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nicksaviking

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Everything posted by nicksaviking

  1. I am definately pro-leg kick. He had timing and contact issues with the toe-tap, if he's going to miss anyway, why not at least try to generate more power in the few times he happens to make solid contact.
  2. Yeah, the current system isn't equal for US born players and the foriegn born ones. Of course there are certain other benefits to growing up in the states compared to The Domincan Republic or Cuba. I'm guessing that should they so chose, there would be nothing stopping Smyly or Brady Aiken from moving to Venezuala and applying for citizenship in an attempt to cash in on the international cash pool. That is if they don't mind the constant threat of being kidnapped and ransomed. I'm all for an international draft, but I tend to roll my eyes hearing a 1st world person complain about the handfull of 1-in-a-million lottory tickets that happen to be available to some of these impoverished kids.
  3. It sends up red flags for me as well though it shouldn't; your middle section really is the main point. Using ERA for relievers is just a not sound measurement. Four bad outings in April could crush one's ERA he could never recover from. Additionally, the guy who comes in with men on base gets off Scott free when he let's all the runners score before closing out the inning. Digging deeper is going to be needed to evaluate relievers.
  4. Seems to me nearly the whole division is relying on players who had outlier career years last year (Kluber, Brantley, JD Martinez) young players with only one season of positive performance (Abreu, Ventura, nearly everything good about the Twins) or star players clearly on the decline (everyone on the Tigers). There are barely any established franchise stars in their prime in this division; David Price and the injured Chris Sale seem to be about it. Perhaps you could toss Alex Gordon in there. I think this division has a whole lot of average and wishful thinking.
  5. I think the whole division is going to stink. I wouldn't be surprised if there was only one .500 club.
  6. I didn't want any more players over 30, but there's no one to block in the OF at this time except for maybe Schaffer, so I don't much care about his actual production and I could care less about his paycheck. Charisma goes a long way, if the front office and the players themselves think Hunter will improve the clubhouse atmosphere and/or instill leadership skills in the youngsters, he probably will. It's basic self-fullfilling prophecy stuff. I'd feel the same if everyone was brainwashed and thought Danny Valencia and Delmon Young would improve the clubhouse atmosphere and improve leadership skills. MY thoughts on Hunter, his skills or his views don't matter.
  7. I didn't know about his story or that he was a local guy, thanks for the write up. The name looked familiar due to a past of obsseively going over Twins rosters when I was young, but I honestly wouldn't have been able to give one fact about him until this article.
  8. If you're leadoff hitter his prone to hitting long balls, isn't the simple solution to make the 8th or maybe even 7th spot the blackhole of the team? I'm expecting regression, but if Suzuki is still putting up a .330 OBP, put him in the 9 hole instead of Hicks, Schaffer or whoever is struggling to put it together. Even with only minor regression, if Santana only ends up with a .320 OBP, there's a decent chance Hicks, Suzuki and Escobar can top that batting at the bottom of the order anyway. Dozier doesn't have to bat #2, if we're only doing it for the sake of his pop.
  9. I saw Danny Santana in CF last year Chris Parmelee play RF despite playing most if his AAA games at first and Trevor Plouffe play 3B after spending his minor league games at SS and the outfield. Then we have Michael Cuddyer. I don't think we can rule out any position for Harrison even if the club thinks they may have.
  10. Great on the spot analysis. I agree, the lack of lower body movement reminds me of a right handed Denard Span. He obviously lacked any semblance of power. Span's swing probably would cause many to be surprised he actually has a 6', 200+ lb frame, something that should be able to generate more power.
  11. Oh my, that could be a problem. You think of big players like David Oritz and Jim Thome and Vargas at 24 is dwarfing them both.
  12. Please, just this once can we have the newest, coolest toy on the market?
  13. If Stewart's proponents are right and his K numbers get in line with his stuff, I'll probably be more excited about him than Berrios or Meyer. But we have to see it first. Also, Willie Banks always seemed soooo close to breaking out. His 1993 season was a huge improvement over 1992 and I thought he was going to be the real deal the next year. Of course the Twins traded him that offseason and he never got his control tamed down after that. Andy McPhail must have hated Willie. He traded him to the Cubs in the 1993-94 offseason and then traded him away from the Cubs once he landed that gig.
  14. I know, who in their right mind would want seven kids?!
  15. So how are we judging the "best" five on in this scenario?
  16. Oh I'm sure they will, just as they misguidedly have the past four years. This team won't be competing until the young guys are ready, and they won't be ready until they start playing. Isn't it better to struggle now in an effort to be better in the future? Youth and upside should weigh more heavily on roster decisions than experience. If Pelfrey is the "best" pitcher this spring and is given the job, how would that help the team in 2016 or beyond?
  17. Milone pitched well extremely pitcher friendly Oakland. A pitcher who throws poorly there is about as rare as a pop foul reaching the seats. Most people, Beane included and likely Ryan as well, see the writing on the wall. His mid 80's fastball is a mirage and it won't stand up, particularly when he's coming from the stadium with the most foul territory and going to one with among the least.
  18. Sorry to derail. I tend to think a pitcher with a 4.0 BB/9 can still make it at the majors. I also think a middle infielder who struggles to get on base can still make it if he has a nice glove. I just don't think it will work for a corner outfielder. I don't mean to sound negative, I love Walker's power potential and he sounds like a good guy, but it just seems to me that a promotion would send the wrong message. And I don't think he's a lost cause by a long shot. I just think the severity of this deficiency needs to come across loud and clear.
  19. Well for one thing, the "struggles" we're pretty subjective. Neither Gibson nor May were struggling in any truly meaningful way in AAA. I was simply suggesting that struggles at the MLB level were expected and it would be best to get them out of the way. For another, in this analogy there was very little difference between the HS students than the college students anyway.
  20. Yes Gibson, May and Meyer are the main talking points when questions arise about slow promotions. Gibson and May have struggled upon their arrival, but that doesn't tell me the club was right to wait, it tells me the opposite. They were viewed as "ready" before their call up yet they still struggled implying being "ready" doesn't occur until they get acclimated to the MLB. Gibson should have been allowed to struggle in early 2013 with the hope he'd be useful at the end of the season and closer to his potential to start 2014. The same should have been done with May. This team has been historically awful, yet they seemed to keep the young arms down at least in part because they didn't want to chance making the MLB product worse. If that played any part in the decisions, and I'd bet it did, they were very short-sighted. I don't know why there is an idea that guys have to learn in the minors and education ends upon a call up.
  21. The A's were smart enough to consider what he would do for them going forward, not what he did in the past. The A's had just traded for Samardzjia and Hammel and had no room for Gray, Kazmir, Chavez and Milone. Milone had by far the lowest upside and was the least likely to succeed going forward. Seems like an easy call to me. If the Twins are smart, they'll also put most of their deciding votes on the guys with higher upside.
  22. I think putting top pitchers drafted from major conferences in the rookie leagues is coddling. I think not letting top pitching prospects work out their kinks at the MLB level even when your MLB starters are serving up BP nightly is coddling. I don't think this team coddles the batters. However, possibly because of such a lack of success this past decade, they appear overly cautious with the starting pitchers, perhaps because the organization is unsure of how best to develop them, perhaps because they think if a player is injury prone he shouldn't be on the MLB roster. That being said, Berrios doesn't look like he's going to get much of a stop sign, neither do several of the college arms drafted in the last three years. Things may be changing.
  23. I could care less about the strikeouts. I care that he doesn't appear to have either very good zone recognition or patience. That doesn't translate to the MLB level. If MLB pitchers know you're strikeout prone AND you can't take a walk, he'll never see a hittable pitch.
  24. I think he did. He was pretty upset about his service time ramifications. He's OK depth, but he had little trade value last year as we found out; he shouldn't have much now. I'm not really concerend with a return though, I just don't want him getting in the way of the higher ceiling guys.
  25. Perhaps it's wishful thinking, but I think they did their best to find the veteran innings eater to put at the front of the rotation this year. I think they'd really prefer May and soon Meyer. But that could just be spring optimism. I tend to turn dour regarding the front office once they start proving my hopeful expectations wrong.
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