Jump to content

Heston Kjerstad 2023


Three Run Homer

Recommended Posts

4 minutes ago, emmett16 said:

He is quite fast.  I think his skillset would be greatly underused at 1b.   I'm thinking Kjerstad RF and Santander to 1b.  

I agree completely, especially since Mayo isn't too far behind HK, doesn't have his wheels, and will need a position change off 3B because of Gunnar.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, emmett16 said:

He is quite fast.  I think his skillset would be greatly underused at 1b.   I'm thinking Kjerstad RF and Santander to 1b.  

While that sounds good,  it also leaves Cowser without a place on the MLB team, unless we move on from Hays who is hitting great so far this season.   We are quickly getting to the point of not having room for all the talent in the organization, even if we were willing to call it up.  Good problem to have!

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, AnythingO's said:

I agree completely, especially since Mayo isn't too far behind HK, doesn't have his wheels, and will need a position change off 3B because of Gunnar.

I don’t know if there’s any credence in this notion but considering his initial diagnosis of myocarditis, I’d suspect it’d be a good idea to have him at a less demanding position. I don’t really know enough about the disease to say anything definitively but from my understanding it can be re-aggravated, there is no cure. Not a whole lot of running around at 1B, so a position move could just be preservation of health? I dunno, just speculating. I’m not a cardiologist.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, forphase1 said:

While that sounds good,  it also leaves Cowser without a place on the MLB team, unless we move on from Hays who is hitting great so far this season.   We are quickly getting to the point of not having room for all the talent in the organization, even if we were willing to call it up.  Good problem to have!

One guy DH's and Mouty is the odd guy out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, forphase1 said:

While that sounds good,  it also leaves Cowser without a place on the MLB team, unless we move on from Hays who is hitting great so far this season.   We are quickly getting to the point of not having room for all the talent in the organization, even if we were willing to call it up.  Good problem to have!

If Santander if filling the 1B roll most evenings, then a Rotation of Mullins, Cowser, Hays, Kjerstad in the OF could work with someone getting a night off once a week and someone DHing.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, deward said:

One guy DH's and Mouty is the odd guy out.

Sure, but we use the DH a good amount for Adley when he isn't catching.   Just saying that we are going to need someone in our young talent to be a first baseman in the future as Mountcastle isn't the long term answer and neither is Santander as he's going to get expensive soon.   Be it Mayo, Kjerstad, Westburg, whomever. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, forphase1 said:

Sure, but we use the DH a good amount for Adley when he isn't catching.   Just saying that we are going to need someone in our young talent to be a first baseman in the future as Mountcastle isn't the long term answer and neither is Santander as he's going to get expensive soon.   Be it Mayo, Kjerstad, Westburg, whomever. 

How expensive is Santander? I believe that he's 7.4 million this season. What maybe 9 next year? If if we decided to give him a 3 year deal after his age 29 season how much are we talking here 33 million? 

We are in serious trouble if that kind of money is something that we can't/won't do. I'm not saying that we should definitely invest in re-upping Santander. But he's not the kind of player that you have to break the bank for.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Bemorewins said:

How expensive is Santander? I believe that he's 7.4 million this season. What maybe 9 next year? If if we decided to give him a 3 year deal after his age 29 season how much are we talking here 33 million? 

We are in serious trouble if that kind of money is something that we can't/won't do. I'm not saying that we should definitely invest in re-upping Santander. But he's not the kind of player that you have to break the bank for.

I don't know what he'll be getting after this year.   But I do believe that as soon as management thinks his production can be close to matched by someone making the league minimum he'll be gone.   I expect him to be traded between now and the trading deadline next year.   I don't really see any situation where we sign him for any of his free agency years. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, forphase1 said:

I don't know what he'll be getting after this year.   But I do believe that as soon as management thinks his production can be close to matched by someone making the league minimum he'll be gone.   I expect him to be traded between now and the trading deadline next year.   I don't really see any situation where we sign him for any of his free agency years. 

I don’t think that resigning should be any sort of priority. But I also don’t think that trading him (especially not this season) should be a priority either. If you could just find rookies to come up and hit 30 home runs in a season, that would be great. The only problem is that you can rarely get that kind of production of a rookie (even the best of prospects).

I think it may be helpful to us fans to set realistic expectations for young guys trying to figure out this level. Look at how long it’s taken the uber talented Gunnar. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, Bemorewins said:

I don’t think that resigning should be any sort of priority. But I also don’t think that trading him (especially not this season) should be a priority either. If you could just find rookies to come up and hit 30 home runs in a season, that would be great. The only problem is that you can rarely get that kind of production of a rookie (even the best of prospects).

I think it may be helpful to us fans to set realistic expectations for young guys trying to figure out this level. Look at how long it’s taken the uber talented Gunnar. 

I'm not saying this fans expectations or what I'd do about Santander if I was in charge.   I'm saying what I expect the organization to do.  He's an asset they will be losing in less than two years and they will trade him to get some value for him.  At the same time that will open up a place for another cost controlled asset to take his place and hopefully put up similar numbers. 

Like the Rays, I expect us to trade most players before they reach free agency,  if we can,  while extending a select few.   Of course it requires getting offers worth trading.  Now maybe they do pull more of an Astros type long term plan where they do dive more into free agencies and locking up more guys.   But the farm system is where I expect most of our talent to be found, and I think for the most part we need to be prepared to only see most guys in an Os uniform for a handful of years.   I don't like it,  and it's not how I'd run things.  But it's the way I expect it to be ran, until I'm shown otherwise.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, forphase1 said:

I'm not saying this fans expectations or what I'd do about Santander if I was in charge.   I'm saying what I expect the organization to do.  He's an asset they will be losing in less than two years and they will trade him to get some value for him.  At the same time that will open up a place for another cost controlled asset to take his place and hopefully put up similar numbers. 

Like the Rays, I expect us to trade most players before they reach free agency,  if we can,  while extending a select few.   Of course it requires getting offers worth trading.  Now maybe they do pull more of an Astros type long term plan where they do dive more into free agencies and locking up more guys.   But the farm system is where I expect most of our talent to be found, and I think for the most part we need to be prepared to only see most guys in an Os uniform for a handful of years.   I don't like it,  and it's not how I'd run things.  But it's the way I expect it to be ran, until I'm shown otherwise.

Everything that you say is very rational and may proof to be true. I just don’t have any interest in investing money and time in a continuous (unnecessary rebuild), what you are calling/describing as the “Rays model”. 

That sounds like being unnecessarily cheap and not really investing in the on field product while the owner rakes in most/all the profits and laughs at us all the way to the bank every year.

I’m fundamentally opposed to this idea/concept/philosophy and will not support it. I have seen where this leads, we will indeed be like the Rays, in the end we will be consistently good but never will to do what it takes to ever be good enough. We will have no fans and no relevance in the community. 

Lastly, in order to be like the Rays you have to CONSISTENTLY be able to develop elite pitching like the Rays, year in and year out. 

What have you seen from the O’s that suggest that can even remotely approach that? I hope it’s not the fact that we have been able to turn a few scrap/career minor league relievers into very good to elite guys. We are going to need to do that with starting pitching consistently like the Rays have done. They have produced elite, all star, and very good starters for like the last 15 years.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Bemorewins said:

Everything that you say is very rational and may proof to be true. I just don’t have any interest in investing money and time in a continuous (unnecessary rebuild), what you are calling/describing as the “Rays model”. 

That sounds like being unnecessarily cheap and not really investing in the on field product while the owner rakes in most/all the profits and laughs at us all the way to the bank every year.

I’m fundamentally opposed to this idea/concept/philosophy and will not support it. I have seen where this leads, we will indeed be like the Rays, in the end we will be consistently good but never will to do what it takes to ever be good enough. We will have no fans and no relevance in the community. 

Lastly, in order to be like the Rays you have to CONSISTENTLY be able to develop elite pitching like the Rays, year in and year out. 

What have you seen from the O’s that suggest that can even remotely approach that? I hope it’s not the fact that we have been able to turn a few scrap/career minor league relievers into very good to elite guys. We are going to need to do that with starting pitching consistently like the Rays have done. They have produced elite, all star, and very good starters for like the last 15 years.

I think instead of the pitching side of it,  the O's expect to keep churning out high quality offensive players, and to keep having a top flight scoring offense.  While not yet proven, I THINK the plan is once the majors is stocked with high performing young guys to start trading the surplus for #1,2 and 3 starters and bullpen help as the organization seems hesitant to draft pitching on their own.   So far they have done a very good job of getting many high ranking positional players,  and identifying something that seems to be working for the hitters.

So to sum by Rays model I mean more the structure of not being in on big free agents, not keeping most guys when they get expensive or hit the open market,  and trading guys and replacing them with the youthful talent, along with some selective extensions for key players.   But doing our building through the positional player pipeline instead of the pitchers like the Rays.

Finally, I don't disagree about the cheap ownership.   I was hoping, and expecting, ownership to start spending this offseason, and they didn't.   Maybe they will surprise me,  but at this point I don't believe we will be signing big free agent, taking on expensive contracts in trade,  or even extending guys that we should.  Maybe I'm wrong and 'takeoff' just hasn't happened yet,  but will.   But at this point I'll believe it when I see it.   Have you seen anything from ownership over the past decade or so to think they are going to really open up the checkbook?  Davis was the last big signing and we all know how that worked out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Bemorewins said:

Everything that you say is very rational and may proof to be true. I just don’t have any interest in investing money and time in a continuous (unnecessary rebuild), what you are calling/describing as the “Rays model”. 

That sounds like being unnecessarily cheap and not really investing in the on field product while the owner rakes in most/all the profits and laughs at us all the way to the bank every year.

I’m fundamentally opposed to this idea/concept/philosophy and will not support it. I have seen where this leads, we will indeed be like the Rays, in the end we will be consistently good but never will to do what it takes to ever be good enough. We will have no fans and no relevance in the community. 

Lastly, in order to be like the Rays you have to CONSISTENTLY be able to develop elite pitching like the Rays, year in and year out. 

What have you seen from the O’s that suggest that can even remotely approach that? I hope it’s not the fact that we have been able to turn a few scrap/career minor league relievers into very good to elite guys. We are going to need to do that with starting pitching consistently like the Rays have done. They have produced elite, all star, and very good starters for like the last 15 years.

Winning for $10,000,000 is unacceptable.

I demand we win for $300,000,000

 

🙄

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, forphase1 said:

I think instead of the pitching side of it,  the O's expect to keep churning out high quality offensive players, and to keep having a top flight scoring offense.  While not yet proven, I THINK the plan is once the majors is stocked with high performing young guys to start trading the surplus for #1,2 and 3 starters and bullpen help as the organization seems hesitant to draft pitching on their own.   So far they have done a very good job of getting many high ranking positional players,  and identifying something that seems to be working for the hitters.

So to sum by Rays model I mean more the structure of not being in on big free agents, not keeping most guys when they get expensive or hit the open market,  and trading guys and replacing them with the youthful talent, along with some selective extensions for key players.   But doing our building through the positional player pipeline instead of the pitchers like the Rays.

Finally, I don't disagree about the cheap ownership.   I was hoping, and expecting, ownership to start spending this offseason, and they didn't.   Maybe they will surprise me,  but at this point I don't believe we will be signing big free agent, taking on expensive contracts in trade,  or even extending guys that we should.  Maybe I'm wrong and 'takeoff' just hasn't happened yet,  but will.   But at this point I'll believe it when I see it.   Have you seen anything from ownership over the past decade or so to think they are going to really open up the checkbook?  Davis was the last big signing and we all know how that worked out.

I remain VERY cynical/skeptical about our awful ownership's interesting in the team winning let alone spending any real money to improve the team. It appears to me that John Angelos views the Orioles solely as a money grab and that his side interest is community development work in Baltimore.

Now back to the baseball side of things, if we can consistently "church out" and replace special bats like Adley, Gunnar, and Holliday, I will be shocked. And I consider that a VERY LOW probability of being able to do such a thing consistently. That seems like a very poor stratey to rely on going forward, as the odds just don't favor repeated/sustainable success with that kind of low probability approach.

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

    • Every time we get a pitcher from the A’s this time of year, I think they are still doing us a solid for trading them Pat Neshek for cash in 2012.
    • I understand why you'd be concerned with Webb's performance but that contract is so juicy that I'd jump on him if he were available.  4/82 plus the remainder of his salary this year is a steal for him, even accounting for the fact that pitcher arb awards have been weirdly low.
    • Great to get a 2-0 win facing George Kirby, but man they made it way harder than it had to be. Grayson gets staked to a 1-0 lead in the top of the 4th, then walks 2 of the first 3 batters he faces in the bottom of the inning.  Fortunately, erased on a DP. The O’s score an insurance run in the 7th, but then can’t capitalize on a bases loaded, one out situation with Gunnar and Adley up.   In the bottom half, Grayson allows a single and puts the tying run on via a walk, then makes a poor throw on an easy DP comebacker that could have loaded the bases but Gunnar somehow got a barehand grip on the ball with his foot on the bag.   In the 8th, O’Hearn leads off with a double but the O’s failed to advance him. In the 9th, Kimbrel hits a guy, almost allows a game-tying homer that goes just foul, then hits another guy, and the baserunners both get into scoring position but Kimbrel is able to end it on a strikeout.    I’m thrilled they won, but man they made it gut-wrenching.   
    • 1: A lot of posters here actually have an milb.tv subscription and use it, or they attend games in person.  So you're off base if you think the prevailing opinion here is based on a few social media posts. 2: Henderson doesn't have a famous dad, and Holliday outproduced him at a younger age in the minors, and people here were about equally hyped about Henderson. 3: Holliday put up a 1.000+ OPS in AA as a 19 year old.  AA is harder than power-5 division 1 college baseball.  That's basically like a freshman putting up 25/10/5.  Not 4 points a game.  Get outta here with your terrible Bronny James comparisons.  If people here were actually blinded by a last name then posters here would have thought that Ryan Ripken was a legitimate prospect.  Believe it or not some of us actually do research on things like this.  We certainly aren't alone in rating Holliday highly, as he was rated #1 or #2 overall by every publication I can think of (and #1 by most of them if I recall.) 4: Holliday for Miller, who isn't guaranteed to be healthy enough to be in the starting rotation over the course of his controlled years, is a ludicrous trade proposal and I'm glad you're not our GM.  You're trading Holliday for an ace.  And not just any ace, an ace without injury concerns with years of control left.  Someone like Chris Sale, when the White Sox traded him for Moncada/Kopech+.  Anything less than an ace is a terrible return.  And I get that Moncada was probably a bad #1 overall prospect, but even if you think Holliday is a bad #1 overall too, you're still undervaluing him to an absurd degree by settling for a reliever with injury concerns, even a shutdown one.
    • So, Burnes is pushed back to Thursday. He could still make the Tuesday-Sunday starts next week, or does Hyde go with Kremer to make two starts next week. The Sunday game against the Yankees could be big. I think if we win two of three we clinch the season series.    
    • Probably a low leverage reliever.  Maybe one with options the O's can send to the minors.  No chance the O's can get a high K closer for him.
  • Popular Contributors

  • Popular Now

×
×
  • Create New...