Best Newberg Report in a long time with posting of Sheehan article . No mention of Pelicans or some other stupid story from him.
This pretty much sums it all up
"The Joe Sheehan Newsletter
Vol. 9, No. 49
July 17, 2017
After a walkoff 4-3 loss to the Royals yesterday, a game that ended with Shin-Soo Choo losing a ball in the sun to allow the winning run to score, the Rangers slipped back under .500 at 45-46. They are dead in the AL West race, of course, 16 games behind the Astros, but they're one of a half-dozen teams bunched in the AL Wild Card race. The Rangers begin the day 2 games behind the Yankees for the second Wild Card, three back of the Rays for the top spot. Seven teams are separated by four games for the two playoff berths. Of those seven, the Yankees and Rays have far and away the best underlying performance, with the Mariners and Rangers next in line.
It's been an odd year for the Rangers, who have essentially the same roster they had a year ago. Last year's Rangers outscored their opponents by eight runs all season; they also rode a strong bullpen and unusually well-timed performance to a 36-11 record in one-run games. They won the AL West going away on the strength of that mark. This year's Rangers have actually outscored their opponents by 31 runs in just about 60% of a season, but have underperformed that they're just 7-15 in one-run games. The bullpen that was so impressive last year imploded early in this one, and the team hasn't hit nearly so well in high-leverage situations as it did in 2016.
The 2016-17 Rangers are likely to be one of the signature examples when we argue against the idea that teams have a particularly ability to win close games. There's been minimal change in their personnel, no change in management, and yet a huge swing in close-game record. Playing well in close games isn't a skill over and above playing well.
However they got here, the Rangers are now faced with a decision over what to do about it. The division title is out of reach, leaving them playing for half a playoff berth. We know that teams can advance to the World Series and even win one from the Wild Card Game, but it's a daunting challenge mathematically, assuming all playoff teams are equal, the Wild Card gives you a 6.25% chance at a title. Realistically, it's far below that when you consider how often the Wild Card has to play better teams without home-field advantage. To pick a number, the Diamondbacks have the best chance of being a Wild Card team of any team in baseball, about 83%. They have a 3.1% chance to win the World Series. That's what you're playing for if you're the Rangers, a chance at a chance at a chance.
About two weeks ago, we compared the Royals and the Twins, two teams then tied in the standings but with considerably different rosters and futures. The 2017 Rangers split the difference between those two. In Yu Darvish, they have a free agent who, after years lost to elbow surgery, is pitching at the level of a #2 starter. He's been their nominal ace when healthy, and on any given day is still their ace. He's also, pending how his season ends, in line to make at least $25 million a year in free agency. Were he to be made available in trade, he'd be as attractive a rental as there is conceding that rentals tend to return less in trade than controlled players. The Rangers are also set to lose Carlos Gomez (31, hitting .251/.331/.471, rapidly losing his speed) and catcher Jonathan Lucroy (31, .257/.302/.361, rapidly losing his framing skill). They're not the Royals, losing half their roster value on October 1, but the Rangers are in position to lose some players without getting much in return. It's hard to see Texas making a qualifying offer to Gomez or Lucroy at this point.
Like the Twins, though, the Rangers are bringing along a core of young players who should be around for a while and should be able to contend. Three of the Rangers' top five players by playing time are 23-year-old Rougned Odor, 22-year-old Nomar Mazara and 23-year-old Joey Gallo. 24-year-old Delino DeShields has been up and down while generating 1.8 bWAR with his OBP (.341) and legs (19/4 SB/CS, plus defense in left field). Jurickson Profar's career has stalled, yet he's still just 24 years old. The argument for selling is to bring in players who can join that group, particularly a true center fielder or a young starting pitcher.
The Rangers don't have to think long term. While they are set to lose Darvish, Gomez, and Lucroy, they will retain much of their roster value into 2018, about 71% of the positive bWAR generated by the team so far. Elvis Andrus, Adrian Beltre, and Cole Hamels are all signed through at least 2018. The Rangers will also have a lot of money to play with; they have committed just $93 million in 2018 salaries, which gives them room to replace Darvish in the market, and will certainly have them at the forefront of Shohei Otani rumors all winter.
So the Rangers are nowhere near a rebuild, yet have about a 3-in-4 chance of missing the playoffs as-is. They have one incredibly attractive trade chip, and a few others throw Andrew Cashner and Tyson Ross out there, I guess who could at least return a low-level prospect. The furthest out they should be focusing is next year, with much of the team's productive players under contract, with a group of under-25 players who should be improving, and with plenty of money available for adding to the group.
And yet... 2 games out. Mind you, 2 games out with the memory of 2015 fresh in everyone's, including the fans', minds. The '15 Rangers were 49-52 on the afternoon of July 31, 2015, when they traded a slew of prospects for Cole Hamels and Jake Diekman. At the time, with the Rangers eight games out in the West and four out in the Wild Card race behind five other teams, the deal seemed like a play for 2016. The Rangers went 39-22 after that, not only lapping the Wild Card field but chasing down the Astros to win the AL West. It's hard to give up on a season in July when you did that just two years ago.
I like to say that for many teams in the Rangers' spot, they want to either win seven in a row or lose seven in row, just to make the decision easier. The Rangers, by their place in the standings, by the composition of their roster, by the mix of contracts they hold, are in as tough a spot as you'll ever see. There's just no preponderance of evidence that points the team in one direction or another. There are still two weeks to the deadline, time for that seven-game streak to push Jon Daniels and his staff to one pole or the other. Today, however, the Rangers straddle the fence. They are as hard a buy/sell decision as I've seen in years.
Actually, that's a misnomer. The Rangers are a hold/sell decision. With the young core, with the division out of reach, there's no case for the Rangers to be a strong buyer. They shouldn't be putting top-100 guys like Leody Taveras or Yohander Mendez into trades, shouldn't be in play for the big-ticket items like Justin Verlander or Zach Britton or Andrew McCutchen. You don't make a big play when your only hope is the Coin Flip Round.
No, the Rangers' decisions are really just one: whether to keep or sell Darvish. He won't bring back the Quintana package, but then again, Aroldis Chapman returned Gleyber Torres and then some for a third of the innings that Darvish will pitch. Realistically, the Rangers' ask would be one top-50 type, and then a couple of other prospects. With their infield set and their intentions to contend in 2018, the Rangers have the luxury of focusing on close-to-the-majors outfielders were they to shop Darvish. Could they ask for Clint Frazier from the Yankees? Bradley Zimmer from the Indians? Derek Fisher from the Astros? The Rangers' other short-term need is reliable, preferably controllable starting pitching. Would the Rockies move Jeff Hoffman for the top-end starter they need? How about the Rays with their upper-levels depth? Would they move Blake Snell or (and?) Jose De Leon (currently out with a lat strain) for the starter that pushes them closer to the Red Sox in the East?
The Rangers can trade 12-13 Darvish starts for more than 100 from a controllable pitcher, and they can use that pitcher in seasons where the top team in the AL West doesn't run away and hide. As hard as it would be to part ways with someone who has been so important to the franchise, as hard as it would be to send this message to the team and the fans, the potential gain in trading Darvish trading just 70 or 80 innings of him is too high. The Rangers should cash in this chip.
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