Jump to content

Shohei's 2023 LA Angels


Just Regular

Recommended Posts

2 hours ago, Moose Milligan said:

I have mixed feelings about this. I coached him in 2021 with the BigTrain and he was a very advanced hitter. I’m not surprised he was promoted aggressively but I had no idea that he’d only spend 6 weeks in the minors. The Angels have been pretty aggressive with bats in the past. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, MCO'sFan said:

I have mixed feelings about this. I coached him in 2021 with the BigTrain and he was a very advanced hitter. I’m not surprised he was promoted aggressively but I had no idea that he’d only spend 6 weeks in the minors. The Angels have been pretty aggressive with bats in the past. 

That's cool, he looks like a great prospect.  But I'm pretty positive they don't promote him this quickly unless they're trying to snag a playoff spot and keep Ohtani.  

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Moose Milligan said:

That's cool, he looks like a great prospect.  But I'm pretty positive they don't promote him this quickly unless they're trying to snag a playoff spot and keep Ohtani.  

I agree. I have not checked BA but Nolan isn’t in MLB’s top 100. He is the Angels #2 prospect. Their system is pretty bare. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And we thought Oregon Ridge crabcakes or whatever would be impressive wooing of Carl Pavano.

No stone is being left unturned to try and convince Ohtani this wreck of an organization will be "good for him".

Though it will be good Westburg-Cowser-Kjerstad fun if Schanuel just rolls.

Like Masyn Winn in the NL, this 43rd or 44th to last day of the season is also a bit of an unofficial start to the 2024 Rookie of the Year race and that sweet sweet Comp A bonus pick.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, FlaO'sFan said:

Nolan was who I wanted, if he fell to our spot, because of his great analytic numbers. Didn't happen, but I'm interested in seeing how he develops. Agree that this seems like a really wierd move by the Angels.

Yeah, I selfishly wanted him to fall to us. Some mocks had him as a possibility. He’s really a great guy with a great personality and a lot of fun. We had a particularly gruff player on the team and Nolan said to him on day 1 that he would make this kid like him and they’d be best friends by the end of the summer. They weren’t but Nolan had 28 other best friends. 

  • Upvote 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

This Angels team is just awful. The fact that management looked at this team and thought they could make a run is just laughable. 
 

Staked themselves to a 6-2 lead against Glasnow through a series of bloop hits, errors, passed balls. And now have blown most of that lead already with the Rays still batting in the fourth. 
 

I mean FFS Moustakas is their cleanup hitter. Just a terrible roster. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

MLB Tonight ripped the Angels a couple of nights ago on their failure to trade Ohtani at the deadline.   One quote I remember was that if you can't make the playoffs paying Ohtani at a discount, how are you going to do it full price.  I wonder if there will be a big attendance drop for the Angels in 2024?  Come watch Rendon hit singles and Trout (sorry, Trout is on the DL).

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ohtani done pitching for the season with a torn UCL. I think any team signing Ohtani needs to keep this in mind that eventually he's probably just going to be a position player.

Ohtani's UCL keeps getting injured and his pitching career is going to have a limited shelf life. Realistically he's not pitching until 2025 if gets surgery. Not sure how long the surgery would sideline him as a hitter.

 

Edited by OsFanSinceThe80s
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 guarantee you that if Christy could only get guys out by using his best stuff he would have.  
    • I'm going to guess that in the olden days there was a weeding out that happened before most kids played an organized baseball game. Many, many kids played baseball all day long in the summer, and many, many of them tore up their elbow or shoulder at 11 or 13 or whatever and never pitched on a high school or other team. And nobody was Drivelining anyone. Part of the philosophy of pitching was you don't throw as hard as you possibly can because it hurts and you'll ruin your arm. A few people got away with throwing near max effort, but most couldn't. And there was a very stong stigma to coming out of a game, so pitchers knew they'd be shamed and mocked if they threw until it really hurt and had to come out. In the 1910's Christy Mathewson (or a ghostwriter) wrote Pitching in a Pinch, where he explicitly said that using your best stuff except when you really needed to was stupid.  Smoltz is a guy who idiotically venerates the past, making the era where he came up into some kind of golden nirvana. But, he is right that the driving factor in injuries today is that everyone throws at 110% of rated capacity all the time. It's just a matter of time until something tears.  The problem is that there is no simple solution, since throwing at 110% is simply more effective than throwing at 90%. 90% gets you (essentially) limitless innings. But 110% makes your ERA half a run or a run lower (numbers made up for illustration). And it couldn't be more clear that when $millions and wins are on the line, essentially everyone picks the lower ERA over the more innings. An average MLB pitcher has an ERA in the mid-4s. If he backs it off to 90% so he can pitch into the 8th or 9th, he'll likely have an ERA in the mid-5s, which puts him in AAA. The difference between pacing and pitching until it breaks is often the difference between $7M a year and $70k a year.
    • Thx for the firsthand report, I’m heading to the game tonight, hoping to see Basallo behind the dish.  What were your impressions of Etzels swing/mechanics?  When I saw him in spring training prospects game, to my eye he looked more slap hitterish in the box compared to the other players.  His production is better than that so it could have just been the angle I observed from the 3rd base dugout area stands. 
    • I took a few things away from that game. Gunnar is fighting his swing and timing. Mateo swing and swing decisions are getting worse as the season progresses. Kjerstad may struggle with velocity in upper part of the zone. Seattle offense is really bad and they are wasting a good pitching staff. Grayson and Perez pitched really well.
    • What are your thoughts on protecting Brnovich and/or Held from the Rule 5 draft?
    • Of course they didn’t play badly. Seattle was shut out and they got 2 hits. Did the Os have some luck?  Sure..which basically happens in every win and in every loss, you have some bad luck. Os also had 2 CS. Maybe something happens with those guys.  OTOH, Raleigh made 2 perfect throws and one pitch was a pseudo pitch out, ie an easier pitch to throw off of. Second fastball of 17 pitches by Baumann. If it was a breaking ball, Cowser is safe. Bad luck.
    • You just but his minor league numbers are really good. Plus K rate and low BBs. I don't understand why he wasn't given a chance earlier. Seems to have been repeatedly held back at every level despite performing well. I don't get it 
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...