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An Oblique Outlook for Berkman
Monday February 25th 2008, 11:15 pm
Filed under: Majors, Strategy

Big PumaThere are many things we do on an annual basis, including celebrate birthdays or anniversaries, travel, and renew our license plate tabs to name a few. In the case of Astros first baseman/outfielder Lance Berkman, you can add injure your oblique muscle to that list.

Berkman has actually injured his oblique in each of the last five spring training camps, but it sounds like the recent tweak may be bad. “This is the worst I’ve ever done it,” Berkman told MLB.com. “But, we still have six weeks until the season starts.”

The injury occurred during a full-squad workout last week and while he’s been able to swing a bat right handed, he added that he doesn’t expect to swing left-handed for a few more days. His manager Cecil Cooper didn’t necessarily agree with Berkman’s take however. “It might even be longer as far as I’m concerned,” Cooper told MLB.com. “That’s what I’m thinking. I’m not even thinking about three or four days. This is Lance Berkman. This is the Big Puma. And we have to make sure that the Big Puma is fine.”

Big Puma? I suppose that is less corny than something like “Lance-a-lot,” but you really should try harder to earn that endorsement from Puma. In all seriousness, it seems premature to adjust your first base rankings until we see Berkman out of game action for a week or two. He does have plenty of time to heal before games start to count, and at this point it seems safe to hedge our bets given the fact it hasn’t had a major impact on him the last four times he suffered through the malady.


4 Comments so far
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Good Lord. Maybe try getting off the couch once or twice during the offseason, Lance. Some yoga, a few toe-touches, anything to stretch out a little bit.

Question: You have Berkman ranked behind Adrian Gonzalez… do you dislike Lance or just like Gonzo that much? Most sites have Gonzo more in the 10-ish range, so I’m guessing more the latter than the former.

Comment by CP 02.26.08 @ 1:04 pm

CP- Thanks for the question and I agree, I few pull ups or a couple minutes on the elliptical may do Berkman some good.

I still believe that Berkman is a strong option at first base and like past years, will probably be healthy to start the 2008 regular season. That said, I believe that 2007 provides the first evidence that his batting average is probably on the decline. A slide in his BB/9IP, contact rate, and batting eye are reasons enough to believe that this may be a trend.

I think it’s fair to say I’m extremely high on Gonzalez. In much the same way I think Gonzalez will be hard pressed to surpass the .300 mark, but I believe his power is trending north while I feel Berkman’s numbers may have plateaued.

Interestingly enough, in leagues that use 10 game eligiblity, Rockies third baseman Garrett Atkins also qualifies at first and while I believe he’s more valuable at the hot corner, mentioning him in the same tier as Berkman and Gonzalez isn’t a stretch by any means. Keep an eye on him this spring to see if he is able to build upon an incredible second half of the 07 season in which he hit .349 with 12 homers, 40 runs, 58 RBI, and a .941 OPS.

Comment by cbracke 02.26.08 @ 9:10 pm

Berkman also had a pretty big second half after an awful first a year ago, but I agree that the players are probably trending in the opposite direction. My only fear in bumping Berkman behind Gonzo is the HR-limiting effect of PETCO. I’m not sure Gonzo can hit too many more than 30 homers, while Berkman has demonstrated that ability time and again.

Atkins is certainly more interesting as a 3B. I think people soured on him early last year and might not realize how good his second half was after seeing that his total numbers decreased across the board from 2006. Hence, he’s probably ranked lower right now than he was a year ago at this time (the presence of Ryan Braun - who was barely on the radar last February - also pushes Atkins down a notch) and if he hits like he did in the second half he’ll be a good value on draft day.

Comment by CP 02.27.08 @ 7:22 pm

I couldn’t agree more. People aren’t giving Atkins enough credit.

Now back to Berkman. Over the last five seasons, he’s hit 35 homers or more just once. While his overall numbers in most of those seasons were obviously very solid, it suggests that the gap between him and Adrian isn’t pronounced. If you are able to spend the earlier pick that you would’ve spent on Berkman on another valuable bat at a position with less depth, you could pick up Gonzo at least two (if not more) rounds later.

Comment by cbracke 02.27.08 @ 7:41 pm



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