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Otto von Ballpark

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Everything posted by Otto von Ballpark

  1. ...and we rostered Slegers the last 4 games with no real intent/desire to use him either. Could have easily optioned/DL'd him earlier in favor of, say, Moya.
  2. Sano passed 3 years service time just before his demotion, unfortunately. Buxton is 13 days short of 3 years service time right now, so we'd have to keep him in the minors (or on the minor league DL) pretty much the rest of 2018 to get that extra year of control.
  3. The bullpen would have blown it? https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/NYA/NYA201804260.shtml
  4. Actually transactions for those two guys have made good sense. The ones that haven't made sense are failing to option Romero and Mejia after their last starts.
  5. I think this is incorrect. Players can't be recalled for 10 days after they've been optioned unless there is an injury or a doubleheader. That limits shuttling. But the players themselves don't get any extra service time credit when they are not on the roster. For example, every source I have seen on Felix Jorge shows only 2 days service time for him in 2017: https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/j/jorgefe01.shtml https://www.rosterresource.com/mlb-minnesota-twins/ Like Littell, he was up for a doubleheader, then up for a single day/appearance after that.
  6. This understates how odd the Cleveland ninth was. 8 shutout innings from Bauer, leading 4-0 in the 9th with closer Cody Allen taking over. Leadoff HBP on an 0-2 count to start the inning (was kind of a cheap one too, hit the knob of the bat -- it was an inside pitch but the batter was starting a swing and made no effort to avoid it either). Next batter hit it hard down the 3B line, the 3B stopped it but didn't have a play. Then a K and a fly ball, and there was 2 outs, still 4-0. Then a bloop single just over the first baseman's outstretched glove made it 4-1. Finally the first "big hit" by Cincinnati, a double to deep left center on a 2-2 count made it 4-3 with a runner on second, still 2 outs. Then came the questionable Cleveland decisions. Really dumb intentional walk -- Schebler isn't that good of a hitter, and the next batter (Dilson Herrera), while a pretty marginal MLB reserve, he hit for a similar average in the minors and has a similar career MLB K rate as Schebler too. And after Herrera, Votto was on deck. In any case, after the intentional walk to Schebler, Allen unintentionally walked Herrera to load the bases to bring Votto up. That's when the pitcher mix-up occurred, and it was kind of a bad one. Perez has been a lights-out lefty specialist for them this year -- Otero, a battered RH reliever. I guess Votto was 0-for-4 career against Otero, but still. (He's 4-for-13 with 6 K's versus Perez, but only 0-2 since Perez became a full-time reliever in 2012.) Anyway, Votto's double on a 3-2 count to deep right-center scored 3 runs and effectively ended the game.
  7. We have an option on 2019 for Morrison. It could vest at 600 PA, but he's only on pace for 537 right now, so that is doubtful.
  8. And, as if on cue, the Phillies just brought Plouffe back to the major leagues: https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2018/07/phillies-select-trevor-plouffe-dfa-hoby-milner.html
  9. I think the implication is that we'd agree on the framework of a deal with Miami and get permission to talk extension. Like the Mets and Johan Santana.
  10. On an earlier thread, poster dbminn estimated Realmuto's net value over the next 2.5 seasons (performance minus salary) around $60 mil. Fangraphs came up with some prospect value estimates here: https://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/valuing-the-2017-top-100-prospects/ Virtually impossible to get a deal done without including an elite position player prospect (55+ FV), of which the Twins only have Lewis. You can try to pile up prospects from the next tier (45-50 FV), but MLB trades rarely work that way. Plus that level of prospect isn't that scarce of a commodity (there were 97 50 FV prospects in Fangraphs preseason lists), so virtually every team in baseball could build a package around 2-3 of them for the best catcher in the game if that was all it took. And in any case, the Marlins already have more 50 FV prospects (7) than any team in baseball, so they would stand to gain the least from adding more at that level. Maybe the Marlins don't get a better offer this month, but that doesn't mean they have to accept it. If the Lucroy trade is a guide, then equivalent offers will still be available to them this winter and next summer, at least.
  11. Good catch! The article didn't mention that one specifically, but I did see it also contained a reference to "children", plural.
  12. I don't even think it gets that far. Bieber is currently in their rotation, and performing well, and he's needed there for the foreseeable future. Most contenders don't want to subtract current MLB contributors in a midseason trade. Escobar isn't even a particularly strong fit for them -- he'd either have to play second base himself which he has rarely done for the Twins, or he'd require them moving Jose Ramirez back over to second base, and I'm not sure if they'd be willing to do that again now that Ramirez is a bonafide superstar. I think they'd rather look at better fits at second like Gennett, Lowrie, or Starlin Castro.
  13. I don't think it's disrespectful to suggest the team should have a say in Mauer's next contract.
  14. Agreed. Also, Plouffe and his wife just had their first child this past winter, so they probably still had some flexibility to move around this season. I imagine as the child grows, that will change. This was the first time in 7 years where he had to open the year in the minor leagues, so it's not like he's been barnstorming a lot. FWIW, this article mentions the date that his family moved with him to Lehigh Valley, and Plouffe has hit .273/.414/.598 for a 1.013 OPS in 169 PA since then (after starting the season .187/.287/.293 for a .581 OPS in his first 87 PA): http://www.mcall.com/sports/baseball/ironpigs/mc-spt-ironpigs-rochester-0523-story.html He might only be a Maikel Franco injury away from joining the Phillies, or maybe they would release him to pursue a similar opportunity elsewhere.
  15. Honestly, in the modern game, you don't really have to limit his pitch counts or give him much extra rest to control his innings. A lot of guys are only averaging 5 IP per start anyway.
  16. I'm not sure I'd go so far to say Wells has been "dominant" at high A. 2.58 ERA is nice, but it's a pitcher's league -- minimum 40 IP (eliminating most relievers), Wells' ERA ranks 17th, and it's only a 12 team league. His K rate is right around league average. And he's not young for the league (almost 24), and at 6 foot 8 inches, with that downward plane -- you'd like to see him striking out more batters. A low BABIP is nice, but I'm not sure how projectable that is. Poppen, Stashak, and Vasquez have all been promoted already, with higher K rates. (Marzi strikes me as an org filler type, so I wouldn't be too concerned that he got promoted "ahead" of Wells.) I might promote Wells too, but he will have plenty of opportunity to rise quickly if he truly starts dominating and missing bats. He's not Rule 5 eligible until after the 2019 season.
  17. I don't necessarily see a problem with that either, although the fact that they waited until after Odorizzi had a bad start to send down Romero suggests that maybe their priorities and reasoning weren't quite so clear as you claim.
  18. I was thinking more giving him a break, like the Astros did with McCullers back in 2015. I wouldn't want to be pulling him at 60 pitches every game.
  19. Not to revive this old discussion, but it also occurred to me the Angels did change GMs in the middle of the Trout era, firing Dipoto mid-2015 and hiring Billy Eppler from the Yankees after that season. Since then, I think they've been smarter, and while not all of their moves have worked out, they haven't been sacrificing too many long-term dollars or talent. They should have another chance to reload this winter. I agree the Angels overall franchise performance has to be considered a disappointment in the Trout era, but I think the current front office has been doing about the best they can given the limitations they inherited in the form of the Pujols deal, the Hamilton deal (which just came of the books last winter), various injuries, etc. That's the perspective I was taking.
  20. The Mariners are sure keeping up their end of the bargain, though. Up to +10 pythag and +8 BaseRuns now. Fangraphs has actually bumped up their playoff odds from 70% to 84% in the 2.5 weeks since this post. Their closest competitor is actually Oakland, at 6.5 games back (up slightly from 8 GB on June 20). Next is the Rays and Angels each at 11 GB now.
  21. We were slightly closer, and our playoff odds slightly better, at the time of his demotion. At the time, we were just a few days removed from being within 5 games of first place, with 25+% playoff odds (per Fangraphs "season to date stats" mode). Also, I'm not sure there wouldn't be benefit to stretching him through the end of the MLB season, if he is capable. If we shut him down before September again, I am sure we will hear about it next year as another reason to be cautious with him. Getting him accustomed to the longer MLB season might have as much verifiable benefit as keeping him on an innings limit, etc. Frankly I don't even care, I think they could have probably kept him on his regular MLB turn until it was time to shut him down.
  22. That appears to be the case. 94, 98, and 95 pitches in 3 starts since his demotion. No extra rest so far either, basically on a regular 5 man rotation. (Should get some extra rest this week, with the AAA all-star break... although he would have gotten that next week too in MLB.) I am skeptical of this factor, but if they keep him down until at least July 27, he will finish the season with fewer than 120 days service time, which would suggest he misses super-2 arbitration status down the road. (And if Rochester sticks with the same 5 man rotation out of the AAA all-star break, Romero could be in line to start on July 27.)
  23. All I can tell about that is from the game log: Byron Buxton doubles (4) on a sharp ground ball to left fielder Damek Tomscha. (1-2 count, 1 called strike and 1 swinging) Byron Buxton lines out to third baseman Mitch Walding. (1-2 count again, 1 swinging strike and 1 foul) Byron Buxton singles on a soft line drive to left fielder Damek Tomscha. (first pitch) Byron Buxton grounds out softly, pitcher Tom Eshelman to first baseman Joey Meneses. (2-0 count) Byron Buxton singles on a sharp line drive to left fielder Damek Tomscha. (1-2 count, 3 fouls) I have no idea whether I can trust minor league Gameday, but according to that, all of his swings were on pitches in the zone (a couple were on the edge).
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