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AngelsWin.com Today: The tragic downfall of Albert Pujols


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By @Angels_Baseball, AngelsWin.com Staff Reporter

Albert Pujols is 5 home runs away from reaching the prestigious 600 home run mark, a number only 8 other players in MLB history have reached. His 3,000th hit is in sight to be reached possibly next season. It should be a time for celebration for Albert Pujols and the illustrious Hall of Fame numbers he’s accumulated. Yet, there is still a huge feeling of dissatisfaction among the Angels fan base and, presumably, the Angels organization. The feeling of wanting just a bit more from “The Machine” has been in existence since the very first month Albert Pujols played in an Angels uniform and it’s still present today.

On December 8th, 2011, the Angels shocked the baseball world when they signed Albert Pujols to a 10 year 240 million dollar deal. At the time, Pujols was arguably one of the most valuable players in all of baseball and was on a surefire Hall of Fame path. The Angels knew the deal would likely not end very well on the backend years but the rationale behind it was to get a ton of production up front, plus a World Series title or 2, and deal with not so great production on the back end. As you may know by now, the Angels received neither great production up front nor any World Series titles.

The first 5 years of the Pujols deal paid him 100 million dollars. On the open market, free agents are generally paid 8 million dollar per 1 Win Above Replacement(WAR). If you include inflation that has occurred since 2011, Pujols should’ve roughly been paid 7-8 million dollars per 1 WAR. Pujols, through his 1st 5 years as an Angel, racked up 9.8 WAR, which comes out to a rough estimate of 68.6-78.4 million dollars that he should have earned. In the years that were supposed to be the most productive years of the deal, Pujols fell short, by a wide margin, mainly due to declining plate discipline, athletic ability and constant injuries. If the original deal had been a 5/100 deal, the bad press that Pujols has received likely wouldn’t have occurred. The issue is he is owed a whopping 140 million dollars for the next 5 seasons, which doesn’t include incentives Pujols may make, including 3 million dollars for his 3,000th hit. Entering the 6th year of the deal, expectations were moderate for Pujols, with the simply hope that he could avoid declining even more.

The signs so far in 2017 are not pretty, as the 37 year old is really struggling out of the gate. After undergoing another offseason surgery on his foot, Pujols came into Spring Training a tad rusty, just like in 2016 and the seasons before, and he has started slow as a result. While the previous seasons saw a slow start due to a little bit of bad luck, this year doesn’t just look like bad luck. Through 138 plate appearances, the numbers are down across the board in every possible way. Here are his career numbers lined up next to his 2017 numbers, all of which would represent career worst marks.

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Pujols is striking out more than ever while walking less. He’s pulling the ball more than ever but not in the way you’d want him to: he’s hitting a bunch of ground balls into the shift. He’s making less hard contact, hitting the ball on the ground more than ever and he’s hitting more infield fly balls. A look into his Statcast numbers line up exactly with his statistics he has posted so far. Albert Pujols has a 87.3 mph average exit velocity this year, compared to 92.5 mph in 2016 . He has only barreled up 4.9% of his batted balls in 2017(balls expected to have .500+ batting average and 1.500+ slugging percentage) compared to his 9.5% mark in 2016.

Sure, he’s driving in runs, as evidenced by his 24 RBIs, which rank 19th in baseball, but it’s a byproduct of hitting behind the best player in baseball. Many fans and writers have claimed that Pujols is a “clutch hitter”, which is an argument that just isn’t factually correct and is an argument that has had plenty of research done on it. Many hitters hit better with runners in scoring position due to the fact that plenty of pitchers struggle to pitch out of the stretch compared to the windup so Pujols isn’t some special case. Pujols has been better with runners in scoring position(208 wRC+) compared to no runners on(16 wRC+) this year in a small sample. He was also better with runners on base last season. However, he was worse with runners on by a wide margin in 2015 and 2014. He was better with runners on in an injury shortened 2013 year and was just about equal in 2012, his 1st year with the Angels. Since he became an Angel, Pujols has a 112 wRC+ with no runners on compared to a 121 wRC+ with runners in scoring position. That’s a bit better but again, most hitters do a bit better with runners on. Pujols has driven in runs because Mike Trout is consistently on base in front of him.

There’s also a theory floating around that Albert Pujols changes his approach with runners on base, essentially trying to put the ball in play, drive the ball away from the shift and just drive guys in. Pujols does have a significantly higher BB/K ratio with runners on(1.36) compared to the bases empty(0.42). Part of that is due to teams deciding to not pitch to Pujols and just loading the bases to face whoever is hitting behind him. Pujols does deserve some credit for that but those 52 intentional walks he’s received since 2012 have bloated his walk rate without him changing too much, which isn’t helping support the changed approach theory. Nothing changes with the way Pujols tries to hit the ball, however. With the bases empty since 2012, Pujols has a 43.2% ground ball rate, 38.6% fly ball rate, 49.4% pull rate and 17.4% opposite field rate. With runners on, Pujols has a 44.7% ground ball rate, 37.3% fly ball rate, 49.4% pull rate and 17.7% opposite field rate. So there is something to the idea that Pujols is better at putting the ball in play and has a more selective eye with runners on but he’s doing nothing differently with the way he’s hitting the baseball and the overall results don’t really portray a better Albert Pujols with runners on.

Albert Pujols may be a shell of his former self but he does deserve credit for a number of achievements. Since he became an Angel, Pujols has posted a 118 wRC+ and 9.7 WAR, hardly disastrous numbers, just numbers that fall well short of the expectations you receive from signing a mega contract. Pujols has played through a number of injuries throughout this process, which is better than the Angels simply paying him to be on and off the disabled list and provide nothing for the team. He’s also still one of the most respected players in baseball, providing a clubhouse presence for many Angels players and has apparently been a huge help for Mike Trout since he arrived in his rookie year, which was coincidentally in 2012. The reality is Albert Pujols has performed at a level that would earn him half of the contract he signed but he hasn’t been a complete zero with the Angels.

Unfortunately, Albert Pujols will be getting a raise each year until his contract ends in the year 2021. Barring Pujols retiring before the contract is up, something that probably shouldn’t be counted on, there are some potentially ugly years coming up in this deal. At 37 years old, Father Time is starting to really creep in and sap Albert Pujols of any baseball skills he might have remaining. The hope for the Angels is that Pujols is just starting slow and he can still be a 110-115 wRC+ bat just for a few more years but the early signs point to a potentially league average or worse bat going forward. It has been a remarkable career for Albert Pujols but the days of the elite level MVP performer, even above average player, may be gone.

 


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Part of the problem is his exaggerated stance, which after 16+ MLB seasons has to have worn his knees down.

This is where Arte, if reports are true, needed to stay out of it and understand that Albert was going to decline and quickly because of the wear and tear on his knees.

That plus supposedly pushing for Hackilton is why I am hopeful that Arte stays out of scouting players from now on, and so happy that Eppler replaced Dipeuterted.    

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Good article, Brent. 

That said, he is what he is. We just need to accept it and hope one of two things happen. It's the best we're going to get quite frankly. 

1. He hits 30+ HR and 100 RBI a year until his contract is over, albeit with a .250 BA/.320 OBP

2. He opts out of his contract and frees up some payroll for the Angels. Then assumes his front office job (which I hope he does).

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This contract was paid in hopes of the first 5 years of it he would bring a championship...that's hasn't happened and now the last 5 will be nothing but a burden on the organization. At best hes going to be a .250 hitter with 20 hrs from here on out. Obviously that is not worth 30 mill a season.

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4 minutes ago, Troll Daddy said:
You lost me at 'tragic' ... didn't waste my time reading 
 
 

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You cannot separate the two words unless you're a moron.

If you don't believe there's been a tragic downfall to Pujols career numbers & production since he's been here you're delusional or maybe you have reading comprehension issues and couldn't get past the 4th word in the thread title. 

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If I were Albert I'd retire after the 600th home run and preserve that .300 lifetime average.  He has 2858 hits and i think his average will dip below .300 before he gets 142 more hits to reach 3,000. There's no way he can get to 700 homers.  He can't be enjoying the role as a full-time DH that plays hurt all the time.  He's independently wealthy.

 

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If Troll Daddy disagrees with me, then I know I've done my job.

This wasn't done to just bash Pujols because that's been done plenty of times. It was moreso to show the really ugly trends he's showing this year(drop in contact% and exit velocity) and to dispel the myth that he's a "clutch hitter". I hope I'm wrong and Pujols goes on a tear but I'm very concerned about this sudden drop off across the board. 

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If he continues to decline at this rate, lets just hope he has enough pride and integrity to retire early.  If he reaches those milestones (600 home runs and 3,000 hits) soon, maybe the incentive to continue will diminish and he'll realize he's just tarnishing his reputation if continues to play.  Call me naive, but I believe he will retire early.

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3 minutes ago, IEAngelsfan said:

If he continues to decline at this rate, lets just hope he has enough pride and integrity to retire early.  If he reaches those milestones (600 home runs and 3,000 hits) soon, maybe the incentive to continue will diminish and he'll realize he's just tarnishing his reputation if continues to play.  Call me naive, but I believe he will retire early.

I'm inclined to believe he'll retire early too.  I think Albert is a class guy and doesn't want to be a detriment to his team.  I don't think he's physically capable of completing his contract, quite frankly.

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57 minutes ago, Chuckster70 said:

You cannot separate the two words unless you're a moron.

If you don't believe there's been a tragic downfall to Pujols career numbers & production since he's been here you're delusional or maybe you have reading comprehension issues and couldn't get past the 4th word in the thread title. 

Or you know, he is a troll

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22 minutes ago, Angels_Baseball said:

If Troll Daddy disagrees with me, then I know I've done my job.

This wasn't done to just bash Pujols because that's been done plenty of times. It was moreso to show the really ugly trends he's showing this year(drop in contact% and exit velocity) and to dispel the myth that he's a "clutch hitter". I hope I'm wrong and Pujols goes on a tear but I'm very concerned about this sudden drop off across the board. 

You did a good job!

If you look up the definition of tragic ... it was a bad word choice imo. You're not writing for the NATIONAL ENQUIRER. 

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33 minutes ago, California Cajun said:

If I were Albert I'd retire after the 600th home run and preserve that .300 lifetime average.  He has 2858 hits and i think his average will dip below .300 before he gets 142 more hits to reach 3,000. There's no way he can get to 700 homers.  He can't be enjoying the role as a full-time DH that plays hurt all the time.  He's independently wealthy.

 

 

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From a sickly voyeuristic perspective, it will be interesting to see how bad Albert gets before A} he is reduced to part-time duty, and B} he retires. I imagine that the OPS would have to consistently drop below .700 for at least a year or more for A to happen. If he finishes this year around .230/.290/.400, with 20-25 HR, then continues hitting like that or worse next year, he'll probably lose his job sometime in 2018, especially if the Angels are contending and Matt Thaiss is ready. Even then, it is really hard to see the Angels telling him to sit...he might be phased out slowly.

For B, it depends upon how Albert weighs his pride vs. tens of millions of dollars. He might also be happy sitting on the bench as a player-manager for a few years, making $25 million to bat a couple hundred times. Of course he'd kind of be the laughing stock of the major leagues at that point and lose a lot of respect.

My guess is we see something like this:

2017: 140 games, .250/.300/.440, 25 HR

2018: 130 games, .240/.290/.420, 20 HR

2019: 110 games, .230/.700, 15 HR

2020: 90 games, .220/.650, 10 HR

2021: Retired a year early to save face and go out a hero ("I just want to do what is best for the franchise, and clearly I'm not playing my best.") Finishes with 661 HR, just passing Mays. To lazy to crunch the numbers, but maybe something like .301/.377/.558, 3300 hits, 2100+ RBI, 1900 Runs, etc.

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17 minutes ago, Angelsjunky said:

 

2021: Retired a year early to save face and go out a hero ("I just want to do what is best for the franchise, and clearly I'm not playing my best.") Finishes with 661 HR, just passing Mays. To lazy to crunch the numbers, but maybe something like .301/.377/.558, 3300 hits, 2100+ RBI, 1900 Runs, etc.

No way he leaves $27M on the table. He'll ride the pine or spend a long stint on the DL with vaginal fasciitis before he walks away from that kind of money. After being mad at God and all he's not going to do that. 

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2 minutes ago, CALZONE said:

No way he leaves $27M on the table. He'll ride the pine or spend a long stint on the DL with vaginal fasciitis before he walks away from that kind of money. After being mad at God and all he's not going to do that. 

Being mad at God?

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