He might not be Cliff Lee, but Jorge De La Rosa has as much value as any other starting pitcher on the free-agent market beside the Rangers left-hander. After being traded from the Royals to the Rockies in 2008, De La Rosa has dominated National League hitters. Here’s how he’s pitched over the last three seasons in Colorado:
YR |
W-L |
SO |
SNWP |
||||||
2008 |
23 (28 G) |
130.0 |
10-8 |
4.92 |
62 |
128 |
2.0 |
.470 |
3.89 |
2009 |
32 (33 G) |
185.0 |
16-9 |
4.38 |
83 |
193 |
3.2 |
.513 |
3.63 |
2010 |
20 |
121.2 |
8-7 |
4.22 |
55 |
113 |
2.1 |
.494 |
3.75 |
De La Rosa only made 20 starts in 2010 because of a torn flexor tendon band in a finger of his pitching hand, which put him on the disabled list for almost two months. In 2009, he was eighth in the NL with 9.39 SO/9 (min. 100 IP), helping the Rockies capture the NL wild card.
Here’s what De la Rosa has thrown during his time in the Mile-High City:
YR |
FB% (MPH) |
SL% (MPH) |
CB% (MPH) |
CH% (MPH) |
2008 |
56.6% (92.8) |
16.1% (84.0) |
9.3% (73.3) |
18.0% (83.5) |
2009 |
59.6% (93.3) |
15.3% (84.8) |
8.1% (75.9) |
17.0% (84.5) |
2010 |
53.5% (93.4) |
15.9% (85.6) |
3.6% (74.6) |
27.0% (84.8) |
Career avg. |
58.7% (92.8) |
12.1% (84.3) |
9.2% (74.5) |
19.9% (83.6) |
The break on De La Rosa’s slider is devastating and his changeup is very deceptive. He’s a strikeout machine but can get wild at times. De La Rosa’s career averages in strikeouts (146) and walks (83) are almost identical to Giants southpaw Jonathan Sanchez‘s career averages (170 SO, 83 BB).
Here are the teams that could both use De la Rosa’s services and fulfill his contractual needs:
Team |
ERA (rank) |
SO9 (rank) |
CHN |
4.18 (21st) |
6.94 (4th) |
HOU |
4.09 (17th) |
7.57 (8th) |
NYN |
3.70 (7th) |
6.85 (19th) |
WAS |
4.13 (19th) |
6.70 (23rd) |
DET |
4.30 (24th) |
6.58 (24th) |
NYA |
4.06 (15th) |
7.20 (15th) |
TEX |
3.93 (9th) |
7.30 (14th) |
If the Rangers fail to re-sign Lee, they’re going to need a replacement. De La Rosa probably wouldn’t be able to fill Lee’s Texas-sized shoes but he might come closer than you think. De La Rosa is no ace, but he’s arguably the second best free agent pitcher on the market.
Let’s hear your opinions on the value of De La Rosa. And how about some guesses on where he might land this offseason?
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Pavano is an obvious non-option. Westbrook doesn't have great AL stuff. JDLR does have AL stuff. To sum it up, the list of who fills those slots by Yankees' preference: Lee, Pettitte, JDLR, Kuroda, Westbrook, everyone else, Pavano.
So if one of those two first options doesn't pan out, JDLR is going to find himself vastly overpaid this off-season.
With the dough the Nats save by not keeping Dunn, I see JDLR as a nice fallback option.
http://www.baseballprospectus.com/card/card.php?id=DELAROSA19810405A
As a Rockies fan, I've seen DLR pitch a bunch, and often times, he still needs to be reminded in-game to focus on doing his job and not blowing his stack. One hopes that this is a lesson he's learned now. But it will be interesting to see how he handles the pressure of a high-dollar, multi-year deal, especially if it's to a big-market team.
I think he has a decent chance to go all Javier Vazquez on a team like the Yankees.