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sk7326

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Everything posted by sk7326

  1. Eovaldi's FIP/xFIP was 3.37/3.78 Porcello was 3.67/3.68 So if there was a difference it was pretty small and potentially could be normalized away. I expect a lot from both guys. Yankees had a good offseason with the pitching staff, although the lineup maintains its issues. I am sure the Yankees will be a positive run differential team for the first time since 2012 - whether it translates into more actual wins or not is a bit of a coin flip.
  2. When you look at the major signings - Edwin Jackson was basically there because somebody had to pitch. Hammel was a buy low which paid off very well. Soler is winning a Cuban auction - there you go. One good thing about working for the Cubs is that issues the fans have with the team can be defrayed by the fact you are probably blowing off work to go see them. I think this year definitely a leap has to be shown. The crazy haul of position prospects and bats needs to lead somewhere. Year 4 of a farm rehab type of rebuild should start to bear something - even if it is individual somethings. Fans are pretty smart - and will endure a rebuild, but at some point at least a couple of the "kids on their way" should be arriving. It's the reason you lay out for Maddon, who with Francona and Showalter are the best managers equipped at playing and improving kiddos when they're about to arrive.
  3. Using my best Wallace Shawn voice, it's inconceivable that the Red Sox will stand pat with this rotation. It is also inconceivable that they would publicly acknowledge it, fess up their strategy and undercut the starters they do have. Every GM/coach says "I'm happy with our guys", it's right there with "I can't believe he was at this draft position". They didn't gather all of these "good contract outfielders" to play them little league style.
  4. Shields will have the season he always does - because he went to the sort of place where he always produced the seasons he does. I mean aside from his amazing ability to take the ball, it is hard for me to see him as that much of an upgrade over the current rotation.
  5. Yes. Enough? Different questions. With the 2nd wild card - they can at least put themselves in the mix - but then so can a lot of teams. This probably does put them firmly in the Top 3 in that division - so that is a start.
  6. Probably little from column A, little from column B. It's a reasonable move for San Diego. They clearly are trying to turn things around quickly. Whether or not this is a smart way to do it, I do respect the pro-activeness.
  7. It's possible - I don't find it particularly hopeful. Last year names moved - significant ones too - for a fairly modest return all things considered. I think the time of a 1997 Pedro Martinez being available for financial hardship reasons during the offseason are basically over. I mean outside of the Twins, Astros and Phillies, Diamondbacks and Rockies - everybody else can at least sell the playoffs as a possibility right now. And this is not the NBA where being a lower seed might just be setting yourself up to be a punching bag - getting in the tournament means a real chance to win the whole thing. Can the Sox hang in long enough to be buyers? Let's put it this way, last year everything went wrong - and the Sox could not really hit the eject button until the All-Star Break. The 2nd WC position means as bad as Boston was, they were just a 15-5 stretch away from fixing things. All you have to do is expect this year to be better than last - in any form - and I think the Sox will be in a position to buy.
  8. I am very bullish on XB. For guys his age, the jumps are often not steady and they can be large. He also has been able to figure things out at every level he has played at. The suggested line I think could be - not the floor but a relatively pessimistic outcome.
  9. Miley has a chance to get to 200+. Porcello is probably a safer bet. If Allen Craig has that find of slash line .280/.360/.440 or whatever, that will give the Sox a very large portfolio of assets to go get a starter. Prediction here is that they do - might be Johnny Cueto, might be Yovani Gallardo, might be somebody who nobody is pegging right now. I also don't think we'll have to wait til the deadline to find out.
  10. Note that no team which played in a hitter-friendly environment wanted to pay him. I don't want to appeal to authority (you know, say they know better than us - which is a copout), but it is instructive that Team Petco was the one that landed him. Shields is going to have a very good season superficially, maybe more than that. But Shields has consistently pitched in places where his stuff played up. The Yankees, the Red Sox, the Reds, and others were all teams with a job opening - yet none of them bit. It's hard to find premium starting pitching - and Shields was not it. The market will reveal itself in late May I think as teams start to have to make the "in or out" decisions. For Boston particularly, Allen Craig's rebound is particularly important. If he is a reasonable facsimile of the 2013 version, it means the team is flush with good contracts and prospect depth to be able to solve the pitching thing. Given how modest the cost for Lester and Price turned out to be (and Price came with an extra year of control!!!) the price to actually get Cueto (for instance) could be surprising - if the Reds fall out of the chase.
  11. Very canny move by Shields. Took his talents (again) to a place which offers a potentially optimal pitching environment. Now, on paper the Padres outfield looks ghastly compared to the really really good defenses Shields has played with in the past. At the same time Petco is where homeruns go to die - so that offsets quite a bit of that. I think that the industry clearly was skeptical about Shields' ability to play in a hitter friendly situation, and his inability to score a $20M AAV deal (despite his numbers and durability being quite justified) I think reflects that. (along with his age too of course, although the age might influence the years more than the AAV)
  12. I think it is more that they feel like they can start the season this way. Given the population of impact starting pitching this is not unreasonable. I do think if Shields can be had for a short hitch they might call an audible. But I don't mind them balking at Shield's 34-37 years for premium dinero.
  13. I think it's good to know them - because it's what front offices use, or at least the starting point therein (clearly when all the franchises employ analytics departments, they are doing stuff which will not make the public domain). If you (like the BBWAA old guys) focus on RBIs and pitcher wins, the sport has left you in the dust. Now it does not repudiate the value of scouting (which I think got the Ricciardi Blue Jays in trouble) - but makes the scouts smarter about what to look for.
  14. Memories are very short ... the idea that a manager blew a title in baseball short of a World Series game is ludicrous. What is funny is that Francona is indisputably one of the two best managers of the modern era for Boston.
  15. Such as having more of your evenings off!
  16. It is a zero sum thing - it would be nice for players to stay longer, but that means the players do not have the freedom to switch jobs normal people have. That players move keeps interest up in lots of markets. I think the reason football lacks the parity of baseball is simply a matter of the sports themselves. If you accept that the person with the largest impact on any baseball game is the pitcher (and it is - pitching is not 90% of the game or 50% of the game, but it has more impact than any other position), then that baseball teams rotate starting pitchers means that the team fielded can vary wildly in quality. To put it another way, the 1972 Phillies went 59-97. The Phillies were 30-11 in Steve Carlton's starts that year. So for those 41 starts, the Phillies were actually pretty good relative to whom the opponent was putting out there. Because of this, even a bad team is a favorite against a good team occasionally. Football, with the dependencies on team continuity, and that the same personnel play every game (assuming health), the advantages are much more permanent. Also, physical advantages are much more profound. (size of linemen and such) A salary cap would not change this reality at all. In fact, what baseball has done with its tax system is create a system where all 30 markets are healthy and all of them can build competitive teams according to the realities of the city and fan base. Now clearly the Yankees and Red Sox and Dodgers have more room for error than the Rays and Royals. But the Rays and Royals can absolutely afford to keep core guys - if they don't it is because of choice. And that is all you can ask for regarding balance. Can a well managed team succeed anywhere - and the answer in baseball is hell yes.
  17. Health and close-game luck will influence any prognostication. The 2012 Orioles went something like 17-2 in one-run games or something. The 2013 Cardinals had a collective OPS of .820 or something with RISP. The 2012 Red Sox were decimated by injury, while the 2013 Red Sox largely weren't.
  18. Absolutely - positively no ... the salary cap would put more money into John Henry's hands, that's it. If you want Judge Smails to be happy, fine - but it would not do bubkus for competitive balance. In fact, the changes baseball has made now (rookie bonus pool, cap on bonuses for internationals) has hurt competitive balance even though they are "caps".
  19. The fans I get to a degree - but the loyalty comes in how hard they played. Love of the game was more or less established all that time riding buses and making below minimum wage.
  20. Miley is an excellent bet to deliver 200 average innings which is valuable in itself.
  21. For most of those years - they are making (if the prospect is solid) way less than what they produced. So after FA is your first chance to cash in - and at the end of the day the team is special to us, but it's a gig - one of 30 of them. It's not like the Red Sox (or anybody else) is paying farmhands to compensate them above minimum wage (look at the lawsuit filed on behalf of minor leaguers in this respect). The hometown discount is not about a sense of loyalty to me - it's simply that you like it here, and the familiarity and happiness comes is worth something. Not everybody is required to enjoy Boston's weather, or having to answer questions about what they had for breakfast. I think players DO make decisions on lifestyle all the time - the ones who go to the auction process decided the lifestyle they have is not a significant plus. I wish every guy loved playing in Boston. Loyalty to the org? Hey the org's loyalty is exactly to the extent that the player can hit, throw or field.
  22. http://www.oddsshark.com/mlb/mlb-odds-world-series-futures Funny thing about the Vegas odds is looking at them cardinally. From what I pulled up just now. Nats at 11-2 ... Nats are clearly the league's best team on paper. But it is hard to say anybody short of the 1998 Yankees is this far in front of the field. Dodgers at 8-1 Sox, Cubs, Angels, Cardinals at 12-1 ... given the level of change in the former two relative to the latter, Sox and Cubs seem like crazy bets. Angels and Cards look much safer I'd think. Pirates at 33-1, Guardians at 28-1, Orioles at 25-1 seem like the actual smartest values (if there is such a thing)
  23. Funny thing is - if you take the side by side fWAR of last year's opening day rotation and the Steamer projection (just picking that one since I found it) for this year's - they aren't actually that far apart. You look at the Sox choices after they let Lester go, the pattern is clear: 1. Guys with a track record of major league performance - not amazing performance, but solid 2. Guys young enough to still improve (Porcello particularly) 3. Guys who have shown a record of durability (Masterson last year aside). What they lack in sterling record they partially compensate for with being able to consistently take the ball. (basically the latter describes John Lackey to a large degree) We know that with the improved baseball economy, and with the 2nd wild card spot changing how teams perceive their short term outlook - it is going to take a month or two for the trade market to REALLY sort itself out. We know the Sox have a ton in their arsenal to trade when the time comes. The question is can this rotation hold the fort while that process takes place. I think (partially because of that 2nd wild card spot) it would be very difficult for them not to. Think about it - as bad as last year was, we couldn't TRULY jump ship until the All-Star break. That 2nd wild card position continually gave a faint glimmer of hope.
  24. First of all - yeah Vegas lines are built for action and they know Boston fans like to gamble and will bite. Second - Red Sox glasses I think tend to deflate the value of guys knowing how Boston fans roll. Moreover - the complaints about the rotation gloss over the reality. 1. The team as constituted, does not seem poised to win three best-of series against increasingly difficult competition in October. I totally agree. The defense is not amazing and there is a lack of the anchor sorts you'd like to have in a short series. The bullpen looks solid but we all know that good bullpens are largely a matter of attrition and luck. Of course, there is so much baseball luck involved in doing this that the Sox could win these series anyway. I just would not favour it. 2. This team as constituted, should have favorable pitching matchups in most of its games, with most of those being #3 v #3, #4 v #4 and so on. The offense has the potential to be able to beat up mediocre pitching and there is enough projectable youth in the lineup that the offense could be better than even that. This team is capable of winning enough against "not prime time" caliber opposing starters to create a winning season generally. It'd be nice to have both - the title winners had them - but it's not necessary to get to the playoffs. But with a serious dearth of sellers (of good starting pitching) - leaning on #2 and figure out #1 on the fly is a defensible strategy.
  25. that difference goes away when you remove that pesky #9 hitter
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