Rangers Gamble On Desmond Transition

To say the market disappointed Ian Desmond would massively undersell the circumstances. After rejecting a 7-year, $107 million contract extension from the Washington Nationals prior to the 2014 season, Desmond now settles for a reported $8 million pillow contract with the Texas Rangers. Having been tagged with the qualifying offer, Desmond joined Yovani Gallardo and Dexter Fowler, among others, in witnessing their market evaporate due to the associated draft pick compensation. A career-long shortstop, Desmond attempted to work around this hindrance by marketing himself as a “super-utility” type, and indeed signed on with a club set at shortstop. Now the former Expos prospect hopes a shift to left field will recoup the value lost during a disastrous 2015 campaign.

Indeed, disastrous accurately portrays Desmond’s terminal season in the nation’s capital. Having posted three straight 4+ fWAR seasons from 2012-2014, Desmond appeared in line for a massive payday this offseason. Instead, a 1.7 fWAR, 83 wRC+ campaign left Desmond with minimal market appeal, at least at his initial asking price. Perhaps more worrisome – his continuous decline. After peaking at 128, Desmond’s wRC+ fell each of the last three seasons while his strikeout rate catapulted to nearly 30% the past two seasons. Similarly, Desmond’s hard-hit rate dropped nearly four percentage points in 2015, with the difference transferring to soft contact, while his groundball percentage rose each of the last two seasons. If you make a career out of slugging the ball, softer contact and more groundballs is just about the worst combination of progressions to make.

At his peak, Desmond stood among the premier power-hitting shortstops in the game – his .188 ISO from 2012-2014 ranked third among qualified shortstops, behind Hanley Ramirez and Troy Tulowitzki. Now, after shifting to left field, he provides more of an average to below-average bat while learning a new position. Furthermore, that pitchers altered their approach against him likely dissuaded some interested parties. Since his powerful peak, Desmond has seen an increase in sliders with an accompanying decrease in pitches thrown within the strike zone. During this time, Desmond suffered a precipitous drop in contact rate on pitches outside the zone. Perhaps pitchers discovered a weakness against sliders out of the zone, a point only accentuated by the fact that Desmond’s pitch value against sliders in 2015 rated at -5.8, the 18th worst value in MLB. Even during his peak, however, Desmond consistently ranked among the league’s highest swinging-strike rates, perhaps indicating an inevitability to the skyrocketing strikeouts. Either way, Desmond’s penchant for swinging and missing surely concerned any club contemplating a long-term investment.

The Rangers appear not overly concerned with the strikeouts, at least not at the current cost. Between his salary and the draft-pick compensation, Texas seems to be expecting only about 2 WAR from Desmond, an entirely average forecast. Steamer pessimistically projects Desmond to accrue 1.4 WAR over 585 plate appearances, while ZiPS estimates a more fortuitous 3.1 WAR in 623 PAs. Averaging the two, you glean a smidge over 2 WAR in roughly 600 PAs – a figure almost perfectly in line with his acquisition cost.

Of course, your personal perception of Desmond depends largely on how you see him transitioning to left field. As an athletic shortstop with solid defensive history, one might expect Desmond to convert at least reasonably well. However, ask any Red Sox fan about Hanley Ramirez’ move, and you’ll understand some apprehension. With Rougned Odor, Elvis Andrus, and Adrian Beltre locking down the other infield spots, Desmond will occupy left the majority of the time. Desmond could additionally work at 1st base to rest Mitch Moreland against tough lefties, although that would squander his athletic ability, as well as encroach on Justin Ruggiano’s role even further. Moreover, this signing insinuates that the front office holds little hope for Josh Hamilton staying productive and healthy this season — an entirely fair position considering he has taken the field for only 139 games the past two seasons combined — as well as a damning assessment of Ryan Rua’s ability to contribute to a contender. As defending division champions, the Rangers aim to maximize what’s left of the Yu Darvish/Adrian Beltre window, and bridging the hole in left until Nomar Mazara or Joey Gallo arrives certainly occupied a spot on their to-do list. But for a team anticipating to contend, was adding the uncertainty of a position switch truly the best path to take?

At the given contract, Texas should be ecstatic they picked up a recently All-Star caliber shortstop. It’s been accepted for a while that Texas is “in the range of where [they]’ll end up payroll-wise”, according to Jon Daniels, hence cost-prohibitive acquisitions of Justin Upton, Yoenis Cespedes, and Jason Heyward simply weren’t on the table. That understood, the market provided other, more cost-efficient options without the risk associated with the position swap. Recently signed Dexter Fowler only cost $5 million more than Desmond (both having draft-pick forfeiture attached to them), and is projected for a similar WAR output while making a less imposing transition from center to left. Furthermore, Fowler would have provided a back-up for center fielder Delino DeShields that Texas sorely lacks.

Along that same line of thinking, the still unemployed Austin Jackson would have provided a slightly lower projection, but without the relinquishment of the 19th overall draft pick. My personal favorite option this offseason, Steve Pearce, signed for less than $5 million to play part-time for the Rays. Surely Texas could have offered him a similar contract at the time, where he could have provided right-handed power both in left and at first base. I would have thought Pearce or Jackson the more frugal acquisition for a cash-strapped Rangers ballclub, but palpable potential exists for Desmond to recapture his past success and make this deal quite the bargain. At one guaranteed year, this acquisition carries minimal risk while providing real talent to a contender; it’s difficult to dislike, even if you believe that more cost-efficient options exist.





7 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
vonstott
8 years ago

“ZiPS estimates a more fortuitous 3.1 WAR in 623 PAs.”

As a SS, it did. You don’t magically become a better hitter as your defensive value circles the commode. As a LF, 1.3.

vonstott
8 years ago

Of the 1.3, 4 runs of that is plus defense. I’d be curious if ZiPS truly sees a +4 LF or if that is a fudge factor based on an expectation that he’ll play a decent amount of time at more valuable positions.

vonstott
8 years ago

If you believe ZiPS, 1.8 wins went poof. That’s not Desmond’s fault – he’s apparently about to be used really, really inefficiently.

Another interesting question is how 29 teams (30, really) convinced themselves they couldn’t use a 3-win SS.

ANOTHER interesting question is why the Rangers are pickin’ and grinnin’ about Profar and how amazing he looks while spending money and a high pick to give away the only role they had for him.