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ashbury

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Everything posted by ashbury

  1. 82 is over ten times more than 8.1. Sounds like we won this trade!
  2. Jamie? Jaime? Gomez? Garcia? Potayto. Potahto.
  3. Thatsa lotsa trading, but it's part of the fun of OOTP.
  4. You keep banging on the same drum, though, that salaries are the issue, and choosing questionable historical end points to make the argument.
  5. You're not addressing the big picture here. It's billionaires (owners) versus multi-millionaires (players) versus millionaires (ticket buyers) versus Ordinary Joes. The Joes are being outbid for tickets, and that's why prices are high. It's no coincidence that people often remember best the games they saw when their employer gifted them some good seats for a game against a lesser opponent that the employer didn't happen to want to attend. If the teams did unilaterally cut ticket prices by half, scalpers would snap them up and sell them to the highest bidder, and the price to see a game would remain about the same, only the money goes into some other pockets than the team owners and the players. And these scalpers aren't your old-school sleazebags on the street corner - they are corporations like StubHub now - so we're back to talking about billionaires again. I'm not proposing revolution, but we should try to see things as they are.
  6. I assume you are a big free-markets guy. So why in the world would you choose 1970 as the starting point? Curt Flood sat out that season because he didn't wish to play for the Phillies. The players began to get some semblance of control over their destinies after that. So of course their salaries have grown faster, the closer they come to a free market for their services (and they are a long way still from that). That's a good thing! You should be thrilled.
  7. I don't know the name, but it will be someone we're all terribly disappointed in by 2028.
  8. I found Odo admirable in his prime, but that is in the past. I would not count on him to be available for 32 starts, nor for much more than 5 innings per game, nor for above-average performance in those innings. "We're getting the band back together" kinds of moves don't usually work out.
  9. Who do we trade to the Pirates to get him?
  10. Literally anyone who makes it to the major league level can be discussed as a DH. That doesn't mean they are an asset in the role. The bar is set high for that. Nelson Cruz spoiled us, and despite drafting bat-first hitters at times, there is no heir-apparent. Sano doesn't hit well enough to be an asset at DH. He needed to develop as a fielder. Arraez, I don't even want to talk about him in the role.
  11. No one, including Brockmire himself, will ever surpass the home run call in S1E1: "That ball cannot be buried in a Jewish cemetery because it just got tattooed!"
  12. For me, it's a Hall of FAME, and wins above replacement is only a starting point for discussion. Papi (and Kirby for that matter) was famous to a degree that Torii could only imagine. A borderline candidate can go in or stay out based on his level of fame.
  13. Just a missing colon character in the URL. Try this: https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2012/01/29/missing-jersey-finds-twins-player-25-years-later
  14. I'm no longer sold on the concept of Opener, as a particularly desirable outcome for a pitcher's career trajectory. However, it might prove to be a valid waypoint along that trajectory, while deciding what his best use will be. "One time through the lineup, and now and then we'll allow you to try to prove you can do more," would for example constitute a plan that I could see catching on better than "one inning... next!" Doesn't have to come at the beginning of a game, for that matter, nor be literally exactly 9 batters faced - bring someone in to pitch to the bottom third of the lineup, say, and keep him in until goes all the way through again to the #9 hitter, relieving him of course if he struggles.
  15. Garcia earned 0.1 WAR in his stint with the Twins. Extrapolated to a full season of starts, that would be 3.2, well above average. Even more encouraging, his BABIP while with the team was an unsightly .421, relative to his career rate of about .300, suggesting even better results if his luck had been closer to normal. All in all, it's high time the Twins retired Number 24 (maybe a co-retirement recognizing Ryan LaMarre). Oh yeah, my favorite Jaime Garcia moment has to be that one time, it is very, very fair to say.
  16. All men are immortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore Socrates is immortal. By coincidence, I was talking to Socrates, just the other day. He said to watch out for false premises. Doesn't matter whether the rest of the logic is sound or not; the conclusion can be ignored. When you say we're in danger of missing the opening of the season because of the players, in a situation that's manifestly a lockout, none of the rest bears close examination. When you suggest the players are uniquely fortunate, it's an omission and half-truth that likewise invalidates the argument. It's not worth going through point by point. "Look what YOU made me do." That's the mating call of the abusive partner. The owners had the choice whether to initiate a lockout or not. You're in too deep and it's probably too late in your career to reexamine your own allegiances, but your biases can be called out whenever they affect the discussion.
  17. You complain that posters have biases. Yet you use your own evident anti-labor bias to continually frame the discussion. I'm not having it. As for missing part of the season, bear in mind that it's a lockout, not a strike. You want to see the world through a funhouse mirror, fine. I'll call it out when I see it, but I'm not engaging in some pointless back-and-forth. We're very aware of management's position.
  18. Each generation of owner is far more fortunate than the previous.
  19. His days as catcher probably are numbered. Unless the Twins think he's capable of developing into another Nelson Cruz, a rare commodity indeed, once relieved of catching duties, I'd say no to an extension.
  20. I'm pretty much on the pessimistic side with regard to this injury. I expect it to be chronic and to flare up occasionally.
  21. No minor league signing is going to move the needle. Needle-movers get major league contract offers, usually multiple offers from teams wanting their needle moved. And yet, every organization sign minor leaguers every year. Every organization. Every year. This guy, at least, is still a bit young and could be a decent substitute if he starts out hot and a roster vacancy occurs. He's 25 and may be just a later bloomer. He's not some 30-year old with no remaining upside.
  22. Is it? Twins went outside the organization to hire David Popkins from the Dodgers in October. Borgschulte then left for a major league job in November. I hope Popkins really is that much better, because all else being equal there's a lot to be said for promoting from within. On the pitching side, the Twins promoted Luis Ramirez from AA, jumping over McCarthy at AAA who now makes a lateral move to a new organization. Again, I hope the difference is a lot, because you might have been able to keep both by promoting sequentially . BTW I think both the guys who left were FalVine hires, so it's not a matter of clearing out dead wood from the past administration. How easy will this make it to attract new coaching talent for the low minors? It would be interesting to see an interview with either of the guys who left, and try to read between the lines. Oh, and FalVine aren't idiots, so I'm sure there was a lot of thought that went into these decisions.
  23. Outstanding article about some outstanding players who had outstanding seasons near the close of their outstanding careers. Looking just at the headline, though, I felt that Jack Morris was left outstanding in the cold by the article.
  24. ... or to insult any pins, in the process.
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