José Romero

José Romero may be seen as a litmus test for 2-way players. He was below average each way, and below by enough that the notion of providing roster value has to become a little suspect. The historical record would agree, as Pepillo’s career was very short (to the point where

He was better on the mound, with an argument for a steady rotation slot in 1901 and 1902. He struck out a lot of batters for his time, but also gave up a lot of walks. When he kept his hits allowed low, he could be dominant; when that struggled, there was a lot of traffic on the base paths, a situation exacerbated by a tendency to give up the long ball at an above-average rate.

He hit well in 1899 in limited appearances, which may have been the impetus for him being treated as a 2-way player. He only had one decent year at the plate, 1901, where he hit for surprising power. He almost never drew a walk and struck out a ton. He spent most of his time in CF or RF, and was decent there–not great, but not a liability by any means.

This projection seems solid to me: the question, honestly, is whether Romero even belongs in the set of players we treat. The decision to do so is more out of curiosity of how the two-way players emerge, and further refinement in that space could easily lead to him being dropped in the future.

NameJosé Romero (Pepillo)
ID / Statusromer01jos / Draft
PosP/OF
DOB / i9s Career1878 / 1899 - 1904
Birthplace(Cuba)
Height / Weight /
B / TR / R

 

Batting Projections

YearABH2B3BHRBBSOSBCSBAOBPSLGOPS
1899752522024410.3330.3510.4130.764
19004769986142372360.2080.2720.2560.529
1901465128136324432950.2750.3110.3480.659
190231256113015391120.1790.2170.2340.451
19032214683116391530.2080.2620.2850.547
19046717101315310.2540.2860.3130.599

 

Pitching Projections

YearGGSIPHAWKHRAeDeTeHBPBB/9H/9K/9ERAWHIP
189918997.094423110083.98.72.93.331.40
19001917134.01745945400104.011.73.04.361.74
19012423176.01546074500103.17.93.82.791.22
19023620204.0199596860082.68.83.03.011.26
190310655.070183920032.911.56.43.561.60