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Castro’s Effect on Betancourt

by Jon Shields ~ September 21st, 2008

I’ve encountered a few Mariner fans recently that view Yuniesky Betancourt a changed man since Jose Castro took over as the team’s hitting coach back in June.  They are so encouraged by the progress they’ve seen that they no longer resent Yuni like many of us do, and think that he can finally begin living up to the “shortstop of the future” tag that was inappropriately placed on him upon his arrival in 2005.  “Yuni finally has a hitting coach he can trust,” they might say.  “They’re both Cuban born shortstops!”

Such a sentiment is complete lunacy.

Yuni put up a vital line of .279/.289/.405 over the first 70 games of the season under the tutelage of hitting coaches Jeff Pentland and Lee Elia.  In the 74 games since Castro arrived on the scene Yuni has put up a line of .261/.290/.348.  What improvement?

Of course, the big change in Betancourt that people are seeing is his new found plate discipline.  Before Castro came along Yuni was walking in just 1.5% of his plate appearances.  Since Castro started working with Yuni he’s been walking in 3.7% of his at bats.  What a transformation!  I’d hate the break it to you, but that 3.7% is still significantly lower than anyone else on a team of free swingers and the 2.2% improvement isn’t anything to get excited about. 

Not only is it something not to get excited about, but it could actually be a cause for concern.  While I love walks and players that draw a lot of them, Yuni’s new approach seems to be hindering his ability to hit the ball hard and get hits. 

His drop in batting average and slugging percentage since Castro has taken over could be evidence enough, but upon further investigation I’ve found that Yuni’s hitting fly balls 48.5% of the time since Castro took over, which is a huge jump from the 33.3% pre-Castro and his career marks.  Unless you’re a big time power hitter with a propensity for hitting balls over the fence, fly balls aren’t good and are much more likely to be turned into outs compared to line drives or ground balls.  Yuni’s sailing fly ball rate has caused his line drive rate to dip slightly from 18.9% to 17.8% and his ground ball rate to plunge from 41.5% to 33.9%, which is all bad news.  

Additional evidence: Yuni was already hurting the team offensively before Castro arrived, posting a -1.13 WPA (Win Probability Added) in those first 70 games.  Since Castro came aboard it’s dipped to an even worse -2.18.  (For comparison, the best hitters in baseball have WPAs around 5 and 6.  Raul Ibanez’s is at 2.48.)

The point of this post isn’t to bash Jose Castro; I’m just trying to issue a warning to those of you jumping back on the Yuniesky Betancourt bandwagon.  He’s shown an insignificant amount of improvement in one of his problem areas that has apparently effected him negitively in other areas and– as of right now– he’s not a better player because of it.

Now, if Yuni’s batted ball percentages begin drifting back to normal and he continues to work on his plate discipline, then he will be a better player thanks to Castro.  It’s very possible and will be something to watch for, but I remain skeptical until then.

10 Responses to Castro’s Effect on Betancourt

  1. Rob T. (64 comments)

    Yuni also has a -17.2 BRAA (batting runs above average) which is 2nd worst on the team behind Johjima. He also has a .299 wOBA* which is terrible. Yuni is not a good player and its time to get a new SS.

  2. seatownsports (17 comments)

    He needs to do some serious off season work. Both defensively and offensively.

  3. Mariner Melee (59 comments)

    Betancourt is quickley becoming a lost cause for this organization.

  4. Jon Shields (387 comments)

    ^A lot of us see it that way, but I don’t know if the organization does. Either way, he’s under contract through the 2011 season and guarenteed another $11M, so it’s not like we can non-tender him. I hope they can find someway to get rid of him, though.

    I would be content replacing him with an all defense free agent shortstop like Adam Everett or Cesar Izturis this offseason, but I don’t see it happening, especially when the lineup will be in desperate need of some help.

    (Welcome to the site, Mariner Melee)

  5. Mariners fan (15 comments)

    Yea Jon I was one of the people that said that about Betancourt, I was sticking up for him, I admit I was wrong, but at least I was right about Jose Lopez moving to first and Valbuena taking over 2nd base,

    Anyways Valbuena may be better than Betancourt offensively…..maybe we can move Valbuena to short and get another second basemen or if Valbuena’s range ain’t good enough we can just get another short-stop huh!

  6. Slurve (40 comments)

    I never thought of it this way…

  7. Jon Shields (387 comments)

    I thought that Valbuena might be able to work out at shortstop, but now that he’s been up a while I don’t think he could handle the position. His range at second is better than Lopez’s, but it’s still not spectacular.

  8. Slurve (40 comments)

    It’s about average but not gold glove spectacular or better than Lopez but still pretty bad?

  9. Jon Shields (387 comments)

    When he was in the minors his range was reported as “slightly above average” for a second baseman, and that appears to be the case.

    It’s not good enough that it’ll give him a free pass. He’ll have to hit to become a major league starter, and he has the potential to do so. I think he needs another full year in the minors, though.

  10. Mariner Melee (59 comments)

    >> I think he needs another full year in the minors, though.>>

    On that note, its looking like Tuiasosopo does as well.

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