Jump to content

Why Philly Needed All of that Int'l Money


baltfan

Recommended Posts

18 minutes ago, scOtt said:

Elias didn't have scouts in Australia already????? :mad:

Maybe he should hire John Stephens - remember the Aussie soft-tosser who did well in the O's minors before getting a brief underwhelming run in Baltimore?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, scOtt said:

Elias didn't have scouts in Australia already????? :mad:

Poitevint retired, so I guess not!   

Well, we do have Mike Snyder, whose current title is Director, Pacific Rim Operations & Baseball Development.    I’d guess that includes Australia.   But apparently his role is broader than that title now, so I’m not sure he’s minding the store Down Under that intently.

We did sign Alex Wells from Australia a few years back, so I guess we haven’t totally struck out down there.

 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

This guy was training at Driveline and it was up in the air whether he’d sign at all (he had a full ride to pitch for Tulane, a pretty strong mid major program). The Phillies employ some former Driveline employees and there was likely a connection and comfort level there. 

I doubt the Orioles had much of a chance, even if they valued him the same way.

  • Upvote 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Luke-OH said:

This guy was training at Driveline and it was up in the air whether he’d sign at all (he had a full ride to pitch for Tulane, a pretty strong mid major program). The Phillies employee some former Driveline employees and there was likely a connection and comfort level there. 

I doubt the Orioles had much of a chance, even if they valued him the same way.

Not like the O's could have offered him say 100K more.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

Not like the O's could have offered him say 100K more.

They could have offered him more, but that’s assuming they valued him as worth a ~1M bonus and even then we don’t know how strong the connection with the Phillies was, from the reporting it was a lengthy ongoing back and forth. At some point money talks, but where is that point and is the player worth it?

  • Upvote 1
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

    • Yeah I think they need to staggar the lefties in the rotation order. R-R-L-R-L like that.
    • Trading Mayo Kjerstad and Povich for one guy to become a relief pitcher is nuts.
    • We don't need starting pitchers. We need Relief Pitchers. We don't need average Relief Pitchers, we need consistent high leverage/high K Relief Pitchers.
    • If you feel comfortable putting Aiken and Baker (or even Tate) in during an elimination series, that's your prerogative. But I do not. Too inconsistent, which is the same reason why Mike Baumann pitched himself off the active roster. when spot was needed for returning starters off the IL. Currently Coulombe is on IL so we can't even count on one of our best. Cano has regressed from last season. We've also witnessed last season how Webb broke down from over use and was ineffective in the playoff series against Texas. Perez goes in streaks of either really good or concernedly bad (he loses his command). Akin's problem is he leaves the ball over the heart of the plate and he doesn't have good enough stuff to get away with it. They're meatballs. We might get some good times from Baker now that he's up, but I would only expect a month or 2 at best from him before he returns to old habits. And Suarez is a starter who wants to be a starter. Who knows if he will go back to the bullpen? He'll have to go deeper into games if he wants to stay in the rotation, otherwise, I think he should be in the bullpen. But that's not what he is right now in this moment. He's a starter with a ERA in the 1s.
    • It's pretty hard to say definitively that the bolded is true.  It might be, but there's also the loss in ability you have to account for.  30 year olds are slower than 26 year olds too.  Maybe their game knowledge and practice have made it so they can overcome the meager loss in bat speed/athleticism over that time span.  But the picture is a bit muddy.   I also don't think the aging issue is limited to people in their mid-late 30s.  Bat speed peaks at like 24 or 25 based on the data we have right now on it, and after 31 starts falling off fairly fast.  Obviously this is population data and individuals are likely to see different curves.   But outside of the stars that have a lot of ability to lose, it's becoming pretty clear that once you hit your early 30s it's pretty hard to maintain your skills without all the "help" that is extensively tested for.   I think that even for early-30s players teams are much more willing to drop them over giving them expensive market-rate deals, especially since they can abuse young talent so readily.
    • After a really dumb day at work, this was an absolutely delightful read. Seeing a diamond expert and a can of corn detonate a yoked PBA pro was absolutely wonderful. I love this website. 
    • If you pitch Bradish on 5 days rest you'd pitch Rodriguez on 3 days rest?
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...