There are many valid philosophies for picking an All-Star team. I’m picking the most valuable performances by position players from the first half of 2008, because that seems to be the most popular approach. Offense matters, defense matters, and playing time matters. Oh, and those other pesky things like park effects and league differences matter, too. This is not the team that has the best chance of winning the game. For that, I’d eschew 2008 numbers in favor of pre-season projections and pick a lot of great hitters to take all the pinch-hit at-bats. Starters are listed first at each position and are notated with an (S). Here’s my AL team.
Catcher
Brian McCann (S) — Honestly, it’s tough to tell these three apart. McCann has the highest OPS+ and isn’t any worse behind the plate so he gets the nod. I’m surprised I’m picking the guy with the lowest OBP, but the power is just crazy.
Geovanni Soto — He loses the tie-breaker to McCann based on home ballpark. It’s just a bit easier to hit in Wrigley.
Russell Martin — Maybe I’m just sour because he’s the new Paul LoDuca in LA — annoyingly overrated. Except that a .396 OBP from a catcher is tough to overrate. A thirty point edge in OBP doesn’t make up for a one hundred point edge in slugging, however.
First Base
Albert Pujols (S) — Surprise! Offensively, he and Berkman are at a dead heat, both with OPS+s in the high 180s. Berkman has the advantage of fifty more plate appearances, which is worth about five runs. But Pujols’ edge in the field is at least that.
Lance Berkman — Was it last year he went a few months with a SLG around .400? Yeah, he’s gotten his power back. Mark Teixeira, Derrek Lee, and Adrian Gonzalez are in the race for the third spot, except with the first two guys there’s no need to play a third guy.
Second Base
Chase Utley (S) — One of the best hitters in the league plays second base and is a sick fielder. Love this guy.
Dan Uggla — One of the best hitters in the league plays second base and actually doesn’t suck in the field this year!
Shortstop
Hanley Ramirez (S) — There are at least five NL shortstops having better years than the best of the AL. The advanced metrics show Hanley to be league-average at short so far in 2008 — if that holds for the second half the Marlins might not lose ground to the Phillies.
Jose Reyes — He’s actually been two steps better offensively than in 2006 even though his slash stats are exactly the same, thanks to a drop in league-wide offense. Yunel Escobar deserves a mention here thanks to his excellent glove and competent bat — the Braves aren’t winning with pitching this year.
Third Base
Chipper Jones (S) — It’s amazing how one bad week shuts everybody up about the .400 thing — like it was ever a realistic possibility.
David Wright — He’s hit better than Aramis Ramirez in a tougher ballpark and played better defense. Is there a better trifecta of position players on one team than Wright, Reyes, and Carlos Beltran?
Outfield
I discussed the outfield a few days ago. The highlights are that Ryan Braun’s .320 OBP puts him about tenth on the list for most valuable NL outfielder, Brian Giles plays mad D and is underrated by PETCO, and Beltran and Ankiel deserve mad props for playing well in center field.
Pat Burrell (S) — Ranks second behind Holliday in OBP and is first in SLG. He’s played league-average defense in right. And hell, he’s even been clutch.
Carlos Beltran (S) — Compared to an average-fielding corner outfielder, Beltran’s almost three wins more valuable defensively over a full season. That makes up for his relative lack of power this year.
Matt Holliday (S) — No, he’s not as good as his raw stats. But you can’t judge his talent based on his road stats, either — everyone hits worse on the road, his road parks don’t include Coors, and there seems to be something to the whole Coors Hangover thing. Oh, and you’ve got to love a slugger who can also play the field.
Brian Giles — Most underrated player in the National League.
Rick Ankiel — I predicted 10-15 homeruns this year. Oops.
Jason Bay — He’s the best of all the corner outfield guys who aren’t defensive assets.
Designated Hitter
Ryan Ludwick (S) — Uh, how does this get picked for the National League? I guess I’m going with the best hitter yet to make the team, which would be Ryan Ludwick.
What do you think? Am I off my rocker?
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Sky is a baseball fan and racket sport afficianado living in upstate NY. His favorite color is orange and is just about ready to give up on his life-long dream to become the next Magnus ver Magnuson (World's Strongest Man). His favorite baseball teams are the Yankees and Red Sox, proving that there's hope in the Middle East.