Team Archives
8th Oct, 2009
Why The Cardinals Will Beat The Dodgers

10th Mar, 2009
Narrowing The Closer Options To Five

Full Archive

MLB Columns
Search
RealGM Poll
Do you expect Mauer to sign an extension with Minnesota before the season begins?

Yes
No



Poll Archives
Narrowing The Closer Options To Five
Matt Shoukry. 10th March, 2009 - 6:20 pm


Current Features
N.Y. YANKEES:
Grading The Deal: Yankees Switch Damon For Winn

CINCINNATI:
Reds Should Be Patient With Chapman

BOSTON:
Grading The Deal: Red Sox Replace Lowell With Beltre

NONE:
Grading The Deal: Vazquez Rejoins Yanks Rotation

SEATTLE:
This Southpaw Ace Will Work For Seattle

PHILADELPHIA:
Grading The Deal: Halladay, Lee Dealt In Three-Way Trade

L.A. ANGELS:
Grading The Deal: Angels Ink Matsui Away From The Bronx

TORONTO:
What Halladay Gives You

L.A. DODGERS:
What The Dodgers Need This Winter

MILWAUKEE:
Grading The Deal: Twins Deal For J.J. Hardy

WASHINGTON:
Finally Good Business Sense

ATLANTA:
Big Series Looming With Phillies

TAMPA BAY:
Rays Haven't Reclaimed Last Year's Magic

CHICAGO CUBS:
Making Moves Before The All-Star Game

CHICAGO WHITE SOX:
'Striking Out' With The White Sox, Late May

SAN FRANCISCO:
Behind Lincecum's Struggles On Opening Day

N.Y. METS:
Grading The Deal: Mets Cheaply Sign Sheffield

FLORIDA:
2009 Marlins Spring Summit

HOUSTON:
2009 Season Preview: Houston Astros

BALTIMORE:
2009 Season Preview: Baltimore Orioles

TEXAS:
2009 Season Preview: Texas Rangers

CLEVELAND:
Let 24 Bat Third?

OAKLAND:
Grading The Deal: Oakland Signs Cabrera

ARIZONA:
‘Striking Out’ With The D-Backs: Late-February

SAN DIEGO:
‘Striking Out’ With The Padres: Mid-February

COLORADO:
'Striking Out' With The Rockies, Mid-February

KANSAS CITY:
Grading The Deal: Royals Make Huge Investment In Greinke

DETROIT:
Auditing The Detroit Tigers 2008 Season

MINNESOTA:
Auditing The Minnesota Twins 2008 Season

PITTSBURGH:
The Future Of The Pirates: A Sinking Ship Or Buried Treasure?


RealGM Search
Search:

With all the drama this spring over who will be starting and who is healthy and all the other mumbo-jumbo going on with the starting rotation, it seems I had forgotten all about the real question: Who's gonna close?

"The process now," said La Russa, "is to give guys appearances, make evaluations and then sort it out at some point at the end." TLR has told the media he has narrowed his options down to five. That sounds like a lot but a few months ago there were about a million. I'll break down his options one by one.

1. Ryan Franklin. As an interim closer filling in for an 'injured' Izzy last year, (I still think that after a few too many blown saves that Dunc and Tony roughed him up in the locker room and then put him on the DL) Franklin was far from perfect. But to be given the benefit of the doubt, he was caught off guard. He was thrown into the role after Izzy's 'injury' (see: ineffectiveness). It's a tougher transition from the 8th inning to the ninth. The pressure is much greater. If you blow a lead in the eighth, your team still has an opportunity to bat. In the ninth, you have no margin for error. If he would have had the whole spring to prepare himself for the position, he may have been more successful.

2. Jason Motte. Motte is who I would consider my leading candidate. Mainly because I haven't seen enough of him yet for him to have shaken my confidence. I have seen all of the other candidates struggle at times, and that worries me. He has a blazing fastball and has been developing more offspeed stuff to compliment that heater this spring. Also, La Russa has put him in for the ninth in his last two appearances which shows he has some faith in the kid.

3. Josh Kinney. After the Cardinals amazing postseason run in 2006, in which Kinney played a major role out of the pen going 1-0 without allowing a run in seven games, Kinney discovered that he needed Tommy John surgery during spring training of the following year. He missed all of 2007 recovering as well as 90% of 2008. After being out so long, there is a fear that he will not come back as good as he was when he left. One reinforcing piece of statistical information is how well Kinney pitched upon his return late last season, throwing seven scoreless innings while striking out eight and walking only one. But as I stated previously, the transition from the late innings to the ninth is a big one. I don't know if Kinney has the stuff to be able to shut down the big bats when their backs are to the wall.

4. Chris Perez. No doubt about it, Chris Perez has the stuff to be able to shut down hitters in the ninth. But does he have the mental readiness? And can he pitch consistently? Perez received a few chances to close out games for the Cards last season after Izzy and Franklin flopped and Mozeliak was just about to call me to close. Sometimes he was lights out, other times he got lit up so bright, you'd think you were on the face of the sun. All said and done he saved seven out of eleven chances. Not really closer material in my book.

5. CBC. Oh, by the way, that acronym stands for Closer By Committee. The only thing negative I can see about a closer by committee arrangement is that no one pitcher can ever get in a groove. What if Franklin is slamming the door every time out while the other three are throwing the door wide open? Do you give the job full time to Franklin? Will the others get angry? Too many questions up in the air. These are questions that need to be dealt with during spring training, where the only thing that matters is answering these questions. You don't want to create problems for yourself during the regular season.
These are the five decisions that TLR and Dunc have to weigh on. Whichever decision they make, the Cards will certainly have an interesting year in the ninth.
All content © 2000-2010 RealGM, L.L.C. All rights reserved..
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising Opportunities | About Us | Site Map | Contact RealGM