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Posted

Daniel Bard is really making a case to be the future closer of the team. Jonathan Papelbon is making a case to be the next Kyle Farnsworth for the NYY in a few years.

 

I understand that Papelbon is the closer and will continue to be the closer for the rest of the season, there's no question about that.

 

But right now Daniel Bard is showing that as the bigger the situation becomes, the more confidence he shows and the more dominant he is. Believe it or not they have almost identical ERA's (although Paps has 14 or so more IP)..the difference is WHIP. Bard is at about 0.96 while Papelbon is at about 1.33. Not as sexy of a stat now that he doesn't have a WHIP of 0.77 like he did in 2006.

 

I've watched pretty much every game this year and Papelbon is starting to lose it. Sure people will come in here and say "Oh for crying out loud he has 3 blown saves, stop crying"..but my eyes don't lie. A clean inning for Papelbon is a walk, a single, a ground out, a strikeout and a fly ball out that goes to the warning track. Am I wrong?

 

Maybe I'm just getting on my high horse because of Bard's recent performance where he hasn't allowed a run in 14+ innings and has been striking out hitters at a ridiciulous rate. Maybe we have to wait until he gets more experience and shows he can handle a full Major League season. Maybe we have to wait until he starts to face teams for the 3rd or 4th time to crown him. But in my eyes he should be given a chance to compete for Papelbon's closer role in 2010, Papelbon can only hold on to his reputation as an elite closer for so long. That shoulder's going to start to wear down really soon as he pushes 30 years old with that violent delivery.

 

And please read the whole post before coming in here and bashing me saying how "Papelbon is untouchable and the best closer in baseball"

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Posted
After seeing Bard this season I wouldn't be that mad if we dealt Papelbon (Maybe in a package with Lowell for a good young C+) Although I'd be extremely cautious. Buchholz looked like he was on the highway to "ace" 2 years ago, but s*** the bed last season. Granted he's coming around now, going a full season without a legit closer could hurt.
Posted
The split:

 

He refuses to throw it.

 

He refuses to throw it and is losing money in the process.

 

After seeing Bard this season I wouldn't be that mad if we dealt Papelbon (Maybe in a package with Lowell for a good young C+) Although I'd be extremely cautious. Buchholz looked like he was on the highway to "ace" 2 years ago' date=' but s*** the bed last season. Granted he's coming around now, going a full season without a legit closer could hurt.[/quote']

 

More than a C+ for that.

Posted

He's still a very good closer. He has less control and doesn't throw the split like he did in the past, but he's still very hard to hit.

 

If your premise is right that Papelbon is losing it, they should him to Seattle in the offseason as part of a package for Felix. It would be a bold move for both teams. He's still a good pitcher and he's better than Aardsma. He would be a good answer for a fan base who will need to know who they got, and he has an obvious replacement in Bard and a few other pitchers who may be able to pick up the role if necessary (MDC, Ramirez, even Oki). Again, it would be bold but would definitely help the team get younger and more dynamic.

Posted
I've already stated I see Papelbon getting traded this off season. Bard is the closer of the future.
Posted
He's still a very good closer. He has less control and doesn't throw the split like he did in the past, but he's still very hard to hit.

 

If your premise is right that Papelbon is losing it, they should him to Seattle in the offseason as part of a package for Felix. It would be a bold move for both teams. He's still a good pitcher and he's better than Aardsma. He would be a good answer for a fan base who will need to know who they got, and he has an obvious replacement in Bard and a few other pitchers who may be able to pick up the role if necessary (MDC, Ramirez, even Oki). Again, it would be bold but would definitely help the team get younger and more dynamic.

 

Papelbon's control has not eroded, his BB spike stems from the fact that absolutely everyone is sitting on his fastball, and it's a lot easier to identify a FB when it's a ball when you don't have to worry about the split, or basically anything else with Papelbon.

Old-Timey Member
Posted
Papelbon's control has not eroded' date=' his BB spike stems from the fact that absolutely everyone is sitting on his fastball, and it's a lot easier to identify a FB when it's a ball when you don't have to worry about the split, or basically anything else with Papelbon.[/quote']

Not only that, but he doesn't throw off their timing either. Several of his walks this year were long at bats where batters fouled off a bunch of his strikes. If the past, respect for the split would make them late on some of those pitches they are now fouling off.

Posted
Not only that' date=' but he doesn't throw off their timing either. Several of his walks this year were long at bats where batters fouled off a bunch of his strikes. If the past, respect for the split would make them late on some of those pitches they are now fouling off.[/quote']

 

To tell you the truth, this makes you think about how dominant Papelbon really is, since he has numbers in the upper echelon for closers even though he throws nothing but fastballs.

Posted

I think he is saving the wear and tear on his arm by staying away from the split. He's doing pretty well getting by on just a fastball. Last year he did much the same thing. There was that one game when he blew a save and he threw nothing but fastballs and people started asking where's the splitter? Varitek defended him and said that he's a fastball pitcher so I call for the fastball. At the end of the year and the playoffs, he worked in the splitter and an ocassional slider. I think he'll do the same as he starts to lose a little on the fastball as the season wears on.

 

I don't get theis Bard for closer talk yet. I'm not excited to get rid of Papelbon. I am excited that if Bard continue this progression that he and Papelbon will shorten games to 6 or 7 innings. That is a formula for success. Bard just recently learned to throw consistent strikes. By this point in his development, Papelbon was already a big time closer. Some guys develop slower than others and he may become a dominant closer or late inning guy. He isn't there yet. Papelbon has been ther for some time. Comparing the two guys, I would say that it is clear that Bard has a good curve. Papelbon has never developed consistent offspeed stuff, but neither has Mo. Bard throws harder, but IMO Papelbon's ball has more movement. That's the key. That's why Papelbon is elite.

Posted

Maybe some of these people weren't fans on the days of Slocumb and the bullpen-by-committee.

 

Papelbon is a proven closer, Bard is not, if you honestly think Bard can handle the closer role for next year you're kidding yourselves.

 

And established closer is a key part of a championship-caliber team.

 

Bard is filthy, but Paps is proven, so really, stop it with the ship Papelbon off pipe dreams.

Old-Timey Member
Posted
I think he is saving the wear and tear on his arm by staying away from the split. He's doing pretty well getting by on just a fastball. Last year he did much the same thing. There was that one game when he blew a save and he threw nothing but fastballs and people started asking where's the splitter? Varitek defended him and said that he's a fastball pitcher so I call for the fastball. At the end of the year and the playoffs, he worked in the splitter and an ocassional slider. I think he'll do the same as he starts to lose a little on the fastball as the season wears on.

 

I don't get theis Bard for closer talk yet. I'm not excited to get rid of Papelbon. I am excited that if Bard continue this progression that he and Papelbon will shorten games to 6 or 7 innings. That is a formula for success. Bard just recently learned to throw consistent strikes. By this point in his development, Papelbon was already a big time closer. Some guys develop slower than others and he may become a dominant closer or late inning guy. He isn't there yet. Papelbon has been ther for some time. Comparing the two guys, I would say that it is clear that Bard has a good curve. Papelbon has never developed consistent offspeed stuff, but neither has Mo. Bard throws harder, but IMO Papelbon's ball has more movement. That's the key. That's why Papelbon is elite.

Yeah, it's really not an either/or situation. It's both. Enjoy it.

 

EDIT: At the risk of running into "preconceived" notions about what I'm saying, I'm agreeing with you and directing the "Enjoy it" part at everyone.

Posted
Maybe some of these people weren't fans on the days of Slocumb and the bullpen-by-committee.

 

Papelbon is a proven closer, Bard is not, if you honestly think Bard can handle the closer role for next year you're kidding yourselves.

 

And established closer is a key part of a championship-caliber team.

 

Bard is filthy, but Paps is proven, so really, stop it with the ship Papelbon off pipe dreams.

 

What is an 'established closer'? One of them tuff rugged guize at the end of teh 'pen with dat bulldawg, ****ree mentality u gotta have to get them there outs? No, I don't buy it.

 

A closer, like every other reliever on the roster, has one job - get outs. Either he does or he doesn't. Bard is getting outs. If you have perfectly good (and probably cheaper) alternatives already on your roster, why not ship Papelbon to some team that will probably overvalue him and give us more than he's worth? Both Bard and Ramon Ramirez would be sufficient closers.

Posted
What is an 'established closer'? One of them tuff rugged guize at the end of teh 'pen with dat bulldawg, ****ree mentality u gotta have to get them there outs? No, I don't buy it.

 

A closer, like every other reliever on the roster, has one job - get outs. Either he does or he doesn't. Bard is getting outs. If you have perfectly good (and probably cheaper) alternatives already on your roster, why not ship Papelbon to some team that will probably overvalue him and give us more than he's worth? Both Bard and Ramon Ramirez would be sufficient closers.

 

Your closer, is not the "whatever full of fail statement you mentioned above", but the best reliever on your roster.

 

And if you wanna make an argument that Daniel Bard is a better reliever than Jonathan Papelbon with his SSS of innings you will fail. Miserably.

Posted
Yeah, it's really not an either/or situation. It's both. Enjoy it.

 

EDIT: At the risk of running into "preconceived" notions about what I'm saying, I'm agreeing with you and directing the "Enjoy it" part at everyone.

You get under my skin at times, and deliberately so, but I always return the favor. Nevertheless, I am always interested in your point, even when we are in disagreement.:D
Posted
Your closer, is not the "whatever full of fail statement you mentioned above", but the best reliever on your roster.

 

And if you wanna make an argument that Daniel Bard is a better reliever than Jonathan Papelbon with his SSS of innings you will fail. Miserably.

 

Your closer, like any other reliever on your roster, needs to get outs. If they get outs, they succeed. That's it.

 

I never said Daniel Bard is a better reliever than Papelbon.... yet. Next year, it could ultimately turn out that way if Bard is given the chances. Papelbon has seen a decline this year. There's no guarantee he'll bounce back; he could very well continue to decline. It is much better to trade him too early than too late. If you ship him out now, there's bound to be teams out there who see this season as a bump in the road, and are willing to part with something valuable for him (the Marlins traded Kevin f***ing Gregg for Jose Ceda, a good relief prospect).

 

Also, IIRC, Papelbon wasn't even slated to be a closer heading into 2006. Francona just threw him into one of the Rangers games, he did a good job, and it stuck. Why can't Bard come in and do the same?

Posted
The last three outs of the game are the hardest. Every pitcher would confirm that. Some guys can't get those outs.

********. That is all.

 

 

Anyone who is too shaken up to get those outs shouldn't be in the majors.

Posted
Not really' date=' more like maximizing value while you still can.[/quote']

 

I think his best value is as the closer of the Red Sox, not in a trade. At least at this point in time. In the off-season I might be singing a different tune.

Posted
Have you?
I still pitch ocassionally.

 

Edit: Anyone that's ever pitched in any organized league knows that the last three outs are the toughest to get. I've heard a lot of major leaguers say the same thing. Guys like Seaver took pride in closing out what he started, but still said the last three were the toughest. When it comes to pitching, I'll take Tom Terrific as a good authority.

Posted
********. That is all.

 

 

Anyone who is too shaken up to get those outs shouldn't be in the majors.

 

O Rly?

 

Carlos Marmol says hello.

 

2.20 ERA as a SU man.

 

4.80 ERA in the CL role.

Posted
So fear is the common denominator here?

 

No.

 

What i'm saying is, you don't ship Papelbon off and hand the CL role to Bard.

 

He has to earn it.

 

He has better stuff, but he needs to prove he can harness it for prolonged periods.

 

In other words, Bard has to run Papelbon out of town.

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