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Orioles Lose Zach Pop and Grey Fenter in Rule Five


weams

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2 minutes ago, Jammer7 said:

Exactly my thoughts. We’ll see, I guess. He may be the once in a generation type, or they may set him back. He’s a heck of a talent though, for sure. 

Maybe having a father who was in the majors at a young age means something in terms of his mindset.

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35 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

Because, generally speaking, the faster a player reaches the majors the better their career.

He turns 21 in June.  Lots of highly touted guys are in the majors at 20-21.

 

Sure, but they generally don’t skip A/AA/AAA altogether and succeed. Griffey, Arod, Tatis, Machado, Trout, etc...all played some minor league ball for 1-2 years. I have no knowledge of where Witt is in his preparedness, but wow. 

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3 minutes ago, Jammer7 said:

Sure, but they generally don’t skip A/AA/AAA altogether and succeed. Griffey, Arod, Tatis, Machado, Trout, etc...all played some minor league ball for 1-2 years. I have no knowledge of where Witt is in his preparedness, but wow. 

Obviously I think the minor league experience is overrated, at least when it comes to a certain caliber of player.

I expect him to struggle if he is brought up early this year, but I think it will lead to a better career overall.

 

 

Unless of course the hit tool is borked in which case time in the minors won't fix it.

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17 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

Obviously I think the minor league experience is overrated, at least when it comes to a certain caliber of player.

I expect him to struggle if he is brought up early this year, but I think it will lead to a better career overall.

 

 

Unless of course the hit tool is borked in which case time in the minors won't fix it.

I agree with some of that, but the confidence of a high end kid can be shattered with prolonged utter failure. Like I said, I have not watched him and have no idea of his preparedness for this kind of jump. Perhaps he is just plain ready. But has ever really failed? And what happens when he does? IDK. It will be interesting to watch. I hope he does well, but I am skeptical.

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4 minutes ago, Jammer7 said:

I agree with some of that, but the confidence of a high end kid can be shattered with prolonged utter failure. Like I said, I have not watched him and have no idea of his preparedness for this kind of jump. Perhaps he is just plain ready. But has ever really failed? And what happens when he does? IDK. It will be interesting to watch. I hope he does well, but I am skeptical.

If you think a kid can't handle pressure don't pick him 1-2.

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2 minutes ago, Can_of_corn said:

If you think a kid can't handle pressure don't pick him 1-2.

That’s easy to say. I am sure his dad has given him every advantage of having a major league dad, and I doubt he has any issues with pressure. But high end kids like that have not failed much. So you just don’t know until they struggle for a few months.
 

“You don’t know until you know.” (probably Yogi Berra)

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1 minute ago, Jammer7 said:

That’s easy to say. I am sure his dad has given him every advantage of having a major league dad, and I doubt he has any issues with pressure. But high end kids like that have not failed much. So you just don’t know until they struggle for a few months.
 

“You don’t know until you know.” (probably Yogi Berra)

Does what you are suggesting happen in baseball?  I can't think of an example but maybe I'm just tired.

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Aside from the sham that is service time and compensation for young players, I think it would be kind of insane to promote Witt now for a simple reason: I'd want him around for as much of a competitive window as I could get. 

SG mentioned this earlier in the thread, but the benefit of not putting our best young players on our bad team is they at least have a shot to still be around on our good teams. It's a cynical game to play, but as a GM it's almost a responsibility to do this for your organization. Hopefully when the flood gates open, there will be a legit flood of good young players coming up together.

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