Jump to content

Luis Barrera vs McKenna vs Stewart at 4th OFer


wildcard

Recommended Posts

38 minutes ago, interloper said:

I think you are significantly over-concerned with left field and the need for speed there. Don't think it will play out quite as you think. Sure it's nice to have speed in that position at home, but a true outfielder like Diaz, despite his lack of speed, will be fine out there for the most part.

Sure, Diaz can turn and play it off the base of the wall.  Or play so deep that  balls are base hits in front of him.   Hays, McKenna or Barrera probably catch a lot of those balls.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Sports Guy said:

So?  I like speed but they need to be able to play the game well for it to matter.

Well said.   Give me a slow guy with a .400 OBP over a fast guy with a .300 OBP.   And in the OF, yes speed matters but ability to judge fly balls, get a good jump and take good routes also matter a lot.   I thought it was interesting that Fangraphs gave Barrera a 70 speed grade but only a 45 fielding grade.   That leads me to think he’s not the most instinctive outfielder around.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, wildcard said:

Sure, Diaz can turn and play it off the base of the wall.  Or play so deep that  balls are base hits in front of him.   Hays, McKenna or Barrera probably catch a lot of those balls.

I don't disagree, I just think that if you have 2 COF, and one is a defense first guy and one is an offense first guy who makes the routine plays (i.e.: NOT a Stewart or Trumbo type, but more of a Diaz type), I want the offense guy. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Frobby said:

Well said.   Give me a slow guy with a .400 OBP over a fast guy with a .300 OBP.   And in the OF, yes speed matters but ability to judge fly balls, get a good jump and take good routes also matter a lot.   I thought it was interesting that Fangraphs gave Barrera a 70 speed grade but only a 45 fielding grade.   That leads me to think he’s not the most instinctive outfielder around.  

That appears to be wrong.

From Athletics Top 30 Prospect/ MLB Pipeline

A slasher from line to line, Barrera is a pure hitter. Although there isn’t a ton of power there, he brings a level left-handed stroke and the ability to hit line drives to all fields. His plus speed comes with good instincts on the bases, and his solid defense allows him to play all three outfield spots.

Barrera plays with a lot of passion and brings excitement. He does not walk much, but he also does not strike out at a high rate due to great hand-eye coordination. Barrera will chase sometimes, which could expose him at the higher levels, though he seems determined to work on improving that area of his game. Once that comes, Barrera should develop into a starter at the big league level.

https://www.mlb.com/prospects/2021/athletics/

What he lacks is power.

 

 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Remember Diaz played a lot of CF, as has Stowers. They're bigger guys but they should be more athletic than, say, Mancini. 

Anyway, I still like this thread because it shows that Stewart and McKenna are getting to be fringey at this point to where you'd consider replacing certainly Stewart, but also McKenna. 

But I still would like to see a bit more of McKenna - there's no huge need to looks for 4th OF upgrades until there's a trade perhaps. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, wildcard said:

That appears to be wrong.

From Athletics Top 30 Prospect/ MLB Pipeline

A slasher from line to line, Barrera is a pure hitter. Although there isn’t a ton of power there, he brings a level left-handed stroke and the ability to hit line drives to all fields. His plus speed comes with good instincts on the bases, and his solid defense allows him to play all three outfield spots.

I’d call it a difference of opinion.  Fangraphs calls him “a comfortable defender at any outfield position.”   Not sure how that squares with their 45 grade, but it suggests that he’s competent, not plus, despite his speed.  I’m not choosing sides.   It’s not like I’ve seen the guy play.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, wildcard said:

That appears to be wrong.

From Athletics Top 30 Prospect/ MLB Pipeline

A slasher from line to line, Barrera is a pure hitter. Although there isn’t a ton of power there, he brings a level left-handed stroke and the ability to hit line drives to all fields. His plus speed comes with good instincts on the bases, and his solid defense allows him to play all three outfield spots.

Barrera plays with a lot of passion and brings excitement. He does not walk much, but he also does not strike out at a high rate due to great hand-eye coordination. Barrera will chase sometimes, which could expose him at the higher levels, though he seems determined to work on improving that area of his game. Once that comes, Barrera should develop into a starter at the big league level.

https://www.mlb.com/prospects/2021/athletics/

What he lacks is power.

 

 

So it’s wrong because you found an article that says differently?  What if that article is wrong?

Why would Oakland, a team that needs talent, is very smart and doesn’t want to spend anything, drop him to begin with if he’s so good?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

So it’s wrong because you found an article that says differently?  What if that article is wrong?

Why would Oakland, a team that needs talent, is very smart and doesn’t want to spend anything, drop him to begin with if he’s so good?

I didn't say he was wrong.  I said he appears to be wrong.  Frobby was guessing off a 45 rating.  MLB Pipeline says he is a good outfielder.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Fangraphs has vavra at a 55 speed grade, same as Hays has. That’s enough speed, jumps and route matter more. 
 

I think the conversation between Barrera and McKenna is maybe interesting. But taking AB’s away from a 10-15 prospect in the O’s system for a guy who couldn’t crack the Athletics top 30 is crazy. Also the Athletics need OFers and they were willing to DFA him, should maybe tell you something  

Edited by seak05
Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 minutes ago, wildcard said:

I didn't say he was wrong.  I said he appears to be wrong.  Frobby was guessing off a 45 rating.  MLB Pipeline says he is a good outfielder.

Like I said, I have no idea if Fangraphs’ 45 or MLB.com’s 55 defensive grade is more accurate.   Either way, his 70 speed doesn’t fully translate to his defense, but obviously 55 is better than 45.
 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, seak05 said:

Fangraphs has vavra at a 55 speed grade, same as Hays has. That’s enough speed, jumps and route matter more. 
 

I think the conversation between Barrera and McKenna is maybe interesting. But taking AB’s away from a 10-15 prospect in the O’s system for a guy who couldn’t crack the Athletics top 30 is crazy. Also the Athletics need OFers and they were willing to DFA him, should maybe tell you something  

Barrera is #26 Prospect for the Athletics according to MLB Pipeline.    He apparently does not match up with what the Athletics want because of his lack of power.   I think they will try to trade him.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

38 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

Why would Oakland, a team that needs talent, is very smart and doesn’t want to spend anything, drop him to begin with if he’s so good?

This is the bottom line. 

wildcard, it's an interesting discussion in the McKenna realm, but Oakland of all teams wouldn't DFA this guy if he was much of an asset at all. I don't care what the articles say, right or wrong. His own team doesn't think he has value.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, wildcard said:

Barrera is #26 Prospect for the Athletics according to MLB Pipeline.    He apparently does not match up with what the Athletics want because of his lack of power.   I think they will try to trade him.  

The Athletics of all teams aren't ignoring quantifiable value out of a single-minded focus for power.

Again, it's an interesting discussion in the McKenna context. I'm sure we could upgrade there, but with prospects on the come and a team that's going to struggle to win 65 games, I'm not sure dropping your homegrown guy for a marginal at best upgrade is exactly a good move from a chemistry perspective. 

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

    • Right now I see the pitching staff as.  Eflin, GRod, Suarez, Kremer and one of Povich, Rogers, McDermott and Young.  All of the 5th starters have options so they can be on the shuttle if needed.   Bradish and Wells may come back in the 2nd half. Pen:  Bautista, Cano, Coulombe, Dominguez, Soto, Akin, Perez, Webb and Bowman.   Yes that is 9 but someone is normally injured.   I will not be surprised if the O's protect Nick Anderson and bring him to camp in case of injuries.    Akin has an option next year. That is 20 pitchers. Will Elias look to improve over the winner? Sure but with the 5th starters being able to either start or be a long man in the pen the O's begin the off season with volume on the pitching staff.
    • If you're going to make this a WAR/OPS/OPS+ debate, sure, he's not the best offensive player right now.  But then again his power/speed combination makes him tough to beat. Best talent ever because of the ability to pitch, yes.  That's the point I was making.  Not only to pitch, but to be dominant on the hill, too.
    • I think Mullins is as set as the entire lineup, but he would have to go if Elias chased the Robert upgrade. Getz already navigated the 3-team thing when he wanted Dodgers Latin kids, and the Dodgers didn't feel Erick Fedde was the caliber of pitcher they wanted to deploy. I do like Santander as a Victor Martinez aficionado, but he and Kjerstad are both RF profiles and, holy Rio Ruiz Batman, the handpicked kid has to play.    This is one of those calculations where the 80% as good for 20% of the cost part is easy, even if Kjerstad never achieves the heights Santander is at now. There's still room to hope Kjerstad is all Santander is and more, but even if he isn't, the team needs the Santander salary slot repurposed to pitching more than it needs him. I think after this summer's moves, we got a fair bit of information if Elias is trading Cowser/Kjerstad for pitching...looking like he isn't.
    • I think you can argue he’s the best talent ever because of his ability to pitch. As an offensive player, he’s not the best player right now.
    • Age, body type, how he plays(strengths/weaknesses) and what we have depth at, in terms of high end talent, coming up behind him. And yes, we should be out on most key FAs because they are largely terrible investments.
    • I'd say that overall his defense has also been down this year.  
    • Your point is entirely valid. Just because Tony is better than Trumbo was means nothing, because Trumbo was a catastrophe. It was just beyond comprehension that they kept putting him in the field. That said, Santander is still ok. Diminished range, but a good glove and arm. However, they avoided the problem with Nelson Cruz in Seattle and Minnesota by just putting him designated hitter, so that’s a possibility for Santander, if he can maintain solid contact. But not here. Let’s take the pick and use it on pitching, please.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...