Community Projection - Joe Mauer
So how 'bout that Joe Mauer? It turns out that he had a pretty decent season last year. What will happen this year? Will his knee doom his season? Will he slump badly trying to defend his batting title? Will he add more power to his game? I'd like to know what you think.
If you're submitting a projection, just make a comment including your projected plate appearances, batting average, on-base percentage, slugging average, home runs, stolen bases, and caught stealing. Discussion is encouraged.
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I'll go first...
600 PA, .330/.420/.530, 20 HR, 10 SB, 2 CS
What can I say? I'm a big fan of 24-year olds coming off of a .347/.429/.507 season with more walks than strikeouts.
Off the top of my head...
610 PA, .320/.420/.510, 17 HR, 10 SB, 4 CS
Projection
630 PA .320 BA/ .425 OBP/ .510 SLG, 18 HR, 40 2B, 9 SB, 3 CS
Those numbers line up rather nicely from mathematical perspective (as in that number of homers, doubles, and average amount do add up to that level of slugging). It would leave him with 97 BB's as well, which is about what I'd expct in improvement from this year's 79. It isn't so much that I expect his patience to increase, it's that in his months where he was hitting over .400 hundred last year (like his big June and May's) he was hitting for such a high average that he didn't walk so much. It's hard to walk that often when you're hitting .450, and his isoPD went down. It was around that level for the other times when he was hitting more normally. This line I gave him is pretty similar to his September line as far as relationships between his Ba, OBP, and SLG are concerned.
The power is pretty much in line with what his growth had been from year to year, the fact that he hit a few more homers down the stretch last year than at the start, and the fact that he hit a few more homers once he wasn't hitting .450 for the month. Once he calmed back down to hitting a "normal" .320, he was averaging around 3 homers in those months, and that lineup up with his age curve. The Sb's I don't see improving. he's gotten most of the stolen bags in his career before last July when he was more unknown. He's still clever there though.
S basically, what were seeing in terms of last year is a lower average, but a few more plate appearances (because of april) and about 1 less hits, but a handful of extra doubles and homers to boost the the owner somewhat and overall bring his total bases equal to last year and enough walks to make him get on base as often as last year. That's a player who's ALMOST as productive as he was last year, and absolutly amazing.
There you are.
I Project...
Mauer...
by roger @ Twinkie Town on Mar 1, 2007 7:42 AM EST reply actions
Mauer Power
PA: 618
BA: .344
OBP: .431
SLG: .527
HR: 21
SB: 9
CS: 2
MVP-type season, depending on the Twins finish.
Not much to argue with here
What was the main cause of his slip? I contend it was luck. His at bats looked very similar to me in the second half, but he hit more balls hard right at people and had more great plays made against him than I ever recall in my 40 years of following baseball. Some of that was good positioning. But a lot of it was bad luck. With average luck, we're talking .380. If you do regression from there, .350 to .360 is not out of line.
The interesting number that everyone is watching is HR. He certainly has the body for a lot more homers. He's actually bigger than Morneau, if not stronger (same height, bigger frame). By all accounts, he has worked really hard this offseason on core strength. It will be interesting to see how that translates into homers, but I'm going out on a limb to say last night's performance is a sign of things to come. I'm projecting him at 25 for the year.
well-hit average
this Minneapolis-based company keeps track of exactly what you are talking about and could give you precise stats
Too many plate apperances being projected
So......
530 AB's
.350 BA
.425 OBP
.525 SLG
21 HR's
14 SB
4 CS
by bobio on Mar 1, 2007 9:08 AM EST reply actions
PA
Last Night
620 PA
.320 AVG
.450 OBP
.480 SLG
15 HR
9 SB (pitchers and catchers are starting to watch him more closely)
4 CS
49 SO
61 BB
by TheMattWilke on Mar 1, 2007 10:34 AM EST reply actions
Last night's HR to left
To me his power will develop as his body develops and he gets more core strength. I wouldn't want to mess with that swing or that approach.
Remember Hank Blalock? He had a similar approach when he came up. Then he hit a big homer in the All-Star game and ever since then, he's tried to pull everything. I wonder how good Blalock would be now if he'd stuck with the approach that got him to the big leagues.
Re:
What I was saying, is that if he still has this approach, the power numbers aren't going to jump this year. I generally like the approach because it allows slack for being late on a fastball and being fooled by an off-speed pitch. It's just definitely for contact hitters hitting for average, though.
Jacque is straight up over the left-fielder's head opposite field. It's a much easier home run that allows for a margin of error in getting complete contact. It a shorter distance and he has hitting fastballs that way down to a science. But it makes him easier to fool on offspeed pitches and more prone to strikeouts. I just don't see the comparison as applicable.
by TheMattWilke on Mar 1, 2007 12:23 PM EST up reply actions
Well
But perhaps you were referring to the projection than he'll hit 25 homers this year, which I think is pretty unlikely. I think he'll hit 16-20 a year for a bunch more years now, with maybe more and more doubles, ad then, once he's slowed down a litt,e around 29 and isn't quite as quick and spry, he might change his approach a hair and start collecting some more homers. But that's down the line a bit more.
Major regression :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMcxIZiO1qQ
Apologies if you've already seen this video on Bat-Girl.com -- I can't get it out of my head whenever Joe Mauer comes up.
quick swing
It was also interesting watching the videos next to it about Mauer's quick swing training tool. You can see how it would lead to a quick, compact stroke like Mauer's. But I wonder if that kind of training also reined in his power some.
I agree...
I too think he will at LEAST challenge .400 at some point in the next few years, and would not be the least bit surprised if he actually does it.
by djskilbr on Mar 2, 2007 1:51 AM EST reply actions
.400
Im not saying I wouldn't love it, but let's be realistic. Mauer is an amazing, once a generation player, but he still doesn't call Mt Olympus home.
.400
Your point about playing catcher is well taken though, since he WAS flirting with .400, then DID wear down and fall back some. You can't help but wonder what he would hit as a DH...but let's hope we don't have to find out.
DH
There isn't really any reason for me to believe this, I just have the guess in my head about it.
I don't ever...
by djskilbr on Mar 3, 2007 12:43 AM EST up reply actions
Yes!
Gwynn
So Mauer is very comparable to Gwynn, ut has a much tougher go at a number like this because of the position. There is a reason no catcher has ever led the majors in average before, and now we're talking about .400? I find that a little farfetched IF NOT TOTALLY IMPOSSIBLE.
You're right
I don't think Joe will be a catcher his whole career. I'd like to see him catch for a dozen or so years and then move to a corner infield position. When he does, he could hit .400. But it's extremely unlikely that he'd hit .400 as a catcher. Still, I think he'll have a few more .350s in him as a catcher, which is kind of incredible, when you consider the historical signficance.
.350
BA
Odd to see such interesting analysis from a Yahoo sports fantasy column, but this study is probably worth it's salt.

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