Jump to content

Questions that need to be answered during the 2024 season


wildcard

Recommended Posts

5 minutes ago, RZNJ said:

Semantics.  The other poster said defense and pitching were key with Hyde.   Sounds reasonable to me.   

I'm also pretty sure that scoring runs is a key.

What did Earl say?

Pitching

Defense

Three run homers.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

56 minutes ago, Roll Tide said:

I’m confident Mayo can play above average defense at 1B

Above average? Thats Monty. Even if he could play average 1B thers already 2 at 1B / DH. Mayo needs an injury or 2 to get called up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, Safelykept said:

Neither does Mullins.

Mullins is interesting.   His defense is  his best feature.   His offense shows back to back 721 OPS season.  Well below what is desirable for a starter.    His leg injuries are concerning for a guy who makes his living with his legs.  

Hyde has lowered Mullins to the bottom half of the lineup.   That seems to be because his OBP was 318 and 305 in 2022 and 2023.

Then there is his contract status.   He is fine this year but next year he will be in his walk year.   Do the O's extend a player with a 3 or 4 year contract who is having trouble staying healthy?   Having players in their 20's  rather than their 30's has been why the O's have risen in the standings.    Do they trade Mullins over the offseason so they don't have to make a long term commitment to him?

A lot depends on whether the O's have a replacement is center.    Is Cowser capable of doing that.   That is one of the questions the O's will try to answer this season IMO.  EBJ is still in A+.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, wildcard said:

Mullins is interesting.   His defense is  his best feature.   His offense shows back to back 721 OPS season.  Well below what is desirable for a starter.    His leg injuries are concerning for a guy who makes his living with his legs.  

Hyde has lowered Mullins to the bottom half of the lineup.   That seems to be because his OBP was 318 and 305 in 2022 and 2023.

Then there is his contract status.   He is fine this year but next year he will be in his walk year.   Do the O's extend a player with a 3 or 4 year contract who is having trouble staying healthy?   Having players in their 20's  rather than their 30's has been why the O's have risen in the standings.    Do they trade Mullins over the offseason so they don't have to make a long term commitment to him?

A lot depends on whether the O's have a replacement is center.    Is Cowser capable of doing that.   That is one of the questions the O's will try to answer this season IMO.  EBJ is still in A+.

Theoretically, the Orioles had replacements for Santander.   There’s your answer.  Mullins is here thru next season.   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, wildcard said:

Mullins is interesting.   His defense is  his best feature.   His offense shows back to back 721 OPS season.  Well below what is desirable for a starter.    His leg injuries are concerning for a guy who makes his living with his legs.  

Hyde has lowered Mullins to the bottom half of the lineup.   That seems to be because his OBP was 318 and 305 in 2022 and 2023.

Then there is his contract status.   He is fine this year but next year he will be in his walk year.   Do the O's extend a player with a 3 or 4 year contract who is having trouble staying healthy?   Having players in their 20's  rather than their 30's has been why the O's have risen in the standings.    Do they trade Mullins over the offseason so they don't have to make a long term commitment to him?

A lot depends on whether the O's have a replacement is center.    Is Cowser capable of doing that.   That is one of the questions the O's will try to answer this season IMO.  EBJ is still in A+.

A 721 OPs is not below average for a CF.  In fact, I don’t think 721 is much below average for any position.(as a whole, obviously that’s low for first, DH, COF)

Average OPS across the board was 734 last year.  He is right there with many positions.

Edited by Sports Guy
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, RZNJ said:

Theoretically, the Orioles had replacements for Santander.   There’s your answer.  Mullins is here thru next season.   

The O's may be able to offer Santander a Quality Offer and get a draft choice for him.   I don't see that as possible for Mullins.   Elias is going to have to decide this off season to extend Mullins or keep him and let him go FA with no compensation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

A 721 OPs is not below average for a CF.  In fact, I don’t think 721 is much below average for any position.

For a team trying to win the World Series?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, wildcard said:

For a team trying to win the World Series?

The laundry list to why this is a bad question is long but…

 

Last year, the Rangers starting CFer, who had over 550 PA, had a 733 OPS. They had a LF who had almost 300 PA have an OPS at 699.  Josh Smith had 233 PA and an OPS of 633.

You can’t find countless examples of this type of thing on every team that makes the playoffs and wins it all.

Edited by Sports Guy
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

The laundry list to why this is a bad question is long but…

 

Last year, the Rangers starting CFer, who had over 550 at bats, had a 733 OPS. They had a LF who had almost 300 at bats have an OPS at 699.  Josh Smith had 233 PA and an OPS of 633.

You can’t find countless examples of this type of thing on every team that makes the playoffs and wins it all.

The expectations people have for individual players and the numbers that put up is always so out of line with reality. Folks on this board think that every position player should have an 850 OPS or the team has no chance. 

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, wildcard said:

For a team trying to win the World Series?

You may be stuck in the 2019 juiced ball mentality. Mullins has been an above average hitter the past two seasons (107 and 102 OPS+). And that is playing outstanding defense at a difficult position while stealing bases and playing half the year in Camden. 6.01, 4.15, 3.91 162 game pace WAR's in 2021-2023. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Fiver6565 said:

The expectations people have for individual players and the numbers that put up is always so out of line with reality. Folks on this board think that every position player should have an 850 OPS or the team has no chance. 

With plus defense.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, RZNJ said:

Would you want Hays in CF full time?  I wouldn’t.  Cowser can play CF but I don’t think he becomes the regular CF.

I'm not sure I want Hays on the roster at all after this year. 

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

    • A little funny to have provided descriptions of the hits (“weak” single; “500 foot” HR). FIP doesn’t care about any of that either, so it’s kind of an odd thing to add in an effort to make ERA look bad.  Come in, strike out the first hitter, then give up three 108 MPH rocket doubles off the wall. FIP thinks you were absolutely outstanding, and it’s a shame your pathetic defense and/or sheer bad luck let you down. Next time you’ll (probably) get the outcomes you deserve. They’re both flawed. So is xFIP. So is SIERA. So is RA/9. So is WPA. So is xERA. None of them are perfect measures of how a pitcher’s actual performance was, because there’s way too much context and too many variables for any one metric to really encompass.  But when I’m thinking about awards, for me at least, it ends up having to be about the actual outcomes. I don’t really care what a hitter’s xWOBA is when I’m thinking about MVP, and the same is true for pitchers. Did you get the outs? Did the runs score? That’s the “value” that translates to the scoreboard and, ultimately, to the standings. So I think the B-R side of it is more sensible for awards.  I definitely take into account the types of factors that you (and other pitching fWAR advocates) reference as flaws. So if a guy plays in front of a particular bad defense or had a particularly high percentage of inherited runners score, I’d absolutely adjust my take to incorporate that info. And I also 100% go to Fangraphs first when I’m trying to figure out which pitchers we should acquire (i.e., for forward looking purposes).  But I just can’t bring myself say that my Cy Young is just whichever guy had the best ratio of Ks to BBs to HRs over a threshold number of innings. As @Frobby said, it just distills out too much of what actually happened.
    • We were all a lot younger in 2005.  No one wanted to believe Canseco cause he’s a smarmy guy. Like I said, he was the only one telling the truth. It wasn’t a leap of faith to see McGwire up there and Sosa up there and think “yeah, those guys were juicing” but then suddenly look at Raffy and think he was completely innocent.  It’s a sad story. The guy should be in Hall of Fame yet 500 homers and 3,000 hits are gone like a fart in the wind cause his legacy is wagging his finger and thinking he couldn’t get caught.  Don’t fly too close to the sun.  
    • I think if we get the fun sprinkler loving Gunnar that was in the dugout yesterday, I don’t think we have to worry about him pressing. He seemed loose and feeling good with the other guys he was with, like Kremer.
    • I was a lot younger back then, but that betrayal hit really hard because he had been painting himself as literally holier than thou, and shook his finger to a congressional committee and then barely 2 weeks later failed the test.
    • Not bad, but Mullins needs to be at Centerfield for his range, glove, and defensive ability. Top teir premium defense cannot be underestimated. Kjerstad will be on the bench. I think the question is whether Slater or Cowser plays. I would prefer Ramirez over Slater if they need another right handed bat. Sig needs to look at Adleys recent sample sizes vs LHP before making him DH. McCann is catching for Burnes and hitting the left handed pitcher. He's also on a hot streak.
    • I’m slightly (irrationally, I admit, there’s no factual basis for what I’m about to say) worried that Gunnar is going to view this as the “Gunnar vs. Bobby” show and press hard at the plate and in the field leading to bad at bats and unforced errors. 
    • Sounds like getting your heart broken by big league ballplayers is a personal problem. Learn and adjust accordingly. These guys usually aren’t trying to be role models and he played in an era where a lot of players were on the gas. Was I surprised? Yeah, a little bit.  No one likes to admit Jose Canseco was the most honest one up there that day and was telling the truth the entire time.    
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...