September 29, 2008 5:58pm CDT
Back in the first week of April, I wrote an article discussing the myth that players that are 27 years of age enjoy a "breakout" campaign called 27 in 2008. In what follows, I will review the players discussed in that article to determine, on a micro level, if players really do produce their best seasons when they are 27-years-old.
THE PLAYERS
Rocco Baldelli, OF, Tampa Bay (.263-4-13-12-0 in 80 AB)
A completely lost season for the one-time future star, Baldelli is just trying to overcome his mysterious mitochondrial disorder in order to have a normal life. He may never be able to be anything more than a bench player given that the condition saps his strength and energy.
Hank Blalock, 1B/3B, Rangers (.287-12-38-37-1 in 258 AB)
For the second straight season Blalock was held to fewer than 260 AB. He finished on fire, hitting .337-8-23-19 with a 1.079 OPS in his last 24 games, but it's now been three years since he hit 20 home runs or recorded 90 RBI. His future is murky solely because of the injury woes.
Carl Crawford, OF, Tampa Bay (.273-8-57-69-25 in 443 AB)
Sure he was injured and limited to just 443 AB, his lowest total since his rookie campaign, but when on the field he was far from a breakout performer, as he produced the worst season of his career.
Ryan Doumit, C, Pittsburgh (.318-15-69-71-2 in 431 AB)
Yahtzee. After a nice support season in part-time duty in 2007 (.274-9-32 in 252 AB), Doumit exploded for one of the better seasons by a catcher in baseball with career-highs in average, OBP (.357), SLG (.501) and OPS (.858). A real breakout star.
Chris Duncan, OF, St. Louis (.248-6-27-26-2 in 222 AB)
His season was ruined by a back issue that eventually ended up in surgery for a herniated disc. After back-to-back 20-home run seasons, Duncan's failure to drive the ball at all when on the field (.365 SLG) was terribly disappointing.
Ryan Garko, 1B, Cleveland (.273-14-90-61-0 in 495 AB)
A darling of quite a few pundits this season, Garko needed a great finish to end up with respectable numbers. Over his final 47 games he hit .331-6-40 to turn around a poor first half that presented a .241-7-45 line with a .668 OPS through his first 84 games.
Joey Gathright, OF, Kansas City (.254-0-22-41-21 in 279 AB)
Sure he produced the 21 steals, which were a nice bonus in AL-only leagues, but otherwise he was a useless hitter who failed to reach his career averages in batting average (.263), OBP (.311 to .328), SLG (.272 to .304) and OPS (.584 to .631).
Jonny Gomes, OF/DH, Tampa Bay (.182-8-21-23-8 in 154 AB)
His biggest hits this year came in brawls with other clubs. After averaging 19 home runs and 54 RBI the past two seasons he failed to even record 50 percent of that production this season.
Curtis Granderson, OF, Detroit (.282-22-66-112-10 in 549 AB)
Had a slow start due to injury, but the bottom line is that he failed to reach last year's levels in batting average, home runs, RBI, runs, hits, doubles, triples, steals, SLG and OPS. It was a solid year, but nowhere near his magnificent 2007 effort (.320-23-74-122-26).
Josh Hamilton, OF, Texas (.304-32-130-98-9 in 624 AB)
One of the breakout stars and best stories of '08, Hamilton led the AL in RBI with a simply massive first full season at the major league level.
Maicer Izturis, 2B/3B/SS, Anaheim (.269-3-37-44-11 in 290 AB)
He tore a thumb ligament that knocked him out in mid August, but was still just under his previous two-season total of 334 AB. He also failed to match all his 5x5 marks other than steals from 2007 (.289-6-51-47).
Mike Jacobs, 1B, Florida (.247-32-93-67-1 in 477 AB)
It pains us to say a guy who hit .247 with a .812 OPS and a terrible 0.30 BB/K ratio had a breakout campaign, but setting career-highs in home runs, RBI and runs scored signals that he did indeed provide solid value in what can be called the best season of his career.
Felipe Lopez, 2B/SS, Cardinals (.283-6-46-64-8 in 481 AB)
Lopez's numbers were poor, and they would have been terrible if he didn't go nuts after joining the Cardinals. Lopez has hit .385 in 156 AB with the Cards and destroyed all opposing pitchers in September, hitting .414 in 99 AB. This was the first time in four years that he failed to record 20 steals.
Austin Kearns, OF, Washington .217-7-32-40-2 in 313 AB)
Face it, Kearns will never reach the heights that were once predicted of him. This was yet another down season in which he missed significant time due to injury, and it can easily be argued that this was the worst season of his big league career, and for a guy who has struggled to live up to expectations as much as Kearns has, that's certainly saying something.
Kevin Kouzmanoff, 3B, San Diego (.260-23-84-71-0 in 624 AB)
An extra 140 AB this season only produced five more home runs and 10 more RBI than in '07. Plus, Kouzmanoff saw a batting average reduction of .015 points, and OBP loss of .030 and a SLG loss of .024 in year two in San Diego.

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