Monday, October 24, 2011

How valuable is Jose Reyes?

Jose Reyes 2011 stats: BA .337, OBP .384, 3B 16, SB 39

There's no doubt Jose Reyes is an immensely talented shortstop.

At an offensively weak position, Reyes has excelled through his entire career. 

This past season, Jose Reyes made himself a serious MVP candidate by leading the league in hitting with a .337 batting average and scoring 101 runs. He's the first Met is history to hold the batting title.

And this wasn't a fluke year, as Reyes has made himself a premiere leadoff man his entire career. He's scored over 100 runs four times. He's led the league in stolen bases three times. He led the league in hits with 204 in 2008, and has had over 190 hits in four seasons.

His lifetime .973 fielding percentage isn't extraordinary, but it's solid.

So what is Jose Reyes' value?

There's no easy answer on this one.

He is an elite talent at an offensively starved position, the Joe Mauer of shortstops. He's a dominant player who mixes contact and speed better than most. And he's just entering his prime now at 28, still young enough that he could have many more years like this one. 

He was paid $11 million this season, and if we're looking at talent and track record alone, he's easily worth closer to $18 million. At first glance it's hard to see him making the $18 mil Ichiro rakes in, considering Ichiro has a much longer track record of speed/contact success, but considering Reyes' position, it seems more than possible. To get the best in the game at his position, you might have to overpay. 

But he's far from perfect, and has some serious negatives teams need to consider. 

The most obvious is his durability. His past three seasons have been plagued with injuries, playing in only 126 games last season and missing all but 36 back in 2009.

That could be chalked up to him being a Met. The Mets - for whatever reason - have had trouble keeping their players healthy for years. But teams might be wary of giving $18 million and guaranteeing 6 or 7 years to a player who hasn't stayed healthy for three straight seasons. If he breaks down and can't replicate his speed, teams could be stuck with an average player at $18 million for five years.

Another weakness is his lack of plate discipline. Last season was the only time he had more walks than strikeouts, and his career .341 OBP is a cause for concern. A lead off man needs to get on base. So if he loses some speed and can't get as many hits, Reyes can't make up for it with walks. If he doesn't hit, he doesn't get on base. It is said on-base skills don't wear down over time. The same is not true for speed.

So what should he be worth? Prudent teams will gamble the money, but not the years. Reyes first broke down at the age of 26. He has not been able to stay healthy. Reyes will certainly balk at an offer of less than four or five years, no matter how much a team throws at him, not even if it's as ridiculous as $40 million for one year. 

But he might be willing to take 4 years, $100 million instead of 6, $90 million. Teams should be willing to overpay a little if it means less guaranteed years. They can keep him happy with multi-year options and incentive-laden years further down the road.    

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