By now everyone knows the
story with Brian Barton. A Rule 5 draft pick,
Barton must remain on the Cardinals’ 25-man
Major League roster for the entire 2008 season, be
returned to the Cleveland Indians (from whom he
was plucked) for $25k, or the Cards have to work
out a “trade” with the Indians to keep
him and send him to the minor leagues. Given
Barton’s relative progress with the Cards,
they’re more likely to accept option two
rather than work on option three.
So what of Barton then? What is his future with the
Cardinals?
He started the season off well, being very successful
in mostly a pinch hitting role for the first month of
the season, going .333/.409/.462 in March/April. Since
then he has tailed off significantly and steadily. That
being said, his numbers split between games he starts
and those he pinch-hits in are wildly different. Barton
is hitting .290/.333/.419 as a pinch hitter. Compare
that to only .227/.337/.307 in games he starts. Is he
another Lenny Harris? A guy who can’t get it done
on a regular basis, but for his one at-bat per game, he
can put a charge into a line drive? He’s
certainly the picture-perfect example of a
pinch-hitter, going in there and swinging at 43% of
first pitches that he sees in his plate appearances.
All of that brings me around to my point. Barton has
had a horrendous June thus far, and has only appeared
for four pinch-hit at-bats since June 8th. No starts
since then, and no extended substitute appearances.
Granted, he plays for Tony LaRussa, so the string of
right-handed pitchers has surely played a role in
Barton’s disappearance from the outfield
rotation.
But that doesn’t tell the whole story either. The
Cardinals have essentially employed a roster with only
four outfielders since Joe Mather was sent down on June
14th, because Chris Duncan is taking all of the starts
at first base, in Albert Pujols’ absence. Despite
the narrowed outfield roster, the Cards have trotted
out the same outfield of Skip Schumaker, Rick Ankiel,
and Ryan Ludwick every game since June 10th. I’m
not saying that’s necessarily a bad outfield for
the Cards to put in the lineup, it just piques my
interest that Barton can’t get a start in two
weeks of games.
Additionally, the platoon argument doesn’t seem
to hold up in this case as, like Ludwick, Barton has
hit right-handed pitching better than lefties on the
season.
Ultimately, Barton seems to still have upside.
He’s still learning to hit Major League pitching,
after all, he didn’t have an MLB at-bat to his
credit prior to this season. He seems to be a plus
defender in left field, posting above-league-average
range factor and a .964 RZR (which is pretty
ridiculously high, when you consider that
Ankiel’s .947 RZR rating leads the National
League among all qualified fielders).
But are the Cardinals willing to let him hold down a
roster slot for this entire season just to hang onto
him? Would they then option him back down next season
to try and further his development?
Rumors swirling before the Rule 5 draft had San Diego
trading up to take Barton, which obviously never
happened. But would the Pads still be interested in him
now, given that he would still have to remain on their
25-man roster to avoid return to the Indians? Do the
Padres have anyone that would interest the Cards who
merits giving up on Barton’s potential at this
stage? Tadahito Iguchi comes to mind, but I tend to
think Barton’s upside outweighs any possible
upgrade Iguchi may or may not represent over the
current 2B situation in St Louis.
Could the Cardinals turn Barton into a solid
left-handed bullpen option, say from the Pirates (John
Grabow or Damaso Marte or the Rockies (Brian Fuentes)?
It would seem that Barton’s recent relative
absence from action would indicate the Cards are
starting to lose their sweet tooth for the guy, where
some of these other teams who are not in the race and
can gamble on upside might be interested. Moving Barton
now would make room for Mather to get a true test in
the bigs, as well as Nick Stavinoha who is setting the
world alight with his bat down in Memphis, and the
other name just around the corner, Colby Rasmus.
Not to mention the unenviable task of trying to decide
what to do with Duncan once El Hombre returns (get well
soon Albert!)…
(pitchershiteigth.com)