Jump to content

Who would you not trade?


wildcard

Recommended Posts

7 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

Must have been rough with all those guys throwing 90 MPH heat.

Yeah. I did not know how hard they did throw. Every fan fiction in the stands did not have a "gun." Feller was fast.  McDowell was sudden. Gibson threw real hard. Real hard. Some say that Satchel Paige threw 85. In his sixties. Steve Dalkowski and Nolan Ryan may have thrown harder than anyone. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, weams said:

Yeah. I did not know how hard they did throw. Every fan fiction in the stands did not have a "gun." Feller was fast.  McDowell was sudden. Gibson threw real hard. Real hard. Some say that Satchel Paige threw 85. In his sixties. Steve Dalkowski and Nolan Ryan may have thrown harder than anyone. 

I'm sure some guys threw hard.

I'm sure most of them didn't throw near as hard or have near the offspeed pitches that they do today.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Hallas said:

The notion that no one is untouchable is sort of silly and doesn't add anything to the conversation.  Of course no one is untouchable.  If we got into a 3-way trade with the Astros and the Angels, and received Mike Trout and Yordan Alvarez back in return for AR, I'd drive Adley to the airport myself.  But everyone knows that is not a realistic trade proposal.  If a player is not worth trading for any package that a team would remotely offer up, then they are untouchable.  And frankly unless you're down on any of our top prospects for some reason they should all be untouchable.  Means is probably in the same boat.  Mancini I wouldn't trade, but I can see the argument for.

This happens with all speculative trade threads like this.  There are players you'd probably not trade in a real life scenario on a team in the Orioles' situation.  They have at least several of those, maybe a half-dozen or more.  Then there's the players you wouldn't trade if your 11-year-old nephew offered up Ty Cobb, Hank Aaron and $745,000,000 on his favorite baseball sim.

There are always multiple posts in these threads that at least parenthetically note that they'd totally trade anyone on the roster for the latter.  Nobody should be untouchable if the deal is Cobb, Aaron and $745M.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

I'm sure some guys threw hard.

I'm sure most of them didn't throw near as hard or have near the offspeed pitches that they do today.

I really don't know. Pitching was definitely better during Mays career. Especially pre 1970.  Much better pitchers. Not nearly as diluted. High Mound was a killer. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Can_of_corn said:

I'm a firm believer that the overall level of play in all sports increases over time.

I do too. But I saw some fine pitching. Not nearly the beasts that hit today. Frank would not have appeared all that special in today's offenses. Heck they don't even care about Triple Crowns anymore. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, weams said:

Yeah. I did not know how hard they did throw. Every fan fiction in the stands did not have a "gun." Feller was fast.  McDowell was sudden. Gibson threw real hard. Real hard. Some say that Satchel Paige threw 85. In his sixties. Steve Dalkowski and Nolan Ryan may have thrown harder than anyone. 

I truly believe that if Walter Johnson threw in the high-90s with his low-sidearm delivery he probably had alien DNA.  And that the stories of Dalkowski throwing 110 or 115 are less likely than as the Dan Brouthers homer that cleared the fence, rolled down a hill into a wagon, ended up in Baltimore harbor on a ship and didn't actually stop until it reached Shanghai.

And I'm very sure that when I was a kid it was repeated to me many times that a Major League fastball was somewhere between 85 and 88 mph.  And by the time I was a kid most of the people on your list had been retired for quite a long time.  By the end of his career I'm not sure Scott McGregor could break 80.  And since they've been keeping track with real equipment just the last decade or so the average fastball has gone up about 2 mph. 

There may have been an occasional pitcher who'd sometimes throw in the high 90s in the past.  Maybe even hit 100 once in a while.  Today every bullpen has four guys who can approach 100 and nobody sits in the 80s who doesn't live on knucklers or submarine pitches.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, DrungoHazewood said:

I truly believe that if Walter Johnson threw in the high-90s with his low-sidearm delivery he probably had alien DNA.  And that the stories of Dalkowski throwing 110 or 115 are less likely than as the Dan Brouthers homer that cleared the fence, rolled down a hill into a wagon, ended up in Baltimore harbor on a ship and didn't actually stop until it reached Shanghai.

And I'm very sure that when I was a kid it was repeated to me many times that a Major League fastball was somewhere between 85 and 88 mph.  And by the time I was a kid most of the people on your list had been retired for quite a long time.  By the end of his career I'm not sure Scott McGregor could break 80.  And since they've been keeping track with real equipment just the last decade or so the average fastball has gone up about 2 mph. 

There may have been an occasional pitcher who'd sometimes throw in the high 90s in the past.  Maybe even hit 100 once in a while.  Today every bullpen has four guys who can approach 100 and nobody sits in the 80s who doesn't live on knucklers or submarine pitches.

Ryan. Gibson. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, weams said:

I really don't know. Pitching was definitely better during Mays career. Especially pre 1970.  Much better pitchers. Not nearly as diluted. High Mound was a killer. 

You forgot the smiley.  I hope you forgot the smiley. 

To me diluted is every starter trying to eek out nine innings, going through the order three, four+ times, pacing themselves by throwing at 80% effort, and four-man bullpens that included a 5th or 6th starter for use only when today's guy got knocked out in the 2nd.  Willie Mays never had a single game in his life where they pulled the 96-mph throwing starter after 4.1 innings, and followed him up with five other guys each throwing an inning as hard as Nolan Ryan.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

I truly believe that if Walter Johnson threw in the high-90s with his low-sidearm delivery he probably had alien DNA.  And that the stories of Dalkowski throwing 110 or 115 are less likely than as the Dan Brouthers homer that cleared the fence, rolled down a hill into a wagon, ended up in Baltimore harbor on a ship and didn't actually stop until it reached Shanghai.

And I'm very sure that when I was a kid it was repeated to me many times that a Major League fastball was somewhere between 85 and 88 mph.  And by the time I was a kid most of the people on your list had been retired for quite a long time.  By the end of his career I'm not sure Scott McGregor could break 80.  And since they've been keeping track with real equipment just the last decade or so the average fastball has gone up about 2 mph. 

There may have been an occasional pitcher who'd sometimes throw in the high 90s in the past.  Maybe even hit 100 once in a while.  Today every bullpen has four guys who can approach 100 and nobody sits in the 80s who doesn't live on knucklers or submarine pitches.

 

3 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

You forgot the smiley.  I hope you forgot the smiley. 

To me diluted is every starter trying to eek out nine innings, going through the order three, four+ times, pacing themselves by throwing at 80% effort, and four-man bullpens that included a 5th or 6th starter for use only when today's guy got knocked out in the 2nd.  Willie Mays never had a single game in his life where they pulled the 96-mph throwing starter after 4.1 innings, and followed him up with five other guys each throwing an inning as hard as Nolan Ryan.

Not really. The offenses were depressed.  And Certainly homers for the most part. 

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

    • They also haven’t announced the times, yet.
    • Well, I don't like to predict things on message boards but my prediction is we will not acquire two pitchers with a better Zips projection than Kremer. I would be more surprised by two than I would be by zero.
    • You can’t ignore how he pitched against Detroit and the makeup of their roster. He has more value than even Suarez if that is who we end up playing.
    • So it is different from last year? Last year the games were something like 3:00, 4:30, 7:00, and 8:30.   Have they said it will be different this year???
    • Me too. Driving 4 hours to have a father daughter date. Can't wait!
    • The discussion about Cle vs NYY is interesting. The Os always struggle at Cle and their BP is awesome but the starters are meh and so is the offense. I prefer to play NY. Worse pen, doesn’t run as much.  Not a bunch of contact hitters.  
    • Bautista, if he is back to his old self, would be a big addition. Dominguez and Soto have to improve the walk rate. They certainly have swing and miss, but at a significant cost. Cano can throw up in the zone and get misses, but he is used so often he is rarely sharp. He is used to induce ground balls, and the sinker is fairly effective when he is tired.  Akin, Webb and Coulombe are getting some swing and miss. They are all above average in swinging strike percentage, according to FanGraphs. MLB average is generally around 11.2% from year to year, and Akin (second on the Orioles behind Grayson 13.6) is at 13.2, Dominguez 12.4, Cano 12.2, Soto 12.9, Webb 11.8, Coulombe is 9.9 and Cionel 9.5. In fairness to Coulombe (11.8) and Webb (13.7), they are higher over the last three years. They have not been healthy for a fair amount of this season and pitched through some things that made those numbers dip, perhaps.  Bautista was 18% in the same period of 2022-2024. He would be 11th in MLB in 2024. No other Oriole is in the top 100 in MLB. Grayson Rodriguez is at #120. It should be noted that Andrew Walters is at 18.8, ranking 7th. He was our unsigned 18th round pick in 2022. All of that aside, I am not sure the pen is structured the same as in recent years. There may be some moves there. Or, perhaps it is like you wrote, and they focus on Soto and Dominguez making adjustments to having more command, decreasing the walks. Those two are getting a little expensive as well. I guess we’ll see.   
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...