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beantownrefugee

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Posts posted by beantownrefugee

  1. On 6/21/2022 at 9:59 AM, waroriole said:

    I’m in no position to say it has to be a specific person. And I don’t think anyone on here is, though there may be some people with scouting backgrounds who have thoroughly considered it. I do think there’s a group of people I would choose from:

    Jones

    Termarr

    Green

    Lee

    Holliday

    Outside of that, I’d have some concerns about the direction. 

    This describes me as well.  So I'm more interested in guessing who I think Elias and Sig will take.  Seems to boil down to the list you have, but I doubt it's Green.  Elias seems to like the "hit" and "power" tools plus a lefty bat to go with his build-your-own-ballpark.  Based on mlb.com's five tool assessments, Termarr Johnson is a 70 hit / 60 power / LHB. Lee is 65/55/Switch.  Holliday is 60/55/LHB.  So I'll guess Termarr is the pick.  Lee as the most likely other option, since he is also a college player.

  2. It sounds like there's not a great amount of training and communication to the front line customer service staff, and that at least some of your issues were resolved by their supervisor who was in the know.  I'd just ask to speak with a supervisor each time, much like most other customer service situations in other businesses.  

    As for the Dugout Club, yes based on the in-game MASN promos, it has been replaced by Kids Cheer Free Plus

    https://www.mlb.com/orioles/fans/kids/cheer-free

    What isn't clear, at least to me, is whether the four vouchers means one per game for four games (similar to past Dugout Club), or four vouchers for one game with each member of the party gets in, up to four.  

  3. I'll give Elias & co. some credit that they clearly have a plan and executed it with no ambiguity.  Namely, draft college kids with a track record (i.e., data), draft positional players to be top heavy on that side and use some of them to trade for pitching later, and let other orgs pay for the pitchers' development.  But man alive, when your manager states the obvious and says the team is in dire need of rotation help, and you don't use the draft to stock up on future pitching talent, you're really putting all of your chips on the value you're hoping you are accumulating on the positional side.  AND likely forcing yourself later to pay high salaries for the established pitchers you trade for.  

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  4. 3 minutes ago, Black_and_Orange said:

    The way I see it, there are two possible explanations for what is going on with this draft:

    1) Colton Cowser was a full slot pick and the orioles don't really have the savings to go underslot like we think they do.

    2) The Orioles overvalue all of these college bats so much more than everyone else and they are slightly over slotting each of them (even though they don't need to)

    Both possibilities would mean the orioles front office are failing at their jobs

     

    Very well could be.

    I see an Orioles front office who has likely been told by ownership that their patience is dwindling, and they have until 2023 (or 2024) to field a competitor.  College players are more likely to contribute sooner.  Doesn't do Elias & co. any good to draft a HS project who takes 4-5 years to reach the big leagues, if Elias isn't around to reap the benefits.

  5. 2 hours ago, RVAOsFan said:

    I am bias, but I watch a lot of East Carolina baseball, and I would love to see us draft Connor Norby at 41 today.  If the O's are looking for another big time college bat which seems to be what they have been focusing on, I think this guy fits the mold and he isn't another OF which is nice.

    You have fished your wish!

    Would love to get a scouting report, if you have time.

  6. 3 hours ago, Tony-OH said:

    Perhaps, but I personally think Lopez could have value as a reliever and that value could have been maximized and potentially used in a trade instead of just filling innings.

    Lopez seems very well suited to being the long reliever after the "opener".  A team like TB may see that for a trade.  Which begs the question -- why are the O's not trying the opener strategy, with Lopez then pitching twice through the lineup?  Not much to lose in trying at this point.

    • Upvote 1
  7. 23 hours ago, OrioleDog said:

    https://blogs.fangraphs.com/2021-draft-notebook-setting-the-odds-for-1-1/

    Kevin Goldstein with an overview as of this morning. 

    Interesting article. Thanks for posting.  This stuck out like a sore thumb.  Oh no.  Not again.

    Two names generating particular buzz are outfielders Sal Frelick (Boston College) and Colton Cowser (Sam Houston State).... The talk isn’t being generated by their play on the field as much as it is the people in the seats behind home plate, as multiple sources have noted high-level executives, including general managers with picks in the top six, bearing down on the duo. If teams focus on their concerns about the top talents, Frelick and Cowser could turn into potential early-pick money savers in order to redistribute big bonus pools further down the line.

  8. Having survived the Brandon Fahey / Freddie "Boom Boom" Bynum year (2008, IIRC), I'm happy if the SS at least makes the routine plays.  Our pitching is bad enough without giving extra outs.  The eye test suggests to me that Galvis is about on par with JJ Hardy defensively, a notch below Iglesias (who makes highlight reel plays).

  9. Just now, fansince1988 said:

    I was lucky enough to see two games in the Metrodome, even got Cal's autograph there before his 2001st consecutive game. "There will be NO SMOKING in the METRODOME, TONIGHT!" the pa would announce before every game. 

    That Metrodome PA announcer was a big part of the nostalgia for me.  Intros to Kirby Puckett and Kent Hrbek were legendary.  Kirby Puckett was easily my favorite non-Orioles player.

    • Upvote 1
  10. 13 minutes ago, Surhoffan17 said:

    Well, my take on our future is that it boils down to three "main" things happening.  Without them, we won't be competitive for a while.  And these three items are fairly obvious:

    1) DL Hall develops into a no. 1 or 2 starter (not just reaches the majors or is another Matusz, Gausman, etc.)

    2) Grayson Rodriguez same as above. 

    3) Adley Rutschmann turns into a potent middle of the lineup guy.  I know some on here are down on him, but it could happen. 

    IF (always the key word) GrayRod and DL Hall are true no. 1 and 2 starters (asking a lot I know), then ideally Means is your number 3 and then any two out of Kremer, Akin, Zimmerman, Lowther, Sedlock, K Smith, Wells could round out the rotation. 

    I am a little surprised at the overall negativity when one of the publications has us at no. 5 in organizational rankings.  I know it remains to be seen if that is accurate, but presumably these publications know more about our system than most anyone on here.  

    I am as well.  Rob Long pointed out on MASN yesterday that the O's are #5 and the Rangers #21, and stated the O's are further along in the rebuild.  #5 vs. #21 is a big gap, regardless of whether those are pinpoint precise.

    If Means were to be our #3, then that would mean DL Hall and GrayRod would be Koufax and Drysdale!  Means looks pretty darn good to these eyes.

  11. Rotoworld says "Good job by Baltimore here."

     

    Ken Rosenthal and Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic report that Jahmai Jones will head to the Orioles in the trade for Alex Cobb. 

    According to Mark Feinsand of MLB.com, the Orioles are paying more than half of Cobb's $15 million salary for this year, so they managed to buy themselves an interesting prospect. Jones, 23, is a former second-round pick who made his MLB debut over the summer; going 3-for-7 with an RBI in limited action. He's considered one of the better prospects in the Angels' system thanks to plus speed and the versatility to play at second base as well as the outfield. Good job by Baltimore here.

  12. 2 hours ago, Sports Guy said:

    That worthless win against Boston the other day is going to prove costly.

    Certainly, but the two losses to start the Boston series more than likely pushed the Red Sox out of the top two picks, and likely their chance at Rocker or Leiter.  

    Based on the 2020 draft strategy, the draft position probably impacts the O's draft for their slot values, more than which player they would pick first. 

  13. 7 minutes ago, Jammer7 said:

    Many players have had dramatic growth in their games since Elias and staff have arrived. Perhaps you could argue Duquette wanted to make the changes on the player development side Elias has, but simply did not have the resources because he had to allocate so much of the budget to keep the competitive window open at the major league level. IDK, but I would say that our player development staff is leaps and bounds more effective than it was two years ago.

    Out of the players who have made an impact at the major league level this year, seems to be a split verdict on 2018 vs. 2019.  Mountcastle and DJ Stewart had an appreciable gain in their 2019 minor league numbers.  Kremer, Akin and Mullins did not.  

    But these guys all came up this year late and have been fantastic.  Is it the more hands-on instruction at Bowie?  Maybe an idea to consider going forward would be to not have the better minor league players in games every day, but rather have 2-3 days per week of hands-on instruction.

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