Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Now Entering, for the Boston Red Sox, Closer...Joe Kelly?

Pitch Joe Kelly, receive a poor start, rinse, repeat.
It has now been six starts, 54 days and one demotion since Kelly has won a game for the Boston Red Sox. The Joe Kelly as a starter project has all but ended as the Red Sox have officially missed on their return for John Lackey, but one move could salvage the team’s failures.
Move Kelly into the bullpen, setting him up to become a possible closer.
Call me crazy, but I think it could work.
Kelly tops out at 100 mph with his fastball in practically every start, but yet still struggles in each time he takes the mound. He often shows flashes of potential in each start, throwing one or two great innings only to follow up with one disastrous inning, ruining his entire start.
Remove the mentality of having to make it through six or more quality innings for Kelly. Let him pitch for one inning, focus on only three batters. He could become a real asset in this situation. Imagine Kelly coming out of the bullpen slinging fastballs at 100 mph. Within this situation, I feel as if Kelly would improve drastically.
As a comparison, how about Tom Gordon?
Gordon came to the Red Sox as a starting pitcher. He could pitch five quality innings but would break down in the sixth inning and on. Gordon still had a good career as a starter, unlike Kelly, but he couldn’t throw 100 mph regularly for five innings or more, his arm couldn’t do it by the time the Red Sox had control over his services. So the team elected to turn Gordon into a closer and his career rejuvenated. Gordon became one of the best closers in the game, becoming an all-star for the first time in his career.
Will the same happen to Kelly? Probably not. But I truly believe Kelly has real potential as a closer, if not, definitely within the bullpen. Kelly cannot enter the closer role immediately as the Red Sox have a legitimate closer in Koji Uehara and Kelly’s struggles as a starter should still make the team apprehensive.
But in a lost season, the Red Sox have already started to take inventory. They traded right fielder Shane Victorino, granting outfielder Rusney Castillo a spot on the roster in order to see what he can contribute. Similar moves might happen in the Red Sox’s near future as well.
Starters become closer more often than one would think—Jonathan Papelbon, Andrew Miller, Zach Britton, even Uehara himself just to name a few. I would take any of those pitchers on my current team.
Will Kelly turn into the league’s best closer? Probably not. Is it worth the attempt? Probably. You can’t succeed unless you try and I have full confidence that Kelly would at least make a viable option out of the bullpen.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

David Ortiz is not the Player Everyone Thinks He is

On Sunday, Red Sox fans watched David Ortiz play first base as well as any other option in Boston’s arsenal. Manager John Farrell publicly stated that he has full confidence in Ortiz’s ability to play the position. Fans will watch him play the position again tonight against Miami.
But the question lingers, why haven’t the Red Sox played Ortiz at first base on a regular basis? Most writers and fans agree that the best possible team the Red Sox can put on the field  has Ortiz at first base, Hanley Ramirez at designated hitter and Alejandro De Aza in left field. How has the Red Sox organization not realize this yet?
I suspect the reason is David Ortiz himself. Ortiz’s words insinuate he does not want to play first base regularly. When asked about playing first base, in a light-hearted way, Ortiz would always bring it back to his hitting, stating that playing first base keeps his mind off of hitting, distracting him even. And why should fans expect a 39 years old DH to accept a change of role after 10 years in the business?
Farrell seems to adhere. As a manager with great respect for veterans—the man benched Jackie Bradley Jr. in 2014 for veteran Grady Sizemore and made sure veteran Shane Victorino started this year in right field—I speculate that Farrell feels no need to upset Ortiz by playing him at first base regularly, even if it makes the team better. Farrell has the tendency to start veterans over the best possible scenario.
Publicly, Farrell can do and say whatever he wants, as can Ortiz. They certainly do not have to do what the media and fans say. But they should not deceive the fans. Again, Ortiz has not played first base regularly for more than 10 years, dating back to 2004, and again, no way does it appear Ortiz wants to start playing first base again.
That speaks about David Ortiz’s character.
The Red Sox’s best option of winning resides in Ortiz at first base and Ramirez at DH. However, Ortiz still will not embrace playing first base more often. As the veteran, a guy others look towards and a presumed leader of the clubhouse, Ortiz should be willing to do anything that gives the team the best chance to win.
But Ortiz will not play first base because it hurts his knees so much that he has to spend the entire next day on the couch. That cannot and should not count for leadership.
This gets to my second point. As a long time Bostonian and an essential part to the Red Sox’s 2000-era dynasty, most assume Ortiz can and will stay in a Red Sox uniform on his own time. He will choose when he retires. However, that should not hold true. I contest that if Ortiz plans to play longer than this season, the team needs to trade him at this year’s July 31 trade deadline.
Batting .228 at the age of 39 only looks bad for Ortiz. On a team with two designated hitters—that is Ramirez and Ortiz due to Ramirez’s sheer inability to play any position—in the long term, Ramirez wins. The Red Sox have Ramirez for four years, three more after this season. The Red Sox are contractually obligated to Ortiz only until the end of this season, the team holding two options on the contract. The Red Sox have more invested in Ramirez and Ramirez will outperform Ortiz within those years, if Ortiz continues to play. The Red Sox should focus more on exploiting Ramirez’s productivity than letting the Ortiz legacy play out.
Going forward, if the Red Sox continue to play the way like the last two weeks for the rest of the season, the team will push for winning the division. Their best chance to win is by sporting a team with Ramirez at DH and Ortiz at first base, but without Ortiz putting the team first, it will never happen.

A veteran, leader, contributor, call Ortiz whatever you want, but until Ortiz chooses to put the team before anything else, my adjective of choice remains selfish.