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6-4-3: Ratcheting
by Gary Huckabay
Some reflections on arbitration and scrambling....
There's nothing worse than an ignorant judge. If you have a complicated case, you have to spend forever educating them, and then reminding them of the salient points every step of the damn way. All the defense has to do is distract them slightly, or pound away on minutiae that chew up the judge's time, and you're going to eventually lose. If you have to spend any time educating the judge, don't take the case. Just walk away.
All I can say is that a great many entries would have an excellent shot in front
of a panel consisting of Clay Davenport, Keith Woolner, and Doug Pappas. Right
now, I'm working on signing up Carrot Top, Chesperito, and Pink as the arb
panel, so things don't look good for those of you with a target audience of
BPers.
I can understand clubs' frustration with the arbitration process. I'm not going
to argue that it's more expensive than free agency, but you basically have to
make your case not only against the player's agent, but you also have to defend
every boneheaded signing or incompetently-constructed arbitration case ever put
forward by a front office somewhere. One lazy intern for another club can cost
you a couple of million bucks. Add in the confrontational nature of the process,
and the fact that there's plenty of apparent randomness, and you've come up with
one more reason to buy stock in antacid suppliers.
However, is Henderson a good pickup for anyone at this point? I hope so, but if
not, it's still a great run. Context has worked against Henderson almost his
entire career, and he's still put up numbers that are truly astonishing. Here
are some abbreviated stat lines:
YEAR TM G SB CS BA OBP SLG OPS ----------------------------------------- 1979 Oak 89 33 11 .274 .338 .336 .674 1980 Oak 158 100 26 .303 .420 .399 .819 1981 Oak 108 56 22 .319 .408 .437 .845 1982 Oak 149 130 42 .267 .398 .382 .780 1983 Oak 145 108 19 .292 .414 .421 .835 1984 Oak 142 66 18 .293 .399 .458 .857 1985 NYY 143 80 10 .314 .419 .516 .935 1986 NYY 153 87 18 .263 .358 .469 .827 1987 NYY 95 41 8 .291 .423 .497 .920 1988 NYY 140 93 13 .305 .394 .399 .793 1989 -- 150 77 14 .274 .411 .399 .810 1990 Oak 136 65 10 .325 .439 .577 1.016 1991 Oak 134 58 18 .268 .400 .423 .823 1992 Oak 117 48 11 .283 .426 .457 .883 1993 -- 134 53 8 .289 .432 .474 .906 1994 Oak 87 22 7 .260 .411 .365 .776 1995 Oak 112 32 10 .300 .407 .447 .854 1996 SD 148 37 15 .241 .410 .344 .754 1997 -- 120 45 8 .248 .400 .342 .742 1998 Oak 152 66 13 .236 .376 .347 .723 1999 NYM 121 37 14 .315 .423 .466 .889 2000 -- 123 36 11 .233 .368 .305 .673 2001 SD 123 25 7 .227 .366 .351 .717 2002 Bos 72 8 2 .223 .369 .352 .721 ----------------------------------------- Total 3051 1403 335 .279 .402 .419 .821
This ignores Henderson's defensive contributions, which were outstanding. You
may remember than Henderson came up as a natural center fielder--and a very good
one--but moved to left field because of the presence of
Dwayne Murphy,
one of the few people who's ever been better.
But consider this context--Henderson spent the first 17 years of his career in
absolutely miserable hitters' parks. For most of that time, league offense was
significantly depressed compared to the levels we see today. The Oakland
Coliseum's park factor was 93 during Henderson's first full year, and he
patrolled the OF in Yankee Stadium when the dimensions there were still
enormous. During his prime, Rickey didn't see anything even close to a hitters'
park as his home field.
Henderson is probably the most underappreciated player of all time. Not because
he hasn't gotten attention, but because people don't seem to grasp precisely how
amazing a player Henderson's been.
That said, it's going to be an uphill climb to find a spot for the 2003 season.
He hasn't really hit lefties for the last several years, he hasn't posted a
batting average over .240 since 1999, and a 44-year-old pinch runner and
right-handed bat off the bench is a pretty tough sell. We'll definitely be
rooting for him, and there's likely a spot where he can play a role for a good
club--no matter what else, Rickey still looks like he can post a .360 OBP and
steal a few bases, and it's nice to have that in reserve if you're a manager.
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Gary Huckabay is an author of Baseball Prospectus. You can contact him by
clicking here.
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