Graph of the Intermittent Time Period
by Bill Baer on May 26th, 2010Posted in Graphs, MLB, Philadelphia Phillies | Print | 3 Comments »
2010 is a stark contrast to previous seasons as the Phillies have dealt with injury after injury. Brad Lidge and J.C. Romero started the season on the disabled list due to off-season flexor tendon surgery; Lidge has since returned due to elbow inflammation. Shortstop Jimmy Rollins hasn’t been able to keep his calf in working order, first with a grade-two strain, more recently with a grade-one. Joe Blanton started the year on the shelf as well with a left oblique strain, and J.A. Happ soon joined him with a left forearm strain. Ryan Madson got angry and kicked a folding chair, breaking his right big toe. And bench players Brian Schneider and Juan Castro dealt with strains of their own of the left Achilles and the left hamstring respectively. (Carlos Ruiz is also hurting.)
It’s been a struggle for sure, but the Phillies still find themselves three games ahead in the tightly-bunched NL East, eight games above .500. Charlie Manuel came into the season expecting to use a lineup of Rollins-Polanco-Utley-Howard-Werth-Ibanez-Victorino-Catcher-Pitcher but has only used that order once after April 12. Even worse, Manuel’s top-two options for the closer’s role have gone down in Lidge and Madson, forcing Jose Contreras to step up — something he has handled with great aplomb.
Just how badly have the Phillies been bitten by the injury bug?
| Player | Absent | Injury | $/Gm | $ to Date | Injury Cost |
| Brad Lidge | 35 | R Flexor Tendon Surgery / R Elbow Inflammation | $74,074 | $3.33M | $2.59M |
| Jimmy Rollins | 32 | R Calf Strain (Grade II, Grade I) | $52,469 | $2.36M | $1.68M |
| Ryan Madson | 24 | R Toe Fracture | $29,835 | $1.34M | $0.72M |
| Joe Blanton | 24 | L Oblique Strain | $18,519 | $0.83M | $0.44M |
| J.C. Romero | 16 | L Flexor Tendon Surgery | $26,235 | $1.18M | $0.42M |
| J.A. Happ | 34 | L Forearm Strain | $2,901 | $0.13M | $0.10M |
| Brian Schneider | 13 | L Achilles Strain | $6,944 | $0.31M | $0.09M |
| Juan Castro | 9 | L Hamstring Strain | $4,321 | $0.19M | $0.04M |
| TOTAL | 187 | $9.69M | $6.08M |
(Click the graph to view a larger version)
The blue bars indicate the amount of money each player would have earned if he had “contributed” in each of the team’s first 45 games. The red bars indicate the amount of money each player has collected while sitting on the disabled list (games missed times game salary).
Overall, the eight players on the list are collectively owed $9.69 million through 45 games but have only been healthy enough to earn $3.61 million of it (37%). The 28 players who have been on the 25-man roster have earned $39.43 million through 45 games; the $6.08 million represents more than 15% of that.
Last year, the New York Mets lost nearly $55 million to injuries, representing about 37% of their total payroll for the season. The 2008 Mets weren’t too fortunate, either — they lost more than $27 million, about 20% of their payroll. (Via Jeff Zimmerman, Beyond the Box Score)




3 Responses to “Graph of the Intermittent Time Period”
By Steve-O- on May 27, 2010
Going down the list of starters that have been or are on the DL is scary to say the least. In fact looking at the names it is kind of amazing the Phillies still lead the NL east. I am optimistic in thinking the future will be much brighter once Lidge, Happ and Rollins are healthy and we are not faced with depending on Castro, Baez and Kendrick etc to contribute to winning baseball.
By Shooter-B on May 27, 2010
Graph also known as “The Beltran Bar”. Unfortunate for the Phils, but the good news is that with that much time spent on the DL…Lidge should eventually find the Hot Tub Time Machine.
By MetsFan on May 28, 2010
Hilarious to hear the Phillies complaining about injuries. You should be happy Rollins is injured, he’s the most overrated player in baseball anyway.
Carreer statline: .275/.330/.440
League average: .266/.340/.452