Player Profile: Paul Maholm

January 1st, 2013 | by Ray Flowers |

'Paul Mahom checks the runner 6/19/2010' photo (c) 2010, Patrick Reddick - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Paul Maholm‘s name likely elicits, let’s see, a yawn? Before you lock that thought into your head as to what your reaction should be when the Braves’ lefties name as mentioned remember this:

Maholm had a better ERA than Homer Bailey, Chris Capuano, Mark Buehrle, Wandy Rodriguez, Jeff Samardzija, Josh Johnson, Adam Wainwright and Ian Kennedy in 2012.

Maholm had a better WHIP than Ryan Vogelsong, A.J. Burnett, Adam Wainwright, Josh Johnson, Ian Kennedy, Yovani Gallardo, Lance Lynn, Tommy Hanson and Tim Lincecum in 2012.

Maholm had more wins than Jordan Zimmerman, Chris Capuano, Roy Halladay, Edinson Volquez, Tim Lincecum, Edwin Jackson, Chad Billingsley and Jeff Samardzija.

Do I have your attention yet?

Paul Maholm isn’t exciting, I will give you that. Even with all of the above data the fact of the matter is that Maholm won 13 games, had a 3.67 ERA an a 1.22 WHIP. Those are certainly solid numbers no doubt, but it’s not like they will lead to a fantasy championship. However, it should be noted that numbers like those, from a reserve round selection or a waiver-wire pick up, are special numbers. Are you better off spending $23 on Johnny Cueto or $3 on Paul Maholm on draft day? Obviously Cueto is a better pitcher and the one you need more to win a championship, but hopefully you see the point – Maholm is the better value add based on his draft day cost. If you can augment an expensive Cueto with a cheap as all get out Maholm, then you’ve got something. In terms of return on investment, Maholm was one of the best bargains in baseball in 2012. Can he be so again in 2013?

On the bump Maholm has been very consistent the past two seasons. In 2012 he had a 3.67 ERA and 1.22 WHIP in 189 innings. In 2011 he had a 3.66 ERA and 1.29 WHIP in 162.1 innings. However, like many of the other hurlers I’ve been reviewing, it’s best to realize what Maholm is – he’s a rotation filler who won’t hurt you. Why do I say that? For some reason he can’t seem to consistently win games. Maholm owns a 66-84 career record, and even the past two years when he has pitched so well he’s gone 19-25. Wins-loses are of course a bad way to judge pitchers performances, I’m the first to admit that, but in the fantasy game they are one of the four categories that matter to starting hurlers. I should also point out that in four of the past five seasons, despite at least 26 starts each year (more than 30 in four of them), that Paul failed to reach double-digits in wins. For some reason he’s just not able to consistently post wins.

The next issue with Maholm is that he lacks a strikeout pitch. For his career Maholm owns a poor 5.71 K/9 mark, and that fact alone removes him from receiving my stamp of approval. Still, it is somewhat heartening to see that he’s coming off a career best mark of 6.67, though it should be noted that the mark is 0.61 better than ever before (back in 2008). Maholm isn’t going to turn into a league average K arm, just the way it is. Maholm does keep the walks in check, at least he has that going for him, with a BB/9 mark of 2.80 or lower in five of the past six years.

One thing that Maholm does well, very well, is induce grounders. It’s why he can be so effective without dominating hitters. Maholm’s GB-rate has been at least 49.9 percent every season of his career, and his worst GB/FB ratio for a season is a still impressive 1.69. Consequently he’s not exactly a homer magnet as his HR/9 mark has been under one each of the past five years.

Maholm will never be elite. He’ll never be someone to build a staff around. He’s also a pitcher who could see his performance go down since he lacks elite skills, but not likely up. That’s why he’s not someone to reach for on draft day, ever. Still, if you’ve got five or six solid arms in the rotation in a mixed league, and it’s the 25th round, you could do worse than calling out Maholm’s name on draft day.

 

By Ray Flowers

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11 Responses to “Player Profile: Paul Maholm”

  1. By Brian on Jan 1, 2013

    Ray, someone in my keeper league offered me Kemp for stanton. am i foolish not to do the deal? i am worried about Kemp.shoulder injury. is this a no brainer? thank u for your thoughts.

  2. By Ray Flowers on Jan 2, 2013

    Brian – The Marlins are a mess. Stanton is not a big SB threat. He’s also not a .290 hitter in my opinion. I would immediately do this deal. Worst case Kemp should beat Stanton’s AVG and SB mark, and I’d be shocked if he doesn’t at least match Stanton’s run scored total. Gotta get Kemp.

  3. By Fish on Jan 3, 2013

    Ray, I’m wondering what you would think if the offer was a bit different; say, a $24 Stanton for a $38 Kemp. Does that change your thinking? Can’t wait for the Draft Guide – looking forward to being a new first time buyer and changing that 2011 2nd place to a 2013 title.
    Happy New Year!

  4. By Ray Flowers on Jan 3, 2013

    Fish – Provided the standard $260 setup, and not knowing how long players can be kept or if there is any inflation added, I would get Stanton. I’m not a huge fan, but at $24 your investment is obviously less, there is a wee bit of room for growth. Kemp is a better fantasy player, but at 50% more, pretty steep price.

  5. By Brian on Jan 3, 2013

    Ray i made the deal. its a 8×8 league no dollar values.

  6. By Brian on Jan 3, 2013

    When is the new draft guide coming out? thank u for the advice!

  7. By Ray Flowers on Jan 3, 2013

    Brian – Target date is FEB 1st. for DRAFT GUIDE. Might beat it by a few days (I will be gone at FSTA event in Vegas 20-23rd, so I want to wait until at least after that so I’m around to answer questions if there are any).

  8. By joe g on Jan 3, 2013

    Have to get my roster down to 18 b One spot open in a 10 tem keeper league
    Who would you keep ? Asdrubal Cabrera or Geritt Cole?

  9. By Ray Flowers on Jan 3, 2013

    Joe G – Cabrera. He’s a top-10 option at SS. Cole could one day be an ace, but that won’t be in 2013. I’ll take the guy that I know will help me this year versus the one I’m only hoping will.

  10. By Pefacommish on Jan 7, 2013

    Back to Maholm. His numbers last year look even better when you back out his first 2 starts, which were UGLY. Total 8 innings, 12 earned runs, 12 hits and 3 walks. After that, he was shockingly good.

    He was not purchased in our 300 player NL only auction. That won’t happen this year, but it is a reminder that even in deep leagues there is some decent pitching available at the end.

  11. By Ray Flowers on Jan 7, 2013

    Pefacommish – I’ll make this point at a later date but, as an example, if you compare Cahill/Maholm the last two years — there is really no difference.

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