1/31/12

Washington Redskins Team Needs for 2012

Washington Redskins
2011 Record: 8-8
Offense: 336.7 YPG (16th), 235.8 Passing YPG (14th), 100.9 Rushing YPG (25th), 18 PPG (26th)
Defense: 339.8 YPG (13th), 222.1 Passing YPG (12th), 117.8 Rushing YPG (18th), 22.9 PPG (21st)

2012 Potential Free Agents: QB Rex Grossman, RB Tim Hightower, WR Donte Stallworth, C Will Montgomery, DEs Adam Carriker and Kedric Golston, MLBs London Fletcher and Rocky McIntosh, S Laron Landry, CB Byron Westbrook

The Redskins started off the year 2-0 and everyone rushed to proclaim them the sleeper team in the NFC.  Rex Grossman is a real quarterback look at him play well!  They run the ball and play good defense!  Well unfortunately for the Redskins, that spiraled downward into a 5-11 finish on the season.  Lowlights of the season include:


  • Two of the Redskins' good young players were suspended for the final four games for violating the league's substance abuse policy
  • Mike Shanahan playing QB Carousel with Rex Grossman and John Beck
  • Mike Shanahan inexplicably not playing Roy Helu consistently until the end of the season
The first thing I would suggest the Redskins do is get a new coach, new GM, and new owner.  But since none of that is realistically happening, we'll move on to the real needs of the team.

1/30/12

Dallas Cowboys Team Needs for 2012

Dallas Cowboys:
2011 record: 8-8
Offense: 375.5 YPG (11th), 262.6 Pass YPG (7th), 112.9 Rush YPG (18th), 23.1 PPG (15th)
Defense: 343.2 YPG (13th), 244.1 Pass YPG (23rd), 99.1 Rush YPG (7th), 21.7 PPG (16th)

2012 Notable Free Agents: S/CB Alan Ball, S Abram Elam, TE Martellus Bennett, OG Derrick Dockery, P Mat McBriar, WR Laurent Robinson, LBs Keith Brooking, Anthony Spencer, Bradie James

The Cowboys finished the year as a pretty mediocre team, but one that blew plenty of opportunities to make the playoffs.  The Giants came back to win the NFC East in Week 17, and the Cowboys definitely have room to improve from this 8-8 season.

Super Bowl XLVI: The Blue Meanie

The roads that the New England Patriots and the New York Giants took to get here couldn't be any more different. The Pats were favored by the majority to come out of the AFC East while the Giants were, at best, though to come in as a wild card. It took the stars aligning for the G-Men (the Philadelphia Eagles deciding not deciding to start their season until December 11, the Dallas Cowboys losing games for no other reason than they are the Dallas Cowboys) but they still earned their way to the big stage. They held the Atlanta Falcons to two points and then followed it up by beating the NFC's top two seeds on the road (Green Bay and San Francisco). The Pats were the number one seed in the AFC and their road featured Tim Tebow and the Baltimore Ravens. Needless to say, the degree of difficulty wasn't quite as high.

These two teams met in November, a tilt that went New York's favor 24-20. It was the last game that the Pats lost but it was in the worst way imaginable. Not only did Tom Brady bring the Patriots back in the fourth quarter with less than two minutes left on the clock, but the Giants were without both Hakeem Nicks and Ahmad Bradshaw. Even with that, Eli Manning managed to lead yet another comeback against the Pats by hitting Jake Ballard for a game winning touchdown.

By now everyone knows that the Patriots pass defense is all sorts of awful. Having Devin McCourty and Kyle Arrington on Victor Cruz and Hakeem Nicks is just asking for trouble. The Patriots defense is the worst to make the Super Bowl (411.1 YPG), they have allowed the most 20-yard plays in the league this year (89), and the pass rush mostly consists of Vince Wilfork and Rob Ninkovich. When you throw all of things together you have a matchup that the Giants should feast upon as Eli Manning is playing the best football of his career.

Let's not look past the Giants' own defensive woes. Even though they have a fearsome defensive line they are the second worst Super Bowl defense (376.4 YPG) and rank among the league's worst in defending against tight ends (948 yards surrendered). Surprisingly enough, the Giants also had a negative point differential and their weighted DVOA was sixteenth. The Giants can generate enough of a pass rush with Justin Tuck, Osi Umenyiora, and Jason Pierre-Paul but if they don't get home that points towards the Pats' favor. Deon Grant is not a guy you want covering Aaron Hernandez in the open field and who knows who can cover Rob Gronkowski (if he proves to be mostly healthy).

I don't think I need to dwell on the passing offenses for either of these teams. In three games Eli Manning has over 900 yards and he has an 8/1 TD/INT ratio. The Giants' line hasn't been that great, though, surrendering eight sacks. Tom Brady, on the other hand, has an un-Bradylike 6/3 TD/INT ratio. He has only been sacked once (against a Ravens D that ranked third in the league and the Broncos who were eleventh themselves) and also has 602 yards in only two games. The Pats were tied for second in the league with INTs (23 on the year) and the Giants had only three less themselves. What all of this tells me, in a nutshell, is that both of these QBs need to play mistake free because what these defensives lack they make up for in jumping routes and getting timely takeaways.

Nicks, Cruz, and Mario Manningham will get theirs. Nicks is averaging over 117 yards per game in the postseason and has four touchdowns. Cruz has yet to find pay dirt but he has 244 yards and 14 first downs. Manningham, who is seemingly the forgotten man, has three scores of his own with only eight receptions. Cruz is the obvious deep threat but when things get inside the 20s it seems that Eli tends to look towards Manningham. New England, as you can probably imagine, relies heavily on Gronkowski and Hernandez. Of Brady's 602 yards, these two have 353 of them and four touchdowns. Gronk is also the only pay to be in double digits on first downs (14). Of course, that was when he was healthy and before the human Patriots destroyer, Bernard Pollard, got ahold of him. Both TEs have formations where they come out of the backfield and Hernandez even rushes the ball (eight carries, 70 yards). I've gone this entire blog post without mentioning Wes Welker. In this year's earlier matchup Welker had 9 catches for 136 yards. Welker could be poised to be the biggest beneficiary, of both yards and extra attention from the Giants, of Rob Gronkowski's possible limitations. No other wide receiver on the New England depth chart can keep defenders honest except for Deion Branch one or two plays a game.

If I told you that one of these teams comes in with the league's worst rushing attack, you'd probably guess the Patriots. Or if you've been paying attention to the media's coverage, you'd know that the Giants reside in the cellar. At 89.2 Y/G, the Giants make the Pats' 110.3 look as though they have Barry Sanders in the backfield. Sure, a lot of that has to do with Ahmad Bradshaw being banged up during the season and now that he's healthy he and Brandon Jacobs are combining for 109 Y/G in the postseason. Bradshaw is also third on the team in receptions (14) and averages close to 32 yards through the air. On the flip side, New England has a bit of trouble rushing the ball. BenJarvus Green-Ellis has less than 50 yards per game. Aaron Hernandez's longest rush (43) equals Danny Woodhead's total for the playoffs. Stevan Ridley hasn't been healthy, but when he's been in he's been ineffective. If New England can't establish the run in some capacity then they're going to be in a lot of trouble.

The special teams matchups are a wash. Lawrence Tynes and Stephen Gostkowski are two of the best in the business. Tynes has missed two field goals while Gostkowski has been perfect. Steve Weatherford has averaged 46.4 yards per punt while Zoltan Mesko is at 43.8. Neither team had a kickoff return touchdown at all this year but Julian Edelman did return a punt for a score against Kansas City.

This was the most appealing matchup left in the playoffs if you enjoy offense. New England and New York are both physical teams that can rack up the yards and points at will. New York has an edge in defense, of course, but neither one excels in their matchup against the opposing offense. I'll admit I have a smidgen of bias here, but I will go with my preseason pick and pick the Patriots to overcome their blue demons. The whole game may come down to Rob Gronkowski's health and that is the most important thing to monitor heading up to the big game.

As an aside, be sure to check out this year's Puppy Bowl. They have a Piggy Pep Squad!

Will the Marlins Flounder or Swim with the Big Fish?

$209,275,719 and $210,000,000.

The first number represents the Marlins' total payroll for the 2006-2011 seasons.  The other number is the total of contracts handed to free agents Jose Reyes, Mark Buehrle, and Heath Bell this offseason, along with the $19 million remaining on Carlos Zambrano's contract (Zambrano also has a $19.25 million player option he'll undoubtedly exercise in 2013).  Additionally, the team is heavily favored to sign Cuban free agent Yoenis Cespedes, the outfielder with a 20-minute "highlight" tape on Youtube, and whose performance in MLB is near impossible to project.  His services will likely cost in the $50-60 million range, for a completely unquantifiable entity.  Formerly the Marlins acted as a major league prospect farm, shipping off players like Josh Beckett, Miguel Cabrera and other stars before they saw big paydays; the new-look Marlins are showing a commitment to win and spend the necessary money to do it.

The $210 million committed to four players this offseason represents a seismic shift in the Marlins' team construction philosophy.  To accompany the organization's new stadium, uniforms and name, the Miami Marlins have signed or acquired what they believe are four players that can put them into the annual playoff picture and help them contend for the World Series.

The problem is, the Marlins finished 28th of 30 MLB teams in attendance per game this season(19,007 average attendance), and as recently as 2009, were only receiving about $16 million in television and radio revenues (Deadspin produced the Marlins' 2009 financial documents).  How are the Marlins supposed to afford to pay their players now?

The projected 2012 payroll by my estimation will be in the range of $95 million (give or take about $5 million depending on arbitration decisions).  This 2012 season will represent the highest single-season payroll in the history of the Marlins' organization and the ability to pay it off is largely dependent on the success of their stadium in drawing new fans.  The $515 million stadium is largely being financed by the city of Miami, which helps, but the Marlins are still responsible for $165 million of the stadium themselves.  They will rent the stadium and will finally be able to receive revenue for the luxury seating and advertising throughout the stadium.  That new revenue will help quite a bit, and the Marlins should still qualify for revenue sharing, receiving even more by 2016.  The new revenue-sharing formula will not depend on payroll, it will depend on the team's market size, meaning the Marlins are in line to continue receiving revenue sharing, and could receive even more over the years than usual.  The Marlins' bottom line will ultimately depend on the fan support (or lack thereof) they receive after their efforts this offseason and their performance on the field in their new state-of-the-art stadium. 

The entire Miami area seems to be building teams similarly these days.  While the Dolphins haven't raided free agency in quite the same way, the Heat, Marlins, and Florida Panthers (NHL) are simply raiding free agency, signing big contracts and forgoing the development of players for a win-now mentality.  For the Heat, it was always going to pan out.  The acquisition of two of the game's top 5 players (Lebron James and Dwyane Wade) along with a top 20 player Chris Bosh meant that the Heat had become perennial title contenders overnight.  The Panthers' flurry of offseason signings (7 on the first day of NHL free agency, along with 3 players acquired through trade) got them above the newly established salary cap floor and has them in competition for a playoff spot for the first time since 2000.  The Marlins' approach?  While it seems to be similar, the results are yet to be seen.
The following is what we can likely expect for the Marlins' 2012 lineup:

SS Jose Reyes
2B Omar Infante
3B Hanley Ramirez
RF Mike Stanton
1B Gaby Sanchez
LF Logan Morrison
CF Emilio Bonifacio
C John Buck

The lineup is solid, with Reyes and Infante both capable of hitting over .300 at the top of the order.  If Hanley realizes the potential he once showed, this lineup could be scary.  Mike Stanton is bound to hit 35+ HRs annually for the next decade, thus this blog has affectionately named the Marlins' new HR celebration in center field the "Mike Stanton Machine".  Gaby Sanchez is a very consistent, solid hitter who could push 90 or 100 RBIs this season hitting a lot of gap shots with Jose, Hanley and Mike Stanton ahead of him. Emilio Bonifacio hit over .300 last year and provides positional versatility along with great speed on the basepaths to act as a tablesetter for Logan Morrison and John Buck. Morrison and Buck provide patience at the plate and decent power as well to round things out, which is hard to come by when looking at the typical 7th and 8th hole hitters in National League lineups. 

If Hanley hits like an All Star, this offense may be one of the best in the National League, and a very young one at that.  Since Hanley Ramirez is the biggest piece to the offensive puzzle, I decided to take a closer look at his 2011 and try to determine the reason for his struggles.

The past 2 seasons, Hanley Ramirez has been hitting the ball into the ground for some reason.  Whether it's a changed plate approach or something else, over 50% of Hanley's batted balls are grounders now.  As we saw last season when he was benched for lack of effort, Hanley plays when he feels like it.  If he ran out every groundball this wouldn't be as concerning, and maybe the leadership of Ozzie Guillen helps rein in the unpredictable effort of Hanley on a day-to-day basis.  But regardless, hitting line drives and fly balls are more conducive to raising a player's batting average.  His tendency to hit so many ground balls kept his BABIP at a career-low .275 (his career average is .339).  As a player with plus power and plus speed, Ramirez should be expected to post a BABIP over .300 every season, as his speed will help him leg out some hits that a player like Adam Dunn or Albert Pujols may not.  The BABIP seems to have dropped markedly due to his average on grounders that he hits.  In 2010, Ramirez had a .290 batting average on ground balls that he hit, while in 2011 that plummeted to .219.  Additionally, in 2010 Ramirez had a .280 batting average on fly balls, while in 2011 that dropped to an abysmal .189 batting average.  I would expect Ramirez to produce at least a .260 average and an .800 to .850 OPS, which is still quite valuable at 3B.   

Hanley also missed quite a bit of time last year due to a nagging back injury, only playing in 92 games.  Hopefully the injury isn't a recurring one, and I'd assume it's not likely to be a problem going forward after a full offseason to recover.  When he played it didn't seem to limit his baserunning or stealing ability, as he attempted a steal about once every 3 games, which is about on par with his career average.  In a full season, Hanley will attempt 45-50 steals and should convert 30-35 of them at least.  While he's a completely average base-stealer, his speed still remains a valuable asset on the basepaths.  His mobility should, in theory, help him be an above-average fielder, but to this point in his career, he's been either average or below average at shortstop in every season.  Moving to an easier position in 3rd base should allow Hanley to become an above average fielder for the first time in his career, provided that he puts in the effort and is happy at his new position. 

The rotation is likely to be the downfall of the team unfortunately, as it's riddled with question marks (aside from Mark Buehrle):

SP Josh Johnson
SP Mark Buehrle
SP Carlos Zambrano
SP Anibal Sanchez
SP Ricky Nolasco

Josh Johnson is an ace.. when he's on the mound.  The guy just can't stop getting injured unfortunately, and his health may be what the success of this team hinges on.  Mark Buehrle is pretty consistent, and I'd expect an ERA around 3.5, which accounts for a drop in ERA due to his arrival in the National League.  The lefty will throw 200 innings and make every start this year, as he's proven he can do over the past 11 years and provides the consistency that Josh Johnson doesn't. 

Carlos Zambrano is on the decline, and may not provide the production of a #3 starter that the Marlins truly need.  For the first time in his career, Carlos Zambrano's fastball was below average according to Fangraphs' linear pitch weights metric, and he threw it merely 53% of the time on the mound, the lowest rate of his career.  Zambrano doesn't have the strikeout stuff that was his trademark throughout his career, so he's now shifted to an approach of pitching to contact, as evidenced by his career high 90.9% contact rate against on strikes thrown.  That was one of the highest figures in the league, and when combined with his career low 42% ground ball rate, it resulted in his worst MLB season.  Zambrano is only 30, but with so many MLB innings logged on his arm, it may be a sign of him wearing down over time.  He suddenly doubled his HR/FB rate from the past 3 seasons, jumping from 5.6% to 11.3%, and even admitted to quitting on his team, which resulted in a suspension from the team.  The Cubs were eager to dump him, but Zambrano's production may be looking up.  The Miami ballpark is more pitcher-friendly and Zambrano is buddies with Ozzie Guillen as both are from Venezuela, so that connection may convince Zambrano to fully exert himself on the mound this year.  I'd look for Zambrano to rebound to a 4.00 ERA, but for his WHIP to remain high and for him to remain pretty mediocre. 

As for the remainder of the rotation, Ricky Nolasco posts strong strikeout and walk rates on an annual basis, but still can't get his ERA below 4.50 no matter what he tries.  He even posted a low home run rate at .87 HR/9, but his WHIP rose to 1.40.  Nolasco gets hit around consistently, as he's only once allowed less than one hit per inning, and last year allowed 244 hits in his 206 innings.  As a #5 starter, he's okay, but he surely doesn't help fix the Marlins' rotational woes.  Anibal Sanchez is actually pretty underrated as he's posted a 3.55 ERA and 3.67 ERA over the past two seasons along with FIPs of 3.32 and 3.35 respectively.  Anibal Sanchez may actually be the #3 starter entering the season, and a healthy top 3 of Josh Johnson, Mark Buehrle, and Anibal Sanchez would allow the Marlins to compete for the NL East title or at least a wildcard spot.  The Mets are pretty terrible, so we can write them off now.  The Braves and Phillies both have great staffs, but the Braves have injury problems throughout their rotation (Jair Jurrjens, Tommy Hanson) and the Phillies complement their rotation with a below average offense to open the season, as Ryan Howard will miss the first 2 months.  The Nationals' rotation with Stephen Strasburg, Gio Gonzalez and Jordan Zimmermann appears quite formidable, but the offense leaves something to be desired, with only two above-average hitters last year in Ryan Zimmerman and Mike Morse.  If Jayson Werth rebounds, the offense could improve quite a bit, but there's no guarantee that will happen. 

Last but not least, the Marlins have a solid bullpen that now is headed by free agent acquisition Heath Bell at closer.  Bell, Edward Mujica, Steve Cishek, and Randy Choate all posted ERAs under 3 in 2011 and lefty Mike Dunn posted a 3.43 ERA.  Juan Carlos Oviedo (formerly Leo Nunez) also returns to the Marlins on a $6 million deal, which helps solidifiy the bullpen even further.  The bullpen goes six or seven deep and has enough left-handers to allow Ozzie to mix-and-match against intimidating left-handed hitters in late-inning situations.    The bullpen is far from a weakness, and may actually be the most complete aspect of the team, which bodes well if the offense produces and starting rotation is above average.\

The Marlins, surprisingly, look like they have a balanced set-up to compete for the NL East division in 2012.  The addition of major free agents for their everyday lineup (Jose Reyes), their starting rotation (Mark Buehrle) and their bullpen (Heath Bell) seem to have given them a needed boost across the board to compete in the National League East.  I'm not going to go quite as far as to predict they'll win it this season, but they seem to be the most balanced of the contenders in the NL East, which counts for something.  They'll at least be serious contenders for the wild-card round and should win one wild-card spot if Bud Selig introduces the two wild-card format this season.

1/24/12

Prince Fielder Takes His Talents to Detroit

So, who had Prince Fielder's future team pegged as the Detroit Tigers prior to this offseason?  Hell, who even had this predicted a week ago?  The Tigers just made the most shocking move of the offseason, on par with the Angels signing Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson, and have shown that they're truly going all in with their current core of young stars: Justin Verlander, Miguel Cabrera, and now Prince Fielder.

Quickly, to recap my thoughts on Prince Fielder, here's my section on Fielder in my 2012 Free Agency Preview from a few months ago:

Prince is the second high-profile hitter available this offseason, and a fantastic middle of the order hitter to add to any lineup.  Fielder posted the second best season of his career by pretty much any metric. His .299/.415/.566 line was only topped by his 2009 season.  He had a 5.5 WAR season this year, and played almost every game again.  Baseball analysts and executives alike have expressed concern about how Prince's 5'11" and 275 pound frame will hold up over the next 7 years, but Fielder has never missed more than 6 games in his career which sets those doubts aside.  Separating the aspects that make up Wins Above Replacement (Batting, Fielding, Positional, Replacement, Base Running), Fielder was actually 5th in MLB in batting, making him the fifth most valuable hitter.  That's pretty impressive especially considering that his WAR would be higher except that he plays at a traditional power hitting position (1st base is the easiest position to play, so WAR docks players accordingly).

For a guy named Fielder though, he sure doesn't acknowledge that part of the game.  He was the fifth worst fielding first basemen in baseball (granted, the four worse fielders were far lower in grading).  For this reason, it's likely he'll attract a heavy market in the AL, where teams can play him both at first base and slot him occasionally (or mainly) at DH.

Overall, I think Fielder is the second best free agent available, but the most interesting facet of this free agent group is the fact that its two premier players are at the same position.  It'll be interesting to watch if he or Pujols sets the market for first basemen.  I have a feeling Fielder will sign after Pujols, and likely for a deal approaching (if not surpassing) Mark Texieira's 8 year, $180 million deal ($22.5 million per year).  If anyone in this offseason gets a deal longer than 7 years, it really should be Prince, as he's only 27.  Most players hit their prime in their early 30s, so Prince would hypothetically only be beginning his decline towards the end of his deal.
I projected him for 8 years, $185 million ($23.125 million per year) and he got 9 years, $214 million ($23.78 million per year) so I wasn't too far off on the projection, but I sure was wrong about where he'd go (I projected the Blue Jays).  Fielder was always better suited for the American League, and it was fantasy to believe that the Nationals would actually sign him for the $200 million he desired, as his subpar fielding is bound to decline over time.

The Victor Martinez injury likely spurred this decision on, as the replacement of Victor Martinez with a mediocre player such as Johnny Damon, Juan Pierre or Casey Kotchman may have kept the Tigers out of the driver's seat in the AL Central.  The Tigers already were bound to regress from their somewhat lucky 95-win season of 2011.  Justin Verlander isn't likely to post another 2.4 ERA and Doug Fister isn't likely to pitch to an ERA just over 2 this season in Detroit.  Alex Avila's .366 BABIP suggests that his batting average will fall back to a .250 or .260 level this season, and Jhonny Peralta became an elite hitting shortstop again after disappearing for a couple years at the plate.

The lineup now sets up to look something like the following on a nightly basis:

1.) CF Austin Jackson
2.) RF Brennan Boesch
3.) 3B Miguel Cabrera
4.) 1B Prince Fielder
5.) DH Delmon Young
6.) C Alex Avila
7.) SS Jhonny Peralta
8.) 2B Ryan Raburn
9.) LF Andy Dirks

Yeah, you read that right.  Miguel Cabrera is likely moving back to third base in a shocking revelation, even though Prince and Miggy could share 1B and DH duties this year and there wouldn't be a logjam.  However, in 2013 Victor Martinez will return to DH and Miguel Cabrera would then have to move to 3rd base anyways, so the Tigers would much rather get him reps at the position earlier if possible.  Pressure will be on Miguel Cabrera to get himself into much better shape to man the hot corner, as in his current state, he may be the worst fielding 3rd baseman we've seen in years.  The fact of the matter is though, if Miguel Cabrera is 15 runs below average in the field at 3rd base, it's cancelled out by the fact that 3rd basemen are fairly valuable in the measure of WAR.  By moving Miguel Cabrera to 3rd base, Inge's poor bat is removed from the lineup, Delmon's poor outfield defense will move to DH, and Andy Dirks will play above-average defense in left field.  This infield has the potential to be the worst fielding infield we've seen in years or decades though.  None of the players are even average fielders at their position.  I honestly have no idea how big of an impact this will have on the Tigers' season, but this grouping will be the true test of how much defense truly matters in baseball.  Advanced baseball stats value defense pretty highly, so if this configuration can produce a World Series champion as probably the worst fielding team in baseball, it may be time to reexamine the defensive value of players.

The 2-7 spots in this lineup should be exceptionally productive, but the top of the lineup is still quite worrisome.  Austin Jackson isn't a prototypical leadoff hitter, and Brennan Boesch, while he has hit much more effectively while batting in front of Miguel Cabrera, still profiles more as a middle of the order hitter than a hitter to set the table for Miggy and Prince.  The 8 and 9 holes are great compared to that of other teams, especially if Raburn can put a full season together instead of only hitting well after the All-Star Break.

Now, to look at Prince himself, and what to expect.  Fielder posted a 5.5 WAR season in 2011, and it's not crazy to expect close to the same again from him.  As I said in the quote above, Fielder was the 5th best batter in baseball, taking all other aspects of WAR other than hitting out of the equation.  Fielder's actually shown marked improvement over the past few seasons as well, as his K% has dropped to an above-average 15.3% from a career average of 18.5% and his Contact% has risen to above 80%, an above average rate as well.  Basically, Fielder has developed even more discipline and contact skills at the plate, and those aren't likely to leave the 28-year-old any time soon.  Prince needs to provide approximately 35-40 WAR over his 9 seasons to return the value on the Tigers' $214 million investment in Fielder.  Let's assume that Fielder's next nine seasons pan out as follows:

2012: 5.0 WAR
2013: 5.0 WAR
2014: 4.5 WAR
2015: 4.0 WAR
2016: 3.5 WAR
2017: 3.0 WAR
2018: 2.5 WAR
2019: 2.0 WAR
2020: 1.5 WAR

Fielder would produce 31 WAR over the life of his contract, worth about $150-160 million to the Tigers, which means he would easily fail to return their investment.  In order to make this contract palatable for the Tigers over a nine-season span, he needs to keep his current production up for about four years and then experience a gradual decline of .5 WAR per season.  Is that likely?  Probably not.  Is it possible though?  It's not out of the realm of possibility no; the 2015 season is his 31-year-old season, and he could still be in his prime at that time.  Since he's so young, he has the potential to live up to this contract, but it's highly unlikely he does.

The end result is that the Tigers are pushing all of their chips in to attempt to win the World Series in the next 3 seasons while they still have Miguel Cabrera and Justin Verlander to play with Prince Fielder, as well as the other young, important parts of the team.  This contract is likely going to prevent the Tigers from signing players towards the end of this decade, and will likely be impossible to move, as a 5'11", 270 pound first baseman isn't expected to age very gracefully, even if he may be one of the most durable MLB players.  The Tigers likely just improved from a middle-of-the-road 85 win team to a 90 win team that should win the AL Central fairly comfortably and contend for the AL pennant for the foreseeable future.  If Jacob Turner develops into the pitcher he's expected to be, and players like Brennan Boesch, Alex Avila, Jhonny Peralta maintain their current level of production, this team has staying power for the next few years and could just win that coveted World Series.

As a Tigers fan, I love and hate the move simultaneously.  Our window to contend is going to close soon, and it's not likely we compile talent equivalent to our current talent base anytime soon, so it makes perfect sense to go for a championship now.  However, this contract seems almost impossible to live up to, as most contracts over 7 years are.  Fielder is going to be a major liability in the last 3 years of this contract, but if he plays well enough over the first six and helps bring the Tigers a championship, I can stomach overpaying him for those three seasons.

This is truly a paradigm shift in baseball; The Tigers have thrown defense to the wayside in favor of compiling the best offense they can.  Detroit will be tough to watch on defense(or enjoyable if you're a fan of one of the Tigers' rivals), but the offense is undeniably legitimate and will be a joy to watch.

The Tigers are now one of the AL powers, right alongside the Yankees, Red Sox, Rangers and Angels.  I never thought I'd be able to say that about this franchise that 8 years ago was holding church services to pray for wins.  The city of Detroit and Tigers fans now have an even greater reason to rally around this team, and for that reason alone, this Prince Fielder contract makes all the sense in the world.

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