Jump to content

When is the best time to call up rookies?


Sports Guy

Recommended Posts

Read and learn about Prospect Promotion Incentives and it may give you a clue on Elias's strategy on promoting top 100 prospects.....ROY = 29th draft pick and bonus pool money or a draft pick if they finish in the top three in MVP or CY before they are arbitration eligible....but they need 172 days of service time as a rookie to qualify for any compensation  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

27 minutes ago, PsychoBird68 said:

Read and learn about Prospect Promotion Incentives and it may give you a clue on Elias's strategy on promoting top 100 prospects.....ROY = 29th draft pick and bonus pool money or a draft pick if they finish in the top three in MVP or CY before they are arbitration eligible....but they need 172 days of service time as a rookie to qualify for any compensation  

Correction:

Not sure of draft pick order however Seattle got the 29th pick last year and 2.5 million in bonus pool money

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't consider Westburg as probable a RoY candidate as our very best guys but it is also true that managing him to 129 or fewer 2023 at-bats and keeping him as a 2024 Rookie of the Year candidate does incrementally increase his expected future value to any Club holding his rights.

For sure, you can increase a guy like Westburg's award probability relative to say Matt McLain or Elly de la Cruz by managing the time such that the player candidate gets 650 not 400 plate appearances in pursuit of an asset.   As @Moose Milligansaid, its a WAR competition, and WAR is a counting stat.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Just Regular said:

I don't consider Westburg as probable a RoY candidate as our very best guys but it is also true that managing him to 129 or fewer 2023 at-bats and keeping him as a 2024 Rookie of the Year candidate does incrementally increase his expected future value to any Club holding his rights.

For sure, you can increase a guy like Westburg's award probability relative to say Matt McLain or Elly de la Cruz by managing the time such that the player candidate gets 650 not 400 plate appearances in pursuit of an asset.   As @Moose Milligansaid, it’s a WAR competition, and WAR is a counting stat.

That may play a role but I think they have a number of at bats they want to achieve plus the MLB roster impacting things. 
 

Elias has to juggle multiple things. Competent at worst MLB roster, 40 man roster limits, depth due to potential injuries, trade deadline etc. 

I just think over time the timing of the moves will work themselves out. When will there be a time when he deals a productive MLB player or legit prospect is the question? I guess Mateo could be defined as a productive player. The fact he only has 2 more years of service impacts this. I think the next question revolves around Mountcastle who after this year has 3 years left. 
 

Trading players early may increase their value but it also exposes a greater risk factor to the club. We have already seen more injuries this year for position players than all of last year. My guess is we don’t see Elias deal significant prospects unless it’s for a significant arm. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

30 minutes ago, eddie83 said:

That may play a role but I think they have a number of at bats they want to achieve plus the MLB roster impacting things. 
 

Elias has to juggle multiple things. Competent at worst MLB roster, 40 man roster limits, depth due to potential injuries, trade deadline etc. 

I just think over time the timing of the moves will work themselves out. When will there be a time when he deals a productive MLB player or legit prospect is the question? I guess Mateo could be defined as a productive player. The fact he only has 2 more years of service impacts this. I think the next question revolves around Mountcastle who after this year has 3 years left. 
 

Trading players early may increase their value but it also exposes a greater risk factor to the club. We have already seen more injuries this year for position players than all of last year. My guess is we don’t see Elias deal significant prospects unless it’s for a significant arm. 

Just wondering if you still think it’s crazy that Frazier plays most of the year despite poor production?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the answer depends on 3 things:

1.  How bad is the person the prospect is replacing playing, and how long has that been going on?

2.  How confident are you that the prospect will play better than the guy he’s replacing?

3.  How is the team doing the way things are?

If the current player has been playing very poorly for a long time, you are very confident that the prospect will be better, and the team is losing, then it’s a pretty easy decision to bring up the prospect to replace the other player.  It’s gets more complicated in any other combination of these three factors and it’s a matter of degree and weighing them.

 

  • Upvote 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

    • I was at a meeting and came out to the Orioles down 1-0. I looked away for what seemed like a minute and it was 5-0, then 7-0. Do we know why Burnes was lifted after just 69 pitches after 5 innings? Was he hurt? Do we know why Cano was brought into the game in the 6th (Have to imagine his adrenaline may not have been as flowing at that stage of the game)?  Obviously the bullpen was pretty horrific last night, but could some of this be because Hyde was using guys who typically are late in game relievers in the 6th inning?  
    • Good point on the age.  I think it would have to be someone like Nate George from this year's draft just blowing up next year. The story would be how everyone missed on him because he played in a cold weather state.    
    • First, Schmidt is having a better year than Cole. Second, the O's teed off Ragans and Lugo last time they faced them.
    • Elias needs to use better judgement when he dumpster dives, prepare better for the high percentage chance that his dumpster diving pickups will fail, and increase usage of other means to get pieces. Bullpen usage is another problem, but it’s hard to effectively juggle flaming torches. A wrong move burns badly 
    • I can see the case for Mountcastle based on defense alone, but what has Kjerstad done to warrant that kind of treatment? Is it the .505 OPS he’s put up since coming back? The overall .438 ML OPS since getting hit in the head? I’m as bummed as anyone that his season got derailed, but if you’re talking about where they are right now — he’s not your huckleberry. As for O’Hearn, he’s 8 for his last 23 (.348), with 3 doubles. That feels a little like the “getting himself together” that you referenced. He had an awful month-long slump, but he also has an extended track record (over 1.5 seasons) of excelling in the role he’s now back in, as the platoon LH 1B/DH guy. He had a 125 wRC+ in those 750 PAs as an Oriole until 8/20, which is roughly when Mountcastle went out.  I’d be good with Kjerstad DHing against LH starters, because there’s good reason to think he hits them better than O’Hearn. And if they want to play both O’Hearn and Kjerstad against some RHPs, in order to set up the potential of Mountcastle coming in to PH against a lefty reliever, I’m down for that too. But the primary alignment is going to (and should) be the Mountcastle/O’Hearn duo we’ve gotten accustomed to seeing.
    • The Achilles heel for this team is going to be the unit that doesn't step up in the postseason. I can easily see scenarios where: the bullpen is hot and provides good performances but the offense sputters and isn't clutch the offense comes up big but the bullpen blows games late starting pitching tosses some clunkers (not really likely with Burnes and Eflin) and they can't recover the defense sucks and gives opponents extra outs to work with, blowing games open when the bullpen or SP would have been able to escape and continue We've seen all of these units falter at one point or another during this season.  We've also seen all of these units perform very well at different times throughout the season.  So, we'll see what turns out to be the Achilles heel for the Orioles in the playoffs starting next week.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...