Okay, here is an attempt to be "realistic" and objective about our 2023 roster, position by position, as it compares to 2022. Granted, improving on a last place team should not be all that hard with $90M to spend. "Improving" may not guarantee getting out of last place or getting to 3rd place.
I'm going to use a point system based on what I feel a consensus or objective position would be:
5 The position should almost certainly be an improvement area and likely a major improvement over 2022. (Note: if we sucked in '22 and get to average, it's a 5.)
4 The position should likely improve and near certainly should be about the same, at worst.
3 The position looks to be close to the same
2. The position looks to be a declining area with little hope of being even.
1. The position looks almost certain to be a decline and likely a major one.
C: 2.5 Vaz was good with the bat in 2022. Plawecki was not. I almost gave this a 3.0 (We may add a catcher and get this to 3 or more)
1B: 4.5 I can't see how Casas (back-ups Hosmer/Dalbec) can do any worse than 2022 with Dalbec/Cordero.
2B: 4.0 Based on a reasonable assumption that Story plays more and that both him and Arroyo are not hurt at the same time as with 2022. (EValdez hopes)
3B: 3.0 I wanted to put 3.5 as Devers is reaching prime and had an August funk in '22.
SS: 1.0 As of now. Stay tuned. (Hard to know if it will be Kike, Story, Andrus or whatever)
LF: 4.5 I started to put 5.0, but there are doubts about how well MY's skills translate to MLB.
CF: 4.0 A healthy Kike is all we need to make this a 4.0. A 2021 Kike would make this a 4.5 or 5.0.
RF: 3.5 Addition by subtraction is all I have to say. (Dugo/Refsnyder platoon can maybe bring this to a 4 or 4.5?)
DH: 2.5 This could be a 3.0 or 2.0 as we see Dugo, Refsyder, Dalbec, Hosmer, Arroyo and maybe EValdez share time here in 2023.
That's 29.5 for the 9 everyday positions. Avg: 3.3.
This is not great, but I have to think we add something at SS and RF. At worst one significant one at either slot- likely with some offense. If we can change SS from a 1.0 to a 2.0 or 2.5 and or RF/DH up a point, we might add 2-3 points to the total and have 32/9 or a 3.6 average.
Is that enough on the non pitching ledger?
Now the pitching. It's hard to figure out how to compare, and this might not be the ideal way to do it, but here I go.
SP going by GS'd (ERA+ in 2022) >> projected 2023 GS and grade
33 (92) Pivetta >> Pivetta 33 (3.0)
26 (98) Hill + 5 (38) Seabold>> 33 Sale + Paxton (hard to grade, but 3.5???)
23 (127 Wacha) + 9 (122) Whitlock>> 32 Whitlock (3.0)
20 (109) Nate + 11 (90) Bello >> 32 Bello (2.5)
14 (72) Wink + 12 (77) Crawford + 4 (127) Houck 4 (134) >> 32 Crawford/Wink/Mata (Paxton?) for a 3.0
That brings the rotation to about a 3.0 before any additions. Maybe I'm being biased by assuming better health than we will get but I like Mata, Walter and think Crawford or Wink will do better- not both. We only need one.
The pen should be vastly better, despite moving Whitlock to the rotation. Maybe having Houck in the pen, FT and with a defined role can almost cancel out the loss of Whitlock from the pen. Addition by subtraction on losing Diekman, and if we DFA Brasier and less or no IP from some bad RP'ers we can gain a lot here.
2022 Relief IP and WHIP
65 Schreiber 0.985 >> 2.5 Schreiber- projecting regression
62 Brasier 1.300>>> 4.5 Jansen
51 Sawamura 1.421>>> 4.5 Martin
48 Davis 1.708>>> 3.5 Joely - pure guess
45 Strahm 1.231>>> 2.0 Kelly - hard to match Strahm's 2022
43 Houck 1.131>>> 4.0- more IP from pen
40 Danish 1.289>>> 3.5 Taylor
40 Barnes 1.437>>> 3.5 - more IP and a turn around
39 Whitlock 0.788>>> 1.5 more pen IP from Crawford and Wink
38 Diekman 1.487>>> 3.5 Mata/German
28 Ort 1.765 >>> 3.0 Ort
25 Robles 1.581 >>> 3.5 German/Walter/Murphy
(16 Bazrdo & Valdez, 14 Kelly, 10 Familia, 25 others)
Overall maybe a 3.5 or 4.0 average, assuming no additions and no major health issues