Jump to content

Tracking Ex Oriole Thread


Rene88

Recommended Posts

In Wynn’s Dodger debut, he went 1-3 with a 2 run double in his first at bat and caught a runner stealing (doubling the amount of CS that Dodgers catchers have this season.) Made some pretty good blocks too. 
 

Looked bad in his other 2 at bats, striking out on an outside fastball he had no chance at and looked at a frisbee that went from the left handed batters box across to catch the edge of the plate (great pitch.) 

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is up with Mancini?  He was horrible after the trade to the Astros and this year is hitting below .200.  I pains me to see him struggle.  

Guess I should be happy that Elias got rid of him.  Hope he picks it up.  He is entering Odor fall off territory.   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Just Regular said:

Fingers crossed for Evan Phillips, but reading a very sad report LAD have moved him from paternity list to bereavement list.     Not much to hope for except an admin error in the system.

Not much more to say than what you said.  Very sad.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Big night for Darell Hernaiz, who is keeping his AA head above water with a 100 wRC+ as 6th youngest Bat in the Texas League.

https://www.fangraphs.com/leaders/minor-league?pos=all&level=0&lg=7&stats=bat&qual=y&type=1&team=all&season=2023&seasonEnd=2023&org=&ind=0&splitTeam=false&players=&sort=3,-1

Darell Hernaiz, 2B, Oakland Athletics (Double-A Midland): 4-4, 4 R, HR, 3 RBI, SB.
After a promising start to 2022, the offensive production for Hernaiz cratered after a late season promotion to Double-A. However, his .113/.186/.189 slash line in 13 games at Bowie wasn’t enough to keep Oakland from targeting him in a trade this winter. The stats look better this year, albeit in the more hitter friendly Texas League, but his strikeout rate continues to hover around 30%, something to keep an eye on as the season progresses. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mike Yastrzemski’s hammy didn’t survive the trip to Mexico City. He strained it on a diving attempt to save the game in the 8’th. He had slammed into the wall earlier trying prevent a Nelson Cruz triple (yes, Nelson has a .849 OPS in 62 at bats). Alex Cobb didn’t seem to mind the altitude, except that he might have tweaked something. No official word yet.

Edited by Chavez Ravine
  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 4/18/2023 at 10:23 AM, CharmCityHokie said:

Giving up 4 homeruns in 4.1 IP...I guess the only way is up, hopefully, for him. 

Well, I hope I didn't curse Bundy with my previous comment; he now has 12.1 AAA IP and has given up 26 hits...10 of those being homeruns for an unfathomable HR/9 rate of 7.3. Silver lining is that he has a 14/1 K/BB rate, so there is that. 

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

    • I agree with the part about Elias. He needs to operate with a little more humility (regarding his bullpen approach) and pivot in the offense regarding how he puts a pen together. He needs to get away from the arrogant thinking in believing that we are always "the smartest guys in the room" and can fix other teams junk/unwanted parts. That is fine to do some time (regardless of how much you spend). But you can't construct an entire pen made of castoffs and almost no guys with elite/power/strikeout stuff. Yes it worked great with Felix, Perez/Lopez in 22', Cano in 23'. But the problem is that we are in '24. And some of those lightening in the bottle guys have reverted back to what their talent says that they are - mediocre. We have a pen full of decent/league average/mediocre arms. That's not what you really want heading into October.
    • Also, since there’s another interesting discussion going on here, I think it’s time for Hyde to have an uncomfortable conversation with Adley. I hate everything I’m about to say, because Adley is my favorite Oriole. But we have to acknowledge where we are.  Over the last few months, the only sensible approach with Adley — other than the IL, which apparently he hasn’t been eligible for — has been to keep penciling him into the lineup almost everyday and hoping he figures it out. He has a track record of consistent lifelong excellence, so it’s felt like just a matter of time before he busts the slump and rights the ship.  But he hasn’t. Adley’s line over the last 3 months, almost half a season now, is so bad that it requires a double check to be sure it’s right: .186 / .274 / .278 / .552. A 61 wRC+. And -0.2 fWAR. He has been a below replacement player for 3 months now. He has been the 3rd-worst qualified hitter in baseball over that span, and the 7th-worst overall qualified player. The “qualified” part does make it a little misleading — most of the guys who’ve been this bad have long since been benched. I think you have to consider McCann, at least in Burnes’s starts. He’s been hitting a bit (114 wRC+ since the ASB), and even if he wasn’t on a bit of a heater, his normal baseline is still better than a .552 OPS. If you do continue to play him full-time, you just can’t treat him like he’s *Adley* anymore. You have to treat him like the bad backup catcher he’s been. He has to hit at the bottom of the order. The very bottom. There’s really no reasoned basis upon which you could want to have him get more ABs than guys like Mullins or Urias right now. And you have to PH for him liberally — whichever of Kjerstad/O’Hearn doesn’t start should be looking at Adley’s slot as their most likely opportunity.  As I said, I love Adley. It’s been brutal watching him. But there are 25 other guys on the team who deserve the best shot to win a ring. And that means you can’t just keep stubbornly handing all the ABs to a guy who is desperately lost, on the blind hope that he’ll suddenly find it. 
    • I didn’t post it in the game thread no, but I’m also not looking for credit. I thought it was a bad move at the time to remove Burnes in the first place, and choosing Cano at that point after he’d been bombed by those exact hitters, felt odd and off to me. The only real defense I could come up with was who if not Cano?  But taking Burnes out is essentially admitting that winning that night wasnt your top priority anyway, so why not also rest Cano, who you absolutely need in the playoffs and has pitched a lot?  I just didn’t get it in real time, and I still don’t. 
    • I was at a meeting and came out to the Orioles down 1-0. I looked away for what seemed like a minute and it was 5-0, then 7-0. Do we know why Burnes was lifted after just 69 pitches after 5 innings? Was he hurt? Do we know why Cano was brought into the game in the 6th (Have to imagine his adrenaline may not have been as flowing at that stage of the game)?  Obviously the bullpen was pretty horrific last night, but could some of this be because Hyde was using guys who typically are late in game relievers in the 6th inning?  
    • Good point on the age.  I think it would have to be someone like Nate George from this year's draft just blowing up next year. The story would be how everyone missed on him because he played in a cold weather state.    
    • First, Schmidt is having a better year than Cole. Second, the O's teed off Ragans and Lugo last time they faced them.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...