier. The Dodgers are happy to let the gangrenous wound in left field fester, but thank goodness the seventh inning is locked down.

I've ranted many times about the folly of signing a middle reliever to any deal beyond two years -- and even two years is fairly risky because you're looking at maybe a 25-30 percent chance the reliever holds his performance through both years of the contract (and roughly half those odds for him to do it for three years). I do like Guerrier for his repertoire and chance to get better against left-handed batters by using his changeup more, but he's 32 years old, appeared in 47 percent of the Twins' games over the last four years, and (per Fangraphs) has lost a mile an hour off his fastball in that time. This is not someone in whom you want to invest multiple years and eight figures.

Besides, is the bullpen even such a concern for the Dodgers?

If there's one thing they have, it's bullpen arms, and while more depth is always better, it's not something you want to pay for. Is Guerrier going to be $3.6 million better than Kenley Jansen this year -- or next year? Chris Withrow has an electric arm but has had command problems for most of his pro career; why not move him to the pen and bring him up rather than have him spend 2011 in Albuquerque, one of the worst pitchers' parks in organized baseball?

Free agency isn't a good way to build a bullpen, but doing it that way when the Dodgers' amateur scouting team continues to stuff the organization with power arms is just nonsensical.

I don't agree with Law in saying that the Dodgers don't have bullpen concerns, not after last year. But we sure do seem stocked with arms of some sort, and yet every couple of days it seems we're picking up another pitcher (or 75-year-old utility retread batter). Guerrier's signing doesn't seem like the right priority at this stage of the game.

Law goes on to bash the Yank-Mes for signing Russell Martin, so it's good times all around for Dodgers past and future. Just thinking about all of this evokes visions of tragic, unfulfilled potential.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Keith Law Reads SoSG

...and even more impressive, he answers with an email to us. As context, SoSG had mentioned Keith Law and Rob Neyer as examples of ESPN's unyielding east-coast bias, as both columnists regularly fail to answer questions regarding NL/AL West teams. Said SoSG, "We'll see if Keith Law this afternoon remembers the left coast any more than Neyer did."

To which Law replied via email:

"Can't speak for Rob, but the vast majority of the chat questions I get are about teams in the East and Central divisions, which is almost certainly because I chat at 1 pm. If I did later chats, I'd probably get more west coast questions.

"FWIW, I actually lived in Seattle, and would move there in a heartbeat if it wasn't for the fact that my daughter would then never see her grandparents. --Keith

A cursory glance of his most recent chat (4.5.07) displayed 16 NL/AL West questions out of 88 total questions--or 18% (and that includes one question asking about Seattle restaurants). Since NL/AL West teams comprise 30% of the total MLB teams, this seems like he continues to under-represent West in his answers. This may be demand-driven--but I can tell from the times in which I'm furiously submitting questions, it's not.

We do appreciate Keith taking the time out to email, as well as the fact that he must regularly google his name. But come on, Keith, don't forget the West Coast!!!

He did have this to say about the Dodgers in his latest chat:

Jesse (Los Angeles, CA): Please tell me the Dodgers would not consider trading James Loney? How can they get him in the line up?

KL: Just wait a few minutes for Nomar to get hurt again. Keeping him was almost as bad a move as signing Pierre. OK, not almost - nothing's that bad.

Andrew (LA): Is there a chance at all that the dodgers could trade pierre, i know hes got a ridiculous contract, but could they trade pierre and have kemp start in center and loney in left,(until nomar gets hurt) and have gonzo on the bench as insurance in case kemp or loney doesnt perform?

KL: No, they can't do that - it would make them better.

Tony (NH): Keith, Pierre is rough, but doesnt he have the 2nd most hits in MLB since 2000?

KL: That's the product of playing every day, hitting leadoff, and drawing a walk once every three weeks. It's not indicative of anything.

Matt (Cortland, NY): If the Dodgers had signed Hachover, would their combination of Elbert, Kershaw and Hachover been better than the now disbanded DVD Trio?

KL: Yes, and don't forget, the Dodgers had a deal with Hochevar, and the kid backed out.

Since Law squished in two late questions on the Dodgers (#86 and 87), I'm assuming he is at least mindful of his bias. So ask away, SoSG fans...

Friday, January 19, 2007

SoSG Remains Above the Law

Keith Law, our favorite resident baseball columnist who thinks he is a economist, chatted today on espn.com and continues to mix up the economic concepts of "moral hazard" and "aligning incentives":

Jon (Jericho): Keith I currently attend Cornell university and for the past semester we have discussed in depth the theory of moral hazard as it relates to American politics. Recently I read your article and thought it was simply brillant, and relates the topic perfectly. What do you foresee as the possible solutions to moral hazard in baseball?

Keith Law: It's a difficult problem to solve in any industry. JC Bradbury (of sabernomics.com fame) suggests altering compensation of executives to reward things like development of specific players ... which sounds great, but you'd have a hard time getting GMs, who are now paid half a million or more in guaranteed annual salaries, to accept an incentive-laden deal like that. I do think that asking GMs to make business cases for long-term contracts should be de rigueur, and I don't believe that it is.

Wonderful, he is now instructing current students with his unfounded stance. Tepper School at Carnegie Mellon (Law's alma) is tied with the Johnson Business School at Cornell for 16th place, but let's hope Jericho Jon is "brillant" enough to know the difference.

Okay, enough snarkiness for now. Law does cover Dodger-related (including former Dodgers, and arch-rivals) on a number of posts:

Michael (Tustin, CA): Are the Dodgers still trying to acquire a big bat and if so, who are they targeting? If they stand pat for the remainder of the offseason, what are their chances of getting to the World Series?

Keith Law: If one sort of fell into their laps, sure. Billingsley's available, and I think you could pry Ethier loose. Kemp seems to be the untouchable. But even if they stand pat, they're probably co-favorites with the Padres and just a shade ahead of Arizona. Might be worth rolling with what they have and seeing who becomes available as the season progresses.

Johnny (Seattle): Did the Dodgers do right by resigning Nomar? Isn't he still a DH in the wrong league?

Keith Law: That deal didn't make sense to me - it further blocked Loney, and it ran counter to the idea of signing Nomar the year before (get a good hitter cheap and see if he can play enough).

Dan(NJ): What, in your opinion, was the best free agency signing?

Keith Law: Handful of good ones. Randy Wolf. Jason Schmidt. Andy Pettitte. David Dellucci.

Joel Guzman (Tampa): Do you have any faith in me?

Keith Law: You're a good candidate for that earlier question about a hyped prospect who might not/probably won't pan out.

Kris (Chicago): Where do you think Bonds is going to end up. I hate bonds and I hate Boston. However I think a lineup that has manny, ortiz, bonds would get me to watch the games. Any Thoughts? P.S. Have you seen the movie "City of God"

Keith Law: I don't see that as any kind of fit, not for him (hates Boston, wants to stay on the West Coast) and not for Boston (can you imagine a Bonds-Crisp-Manny outfield??). "City of God" is amazing, one of the ten or fifteen best movies I've ever seen.

CARLOS PINEDA CA: DO YOU THINK THE SF GIANTS CAN CONTEND FOR THE WEST TITLE NEXT YEAR WITHOUT AN AGING BONDS?

Keith Law: No. I'm not sure they can do it WITH an aging Bonds.

Keith Law also mentioned that he's a big fan of Jane Austen's Emma. Insert joke here. (Whoops, am I snarky again?)

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Keith Law Is Hazardous to Your Health

You don’t ask the coat check person at the restaurant to select your wine pairings for dinner. You don’t ask the bank teller to set your 401K investment strategies. And you shouldn’t ask a baseball columnist from ESPN to write a piece on economic principles.

Keith Law is a pretty decent baseball columnist for ESPN.com, albeit reasonably grumpy about most of the free-agent deals this winter (he liked the Jason Schmidt and Randy Wolf deals; he hated the Juan Pierre deal (he may not be alone there) and also hated the Barry Zito deal). He spent four years with the Toronto Blue Jays’ front office organization, and also had stints at Scouts Inc. and Baseball Prospectus. He speaks intelligently about baseball,and usually has nuggets of insight. However, for Law to speak about economics is, well, hazardous.

Law’s weekend ESPN Insider piece about foolish GMs, “Desperate GMs can cripple a franchise”, cites recent deals from GMs like the Cubs’ Jim Hendry and the Giants’ Brian Sabean as examples of what Law calls “moral hazard”:

The problem is that the best way to keep a GM job when you know you're in danger of losing it is to produce results in the short term, sometimes in the very short term. This idea of trading a dollar in the future for 10 cents in the present often manifests itself in moves like trading prospects or young players for "proven" veterans, signing well-known free agents whose name value exceeds their on-field value and back-loading deals to maximize disposable payroll in the current year without regard to the payroll consequences for future years.

At times, this aligns itself well with the best interests of the organization as most baseball team owners are in the business to make money, with a small number in the business to win; most economists agree that the best way to increase team revenues is to win more games. But most organizations with GMs who are on the verge of a firing are in that situation because of more fundamental and often systemic problems like poor scouting, inability to develop players or the most fundamental problem of all -- insufficient talent. For those teams, a baseball strategy built around winning more games this year, this month or this week is wrong. Trading away young talent, eliminating long-term payroll flexibility and alienating a portion of the fan base can set the team back several years.

Economists have a name for this problem: moral hazard. It refers to any situation where an agent (in this case, a GM) can take a risky action for which he will not have to face the full consequences if the action turns out badly. A GM who hands a player a seven-year deal knows that if the deal works out, he'll probably keep his job (and even earn a raise), but if the deal doesn't work out, he might lose his job. But he'll still earn the money he was guaranteed under his contract, and he won't have to deal with the albatross contract, or the restrictions it places on payroll. A GM who gives multiyear deals to his cronies to serve as special assistants, or in other high-paying roles, knows that if he's fired he doesn't have to pay for those contracts. It's the next GM who has to clean up the mess, fire the cronies and has less money to bring in his own people, forcing him to scrimp on payroll, or to restock the farm system.

Technically, moral hazard occurs “when the redistribution of risk changes peoples’ behavior.” The primary economic examples of moral hazard come in the fields of insurance, when the risk redistributes from the insured to the insurer. For example, someone who obtains a life or health insurance policy, and subsequently picks up the new hobbies of smoking and riding a motorcycle, is acting with “moral hazard” because he is taking on more risk what was assessed in the original premiums.

The use of moral hazard in this essay, though, is a bit of a stretch, as there is no risk being redistributed (since the organization maintains all the risk in any situation), nor is there any change in behavior on the part of the GM. The GM is merely acting as the organization’s agent, which is irrespective to the remaining tenure in the GM’s contract or the length of the specific deal signed with a player. GMs are at-will employees and thus always want to deliver short-term results, whether it’s their first day on the job or their fifth year at the helm, and as such, there is no change of behavior. That’s not moral hazard—that’s just simple survival tactics, particularly in a competitive job market with high visibility and limited supply of jobs available.

Should the GM succeed in the short-term, and ends up keeping his or her post, the GM is indeed stuck with the consequences of his or her prior actions. This would violate moral hazard.

Law is correct, though, in indicating the root of the true issue, which is a misalignment of incentives between the organization (long-term) and the GM (short-term). Just like any business / CEO relationship, the organization needs to institute mechanisms to protect itself from a CEO with short-term perspectives, which is (in theory) why many compensation packages include stock options (which reflect the stock price, which is forward-looking).

In the case of the baseball organization, there is a tendency for a GM to pillage the farm system to try and get established players on today’s roster. To align the incentives of the GM and organization, in theory, organizations could tie some of the GM’s salary or bonus to the team’s winning percentage (or incremental wins) in the future, even beyond the GM’s tenure. Unorthodox (and unprecedented), but possible.

Law brings up some good issues and valid points, but does not use the term “moral hazard” correctly. Which is why we should leave the economic arguments to Milton Friedman, Kenneth Arrow, and the rest of the economists. And not to the baseball columnists—even those with a “MSIA/MBA-equivalent” (whatever the heck “MBA-equivalent” means).