Jump to content

Elias hints that more prospect trades could come


Frobby

Recommended Posts

11 minutes ago, wildcard said:

Hernandez is going to have to show he can stop walking so many if he wants to be called up.

I agree, but we don’t have too many power arms as relief options. Especially LH. He has held lefties to a .632 OPS for his career. Once Means and Seth Johnson can go on the 60 day IL, Darwinzon could easily be added back to the 40 man if needed. Plus Vespi’s injury. Vespi may be a candidate for the 60 day IL, at least at first. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

27 minutes ago, HakunaSakata said:

I personally can't see them trading any young high end pitching (for a pitcher) because that would be like robbing Peter to pay Paul. I think if they make a trade it will be from a position of strength. So either middle infield (if Urias or Mateo have any trade value) or one of our young hitters. 

Elias' quote in the opening post - "We also might have moves during camp. In terms of the starting rotation, the thing we feel best about with this group is the numbers, the depth. … We’re going to have nine, 10, 11 starters on our 40-man roster when we go into spring training. I feel that’s a good number to pick from and we’ll keep monitoring opportunities the next few weeks."

He likes the depth going into ST, I'm guessing in numbers AND quality. Why not trade Bradish or Kremer along with some of the infield depth if he can acquire a clear upgrade for the rotation?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Jagwar said:

Elias' quote in the opening post - "We also might have moves during camp. In terms of the starting rotation, the thing we feel best about with this group is the numbers, the depth. … We’re going to have nine, 10, 11 starters on our 40-man roster when we go into spring training. I feel that’s a good number to pick from and we’ll keep monitoring opportunities the next few weeks."

He likes the depth going into ST, I'm guessing in numbers AND quality. Why not trade Bradish or Kremer along with some of the infield depth if he can acquire a clear upgrade for the rotation?

I guess I read it differently. Yes we have some depth, but quantity doesn't necessarily mean quality. We're also light on high end young arms in our minor league system. I could see him making a move to improve our starting rotation, but not at the expense of depleting our already thin young pitching prospects. Trading a bat for a pitcher and moving one of those arms to the pen or AAA seems to make much more sense. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, HakunaSakata said:

I guess I read it differently. Yes we have some depth, but quantity doesn't necessarily mean quality. We're also light on high end young arms in our minor league system. I could see him making a move to improve our starting rotation, but not at the expense of depleting our already thin young pitching prospects. Trading a bat for a pitcher and moving one of those arms to the pen or AAA seems to make much more sense. 

I see what you mean. It is important to build up our pitching prospects. But Bradish and Kremer have had great stretches and not-so-great stretches. Are you suggesting that you wouldn't give up one of those two if it brought back an clear upgrade established starter with 2-3 years of control?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Jagwar said:

I see what you mean. It is important to build up our pitching prospects. But Bradish and Kremer have had great stretches and not-so-great stretches. Are you suggesting that you wouldn't give up one of those two if it brought back an clear upgrade established starter with 2-3 years of control?

If it was a youngish pitcher under team control I'd be open to trading them, but Gray Rod and Hall would be off limits. It will be interesting to see how things play out. I think the big question is what young pitchers under team control for a few years are actually available. I really don't feel like there's an obvious trade partner now that the Marlin's traded Lopez. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, Three Run Homer said:

I wish I could believe him when he says that the organization is focused on winning now.  Maybe that's his focus, but it doesn't seem like ownership's focus.  

I think it is Elias's focus.  Ownership's focus is on winning, sure, but doing so as cheaply as possible, while also appearing to the public that they are do-gooders. Ownership sucks. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, Yardball85 said:

I think it is Elias's focus.  Ownership's focus is on winning, sure, but doing so as cheaply as possible, while also appearing to the public that they are do-gooders.

Public appearance notwithstanding... why wouldn't winning as cheaply as possible be the goal of any rational owner?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, HakunaSakata said:

I personally can't see them trading any young high end pitching (for a pitcher) because that would be like robbing Peter to pay Paul. I think if they make a trade it will be from a position of strength. So either middle infield (if Urias or Mateo have any trade value) or one of our young hitters. 

I am shocked that Urias and Mateo are both still Orioles at this point, especially Urias.  Either they have no value or Elias is over valuing them.  I have a hard time believing Urias is ever more valuable to the Orioles as far as trade value than this offseason.  The guy can swing the bat and had a gold glove season at 3rd base until he lost the 3rd base job to the best prospect in baseball. How is he going to improve his value as a utility guy this year? Makes no sense to hold on to him in my opinion.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Let's put things in perspective. After last year, how can Elias not say it's about winning now? What's he going to say - last year was a mistake and we still are rebuilding?

I believe Elias is in win now mode. And, I believe he's been given all he's asked for since 2018 except perhaps money for the major league team. In that regard, we just don't know the range between his ask and ownership's allocate if there is one. We don't know what Elias has left on the table either or what may still be on the table. 

I am no fan of ownership. But I'll give John (in spite of his lack of publicity skills) credit for doing something his father never did. He hired a GM and gave him the ability to rebuild our team doing things his father never allowed and with seemingly little to no interference. I often wonder where we would be if PA hadn't become inactive?

As has been said often before, this year is Elias's biggest test so far. Going to be an interesting year for Oriole Fans.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, Too Tall said:

 

I am no fan of ownership. But I'll give John (in spite of his lack of publicity skills) credit for doing something his father never did. He hired a GM and gave him the ability to rebuild our team doing things his father never allowed and with seemingly little to no interference. I often wonder where we would be if PA hadn't become inactive?

As has been said often before, this year is Elias's biggest test so far. Going to be an interesting year for Oriole Fans.

 

Peter hired GMs, his mistakes were to hire bad ones that weren't at the vanguard of the industry.  He intereferred, he didn't allow scouting and signing talent out of South America and he basically sucked at everything.  So, yeah, credit to John to get someone in who has an eye towards building a franchise the right way, I agree.

That said, every year is Elias's biggest test so far.  2024 will be his biggest test no matter the outcome of this year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, Moose Milligan said:

Peter hired GMs, his mistakes were to hire bad ones that weren't at the vanguard of the industry.  He intereferred, he didn't allow scouting and signing talent out of South America and he basically sucked at everything.  So, yeah, credit to John to get someone in who has an eye towards building a franchise the right way, I agree.

That said, every year is Elias's biggest test so far.  2024 will be his biggest test no matter the outcome of this year.

Yes, because repeating as World Champions is extremely difficult and rare.

  • Haha 1
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

    • Take this how you want it, but Schoop was up here for 1: a lack of better options, and 2: because despite the fact that he was an offensive zero in 2014, his defense was almost good enough to make him a passable regular despite that.  It's hard to call him rushed if he's providing positive value.   A second point of nuance that I'll bring up is that it might be worth considering minor league park effects.  This was pre-Walltimore, and pre-baseball change to the MLB baseball.  The park effects in Norfolk were so severe that for hitters, your MLE OPS was almost identical to your actual OPS.  So while his Norfolk numbers weren't great, the awful hitting environment there suggested that he might be ready for Major League pitching anyway.  (He probably wasn't, but again, lack of better options.)   If Holliday ends up being a +10 or +12 runs above average defender over the course of a whole year (and he very well might be, his OAA is already far above average) then you probably live with a .600 OPS from him, especially considering how big of a black hole 2B has been for the past 2 years.  But of course he's far below that threshold at this point.   I don't think any of this indicates that Holliday was rushed.  Machado had worse minor league numbers than Holliday at close to the same age, skipping AAA all together despite only putting an 850ish OPS there, and Machado put up a 1.3 wins in 1/3 season and 5 wins in his first full season.
    • Whether he was rushed or merely expedited or accelerated, he made his debut at a very young age with very little minor league experience, and the results thus far have been terrible. 
    • I think you're basically right, probability-wise.  That said, almost no one thought Kjerstad coming up today was the move they were going to make. So... you never really know with Mike and roster moves. But I agree, it's tough to figure out how he stays if Mounty is healthy when Hays comes back. 
    • But he's 82nd percentile in barrel percentage and 92nd percentile in Whiff. I saw some some high EVs that were hit at 60 degree angles or more which were pop ups. I'm not saying he's a long term piece. I'd need to see it for longer than two starts, but I like the stuff overall, especially if he can get his curveball over more often to give another look to the change and cutter.
    • The rookie is a #2 overall selection, now 25 years old, who battled back from missing significant time with non-baseball related illness, was called up last season but had mostly sit behind a mediocre performing veteran (Hays), and is performing better at the minor league levels than Hays ever did. But, I guess he hasn’t paid his dues and is just temporarily holding a spot for the guy who was fortunate enough to come up when he was much younger and the organization was in bad shape.
    • Simmer down...  Just because you've got it all figured out doesn't mean I do.
    • by all means bet the house and the student loans
  • Popular Contributors

  • Popular Now

×
×
  • Create New...