Talking Baseball Players

Fast Eddie
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by Fast Eddie » Mon Feb 29, 2016 12:12 pm

DOUGHBOYS wrote:Yeah, it's a good buy for the Rangers, Perry.
The Astros/Rangers matchups ought to provide plenty of offensive scoring.
The Rangers have age and injury risk everywhere. Desmond will fill the Super U well.
I can see Desmond having at least three/positionality on his fantasy resume next season.
Are the Angels asleep at the wheel?
Are you saying Desmond has VALUE in TEX uniform Doughy? :D
I think it is great signing for the fans in Arlington. Being so hot and humid, now can look forward to the chill of cool breezes from Desmond's bat. I don't have to tell the other Desmond owners out there how often in 2015 I'd see WAS putting up crooked #s left and right, scoring double digits, just to find my 2nd Rd stud 0-5 with 3 Ks and 8 LOB...
Maybe the 2015 memories fade as I watch him in Spring games.
Unique positional flexibility is definitely interesting.
But damn 2015 was brutal!

DOUGHBOYS
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by DOUGHBOYS » Mon Feb 29, 2016 3:09 pm

Nah, I'd never say that! :D

You bring up something I was going to write a post about, but I'll just bring up some of the more focal points here...

Desmond's strike outs were mentioned in that post.
We play in a different age. The stigma of the strike out has disappeared. Even becoming normal over the course of a game.
Pitchers are increasing their k totals every year.
I believe it is because not only do chicks dig the long ball, but agents do as well.
Home runs mean more money.
Strike outs are just a bad side effect of swinging harder for those homers.

Desmond finished third in batters striking out last year.
The top 10 in strike outs include batters like Chris Davis, Joc Pederson, Mike Trout, and Michael Taylor.
Davis, Pederson, and Trout also finished in the top 10 for walks.
Sabr loyalists and backers hate strike outs and love walks.
This should not be confused for fantasy players.

The top 10 leading strike out hitters (missers?) had this fantasy line from last year....

.261/82/31/84/9

Those are darned good numbers and even I was surprised at the batting average being as high as .261
Sabr followers prefer a pop up to the catcher over a strike out. To them, it looks better for a hitter not to strike out.
Even though BOTH have the same effect on a baseball game. The batter going back to the dugout and no runners advancing.
As a fantasy player, I flat out do not care that a player strikes out a lot.
ct% means more to Ron Shandler than me.
I care less that a batter walks more than he strikes out.
For many reasons, last year, Miguel Cabrera had the least amount of strike outs then he has ever had in his career.
Nobody celebrated.
Except maybe a sabr or two.
Cabrera had the least amount of homers he had since his rookie year.
THAT is much more important in fantasy terms.

I'm going to pick on poor Joey Votto again here.
The Baseball Forecaster says I'm embarrassing myself for picking on Votto.
The joke's on them, I embarrass myself EVERY DAY.
Every day habits become mundane, even if it's embarrassment.
Votto hit 29 homers last year. Good for him. No seriously, GOOD FOR HIM.
But, I still didn't like what I saw from Votto, and I know he had a very good year.
What I saw was a batter who gave up power with two strikes.
Happy to chip away a foul ball or stroke a ball to the opposite field. There is nothing at all wrong with this from a baseball standpoint. Most coaches preach shortening up and chipping the ball with two strikes.
Again, good for Joey Votto.
In a fantasy sense, though, it isn't easy on the eyes.
Votto hit six homers with two strikes last year. Half of those in the more hitter-advantageous 3-2 count.
On counts of 0-2, 1-2, and 2-2, Votto had three homers and batted .206......206!
Listen to anybroadcaster and they'll tell you that Votto is an excellant two strike hitter.
In a baseball sense, Possibly. In a fantasy sense, no.
If hitting .206 with two strikes, in a pitchers count, why not take a full swing?
Votto will be his team's main power source this year.
Striking out is ok.
Believe me, if he hits .156 in those counts with a few more homers, nobaody will think less of Votto.
Especially his drafters.

Still, as fantasy owners, we can't totally disregard strike outs.
Desmond is still a probable 20/15 player this year.
Strike outs have risen for Desmond.
The problem for Desmond and his owners is that power numbers are not increasing with those strike outs.
All the while, his average is deteriorating.
This is where Ron Shandler, again, can tell me that I'm embarrassing myself.
In Desmond's case, ct% does have meaning....even to me.
Desmond's hr/sb is plateauing and his average is dropping.
This is why his adp has dropped three or four rounds.
I believe that his adp will slowly rise over the next month.
The 'Edgers' will like the dual positionality and late signing free agent adp's go up when signing.
On my tombstone-
Wait! I never had the perfect draft!

DOUGHBOYS
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by DOUGHBOYS » Thu Mar 03, 2016 11:51 am

'Brett Anderson underwent arthroscopic surgery on his back Thursday to repair a bulging disk.
Brutal news for a guy who has battled injury after injury in his eight-year major league career. The recovery time for such a procedure is 3-5 weeks, which means Anderson will likely miss the entire first half of the 2016 season.'

With some baseball players, there is absolutely no surprise factor with a rotoblurb like this.
Anderson qualifies.
I remember when Anderson broke into the Bigs. Just great stuff. Now, he is a parody.
Sad, but true.

The Dodgers have the highest payroll in baseball. I hope their iinsurance premiums are paid up.
Behind Kershaw is...

Brett Anderson, injured. Early, even for him.
Scott Kazmir. A pitcher more noted for his brittleness.
Kenta Maeda. A pitcher who had to settle for one year contracts due to, you guessed it, health concerns.
Brandon Beachy. A two time Tommy John loser.
And they're awaiting Brandon McCarthy to come back.
This staff, after they got cold feet in signing Iwakuma and colder feet in an Aroldis Chapman deal.
Makes my head spin.
It would not surprise me at all to see De Leon and Urias pushed harder through their system this year.
Taking the training wheels off Zach Lee makes sense as well.
On my tombstone-
Wait! I never had the perfect draft!

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KJ Duke
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by KJ Duke » Thu Mar 03, 2016 1:04 pm

And you didnt even mention Ryu's perpetually sore shoulder.

Bronx Yankees
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by Bronx Yankees » Thu Mar 03, 2016 3:02 pm

The Dodgers' off-season was very unimpressive if you ask me. They seemed to go about attacking free agency like a mid-market team instead of probably the richest team in baseball. That's my impression of their front office anyway. I'm not saying they should have given Greinke a blank check, but if they were going to lose him to a division rival, you would have thought the response would be greater than Scott Kazmir and Kenta Maeda. The front office inherited some expensive contracts (e.g., Ethier, Crawford) and it seems like they are looking for "value" in every transaction. Makes sense for Tampa; not sure if it does for the Dodgers when you are hoping to contend for a World Series title. I wonder if this type of penny-wise management will be the type to take the training wheels off of some very skilled, but very young, minor-league SPs. We'll see (at this rate, sooner rather than later).

Mike
Mike Mager
"Bronx Yankees"

DOUGHBOYS
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by DOUGHBOYS » Mon Mar 07, 2016 12:37 pm

'Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak announced Monday that Jhonny Peralta could be out 2-3 months with a possible ligament tear in his left thumb.'

I admire the Cardinals organization more than any in baseball. Consistently, and without depending solely on free agents or even solely on their minor league system, they re-stock their team better than others.
If they're going to have a down year, this year has all the makings.
Peralta gone. Molina hurting and aged. Holliday hurting and aged. A questionable outfield. First base in question.
A possibility of leading off with their eventual leading home run hitter.
They've lost Heyward. They've lost Lackey.
And both, to their Main competition.
If they're going to have a down year, this year has all the makings.
BUT, they're the Cardinals.
Though I would not be surprised by a down year, I also wouldn't be surprised if they win their league.
It's just the way the Cardinals roll.

As for Peralta, this makes him tough to draft in Main Events.
Roster spots are of the utmost.
Thumbs seem to be slow for both a recovery and coming back to play at a high offensive level.
And besides, Peralta was not seen as a 'must pick' by many drafters anyway.
Plugging Gyorko in at shortstop hurts the Cardinals as much as the Pirates plugging in Josh Harrison at 2B.
Both teams lose a Super Utility player who playslmost days, and leaves their depth and bench, ordinary.
On my tombstone-
Wait! I never had the perfect draft!

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Edwards Kings
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by Edwards Kings » Mon Mar 07, 2016 2:24 pm

Hello? Is that you Texas? Ummm...good...good...and how are you? Good....listen, you wouldn't happened to have a cheap old shortstop playing out of position that you would want to...say...just get rid of?

Image

FYI...this from a great little known movie called "Soldier in the Rain" (unfortunately released the same week President Kennedy was shot)...Gleason and McQueen would have a similar conversation to the one above only funnier.
Baseball is a slow, boring, complex, cerebral game that doesn't lend itself to histrionics. You 'take in' a baseball game, something odd to say about a football or basketball game, with the clock running and the bodies flying.
Charles Krauthammer

DOUGHBOYS
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by DOUGHBOYS » Thu Mar 10, 2016 8:45 am

'Rule 5 Draft pick Tyler Goeddel could open the 2016 season as the Pirates' starting right fielder.'

Polanco is going to be PISSED!
On my tombstone-
Wait! I never had the perfect draft!

DOUGHBOYS
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by DOUGHBOYS » Wed Mar 30, 2016 6:49 am

'Blue Jays manager John Gibbons announced Wednesday morning that Roberto Osuna will be the team's closer to begin the 2016 season.
Most expected that the more experienced Drew Storen would win out, but Gibbons said that "familiarity" with Osuna ultimately tipped the scales.'

This is one of those items that screws over some early drafters. At the same time, it makes the late pick of Osuna makes some rosters very strong.
In one announcement, Storen becomes as relevant as Joe Biden.
Instead of having that second Closer rostered, Storen drafters will look to spend money on FAAB to plug the hole during the year.
Fantasy baseball and Closers in particular, are cruel.
On my tombstone-
Wait! I never had the perfect draft!

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Edwards Kings
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Re: Talking Baseball Players

Post by Edwards Kings » Wed Mar 30, 2016 9:11 am

"Evan Longoria is out of the Rays' Grapefruit League lineup for the second straight day Wednesday.
Rays manager Kevin Cash said Tuesday that nothing is wrong with Longoria and he just wanted some extra rest before the start of the season. It doesn't sound like there's anything to worry about here."

Image
Baseball is a slow, boring, complex, cerebral game that doesn't lend itself to histrionics. You 'take in' a baseball game, something odd to say about a football or basketball game, with the clock running and the bodies flying.
Charles Krauthammer

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