Jump to content

Consolidated O’s top 100 rankings


Frobby

Recommended Posts

Averages:

Holliday: 1

Basallo: 18

Mayo: 20

Kjerstad : 43

Cowser: 38 (but obviously only 5 lists)

To me, this is represents close to where these guys should be ranked. I think I would have Basallo closer to 10 than 20. Mayo 15-20.

Kjerstad and Cowser in the 30-50 range.

Makes sense to me.  

 

  • Upvote 2
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Average/mean rank:

Holliday - 1

Basallo - 17.8

Mayo - 21.3

HK - 42.5

Cowser - 52.5*

Ortiz - 84.2*

EBJ - 102.5*

 

*For Cowser, Ortiz, and EBJ:  For the rankings where they didn't make the top 100, I arbitrarily used 125 as the filler rank.  As a sanity test, I recalc'd it with 150 and it didn't move the needle very much: Cowser (56.7), Ortiz (92.5), and EBJ (115).  

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

To me, this is represents close to where these guys should be ranked. I think I would have Basallo closer to 10 than 20. Mayo 15-20.

It's hard for national pubs to be purely objective.  Not from a "let's slight team X" perspective.  But from a "can we really have team/city X over-represented?" perspective.  I can see a group discussion for final rankings including that level of discussion.  At least if marketing/editing is involved.  Rankings are their sacred business, so they scouts can always point to their tiers and say "Well #15 and #21 are all 50 guys.  Shuffle them around however you want."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, btdart20 said:

It's hard for national pubs to be purely objective.  Not from a "let's slight team X" perspective.  But from a "can we really have team/city X over-represented?" perspective.  I can see a group discussion for final rankings including that level of discussion.  At least if marketing/editing is involved.  Rankings are their sacred business, so they scouts can always point to their tiers and say "Well #15 and #21 are all 50 guys.  Shuffle them around however you want."

I’d say it’s much harder for fans of a particular team to be objective about where their prospects rank in relation to prospects in other organizations.  

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

50 minutes ago, btdart20 said:

It's hard for national pubs to be purely objective.  Not from a "let's slight team X" perspective.  But from a "can we really have team/city X over-represented?" perspective.  I can see a group discussion for final rankings including that level of discussion.  At least if marketing/editing is involved.  Rankings are their sacred business, so they scouts can always point to their tiers and say "Well #15 and #21 are all 50 guys.  Shuffle them around however you want."

I could see that. I don’t think there is much difference between 30-50 and 70-120.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's useful seeing the profiles about all of these guys, both from Tony and even from the national guys. I do tend to look at them differently though, and Cowser's the perfect example why.

He's a highly rated prospect that plays good, but not great, outfield defense, has a good eye, good exit velos, but problems with offspeed stuff, LHP and premium velocity.

To me, I care more about his problems than his ranking. I think we make a mistake when we look at prospect write-ups as if they're the finished product. The real value I gain is in understanding the profile and then (hopefully) seeing improvements. Look at McDermott. Last year he was a 2-pitch reliever in Law's eyes. Now there's more and he may be a starter. Bradish was similar. Means also took a jump forward. I don't love Bradfield's profile, but I have hope. 

I don't even know why I'm writing this, lol. Maybe it's a pep talk to people who think Cowser really will only be a 4th OF/platoon guy. I'm not saying he won't. I'm just saying that just because it's what he looked like last year or the year before doesn't mean that's where he'll settle as a player. 

I'm a huge believer in player development in general, what can be accomplished in the offseason, and the Oriole's current approach, so I expect continued improvement from guys like Povich, maybe Cowser, etc., and for those prospect write-ups to be proven premature when they say that they'll not get closer to their ceilings. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, LookinUp said:

It's useful seeing the profiles about all of these guys, both from Tony and even from the national guys. I do tend to look at them differently though, and Cowser's the perfect example why.

He's a highly rated prospect that plays good, but not great, outfield defense, has a good eye, good exit velos, but problems with offspeed stuff, LHP and premium velocity.

To me, I care more about his problems than his ranking. I think we make a mistake when we look at prospect write-ups as if they're the finished product. The real value I gain is in understanding the profile and then (hopefully) seeing improvements. Look at McDermott. Last year he was a 2-pitch reliever in Law's eyes. Now there's more and he may be a starter. Bradish was similar. Means also took a jump forward. I don't love Bradfield's profile, but I have hope. 

I don't even know why I'm writing this, lol. Maybe it's a pep talk to people who think Cowser really will only be a 4th OF/platoon guy. I'm not saying he won't. I'm just saying that just because it's what he looked like last year or the year before doesn't mean that's where he'll settle as a player. 

I'm a huge believer in player development in general, what can be accomplished in the offseason, and the Oriole's current approach, so I expect continued improvement from guys like Povich, maybe Cowser, etc., and for those prospect write-ups to be proven premature when they say that they'll not get closer to their ceilings. 

Good post. I think the point is that some players keep improving and others hit a wall.   If Cowser improves his weaknesses he can still become an all-star level player.  He improved all during his first year playing at 3 levels.  He finished at Norfolk and was just okay.  He returned to Norfolk and was much better there.  He really struggled in a SSS in the majors.  Now we get to see if he can make further adjustments.

Edited by RZNJ
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, RZNJ said:

Good post. I think the point is that some players keep improving and others hit a wall.   If Cowser improves his weaknesses he can still become an all-star level player.  He improved all during his first year playing at 3 levels.  He finished at Norfolk and was just okay.  He returned to Norfolk and was much better there.  He really struggled in a SSS in the majors.  Now we get to see if he can make further adjustments.

Right. And I'm not saying Cowser will be the guy to really improve his profile. I'd put more money on Povich to be honest. Less on Fabian and Bradfield, though obviously I hope I'm wrong there.

With that said, of everyone, I think Cowser almost gets the benefit of legit failure. That brings clarity. If he didn't get into the offseason with open eyes, I don't know who did. Hopefully that really benefits him because he, and all of the experts trying to help him, really should know what he has to work on.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 2/9/2024 at 6:00 PM, btdart20 said:

Average/mean rank:

Holliday - 1

Basallo - 17.8

Mayo - 21.3

HK - 42.5

Cowser - 52.5*

Ortiz - 84.2*

EBJ - 102.5*

 

*For Cowser, Ortiz, and EBJ:  For the rankings where they didn't make the top 100, I arbitrarily used 125 as the filler rank.  As a sanity test, I recalc'd it with 150 and it didn't move the needle very much: Cowser (56.7), Ortiz (92.5), and EBJ (115).  

Holliday - 1

Basallo - 16.3

Mayo - 21.6

HK - 39.9

Cowser - 62.9*

Ortiz - 78.6*

EBJ - 105.7*

 

Updated with FG - nudged HK into the top 40 and Cowser out of the top 60.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It’s fascinating to me how the opinions on Cowser vary so much.   He’s got three evaluations in the top 40 (including as high as 19) and two outside the top 100.   And listening to Longenhagen on Effectively Wild, Cowser wasn’t a borderline case for him, he was way outside the top 100.   

Somebody’s going to be proven very wrong about Cowser, I just don’t know who yet.  
 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Frobby said:

It’s fascinating to me how the opinions on Cowser vary so much.   He’s got three evaluations in the top 40 (including as high as 19) and two outside the top 100.   And listening to Longenhagen on Effectively Wild, Cowser wasn’t a borderline case for him, he was way outside the top 100.   

Somebody’s going to be proven very wrong about Cowser, I just don’t know who yet.  
 

It's interesting but makes sense. A 23 year old former top 10 draft pick who put up a .937 OPS in AAA with good exit velos is usually a lock to be in a top 100. On the other hand, he's a corner outfielder who will most likely never hit lefties well enough to be an impact everyday player. Good news is Kjerstad is going to be a stud imo. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

34 minutes ago, LTO's said:

It's interesting but makes sense. A 23 year old former top 10 draft pick who put up a .937 OPS in AAA with good exit velos is usually a lock to be in a top 100. On the other hand, he's a corner outfielder who will most likely never hit lefties well enough to be an impact everyday player. Good news is Kjerstad is going to be a stud imo. 

Combined, Cowser had a .253 avg and .745 OPS against LHP last year.

A little soon to be declaring he can’t hit lefties.

 

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 think some fans are just inherently negative.   We follow the team so closely that we know the weaknesses of every player.   And every player, no matter how good, has weaknesses. Because a good starter is capable of being dominant in a given start, anything less can be a disappointment.   As an exercise, find a game where an Oriole starter pitched a good but not spectacular game, say 5.2 innings, 2 runs allowed, 5 hits, 2 walks.   Nothing wrong with that.   Not a dominant outing but in 2024 it's considered pretty good.  Now go to the game thread for that game and read how many comments there are about that pitcher, and count how many are positive and how many are negative.   I think you'll find the negatives VASTLY outweigh the positives.  I mean probably a ratio of about 10 to 1.  There will be comments about how he "doesn't have it tonight" after he walks a batter or falls behind a few batters in a row.    There will be comments about how he is about to implode.   If he throws a fat pitch down the middle that is hit for extra bases that will be pounced on.   If it is Irvin or Kremer there will be comments about how we need to get someone better and we don't want this guy pitching in a playoff game.   If it is Means or Bradish there will be questioning their health.   If it is G-Rod there will be comments that he has to be better than this.   Meanwhile, there will be a very small number of positiive comments.   Yet the end results (5.2/2 runs) is probably better than average.   That's just human nature.   Focusing on the negative is more interesting to many than focusing on the positive.
    • Great find Tony. BB% has dropped from 5.2 last year to 0.7. That could be a game changer if it sticks. 
    • Some of the root cause is both Ryan's flirting with All-Star form, but I agree entering the 2nd quarter of the year, something I now think will happen that I wouldn't have guessed is that one of Coby Mayo or Jackson Holliday will end up with 129 or fewer at-bats this season. Trade deadline will be exciting not just for Elias hopefully continuing the Corbin Burnes pattern of buying quality, but because it isn't inconceivable something like the Theo Epstein sending Nomar Garciaparra away move is in the range of outcomes. It is Adley year 3 of 6, and the decision might be to give 2/9ths of the tournament plate appearances to not Mayo/Holliday.
    • Well, I definitely was spoiled for a couple decades in my youth (70’s-80’s). The O’s were always as good or better. It was glorious never being afraid of being in the AL East. Then a new reality set in. That 14-year losing streak was way more humble pie than I anticipated. Now I don’t feel spoiled at all. I’m grateful I’ve lived long enough to see my Birds feared again. In essence, I agree with your original post.  Concern by some fans is always good, but it seems early to be throwing bricks at the TV (or computer screen) based on how well the O’s are doing overall.
    • Here we are with the Mayo in RF chatter again when the O's haven't given any indication that they want to play him in the OF. Dude has no games in the OF for this organization.
    • What is the purpose of this message board if people don't talk about the team? Either negative or positive? When I see a post from MLB on Facebook regarding the O's, or an O's game most of the fans are being just that, fans. I mean even on an O's post you still get Astros and Rangers fans downing the team. Last week when they lost a game to Arizona and there was a post, most folks were fairly complimentary to Arizona and happy with 2/3. I guess every fan base has their extremes, but I think most of us are a far cry away from expecting anything to be given.
    • What I meant to say is I don’t consider making the playoffs a lock.  SG started a thread yesterday like it’s a sure thing.
  • Popular Contributors

  • Popular Now

×
×
  • Create New...