The Z Files: Playing Time Trends Part Two

The Z Files: Playing Time Trends Part Two

This article is part of our The Z Files series.

Last week, I discussed some playing time trends, for those inclined to adjust expectation to their own tastes. There was an abundance of numbers with a dearth of names. As a follow-up, the players enjoying a playing time bump during the span of the study will be revealed, in an effort to identify commonality to help peg this season's beneficiaries.

By means of reminder, the hitters' pool was grouped into tiers by number of plate appearances, looking at how many of each level garnered more playing time. Data from the previous six seasons was employed, generating five years' worth of batters. Age is as of June 1 of the later season.

2016-2017

Player 650-plus PA 2017 2016 increase AGE POS Player 601-650 PA 2017 2016 increase AGE POS
Francisco Lindor7236845.7%23SSCharlie Blackmon72564113.1%30OF
Christian Yelich6956595.5%25OFMarcell Ozuna67960811.7%26OF
Joey Votto7076774.4%331BBrett Gardner6826347.6%33OF
Anthony Rizzo6916762.2%271BDJ LeMahieu6826357.4%282B
Brian Dozier7056912.0%302BKhris Davis6526106.9%29OF
Eric Hosmer6716670.6%271BAdam Duvall6476086.4%28OF
      Freddy Galvis6636246.3%27SS
      Jose Ramirez6456184.4%242B/3B
      Jonathan Schoop6756474.3%
Last week, I discussed some playing time trends, for those inclined to adjust expectation to their own tastes. There was an abundance of numbers with a dearth of names. As a follow-up, the players enjoying a playing time bump during the span of the study will be revealed, in an effort to identify commonality to help peg this season's beneficiaries.

By means of reminder, the hitters' pool was grouped into tiers by number of plate appearances, looking at how many of each level garnered more playing time. Data from the previous six seasons was employed, generating five years' worth of batters. Age is as of June 1 of the later season.

2016-2017

Player 650-plus PA 2017 2016 increase AGE POS Player 601-650 PA 2017 2016 increase AGE POS
Francisco Lindor7236845.7%23SSCharlie Blackmon72564113.1%30OF
Christian Yelich6956595.5%25OFMarcell Ozuna67960811.7%26OF
Joey Votto7076774.4%331BBrett Gardner6826347.6%33OF
Anthony Rizzo6916762.2%271BDJ LeMahieu6826357.4%282B
Brian Dozier7056912.0%302BKhris Davis6526106.9%29OF
Eric Hosmer6716670.6%271BAdam Duvall6476086.4%28OF
      Freddy Galvis6636246.3%27SS
      Jose Ramirez6456184.4%242B/3B
      Jonathan Schoop6756474.3%252B
      Melky Cabrera6666463.1%32OF
      Rougned Odor6516323.0%232B

While the sample's too small to draw conclusions, we can look at some trends then see if they hold true in the other seasons. There are seven middle infielders, seven outfielders and three corners. Ramirez was included with the second basemen, leaving third and catcher the only spots not represented.

With respect to age, there were seven players between 23 and 26, seven between 27 and 30 and only three older than 30. Let's see if things remain evenly distributed through the players' twenties before falling off for the 30-somethings.

2015-2016

Player 601-650 PA 2016 2015 increase AGE POS Player 601-650 PA 2016 2015 increase AGE POS
Mookie Betts73065411.6%23OFEdwin Encarnacion70262412.5%331B
Xander Bogaerts7196549.9%23SSJason Kipnis6886417.3%292B
Kris Bryant6996507.5%243BIan Desmond6776415.6%30SS/OF
Robinson Cano7156746.1%332BCarlos Gonzalez6326083.9%30OF
Nolan Arenado6966654.7%253BMatt Kemp6726483.7%31OF
Jose Altuve7176894.1%262BFreddy Galvis6246033.5%26SS
Jose Abreu6956684.0%291BAdrian Beltre6406193.4%373B
Carlos Santana6886663.3%301BMarcus Semien6216013.3%25SS
Alcides Escobar6826623.0%29SSDJ LeMahieu6356202.4%272B
Adam Eaton7066892.5%27OFDavid Ortiz6266142.0%40DH
Evan Longoria6856702.2%303BJustin Upton6266201.0%28OF
Nelson Cruz6676551.8%35OF/DH      
Paul Goldschmidt7056951.4%281B      
Ian Kinsler6796750.6%342B      

The positional breakdown has a lean towards the infield, with 10 middlemen and eight corners represented. There's six outfielders, plus Big Papi checking in as well.

Age-wise, the 27-30 group stepped it up with 11 while the 23-26 and 30-plus each had seven. It's too soon to call, but I want to keep an eye on the positions of the post-30 players. It looks like the trend could be power-hitting outfield and first basemen.

Galvis and LeMahieu are repeat inclusions. The actual players aren't relevant, but the fact that a second straight increase would rarely be projected is noteworthy.

2014-2015

Player 601-650 PA 2015 2014 increase AGE POS Player 601-650 PA 2015 2014 increase AGE POS
Kyle Seager6866544.9%273BAnthony Rizzo70161613.8%251B
Curtis Granderson6826544.3%33OFMelky Cabrera68362110.0%30OF
Todd Frazier6786602.7%293BJose Abreu6686227.4%281B
Josh Donaldson7116952.3%293BAlcides Escobar6626206.8%28SS
Robinson Cano6746651.4%322BAndrew McCutchen6856485.7%28OF
Carlos Santana6666600.9%291BCharlie Blackmon6826485.2%28OF
Dee Gordon6536500.5%272BYoenis Cespedes6766454.8%29OF
      Brett Gardner6566363.1%31OF
      Buster Posey6236053.0%28C
      David Ortiz6146022.0%39DH
      Jhonny Peralta6406281.9%33SS
      Ben Revere6346261.3%27OF
      Adrian Beltre6196140.8%363B

The 27-30 group again predominates with 12, perhaps providing the initial actionable item. However, there's still two precincts to be counted. The veterans matched the youngsters with four each.

Hey look, a catcher makes an appearance, with Posey doing the honors. Ortiz makes the cut again, leaving seven cornermen, four up the middle and seven fly-chasers. Other than catchers rarely seeing their playing time increase, it's beginning to look like there's no favorable position. That's useful information, nonetheless.

Aside from the now-retired designated hitter, Cano, Abreu, Santana, Escobar and Beltre all made the previous list while Rizzo, Blackmon, Gardner and Cabrera populated the initial group. I'm not sure what to make of this yet, other than it's possible to increase multiple times over a short stretch.

2013-2014

Player 601-650 PA 2014 2013 increase AGE POS Player 601-650 PA 2014 2013 increase AGE POS
Jose Altuve7076725.2%242BIan Kinsler72661418.2%322B
Miguel Cabrera6856525.1%311BBrian Dozier70762313.5%272B
Josh Donaldson6956684.0%283BFreddie Freeman70862912.6%241B
Hunter Pence7086873.1%31OFMatt Holliday66760210.8%34OF
Nick Markakis7107001.4%30OFMichael Brantley67661110.6%27OF
Evan Longoria7006931.0%283BTodd Frazier66060010.0%283B
Denard Span6686620.9%30OFAustin Jackson6566146.8%27OF
      Brett Gardner6366094.4%30OF
      Adrian Gonzalez6606413.0%321B
      Carlos Santana6606422.8%281B
      David Ortiz6026000.3%38DH

The 27-30 group has lengthened its lead, dropping 10 in this set, followed by six for the 30-plus clan, leaving just a pair for the 23-26 crowd. The combined totals for each will be provided at the end, but its certainly looking like players entering their age-27 through age-30 seasons are in the sweet spot for a playing time bump.

Middle Infielders only had three representatives with corners and outfielders both sporting seven, plus Ortiz. Based on Big Papi's durability as evidenced by this study, being bullish on Nelson Cruz is justified.

Other than backstops continuing to be conspicuous by their absence, there doesn't appear to be any trends, expect perhaps outfielder having a better chance once past the 30-year mark. With respect to catchers, keep in mind those receiving at least 600 plate appearances is a tiny subset, so there aren't many even eligible for the investigation.

Five batters also showed up the previous set, including Ortiz, Gardner, Frazier, Donaldson and Santana. Four others, Altuve, Longoria, Kinsler and Dozier were on an earlier list.

2012-2013

Player 601-650 PA 2013 2012 increase AGE POS Player 601-650 PA 2013 2012 increase AGE POS
Kyle Seager6956516.8%253BDustin Pedroia72462316.2%292B
Adrian Beltre6906545.5%343BDaniel Murphy69761213.9%282B
Ben Zobrist6986684.5%32IF/OFMike Trout71663912.1%21OF
Shin-Soo Choo7126863.8%30OFJay Bruce69763310.1%26OF
Prince Fielder7126903.2%291BAlexei Ramirez6746218.5%31SS
Starlin Castro7056912.0%232BBrandon Phillips6666236.9%322B
Andrew McCutchen6746730.1%26OFJose Altuve6726306.7%232B
      Carlos Santana6426095.4%271B
      Alex Rios6626403.4%32OF
      Zack Cozart6186003.0%27SS
      Justin Upton6436282.4%25OF
      Alfonso Soriano6266151.8%37OF
      Nick Swisher6346241.6%32OF
      Freddie Freeman6296201.5%231B
      Michael Brantley6116090.3%26OF

None other than Mike Trout is the only batter younger than 23 to crack the list, though this was his only appearance. It's not important for this season as he's coming off an injury, but it's interesting to note he hasn't garnered more plate appearances one year to the next since 2013. That can primarily be attributed to the Angels offense losing potency the last couple of seasons. They've added some pieces, so the lineup should turn over more times this season, hammering home the reliance on a strong offense for maximum plate appearances.

With Trout leading the way, the 21-26 band outnumbered the 27-30 bunch, nine to six. Seven tricenarians round out the last set of data.

Five corners, seven middles, nine outfielders and a Swiss Army knife complete the positional outlook. It's apparent catchers warrant their own study lowering the plate-appearance threshold.

Four hitters are repeaters from the last set, with Altuve and Santana making it for the second time. Freeman and Brantley are the first-timers. Four more popped up already: Seager, Beltre, McCutchen and Upton.

Let's look at everything together.

Age Range Players
23 to 2629
27 to 3046
31 plus27

Fantasy baseball is a game of probabilities. No one will get everything right, but those being correct more often than not usually have success over the long haul. Here, 46 of the 102 players included in the study fell between 27 and 30 years old. When doing your playing time, be the most aggressive with this group. This doesn't mean you can't show optimism elsewhere, but the percentage play is to focus on this level.

Position Players
Catcher1
Middle31
Corner30
Outfield36
Utility1
Designated hitter3

Keep in mind there are four infield positions (two middle, two corner) with three in the outfield. As such, more infielders enjoyed a bump in playing time than outfielders. The reason may also have to do with managers deploying more platoons in the outfield than at other positions.

Speaking of the outfield, here's the number by position filling out the 31 years and older ranks.

Position Players
Catcher0
Middle6
Corner6
Outfield11
Utility1
Designated hitter3

Again, playing the percentages, veteran outfielders are where to hang your aggressive playing time hat.

Here's the most surprising observation, at least to me. There are 52 repeat appearances among the 102 cases. That's fascinating. More than half of the batters seeing a playing time bump did so within the previous five seasons as well. Not only that, among the 52, there's only 23 unique names. Santana lead the way with four, followed by Beltre, Gardner, Ortiz and Gardner with three each. Of course, to threepeat, you need to start lower in the range, but still, it's impressive.

Earlier, it was mentioned catchers deserve their own treatment. Perusing the data, be aggressive with the bell cows, but understand only Posey (three times), Salvador Perez and Jonathan Lucroy eclipsed the 600-plate appearance plateau. Only Posey has surpassed 500 each of the past five seasons, though to be fair, Perez missed it by one in 2017. Yadier Molina has broken the 500 barrier four times in the past five campaigns.

This is most apropos for Gary Sanchez. Some are extremely optimistic, expecting him to join the 600 club. He may, but that's too rich for my blood. That said, tempering expectation in the mid-500s still ranks him as a top-30 player overall.

The beauty of studies like this is everyone can interpret the data how they desire. I'm still projecting playing time on a player-by-player basis, but at the end, I see if it passes the sniff test with regards to adhering to the trends elucidated from this five-year study.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Todd Zola
Todd has been writing about fantasy baseball since 1997. He won NL Tout Wars and Mixed LABR in 2016 as well as a multi-time league winner in the National Fantasy Baseball Championship. Todd is now setting his sights even higher: The Rotowire Staff League. Lord Zola, as he's known in the industry, won the 2013 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Article of the Year award and was named the 2017 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year. Todd is a five-time FSWA awards finalist.
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