CLOSERS AND THE DRAFT
PART I: Rise of the Closer
By Anup Sinha
Pure hitters are traditionally the biggest movers and shakers in the baseball draft—and
I declared as much in a previous column. Nevertheless, short relievers are
also capable of a quick ascent to the big leagues. In recent drafts, in particular,
it's been in vogue to select one early in hopes that he'll help the big club as
soon as September of his draft year.
Throughout baseball's history into the 1970s, major league starting pitchers were
expected to go a full nine. The best arms were in the rotation with the bullpen
almost a purgatory for pitchers with second-tier stuff. It was long the norm for
a club to leave spring training with 10 pitchers, sometimes less.
In the late 1970s and early '80s though, closers burst on the scene in all shapes
and sizes. Flame-throwing Goose Gossage, finesse sidewinder Dan Quisenberry and
forkball-heaving Bruce Sutter made it both fashionable and effective to have one
man to slam the door shut at the end of games.
In the 1990s and 2000s, bullpens became deeper with an assortment of long relievers,
middle relievers, set-up men and situational lefties at the manager's disposal.
Some clubs even have a specified "groundball guy" like Tampa Bay's Chad Bradford.
Big money is given to specialists now as a matter of routine because it's been demonstrated
that you simply can't win a World Series without a deep pen. A major league pitching
staff today will typically have 11-13 arms.
The closer role itself has become more specialized. While it was not uncommon for
closers like Gossage, who was selected to the Hall of Fame last summer, to work
2-4 innings in the 1970s and 1980s, today's closer pitches an inning max—and almost
always with a lead.
In our look at the evolution of the closer, I've analyzed the saves leader for each
of the 30 big league teams in 2008, and added two others who shared closing duties
to the extent of saving 14 or more games. So that gives us a total of 32 closers,
and they are noted in the appendix at the bottom of the column.
Where Did They Come From?
--14 were drafted and signed out of college
--7 were signed as international free agents
--6 were drafted and signed out of high school
--4 were drafted and signed out of junior college
--1 was signed out of an Independent League but had four-year college experience
Where Were They Drafted?
--25 of the 32 closers were subject to the draft, yet only two (then-Cubs righthander
Kerry Wood and Mets lefthander Billy Wagner) were true first-round picks. Two more
(then-Tigers righthander Todd Jones and then-A's righthander Huston Street) were
first-round supplemental picks.
--10 of the 25 were selected after the 10 th round.
Converted Starters
--Of the 14 college-drafted closers, only two (Street and Red Sox righthander Jonathan
Papelbon) were primarily relievers in college. Giants righthander Brian Wilson relieved
as a freshman at Louisiana State, but was a starter for the remainder of his collegiate
career.
--Of the 32 closers, only one (Street) moved through the minors without making a
single start.
--Only two (Street and Astros righthander Jose Valverde) began their minor league
careers in the bullpen, though Valverde did make four starts in the Rookie-level
Dominican Summer League. Pirates righthander Matt Capps also made 10 relief appearances
for Pittsburgh's' Rookie-ball club after signing late in 2002, but it was merely
to get work. He was exclusively a starter in 2003 and 2004, before making the conversion
to closer in 2005.
--The Mets' Wagner did not make a single relief appearance in the minors and has
not made a single start in the big leagues.
--4 closers (Diamondbacks righthander Jon Rauch, Nationals righthander Joel Hanrahan,
then-Brewers righthander Salomon Torres and Wood) were converted into relievers
after having already started games at the major-league level.
Converted Position Players
--Of the 14 college-drafted closers, four were primary position players in college.
Padres righthander Trevor Hoffman, the game's all-time saves leader, was a shortstop
at Arizona. Rays righthander Troy Percival was a catcher at UC Riverside. Blue Jays
lefthander B.J. Ryan was a first baseman at Southwestern Louisiana (now Louisiana-Lafayette)
and Twins righthander Joe Nathan was a shortstop at Stony Brook. It's interesting
to note that this foursome couldn't make their college pitching staffs and yet have
combined for a 1,221 major league saves.
Neither Hoffman nor Percival threw a pitch during their entire college careers.
Ryan and Nathan were used so infrequently that scouts had to request they throw
for them.
Nathan, Hoffman and Percival were actually signed professionally as position players.
Nathan and Hoffman were switched to the mound after two minor league seasons, Percival
after one.
Nathan actually quit baseball when the Giants, the team that drafted hum, requested
that he move to the mound. He went back to finish his degree at Stony Brook, then
changed his mind and decided to give pitching a try after sitting out a year. He
was also used as a starter initially.
Ryan was a non-prospect as a college first baseman and would never have been drafted
at that position. Then-Reds area scout Johnny Almaraz, however, was impressed with
how he threw the ball around the horn during pre-game warm-ups and had Ryan throw
one live inning for him. That was enough to convince the Reds to draft the big lefty
in the 17 th round. Understandably, Ryan was a willing participant from
the get-go.
What's to Learn From Major League Closers
Given the above analysis, it is stunning how many of the game's elite closers are
late-round picks, converted starters and/or converted position players. It goes
to show that closers are more difficult to identify at a young age or early in the
development process than any of the cogs necessary to build a championship club.
Closers are the elite of the elite. They are supposed to have filthy stuff. They
are supposed to be unhittable. So how come only two (out of 25) were taken in the
first round of the draft and 40 percent were chosen in the 11 th round
and later?
In many cases, the obvious power arms were picked early while the inexperienced
(Ryan) and the sneaky, finesse types (then-Rockies lefthander Brian Fuentes) went
late. But there are notable exceptions, such as Wilson, whose fastball has been
clocked upwards of 100 mph. He was merely a 24 th round pick by the Giants
out of LSU. At age 26, he saved 41 games in 2008.
I would suggest that makeup is the real separator. A great fastball and a knockout
breaking pitch obviously will help, but there are plenty of great arms who don't
make this list. Many of those "great arms" play smaller roles in the big leagues
and some are stuck in the minors.
I respectfully disagree with the statement Red Sox baseball operations advisor Bill
James, renowned author of the Baseball Abstract, made years ago that anyone
can close a ball game and that the ninth inning, with a lead, is just another inning.
It takes a tremendous amount of mental toughness to step in against major league
hitters battling every pitch with a game on the line; and come out on top consistently
from one pressure cooker to the next, day after day. There's no other position like
it in professional sports, although some have alluded to NFL kickers in that light.
But some football teams have only one or two games a season when a last-second field-goal
attempt determines the outcome of a game.
It goes beyond just good stuff to make a major league closer. It takes a pitcher
with a great competitive edge, and one with resilience.
Relief Pitchers and the Draft
Given the evolution of major league bullpens through the years, scouting departments
have had to adapt their strategy to scout potential closers accordingly.
It was a given in the 1970s and most of the '80s that none of the top college arms
in the draft would already be relievers. Essentially, if they weren't good enough
to start in college (or the minors), they surely couldn't pitch in the big leagues.
The most notable example of a college closer being drafted in the first round came
in 1988, when Baltimore took Auburn righthander Gregg Olson with the fourth overall
pick. Olson had saved 10 games that season for Auburn while striking out 113 in
72 innings—mostly on the strength of a dynamic breaking ball. It was not lost on
other teams when Olson saved 27 games for a struggling Orioles club and earned American
League rookie-of-the-year honors just a year after being drafted.
My own first recollection of a closer going in the first round was 1993, when Old
Dominion righthander Wayne Gomes was selected by the Phillies. But I would consider
1997 as the first watershed draft for college closers.
The Tigers had the No. 1 overall selection that year for the only time in their
history. Six-foot-10 lefthander Ryan Anderson, a local product, was the anticipated
favorite to be the Tigers pick but in the end they took another Anderson—Matt Anderson,
a closer from Rice—largely because of the team's desire for immediate help. At the
time, I recall many scouts who were up in arms that a short reliever could be drafted
first overall. The closer role was still one that a pitcher was supposed to grow
into, not one that should be predetermined.
Despite a 98-102 mph fastball and an equally dominating 90-92 mph slider, Anderson
fell short of expectations as a big league reliever, posting a career 5.19 ERA over
parts of seven seasons. No primary closer has been chosen No. 1 overall since and
teams largely avoided selecting them early in the next five drafts. The short relievers
who did come out of the 1998-2002 drafts were mostly converted starters.
But another breakthrough for the college closer came in 2003, when Houston's Ryan
Wagner (Reds), Cal State Fullerton's Chad Cordero (Expos) and Rice's David Aardsma
(Giants) were all prominent first-round picks. Wagner and Cordero reached the big
leagues in the same year they were drafted, while Aardsma opened the 2004 season
in the Giants bullpen. Cordero became on the game's best closers by 2005.
In 2004, the A's hit the jackpot by using a sandwich pick on Street, a dominant
closer for three years at Texas. Suddenly, every team had their eyes out for a short
reliever who could make it quickly. The prevailing thought was that if a hurler
had premium stuff and ice-water veins, he could get big leaguers out in the ninth
inning with only minimal seasoning in minors. Cordero and Street had proved it.
The Changing College Closer Scene
With more and more college closers being drafted in the first round, the college
game has evolved recently to the point where a team's best arm is often coming out
of the pen.
No longer is the closer role relegated solely to the likes of Jack Krawczyk, who
set a then-NCAA record with 49 saves during a four-year career at Southern California
and led the Trojans to the College World Series title in 1998 as a senior. The wily
righty, whose velocity topped in the low-80s, was only a 25 th-round
selection of the Brewers and a minor-league journeyman thereafter. As a testament
to his persistence, Krawczyk was a two-time minor league all-star who reached as
high as Triple-A, but his lack of stuff kept him from a big league call-up.
Nowadays, it's not uncommon for a prominent Division I program to put its most powerful
arm in for ninth inning duty in lieu of the weekend rotation. Scouts can now view
these pitchers first-hand as closers rather than have to resort to their imagination
watching them work only as a starter.
The 2007 draft was reflective of the college game following suit to Major League
Baseball. At the time, I was scouting primarily college players for the Cardinals
and it was revolutionary how many premium arms were coming out of college bullpens
that spring.
Among the closers who were selected in the first round and supplemental first round
that year were Clemson lefthander Daniel Moskos (Pirates), Vanderbilt righthander
Casey Weathers (Rockies), Maryland lefthander Brett Cecil (Blue Jays), Louisville
righthander Trystan Magnuson (Blue Jays) and Oregon State righthander Eddie Kunz;
that's a whopping five college closers selected in the first round.
While Cecil has become a starter in pro ball, the others are currently being groomed
as short relievers. The Pirates used Moskos as a starter to begin the 2008 season,
but he made nine relief appearances towards the end and is likely to stay in that
role in the future.
Incidentally, there were two other college closers in 2007, whom I thought had even
better stuff than the five noted. They were also first-rounders, though under different
circumstances. Georgia righthander Josh Fields didn't sign with the Braves as a
second-rounder, only to be re-selected in the first round by the Mariners in 2008
(he still hasn't signed). Georgia Tech two-way star Matt Wieters, the fifth overall
pick in 2007, decided to give his other position priority and the strapping catcher
is on the verge of stardom behind the plate for the Orioles. Fields and Wieters
could not only throw in the mid-upper 90s but had exceptional second pitches. In
fact, Fields had the best curveball and Wieters the best slider I'd ever seen in
a college pitcher.
Then in 2008, five college closers were taken in rapid fire between picks 19 and
27 in the first round. Texas Christian righthander Andrew Cashner (Cubs) is in the
process of being converted to a starter while Fields, Arizona righthander Ryan Perry
(Tigers), Arizona lefthander Daniel Schlereth (Diamondbacks) and Miami righthander
Carlos Gutierrez (Twins) remain on the closer track.
Another college closer caveat involves Arizona's bullpen. It had two first-rounders
in 2008 in Perry and Schlereth, yet neither served as the primary closer. Sophomore
righthander Jason Stoffel was the man in the ninth for the Wildcats and he is projected
to be a first-round pick himself in 2009. The idea of having three first-round arms
in a single college bullpen would have been unfathomable even five years ago.
Why No High School Closers?
I'm hard-pressed to remember a pure high school closer going early in the draft.
With seven-inning games only two and sometimes three times a week for most high
school teams, it doesn't make as much sense for a high school coach to use a premium
arm exclusively in the pen as it does for a college coach. The high school coach
can often have his cake and eat it too by starting his ace on Tuesday, watch him
shut down the opponent in less than 60 pitches, then use him again as a closer later
in the week.
High school pitchers who go on to become closers are invariably converted starters;
the six high school products among our 32 major league closers were starting pitchers
not only as preps, but also to begin their pro careers.
I don't anticipate the day when high schools fall in line with colleges and Major
League Baseball by using their best arm exclusively in relief. But stranger things
have happened.
Lessons For the Draft
The biggest lesson that major league teams can take from drafting closers is to
be wary of investing heavily in a pure closer out of college. With Cordero shelved
by a labrum tear, Street (since traded to the Rockies) is the only big money "pure
closer" on the list. He was signed to an $800,000 bonus. Every other closer was
a conversion, be it as a starter or shortstop.
Since so many top closers have floated in from other streams, it does behoove teams
to continue to draft a number of strong arms, both early and late, with the hope
that even one among the group emerges into that role. Serendipity has a way of making
baseball men look like geniuses if they give it a chance.
I suspect this demographic will change in the coming years as the bumper crop of
college closers from 2007 and 2008 emerge, but there's still something to be said
for both the conventional wisdom and doubt that surrounded the Tigers' selection
of Rice closer Matt Anderson first overall in 1997.
Part II of our topic on closers will rank and discuss the top closer prospects for
the 2009 draft, as well as provide my views on what's important to look for from
a scout's perspective.
APPENDIX
The group of 32 top major league closers from 2008 includes, in decreasing order
of saves, Francisco Rodriguez (Angels), Jose Valverde (Astros), Joakim Soria (Royals),
Brad Lidge (Phillies), Jonathan Papelbon (Red Sox), Brian Wilson (Giants), Joe Nathan
(Twins), Mariano Rivera (Yankees), Francisco Cordero (Reds), Kerry Wood (Cubs),
B.J. Ryan (Blue Jays), George Sherrill (Orioles), Brian Fuentes (Rockies), Trevor
Hoffman (Padres), Bobby Jenks (White Sox), Kevin Gregg (Marlins), Troy Percival
(Rays), Salomon Torres (Brewers), Billy Wagner (Mets), Brandon Lyon (Diamondbacks),
C.J. Wilson (Rangers), Matt Capps (Pirates), Todd Jones (Tigers), Jon Rauch (Diamondbacks/Nationals),
Takashi Saito (Dodgers), Huston Street (A's), Ryan Franklin (Cardinals), J.J. Putz
(Mariners), Jonathan Broxton (Dodgers), Mike Gonzalez (Braves), Jensen Lewis (Indians)
and Joel Harahan (Nationals).