Al Yellon
Editor
A New York Mets Quiz - May 25
Grant Brisbee
Editor
'Mr. Loria: Tear. Down. That. Wall. Or Whatever The Hell That Is.' - May 26
Jeff Sullivan
Editor
How Close They've Come To The Sculpture - May 25
Rob Neyer
National Baseball Editor
Chone Figgins: M's Won't Play Him, Won't Dump Him - May 25
Dan Moore
Contributor
Joey Votto And The Twilight Of The Giant First Basemen - Apr 14
Jim Baker
Contributor
eBay Item Of The Day - May 25
Marc Normandin
Contributor
What's Wrong With Ike Davis? - May 25
Wendy Thurm
Contributor
Baseball On Par With Other Professional Sports In Dealing With Bad Umpires - May 20
By Rob Neyer - National Baseball Editor
Follow @sbnbaseball on Twitter, and Like Baseball Nation on Facebook.
Feb 21, 2012 - When the Cincinnati Reds signed Cuban left-hander Aroldis Chapman two years ago and almost immediately made him a relief pitcher, some of us said, "Huh?" Because, you know, relief pitchers don't pitch nearly as many innings as starting pitchers. And Chapman seemed to have the stuff to be a starting pitcher, even with only two pitches. Because those two pitches sure looked incredible.
Since then, Chapman has pitched in 69 games for the Reds, all in relief. But that might change this spring. From John Fay (via Cincinnati.com):
Reds manager Dusty Baker spoke about the pitching plan for Aroldis Chapman this morning. Chapman is preparing as a starter.
"We’re going to stretch him out to see if there’s time," Baker said. "If there’s not time and there’s not quality, you can always back off a guy."
Chapman started the transition in the offseason, but he was shut down with shoulder tightness before a start in the Arizona Fall League. That kept him from going to Winter Ball.
The Reds, with or without Chapman in the rotation, are already a trendy pick to win the National League Central. At the moment, here's how their rotation stacks up (in rough order of talent/health):
1. Mat Latos
2. Johnny Cueto
3. Mike Leake
4. Bronson Arroyo
5. Homer Bailey
Of course, Bailey's a long DL stint waiting to happen and Arroyo's a couple of tater-trots waiting to happen. So it's not like the Reds can't use another starting pitcher. Except the Reds do owe Arroyo a fair chunk of change over the next two seasons (though not as much as it looks like, as a hefty amount is deferred for a while). And Bailey could be really good; while his ERA over the last two seasons is 4.44, his strikeout-to-walk ratio is 2.8 and there's probably still a star pitcher in there somewhere.
There's nothing wrong with having six serviceable starting pitchers, especially when two or three of them have been shaky, physically speaking, in recent seasons.
A lot of teams could use six good starters. The only question is whether or not Chapman's capable of becoming one of those valuable beasts. In his brief career he's struck out nearly 13 batters per nine innings, but he's also walked six-and-a-half. As a starter, maybe Chapman could dial things back to, say, 8.5-to-3? That would still be pretty good. Better, actually.
Considering his control issues and his injury history, there's not much reason to think Chapman's going to give the Reds 180 innings this year. But as long as they don't hurt him, the Reds might as well find out for sure.
Read More: Bronson Arroyo (P - CIN), Homer Bailey (P - CIN), Cincinnati Reds
Follow @sbnbaseball on Twitter, and Like Baseball Nation on Facebook.
0 comments
National Baseball Editor
Rob Neyer began his career with legendary baseball author Bill James, and later worked for STATS, Inc. and ESPN.com, writing more words for that website than anyone else. Rob has written or... Read full bio
SB Nation Profile
@robneyer
Subscribe to Rob Neyer
Miguel Montero, Diamondbacks Reportedly Agree To 5-Year Extension
Rockies Place Ramon Hernandez On DL With Hand Problem
Juan Carlos Oviedo Will Arrive In USA Monday, Report To Marlins Camp
Orioles DFA Bill Hall, Make Other Roster Moves
Pirates DFA One-Season Wonder Nate McLouth
Pablo Sandoval Swinging, Fielding
Yankees Sign John Maine To Minor-League Deal
Lance Berkman Injury: Out 8-10 Weeks After Knee Surgery
Orioles, Adam Jones Reportedly Agree To Extension +1
Ryan Howard Still Taking Batting Practice
More News »





