Jump to content

What do you want from this rebuild?


Legend_Of_Joey

Recommended Posts

We know this is going to be a cold, soulless, "screw the fans" process.

But what is "acceptable" for the end result?

World Series champions?

Playoff contenders every year Elias is here after the "rebuild" is done?

Fighting for first in the East, even if they fall short a few times?

.500 or better and you are happy? 

Anything in between? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I’d like a team that can seriously contend for a championship and is capable of being a winning team on a sustained basis, not just a team that every two decades can push its chips to the middle of a table for a 3-4 year period and produce a couple playoff teams and then have to be terrible for a while.    

The fact is, we play in a very good division.    It’s not realistic to think we’ll dominate that division all the time, even if we are very well run.    But we should go into every season thinking we can contend, and have years where things go our way and we make a deep playoff run.    
 

  • Upvote 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Progress. But it has to be caring progress.  Talking about meaningless “cosmetic victories” or “winning isn’t the priority “ is bad. We don’t care about wins?

lemme tell you, Mike, 56 is better than 55, and if you can get guys who can get 56, who are fun to watch, who don’t disrupt your almighty plan, you do it, because talking otherwise is insulting.

And you CAN win more games without ruining the future. Keeping Davis is insulting. Quibbling over insignificant salary is insulting. I’m not suggesting we duplicate any of our previous idiotic moves: no Jiminez contracts, no trading draft picks to save salary, no trading good prospects for bad players, and so on. We aren’t going to do any of that because the new leadership is smart.

But we can get better without  spoiling the plan.

Mike is ignoring that, and saying,” I don’t give a damn about wins because they don’t mean anything right now.”

on the contrary, they mean a lot.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd be happy with an end result of a very bright front office and organization, comparable to the Rays, yet with a top half of the league budget that allows a team to extend the right guys instead of having to trade for budget reasons. An organization known for player development and smart evaluations. 

To me, that would be a top 3 in the East team, sometimes winning the division, sometimes finishing third, which would give a chance for a long playoff run sometimes.

The Rays with a decent budget. Not a team that signs big name free agents, or a team that winds up with burdensome contracts that don't perform.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Philip said:

Progress. But it has to be caring progress.  Talking about meaningless “cosmetic victories” or “winning isn’t the priority “ is bad. We don’t care about wins?

lemme tell you, Mike, 56 is better than 55, and if you can get guys who can get 56, who are fun to watch, who don’t disrupt your almighty plan, you do it, because talking otherwise is insulting.

And you CAN win more games without ruining the future. Keeping Davis is insulting. Quibbling over insignificant salary is insulting. I’m not suggesting we duplicate any of our previous idiotic moves: no Jiminez contracts, no trading draft picks to save salary, no trading good prospects for bad players, and so on. We aren’t going to do any of that because the new leadership is smart.

But we can get better without  spoiling the plan.

Mike is ignoring that, and saying,” I don’t give a damn about wins because they don’t mean anything right now.”

on the contrary, they mean a lot.

Just to be clear, Elias has not used the term “cosmetic victories” that you put in quotes.    Those are your words, not his, right?    

I like winning.    I liked winning 54 games better than I liked winning 47 games, because that was 7 more times that I went to bed happy.     So I wouldn’t call those wins “cosmetic” or “meaningless.”

But at the same time, it’s just a fact that this team won’t be ready to contend for a couple of years at least, and that it should focus it’s resources on getting to that time as soon as possible and being ready to capitalize when that time arrives.    I’d much rather suffer a few sub-60 win seasons than a 14-year string of 63 - 79 win seasons.     From my point of view, just do what it takes, so long as we come out the other side with a team we can be proud of for a long time.   
 

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

55 minutes ago, Legend_Of_Joey said:

We know this is going to be a cold, soulless, "screw the fans" process.

But what is "acceptable" for the end result?

World Series champions?

Playoff contenders every year Elias is here after the "rebuild" is done?

Fighting for first in the East, even if they fall short a few times?

.500 or better and you are happy? 

Anything in between? 

Playoff contenders every year Elias is here after the "rebuild" is done.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Legend_Of_Joey said:

We know this is going to be a cold, soulless, "screw the fans" process.

But what is "acceptable" for the end result?

World Series champions?

Playoff contenders every year Elias is here after the "rebuild" is done?

Fighting for first in the East, even if they fall short a few times?

.500 or better and you are happy? 

Anything in between? 

I'm not naive enough to think we'll contend every year, but I want sustained success. And barring unforeseen circumstances for this to the lowest low...ever. 

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

    • It’s my understanding that nationally televised games are usually blacked out. Consider a free trial subscription of Fubo if they are still offering it. 
    • The Orioles starters absolutely have to do better against the Royals. You can't ask this bullpen to pitch most of the game and expect to win. Right now I probably trust Coulombe the most and Soto (which I never would have guessed a couple weeks back). Perez has been really shaky recently to the point I'm wondering is he nursing a tired arm or minor injuey. Cano hasn't been good as well and O's really need him to get back into a groove. And Akin is usually trustworthy, but only starting the inning clean.
    • I'll be working at Gate F.  If you're getting drunk at Pickles before the game and then walk through the closest gate, you'll walk right past me.
    • What happens if it rains all day?
    • For me, bullpen strategy in a short series is developing a core principle or two and working backwards from that. That’s usually going to involve how we want to pitch to their best guys. In this case, there’s really no way to game Witt. He doesn’t have any discernible platoon splits, and in fact he destroyed RHPs this year. He doesn’t even have any particular pitches he struggles against. If you have to pitch to him, power stuff seems to be the way to go — if he has any weakness, it seems like maybe it’s LHPs who can attack him with high velocity and some sort of off speed weapon (Skubal, Framber, Kikuchi, EdRod, Rodon, Sale, Gore). So maybe you’re looking at Soto and Perez there, although you really just shouldn’t be pitching to him at all if you can avoid it. Beyond him, the other “hero” is Salvador Perez. And that’s from where I’d be building out my strategy. He probably should not see a LHP all series. There’s a fairly meaningful career platoon split there (109 wRC+ to 101), and it’s been more pronounced this year (130 to 110). I would be looking to force feed him ABs against Cano (1/4 with a single), Webb (0/2 with two Ks), and Dominguez. He’s always had trouble with offspeed stuff, which means Webb might be the preferred option. They’ve faced a ton of LH starters in the last week or so, but it seems like their preferred lineup against RHPs stacks LH hitters like Melendez and Gurriel behind Perez. Melendez is awful against LHPs, so ideally Perez might be the last hitter that the starters see. They pinch hit very liberally in platoon fashion in the bottom half of the lineup, so if you brought in someone like Akin behind the starter, they might very well hit for him. Forcing them to do that erases a lot of the platoon stacking in the late innings, so you could subsequently bring in a RHP to pitch to Perez without the same concern that they’d be exposed after him.    In sum, I think the ideal attack plan is for Burnes/Eflin/Kremer to see Perez three times, then bring in Akin or Cionel to pitch to the bottom of what will likely be a lefty-heavy lineup. They’ll potentially PH there, but that’s okay because none of those guys are that good. You then go to one of the RHPs for the top of the lineup, which it seems will consist of Pham, Witt (pitch around), and Perez. Then back to Coulombe or Soto for the bottom of the lineup again.
    • I have two tickets to Game 1 of the WC which I cannot use due to work travel.  Section 352, row 4, seats 9 & 10.  Asking $70 total for the two.  Paid $205 to the Orioles as a season plan member.   PM me if interested.  Paypal preferred.    
    • Can't make game 1. I'll be at game 2...last time I was at a playoff game at Camden, we beat Scherzer and the Tigers.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...