NinersSBChamps
<B>Voted Worst Poster <br> 2015 (Co-Winner)</BR>20
Who cares? He's no longer with the Braves.
Who cares? He's no longer with the Braves.
Dreadful decisions, to be sure, but everybody's got some dead money. I really go back to those four guys crapping out. Two of them have normal careers and he's still in the saddle right now.
One other thing I find laughable is the insistence that our farm was barren. Bull****. Our farm was playing in Atlanta. Freeman, Heyward, Simmons, Kimbrel and friends were promoted at 20-21-22 instead of populating the high minors.
With respect to drafting and the state of the farm system, I'd say his performance was average. I know others see this as a very negative aspect of his period in office. But I've looked at the Wren drafts versus the Roy Clark drafts and as far as I can determine there is not much difference in the production of the players taken, especially when you account for where we were drafting and the number of early round picks. As for the farm system, I think you have to look at the amount of young talent in the majors to get a complete picture. The farm system is down at the moment (I don't think it is 29th as Hart says), but that is in large part due to the graduation of talent in recent years.
Wren's issue with the farm was it was about to become barren because of JS selling off the farm in his latter years, and some pretty crappy drafts/international signings
Let's look at some of JS's later trades. First and foremost the Teixeira trade with depleted us of top prospects Andrus and Feliz and depth propsect Harrison. Pretty sure Salty wasn't a prospect at that point anymore. He alos traded Davies for Dotel, not that Davies amounted to much, but Octavio Dotel? He then traded McBride and Startup for Ring, Betemit for Baez and Aybar, and Marte for Renteria. Most of those trades didn't work out unfavorably for the Braves but they were involved in depleting our farm. And again our picks in the later years were pretty weak.
Saltalamacchia was the centerpiece. Felix was in class A, at the time, and was projected for bigger things. Harrison wasn't as highly regarded. The Rangers just hit the jackpot. Meanwhile, Chipper was in a totally different galaxy with protection in the lineup from another high average/big pop switch hitter. So, let's not pretend that this deal was completed blindly. We all know now that MLB is the point where gunning for the WS has become a crap shoot. We've already heard enough whining between here and Scout about the Texeira trade. Too many Braves fans act is if "why is it only us?" Research what the Expos gave up for Bartolo Colon. Totally gutted that organization to prep the move to DC.
As far as the others, some you should know better. Betemit's development got stunted. He was delayed at AAA for 3 years and did not become the star player, which was projected of him. Even more damaging was not retaining Aybar. Despite the off-field incidents, dude made a dent after he left ATL.
Crocodile tears for Marte, Davies, McBride, Startup, etc. So many armchair GM's here love to 2nd guess Schuerholz, but he rarely got burned, trading a pitcher. About the only exception, if there is one, would be Jason Schmidt. However, he didn't emerge until after joining the Giants. Plus Denny Neagle was the ideal replacement for Avery, whom they knew was on his last legs.
These love-fests with certain prospects really never go anywhere. Unfortunately, the flames were fanned by Shanks, who preached that every Braves prospect was great, especially if he was from Georgia & grew up a Braves fan.
Let me know if you see any trends there.
And before you say "graduation rates" about recent years, I want you to think about how many dudes we graduated or traded in the mid aughts. Or any of the previous 15 years.
Here is an article from BA in March 2013 (for some reason I can't find the 2014 version of this list) ranking farm system productivity in recent years.
http://www.baseballamerica.com/mino...-production-from-farm-system-in-recent-years/
Since that article was published our system has graduated some additional players: Gattis, Wood, Shae Simmons, La Stella, Hale.
We started sucking after Snyder retired.
Anyway, I don't put much stock in BA rankings. They're fun to muse on but at what point do people realize that tools (which is what BA grades on) don't always make for good players? Prado wasn't BA rated, Medlen wasn't, Beachy wasn't, and they all had various amounts of success.
The point is our system used to be able to consistently replace the guys who graduated/were traded/whatever. Are you really not seeing the trend above?
We started sucking after Snyder retired.
Anyway, I don't put much stock in BA rankings. They're fun to muse on but at what point do people realize that tools (which is what BA grades on) don't always make for good players? Prado wasn't BA rated, Medlen wasn't, Beachy wasn't, and they all had various amounts of success.
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(4) Prado being our miracle baby does not make prospect rankings meaningless.
(1) Beachy and Medlen were both top 10 prospects in our system, per BA.
(2) BA does not solely grade on tools.
(3) Honestly, Baseball Prospectus (for example) are much more of tools whores that BA, at least in recent years.
(4) Prado being our miracle baby does not make prospect rankings meaningless.
I see it. I would argue that complementing your list with the actual output of the farm system over the past 4 or 5 years gives a more accurate picture.
True but Prado is a reminder that the actual outcome can be far different that the pundits rankings. Marte is a reminder in the opposite direction. We've had a bit of both over the years. Guys like Marte or Kyle Davies did not live up to their rankings. In addition to Prado, we've had guys like Escobar, Gattis and Wood who never made BA's Top 100. This is why I think the lists need to be complemented by data on the actual output of the players matriculating through the system.
Top 10 in our system and top prospcts are not the same thing. Kyle Kubitza made our BA top 10 and I'm pretty sure he's gonna amount to pretty much nothing.