No, for thinking you know anything about positional development for prospects. Management thinks now is the time to start working on other positions, not two months ago like you did with virtually no information. Two months is a lifetime in prospect development. You'd catch a lot less flack if you stopped trying to sell your ideas as viable.
Moncada's ceiling is sky high because of his five-tool projection and projected ability to play an up-the-middle position. Whoever thinks the value of Swihart and Moncada is even remotely close is kidding themselves.
This would be a good and thought-provoking thread if you weren't such an infuriating, pretentious prick. Stick to the topic at hand without turning it into a flame-war with people who disagree with your opinions.
It's unlikely that, with this specific injury, there was prior history. But perhaps a pre-existing injury to another body part is what created the imbalance that led to this one, so your statement has logic behind it.
But that's the game where he got injured. I went back and checked video out, and Jacko's right. Koji stopped his arm and body violently post-release and that lead to the tear. The wear and tear caused by pitching on the human body is not a zero-sum game. Fatigue and fraying accumulates when prolonged use happens during any stretch of the season and it can persist for a while, even for the rest of the year. The end result are injuries like this one.
They wouldn't be overworked if they had a better constructed pitching staff. That is an indisputable fact. Reasons 1 and 1A that led to the massive amount of innings thrown by this bullpen are called Clay Buchholz and Joe Kelly. Is that incorrect?
I have an idea, but I don't get paid to do it. That's a stupid inference.
My three-step plan, which I posited back in November:
1) Get another starter
2)Move Kelly to the bullpen
3)Manage Tazawa's and Koji's innings
1 and 2 allow 3 to happen.