A straw man is an argument based on a fallacy by giving the impression of refuting an argument made by someone, while actually refuting an argument that was not advanced by that person.
You claim I want to "jerk Moncada around", when my position is far from that.
I don't see what's so hard for you to understand about calling your argument "straw man". You may disagree with my definition of "jerking around", but clearly you should be able to understand why I am calling it a straw man argument.
And, I hate getting in argument over semantics, knit-picking peoples positions, and reading into things inaccurately. Can we move on to baseball?
Many people felt Middy was a high risk to fail in 2013. We ended up having to play Bogey at 3B after just 10 games in the minors. To me, that was "jerking" a player around, and at the worst possible time and level.
Many people saw that once Vazquez was over his injury, we'd need to find another place to play Swihart, assuming his bat became as many projected it might become. This talk was even occurring before Vazquez's injury. Swihart ended up being "jerked" to LF after just 12 games in AAA.
You can claim these two cases were injury related and this sort of thing happens in baseball, but there is an argument to be made to be proactive, especially in cases like Swihart's where it is pretty obvious there is an issue of being blocked at his natural position anyways. The Bogey-Iggy issue was different. It seemed clear all along,m Sox management wanted Bogey to be their long term SS not Iggy, so I get the reasoning to not start converting Bogey to 3B, but having him learn how to play 3B "just in case" would not have been a radical idea or "jerking" as much as he actually ended up being jerked.
Yeah, the philosophy is to not change a guys position shortly after advancing to a new level. I get it. I understand the benefits, but how cool is it to have a player change positions at the MLB level so quickly? It's happened often with the Sox. Too often for me to not be concerned.
The Betts situation did not occur under any stress or pressure due to injury or immediacy needs at the ML level due to a playoff run. Mookie's rapid rise surprised just about everyone. It seemed like he was jumping up a level every few weeks. He played mostly 2B with some SS from 2011 to the fall league of 2013. He was promoted to AA to start 2014 then promoted to AAA after just 54 games, and onto MLB action after just 45 games at AAA. That's 3 levels of advancement in just a few months, and along the way, they converted him from a middle infield position to CF.
In your opinion, was this following "standard procedure"?
In your opinion, was this "jerking" a fragile prospect around?
Yes, I believe they gave him 30-40 games at AA as a 2B before moving him to CF, which is pretty close to the timetable I am suggesting we try with Moncada. (Actually, I am not calling for moving Moncada to LF or 3B right away. I was just saying he could start taking reps in practice sooner rather than later.) Betts played more OF than 2B at AAA (33 CF, 4 RF, 6 2B), so they did transition him adequately before the bigs, but there was no pressure to promote him to MLB in mid 2014. What if there had been a big need? Would it have been prudent to get Betts time in the OF sooner than they chose to do so?
I'm not sure what the answer would have been. All worked out well with Betts as he adjusted better than anyone anticipated. Bogey looked good at 3B in 2014, but not so good in 2015. Swihart's sample size was too small to gauge. Some say we messed up JBJ by forcing him to play LF. I was for keeping him in CF and moving Ellsbury to LF, but I'm not sure his situation relates to this argument.