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    Home » Kolloen: Peguero helps win a World Series … in 2013
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    Kolloen: Peguero helps win a World Series … in 2013

    Seth KolloenBy Seth KolloenJuly 8, 20116 Comments4 Mins Read
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    Carlos Peguero is having issues at the plate. / Drew Sellers, Sportspress Northwest

    If the Seattle Mariners are ever going to win a World Championship, they’ll do it with players like Carlos Peguero. Not the Peguero you see on the field now–the guess-hitting, defensive liability–but the Peguero of seasons future.

    Carlos Peguero has a baseball skill: Power. Or, as Eric Wedge puts it, Peguero is “a high-damage hitter.” Even if you just started watching the M’s this season, you know just how rare that ability is. Peguero lacks many other baseball skills, like bat control, pitch recognition, knowledge of the strike zone, the ability to tell where a fly ball is going–and so Peguero is not destined for a Hall-of-Fame career. At best, the Mariners can hope for two or three decent seasons out of him.

    Steve Balboni, age 25, 1982: .187 BA, 2 HR, 34 K, 6 BB in 114 plate appearances.

    Carlos Peguero, age 24, 2011: .194 BA, 6 HR, 48 K, 7 BB in 145 plate appearances.

    Peguero could be as good as Steve Balboni some day. If you’re underwhelmed, I don’t blame you. But consider this: The Kansas City Royals won a World Series with Balboni at first base.

    (Balboni was not a good baseball player–and was even overrated in his time. This is almost impossible to believe, and it shows how far our evaluation of baseball players has come, but in 1984, Balboni received 5 points in MVP balloting, despite being a 1B who OPSed .817. His WAR was just 1.8. Cal Ripken Jr., playing SS, OPSed .884. Ripken’s WAR was 9.2, leading the American League. Yet Ripken got just a single, 20th place vote in the MVP balloting. It’s as if a Ford Escort was voted best car of 1984 over the Porche 944. But I digress.)

    Small-market teams like the Mariners need young, cheap players to provide power, just like Balboni did for the 1985 Royals. It’s nearly impossible to put together a good offense when you rely on retreads for power, as the Mariners have since Edgar Martinez’s retirement. It’s a massive risk of resources.

    Yet the Mariners have done it anyway, again and again acquiring power hitters on the downslope of their careers. Jack Cust and Milton Bradley being only the most recent examples. Russell Branyan. Richie Sexson. Paul Sorrento. Pete O’Brien. Gorman Thomas. Willie Horton. And … Steve Balboni, who hit 21 homers in 97 games with the ‘88 Mariners.

    Peguero is a bad hitter right now, but he’s got a chance to be an above-average hitter in two or three years if the M’s stick with him. Balboni had about three good years with the Royals before his bat slowed down (at which point, of course, the Mariners traded for him).

    I can think of one mediocre hitter the Mariners held onto just long enough for him to make a contribution to a pennant-winning team: Current broadcaster Mike Blowers.

    Mike Blowers, age 27, 1992: .192 BA, 1 HR, 20 K, 6 BB in 80 plate appearances.

    Not an inspiring line, especially for a 27-year-old. But the M’s let Blowers work through his troubles, and in 1995 he delivered 23 HR and 95 RBI, in a year when the Mariners needed every run they could to force a one-game A.L. West playoff. For once the Mariners offloaded a player in his prime, trading Blowers to the Dodgers in the offseason for two prospects, one of whom (Miguel Cairo) is still a productive major leaguer–though he never played for the M’s.

    Of course, watching Peguero struggle at the major league level ain’t fun. He now has seven strikeouts in his last nine plate appearances. But the Mariners seem to think that his development will be accelerated by facing major league pitching.

    “With more at bats the consistency he has up there, the discipline is going to come,” Wedge says. “There is no other way you can get what you need to get in regard to big-league pitching.”

    If the M’s are wrong, they are giving away at bats that could help the Mariners stay in the 2011 A.L. West race. But if they are right, they are sowing the seeds for a 2013 World Series Championship.

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    6 Comments

    1. SeattleNative on July 9, 2011 10:06 pm

      Miguel Cairo indeed did play for the Mariners, one season. Check his career statistics and you’ll find his Seattle season.

    2. SeattleNative on July 9, 2011 2:06 pm

      Miguel Cairo indeed did play for the Mariners, one season. Check his career statistics and you’ll find his Seattle season.

    3. Michael Kaiser on July 10, 2011 4:49 am

      “Small market team?”

    4. Michael Kaiser on July 9, 2011 8:49 pm

      “Small market team?”

    5. Jerry on July 11, 2011 6:23 am

      If the season is finally a bust then why not switch Ackley to 3rd base and put his college teammate, Seager at 2nd base, where he belongs.  Ackley has more power and size, he is more suited as a classic 3rd basemen, and his buddy almost fits perfectly into the standard mold of a 2nd basemen.  
      To me this is almost a no brainer – especially if they are willing to let Peguero flail away at bat and in left field for what’s left of this season.
      After watching Ackley and Seager play a few games I really believe that they could handle the switch and that it would ultimately help the team. 

    6. Jerry on July 10, 2011 10:23 pm

      If the season is finally a bust then why not switch Ackley to 3rd base and put his college teammate, Seager at 2nd base, where he belongs.  Ackley has more power and size, he is more suited as a classic 3rd basemen, and his buddy almost fits perfectly into the standard mold of a 2nd basemen.  
      To me this is almost a no brainer – especially if they are willing to let Peguero flail away at bat and in left field for what’s left of this season.
      After watching Ackley and Seager play a few games I really believe that they could handle the switch and that it would ultimately help the team. 

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