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Everything posted by moonslav59
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If the late games stay as is, here are the conference records: NFC: Minn 5-0, DET 4-1, GB, CHI, TB, WSH 4-2 (No NFC West team above .500) AFC: KC 5-0, Tex 5-1, BAL & PIT 4-2, BUF & LAC 3-2 (BUF plays Monday night.) Big surprises: 4-2 WSH NFC North all 4-2 or better.
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A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
I don't see it that way, but one really good SP'er and the rest spent on 3 quality pen arms is fine with me. People talk about Crawford's IP, but I'd prefer him as our long man. Too many HRs allowed. Maybe he was lucky so many were solo blasts- maybe not. I'd prefer not to find out. He had an ERA+ of 98. That's really not bad for a 5th starter, but I have Gio pegged for that slot, with an 81 and 90 ERA+, his last 2 full seasons. Besides, we know someone will get hurt, and if not, one of the 4 we got will likely take a step back. An ace pick-up would be awesome. We need to plan for something going wrong, instead of acting shocked, when it does. I think we have every position covered 2-3 deep, except catcher, so we add a decent 1 year catcher to go with Wong, and then improve our rotation and depth and pen. I like Fitts, Criswell, Priester and maybe Dobbins as rotation depth, but I'd prefer they were the 7-10 guys, not the 6. We do need a lot of pen help, and if the budget is limited, I can see going with 1 SP. Your point is valid. I think we can afford to trade Abreu and DHam for a couple nice pen guys, so I'm thinking sign one top RP'er like Tanner Scott and either sign a good SP'er or two, or trade a top prospect for one, and then sign someone like Nick Martinez, Kikuchi or Flaherty- and not a tier one FA SP'er. -
I'd like to agree, but with better teams losing to worse teams, every week, I'm not sure it happens.
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The 4 years of control is the kicker. Duran has proven himself. 4 arbs. There are some players better than Duran, but how many have 4 years of control at arb prices. He is among the top trade chips in MLB. I'm not sure what BTV gives him for a value, but it must be as high as several pitchers I call aces. To me, it would be all about the years of control of the pitcher we get, and the contract situation. Duran is not someone I want to trade, now is Anthony. I'd prefer we trade someone like Casas or Mayer, but they will not bring back what Duran or Anthony will do.
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A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
I'd rather we trade for a much better pitcher and use the money on the pen and maybe a second tier pitcher like N.M. -
A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
Welcome aboard. I'd love the deal, but I am certain AZ would not like the deal, even if Yoshida had just one year remaining on his contract. Maybe, if we paid Yoshida's deal down to the same as what Monty is owed, they might not hang up on us. I like the concept of the idea nd effort. -
Valid point. I think we all know spending more usually increases your odds of winning. I think even Max would agree. There are other correlations to winning, as well- like great management. A strong farm 1-3 years before a window and maybe 1-2 into the window, if you want a long window is also very helpful. Are these more or less important than spending? Does it matter? Is having great management AND a strong farm for a 3-4 year period more important than spending a lot? The Astros would say "YES!" The Astros ranked 18th in spending in 2017. They did jump up to 11th in 2018 and 8th in 2019. They reached 4th in 2020, so one could argue they did spend big, but they had already won, before getting to top 8. They started dropping in the rankings before the Sox and were 7th in 2021 (Sox were 3rd.) In '22 they dropped to 11th (Sox 6th.) They were barely ahead of the Sox in spending in 2023. They let a lot of top talent players go: Verlander, Springer, Correa, Cole, Morton and more, yet they kept winning with great management, some huge farm infusions (and okay, some cheating, too.) This year, they jumped to top 4 again, and lost the first round of the playoffs. Spending matters, but there are never any guarantees in baseball.
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A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
Nick Martinez is significantly better than Crawford, Gio and Bello. He's been very good longer than Houck. His recent 3 year sample size is nothing to complain about: 3.31 ERA (126 ERA+) and 1.176 WHIP in 360 IP. (He was a RP'er for some of this, so that helps his numbers.) Only 74 pitchers have 350+ IP since 2022, and here is where NM ranks: 49th in fWAR at 5.3 (just o.1 from Jon Gray, Pivetta and Detmers and ahead of Morton, Kikuchi, Bello and Crawford.) 35th in xFIP- at 95, just below M Keller and Bello 17th in ERA (just behind Wacha, Lugo and Sonny Gray and just ahead of L Castillo, Gilbert, Cease and Kirby.) T15th in ERA- at 80 w Lugo (1 behind Webb, S Gray and Wacha) This guy would help our rotation and pen, since someone would be pushed to the long man role- something we need, badly, too. -
Well, most teams hit the spending wall. While the Yanks don't have losing seasons, and that's a really nice thing, they have not won a ring in a very long time. With how much the Dodgers have spent, much of it deferred, you'd think they'd have more rings and WS appearances than they have had. They have missed the NLCS, the last 2 years, while outspending just about everyone but the Mets. The Dodgers won the WS in 2020, a short season. From 2021 to 2023, according to Steve the Ump, these are the top spending teams in 3 years combined (I added in my head and may have made mistakes on numbers): $890M Mets: missed playoffs, twice and lost 1st round in '22 $803M Yanks: made playoffs 2 of 3 years, lost 1st rd once, lost ALCS once $736M Dodgers (with some fancy deferrals) made playoffs all 3 & won 1 round. $727M Phillies: made playoffs 2 of 3, lost WS & NLCS, once each. $617M Padres: made playoffs 1 of 3 years, lost NLCS This range has more rings than the upper two ranges 2-0 $550M Red Sox: made playoffs 1 of 3 years, lost ALCS $514 Astros: made playoffs all 3 years, WON WS, lost WS and lost ALCS $510M Blue Jays: LOL $506M Braves: made all 3 years, WON WS, lost first round, twice. Texas has the other ring and are far down the list. I'm not presenting this to say spending does not matter. It clearly does. The top 4 spending teams made the playoffs in 8 of 12 chances. That is fact. No rings, however, does show that spending is not the be-all-end-all. I know nobody is saying that, but nobody is saying spending makes no difference at all, either.
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A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
O'Neill was an excellent alternative to Teoscar. He cost less than $6M and a couple meh RP'ers. If you count shedding Dugo's deal, we spent the same on O'Neill, Weissert and Fitts as Dugo cost. You were right, Teoscar did well, but it's not like the choice we took was worse. -
Max is on a mission to show that spending huge on a just a few players is a bad strategy that ends up back-firing or hurting the team, after the prime years are gone. He likes be hyperbolic and often uses superlatives to show how strongly he feels about his position. If you read most of what he posts, he has often said spending makes a difference, if it's spent wisely. I think taking this one statement and acting like Max thinks spending makes "zero" difference is going overboard. There certainly is no group of posters who think spending makes no difference, at all. Bringing up examples of low spenders who win or consistently win is just showing that spending isn't everything, and it isn't everything. It's a big factor, IMO. It's not such a big factor or an even bigger factor in others' opinions.
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"Ain't much" is not saying absolutely no correlation, and that was the question I asked. Also, Max has said other things that reveal that "intelligent spending" can make a difference. He likes to speak in superlatives. I will add that things have changed since the Yanks ruled MLB with more money. I certainly think spending more gives teams a better chance, even if they swing and miss, wildy some or even most times. There are also some teams that spend little, but spend wisely, scout better and manage/develop players better than richer teams. Bringing up those examples is fair. It's not claiming that spending doesn't make a difference, but it does make the point that spending is not and never has been "everything." In recent years, we have seen various teams, like the Dodgers, Mets and Padres go nutty with spending, if just for a 1-2 year period. This is obvious proof that spending wildly more than others does not mean you win a ring. There is gray area in this debate, but yes, spending makes a difference. Look at last year's hug gaps in sending: $334M Mets $269M Yanks $237M Padres The #10-12 teams were at $180M (over $150M from the Mets.) In 2022, the Dodgers spent $109M more than #10. The Mets spent $85M more. In 2021, the Dodgers spent $85M more than #10/ the Yanks $52M more. Why does bringing this up bother you so much? It's not claiming spending doesn't matter. It's just showing it's not everything- not that this is what you are saying this. I think when one of us points this out, you think we are claiming spending makes no difference, when we are not. Spending is what got the Sox 4 rings. It started with Manny, before JH even arrived. It took the brains to realise we could not win by just spending on bats to get us to glory. We spent and traded for pitching. It took brains and money to get us 4 rings.
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My new top 12: 1. Texas (took care of business w Oklahoma.) 2. Oregon (I do not think they are this good.) 3. Penn St. (almost lost at USC) 4. Miami (still no losses) 5. Georgia (first on less team in my rankings) 6. Ohio St. (lost at Oregon) 7. Tennessee (barely beat a bad FLA team in OT) 8. Clemson (easy schedule) 9. Alabama (almost got upset, again) 10. Iowa St (still no losses) 11. LSU (Beat #9 Ole Miss, yesterday) 12. Notre Dame (got it done) 13. Ole Miss (BYU & IN are still undefeated)
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Is anybody saying there is absolutely no correlation between spending more and winning? The debate is about to what degree it is, right?
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Only examples that support claims can be used.
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Penn St almost lost at USC. The domers won big vs Stanford. Alabama almost lost and #16 Utah lost. It looks like a wide open year. A few big games still going on. I doubt ND moves up, this week, unless #9 Ole Miss loses to LSU, but then LSU may jump over us. #2 Ohio St is playing #3 Oregon, but the loser will not be passed by ND. Maybe Florida upsets TN.
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I'd say the odds were against the Mets, and the Yanks did not play all that well, second half, so their odds were not great, either. Yes, big spending helps your odds.
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I think many agree with this. The Sale extension is but one example, although I thought it was okay, at the time. Nobody says DD did a perfect job up to 2018. Many felt it was overkill or "emptying the farm" to go the extra mile. As it turned out, hardly any prospects he traded did all that well, and just about every big trade worked. When you assemble a team of stars and your young players start to near and reach free agency, the piper comes calling. Sure, he shoulda not extended Sale or signed Nate and assured Betts stayed in BOS forever, but wouldn't paying one guy 1/5th of the budget be against your motto, too?
- 154 replies
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- dave dombrowski
- alec bohm
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No. You changed the subject. You said everyone said you were wrong with the facts about some low spending teams winning. I said nothing about payrolls going in the wrong direction. I mentioned several teams going nutty and passing us.
- 154 replies
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- dave dombrowski
- alec bohm
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A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
I really like Fried, a lot. He is 31. It does worry me, that he's only gone over 175 IP, once. Over 166, twice. Martinez might come at half the price. -
A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
The ones most pissed at us losing, refuse to think ideas to get better have any merit. -
A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
To save $90M, which they could spend wisely and build around Mayer. They are going nowhere, fast. -
It's hard to know how DD would have fared with the same budgets Bloom was handed. The budget demands were the bigger aspect than firing DD, IMO.
- 154 replies
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- dave dombrowski
- alec bohm
- (and 6 more)
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A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
How about this one: To SFG: Yoshida $18M x 3 Mayer (5 years of control) Maybe add DHam or if we have to... Abreu (5 years of control) BOS takes on a net $90M in contracts ($49M '25, $48M in '26, $23M '27, $24M '28) Tax hit: $52M-$18M= $34M in '25, $41M-$18M= $23M in '26 , Even in '27, and $18M in '28 with Webb and no Yoshida. To BOS: Logan Webb $12M in '25, $23M in '26 & '27 and $24M in '28 ($18M tax hit per year) Robbie Ray $25M x 2 ($23M tax hit per 2 years) Taylor Rogers (LH RP) $12M x 1 ($11M tax hit for one year) SFG saves $144M minus $54M for Yoshida= $90M total. -
A Realistic View of the 2025 Red Sox: Part I
moonslav59 replied to moonslav59's topic in Boston Red Sox Talk
The park helps the numbers, too, but some of these guys are pretty good on the road, too. To me, our best bet at getting a SEA pitcher is Castillo, due to his contract and age. His contract was also back-end loaded, to some extent. His AAV is $21.6 x 3 more years, but his pay is $24.2M x 3. There is also a team option, if there is an injury: 28:$25M vesting option and 2028 conditional option: Seattle receives a $5M club option for 2028 if Castillo is on the Injured List in 2025-27 for more than 130 consecutive days due to Tommy John surgery or an operation stemming from damage to the ligament

