Jump to content

Grade the Gausman Deal


Frobby

Grade the Gausman Deal  

187 members have voted

  1. 1. What’s your grade for the Gausman deal


This poll is closed to new votes

  • Please sign in or register to vote in this poll.
  • Poll closed on 08/11/18 at 01:24

Recommended Posts

1 minute ago, wildcard said:

Posters have described Gausman as a #4 starter.  Heck Tony was one of them.  He doesn't have to be a HOFer  to be a whole lot better than that.   Wallace has a pretty good pitching coach.  Gausman had a 3.57 ERA and  3.61 ERA with him as his coach.   And I don't think he had to pitch out of the stretch to achieve that.  He did have a better team supporting him in 2014 and 2016 though.

But, he was hyped in the minors and after being drafted as a sure fire blue chip TOR.

So sliding all the way to a #4 SP is pretty sad.

For now, its too short a sample size, lets wait and see how well he does there.

Believe it or not, I wish him well there.

 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Redskins Rick said:

But, he was hyped in the minors and after being drafted as a sure fire blue chip TOR.

So sliding all the way to a #4 SP is pretty sad.

For now, its too short a sample size, lets wait and see how well he does there.

Believe it or not, I wish him well there.

 

IMO Gausman has not been a #4.  He just had terrible defense, offense and pen playing around him this year.  That last  sentence is not even disputable.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

40 minutes ago, wildbillhiccup said:

It's not our money and with or without O'Day the team's payroll is still considerably less now than it was 2 months ago (and will be even less after the season ends). And unless the Orioles' invest all of the money saved into international signings, I don't think how you can compare the two. 

I get it. But look, my point is just that there is probably a way to quantify the value of a top prospect. I don't know how to do that, but if I were a baseball professional, I probably would figure this out. Surely you agree that money is finite, and money not allocated to Gausman/O'Day could be allocated elsewhere, and its possible that "elsewhere" would lead to getting good players. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, TonySoprano said:

2017 is similar to 2018.   You said, "He just had terrible defense, offense and pen playing around him this year."  

1) McDowell has been the pitching coach in 2017-2018.  He was better under Wallace.

2)  The O's defense was 6th in MLB in 2014 and 2016.   Its 16th in 2017 and 26th in 2018.  All these numbers are based on fielding pct.  Use what ever metric you want.  I doubt it come out much different.

3) O's runs scored were 8th in 2014, 12th in 2014,  16th in 2017 and 26th in 2018.

4) The O's relievers were 6th in ERA in 2014,  3rd in 2016,  12th in 2017, and 25th in 2018.

I think its pretty clear that the defense, offense and pen got worse as the years progressed.   Gausman was good when he had good support in 2014 and 2016.  His numbers did worse as the O's support got worse.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, wildcard said:

1) McDowell has been the pitching coach in 2017-2018.  He was better under Wallace.

2)  The O's defense was 6th in MLB in 2014 and 2016.   Its 16th in 2017 and 26th in 2018.  All these numbers are based on fielding pct.  Use what ever metric you want.  I doubt it come out much different.

3) O's runs scored were 8th in 2014, 12th in 2014,  16th in 2017 and 26th in 2018.

4) The O's relievers were 6th in ERA in 2014,  3rd in 2016,  12th in 2017, and 25th in 2018.

I think its pretty clear that the defense, offense and pen got worse has the years progressed.   Gausman was good when he had good support in 2014 and 2016.  His numbers did worse as the O's support got worse.

 

Defense was much worse this year, according to your metric, and yet his numbers slightly improved in 2018
2017 - ERA 4.68, ERA+93, FIP 4.48, WHIP 1.495, SO/BB 2.52
2018 - ERA 4.43, ERA+98, FIP 4.58, WHIP 1.379, SO/BB 3.25

  Your points #3, #4 contribute to his W/L record, and not to the stats I'm referencing above.  If you want to point to W/L, he had a higher % in 2017 than 2016.  His HR9 was 1.4 from 2015-17, and 1.5 this year - again, that's all on him, not on the defense or bullpen.  Ditto, SO9 the past 3 seasons - 8.7, 8.6, 7.5.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Seems like some people are just cool with moving Gausman because he's been inconsistent and they were sick of him.

That's fine.

But the package we got is not going to help us and it's pathetic compared to what Tampa got for Archer. I think we mainly got unlucky that Tampa decided to finally move Archer. I think we get 2 of the 3 pieces Tampa got had Archer not been on the block.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, TonySoprano said:

Defense was much worse this year, according to your metric, and yet his numbers slightly improved in 2018
2017 - ERA 4.68, ERA+93, FIP 4.48, WHIP 1.495, SO/BB 2.52
2018 - ERA 4.43, ERA+98, FIP 4.58, WHIP 1.379, SO/BB 3.25

  Your points #3, #4 contribute to his W/L record, and not to the stats I'm referencing above.  If you want to point to W/L, he had a higher % in 2017 than 2016.  His HR9 was 1.4 from 2015-17, and 1.5 this year - again, that's all on him, not on the defense or bullpen.  Ditto, SO9 the past 3 seasons - 8.7, 8.6, 7.5.

I don't understand what point you are driving at.  My point is that when supported but a good offense, defense and pen as he was in 2014 and 2016 Gausman showed he was a good pitcher.   In 2017 and 2018 when the offense, defense and pen were worse it affect his numbers and made him look worse but in fact he may have been the same good pitcher, he just had worse support.

You are throwing a lot of numbers at me but I am not sure what you are trying to prove.

The  pen decline is not only about wins and loses record.  Its also about ERA.  Gausman leaves two runs on base in a inning that he is pulled.   The pen comes in and lets those two runners score.  Its added to his ERA.  That was not happening as much in 2014 and 2016 because the pen was better back then. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, wildcard said:

I don't do FIP.  What do you see?

Well if you did FIP, you'd be a more informed fan.  

FIP is fielding indepent pitching, which is essentially looking at what things a pitcher can control vs. what he can't (fielding) and factoring an ERA out of it.  IIRC, it measures the ability to create strikeouts, while limiting homers, walks and HBP.

For Gausman, it's usually slightly higher than his real ERA.  In other words, taking fielding out of it, he still wasn't very good.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Moose Milligan said:

Well if you did FIP, you'd be a more informed fan.  

FIP is fielding indepent pitching, which is essentially looking at what things a pitcher can control vs. what he can't (fielding) and factoring an ERA out of it.  IIRC, it measures the ability to create strikeouts, while limiting homers, walks and HBP.

For Gausman, it's usually slightly higher than his real ERA.  In other words, taking fielding out of it, he still wasn't very good.

 

I know what FIP is but I don't know its limitations or its reliability.   When is it wrong and when it is right?  I have found so far that most advanced stats don't tell the whole story and at times are misleading.   I am sure there are dozens of guys on the OH the argue FIP with you.  I am just not one of them.

For instance, just because a guy in not a high strikeout pitcher does that mean he is not good  pitcher?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Posts

    • So what is the real story on his defense? Because if he's playable at 3B, there is a spot for him to play. Mateo has been seeing his numbers slide down of late (notwithstanding the homer and triple this week). And while Urias had that surge, he seems to be trailing off again as well.  Now, if he's just not playable at 3B defensively, that's a different story and we are in a position where he gets the Kjerstad/Stowers treatment with very limited playing time.  
    • Elias has a plan and he's sticking to it. However, the UCL explosions in our arms are definitely his first unforeseen, unplanned bump in the road. A lot of teams are going through this right now. In my opinion, reading the tea leaves, I felt he was trying "catch up" in the early years of the rebuild by going hard after top position talent in the draft. At the same time, he was using trades to catch up on pitching. He wasn't doing a bad job addressing pitching, but in order to "catch up," drafting top positional talent was smart. Someone said it earlier in this thread, its easier to hit on position players and they're less volatile The O's brass were not disregarding their pitching plan, but they were trying also keep pace by introducing better player development, analytics, and tech. They were drafting "sleeper arms" in the later rounds of the draft while also quietly acquiring a lot of depth and talent in the international market. Last years draft was the 1st one that I felt Elias had a focus on drafting better pitching talent. He's a guy that I believe will use his high picks on "best player" available typically, but moving forward, the positional depth allows them to slot more pitchers at the top of their draft list. In a perfect world, Elias has none of these injuries to deal with and we appear as a Mega pitching program bc we have plenty of starter depth at the MLB level. Last years draft, along with a bunch of DSL arms that have started to creep into A-/A+ give us some good lower level depth. Again, w/o the injuries, we can hide the fact that we are VERY thin at the AA/AAA levels. In 2026, the international depth and the recent drafts depth would have probably met in a perfect storm of talent on the MLB roster, and he'd really look like a genius. But losing Bautista, Bradish, Means, Wells to UCL/TJs, and also having Columbe and Kremer miss time with injuries exposes that gap in our system's pitching depth that Elias was hoping to hide for another season or two.  
    • “And now in late June, it's coming unglued.” Literally right there in your post. 
    • Do you think AAA in 2024 is the same as it was in 2022?
    • I’m taking the over even if he gets called up THIS WEEK 
    • Once again, the O’s have done so well over the past few seasons, people forget what it’s like to have a losing streak. The Dodgers lost five in a row earlier this season. It’s doubtful that their fans think the sky is falling.    Nobody likes to lose games but the bright side is, it seems to be at the right time because the Yankees are struggling too. 
    • Nice to see him hitting well and obviously healthy. Plus he's showing a little extra base pop which was something that was always missing from him in pro ball. Certainly worth keeping an eye on him and seeing how fast they will get him to more age appropriate players in AA.
  • Popular Contributors

  • Popular Now

×
×
  • Create New...