Is "2017" a huge lie?

If we don't trade any SP talent for positional players before 2017, than I think 2017 is a big lie. I do not think 2017 is a big lie.

Here's a quick peak at pitching depth at upper levels:

ATL: Miller, Teheran, FA Veteran, Wisler, Folty, Banuelos (bullpen)
AAA: Volstad, Weber, Jenkins, Sims, Gant
AA: Newcomb, Ellis, Janas, Bird, Thurman
 
If we don't trade any SP talent for positional players before 2017, than I think 2017 is a big lie. I do not think 2017 is a big lie.

Here's a quick peak at pitching depth at upper levels:

ATL: Miller, Teheran, FA Veteran, Wisler, Folty, Banuelos (bullpen)
AAA: Volstad, Weber, Jenkins, Sims, Gant
AA: Newcomb, Ellis, Janas, Bird, Thurman

Realistically I think Newcomb will emerge as a bona fide ML starter and one of the rest from your list (which should include Williams Perez). So two to add to Miller, Teheran, FA Veteran and Wisler. Now we might get lucky and generate one more bona fide ML starter from this list. Or we might get unlucky and end up with fewer. After all there is always the risk one of the "established" guys has an injury or loses it. The most likely outcome imo from this group is six serviceable ML starters. Teheran, Miller, Wisler, FA, Newcomb and one other.

Sticking with the theme of being realistic, it will probably take more than a year for the development of these prospects. So this small surplus of ML caliber starting pitching (if you want to call it that since it is unrealistic to plan on only needing five starters in any given season) most likely won't manifest itself fully until 2018.

It seems to me that what we have at the ML and upper minor league levels will turn out to be just enough (and that includes the assumption we pick up a veteran FA). We can dream about a surplus from this group that can be used to acquire bats. But realistically it ain't gonna happen to any great extent. Imo if we want to accelerate the rebuild we will have to trade from the very young group of promising players who played in rookie leagues last year (Acuna, Yepez, Riley, Allard, Soroka) or those we pick up from the draft and international market this year.
 
clv I disagree that it is enough to be a wizard with the glove if you are truly that special. Again a 3-4 WAR player is a 3-4 WAR player regardless of how one goes about that. Some disagree with that but that is my opinion. No, if he never learns to hit then he won't be in that class of players you use listed as they are either HOFers or had HOF level stretches. But there is nothing wrong with being a good player. Which is saying a lot considering how bad of a hitter he has been.

I'm not saying that being a wizard with the glove isn't enough (or a bad thing). It's obvious that the Braves - as constructed recently - need more than that.

Freeman's not your typical power guy at 1B (again, not a bad thing). Little to no power at 3B (CJ, KJ, Uribe). Little power in RF (Heyward and Markakis). The only place "quick strikes" came from were J-Up and Gattis in LF (and when Evan was behind the plate).

For the offense to improve - especially after you removed Justin and Gattis from the equation - it was much more important that you have guys who "keep the line moving". It's no surprise the team was flirting with .500 as late as June -

May OBPs:

Simba - .342
Peterson - .351
Maybin - .371
Markakis - .339

June OBPs:

Simba - .340
Peterson - .362
Maybin - .366
Markakis - .395

If those guys could maintain that level, this team could be pretty competitive - even without adding big bats. For a stretch early on they resembled the Royals offense (that also doesn't rely on power) with runners on seemingly all the time, putting consistent pressure on opposing defenses. Of course Simba, Peterson, and Maybin weren't able to keep that up and Markakis became the only guy consistently getting on (his WORST month was July, and even then his OBP was .321). When Freddie went down during the middle of the season, there was no way for the team to score runs.

My point is that they've all but begged Andrelton to cut down on his swing and be that guy that just sprays the ball all over and it just hasn't happened - to this point. That's what the Braves needed from him. If he could do that, he'd be impossible to keep from being the NL starter at SS for years and years to come (think Jeter). His glove makes him a really good player - if he'd just make that offensive adjustment, he'd be absolutely elite.
 
I think next year will be a repetition of the Markakis-Heyward discussion moved to short. Aybar is a competent pro. He will not hurt your team in the field and he is a professional hitter. But we will notice that he makes a much smaller proportion of the difficult plays that we got used to seeing made at short the past few years. I think the current FO is a bit behind the curve when it comes to valuing defense. We do very little shifting compared to a growing number of teams. And now we are going to go through a season with Pierzynski at catcher, an outfield of Markakis, Maybin or Bourn, and apparently Olivera. It will be interesting to see how much of a hit our pitching performance takes.
 
I think it's probably 50-50 Aybar even steps on the field for us, if what Coppy said the other day is true about teams lining up on him.
 
Realistically I think Newcomb will emerge as a bona fide ML starter and one of the rest from your list (which should include Williams Perez). So two to add to Miller, Teheran, FA Veteran and Wisler. Now we might get lucky and generate one more bona fide ML starter from this list. Or we might get unlucky and end up with fewer. After all there is always the risk one of the "established" guys has an injury or loses it. The most likely outcome imo from this group is six serviceable ML starters. Teheran, Miller, Wisler, FA, Newcomb and one other.

Ah, knew I was forgetting someone. Added him below. I have nothing concrete to base this on, but my feeling is that the median outcome would be a little better than two of these young guys being bona fide ML starters. I'd set the over / under at Newcomb plus two of the others. Anything less would be unlucky, and anything more would be lucky. Some of the rest will become useful bullpen arms, and the remainder will fall into they abyss of real-life employment.

Self-scouting is going to be critical to maximizing these assets. In year's past, the Braves did a solid job of selling high on SP prospects that didn't end up "turning out" with their new clubs.

ATL: Miller, Teheran, FA Veteran, Wisler, Folty, Banuelos (bullpen), Perez (60-day DL for flu-like symptoms)
AAA: Volstad, Weber, Jenkins, Sims, Gant
AA: Newcomb, Ellis, Janas, Bird, Thurman
 
I'm not saying that being a wizard with the glove isn't enough (or a bad thing). It's obvious that the Braves - as constructed recently - need more than that.

Freeman's not your typical power guy at 1B (again, not a bad thing). Little to no power at 3B (CJ, KJ, Uribe). Little power in RF (Heyward and Markakis). The only place "quick strikes" came from were J-Up and Gattis in LF (and when Evan was behind the plate).

For the offense to improve - especially after you removed Justin and Gattis from the equation - it was much more important that you have guys who "keep the line moving". It's no surprise the team was flirting with .500 as late as June -

May OBPs:

Simba - .342
Peterson - .351
Maybin - .371
Markakis - .339

June OBPs:

Simba - .340
Peterson - .362
Maybin - .366
Markakis - .395

If those guys could maintain that level, this team could be pretty competitive - even without adding big bats. For a stretch early on they resembled the Royals offense (that also doesn't rely on power) with runners on seemingly all the time, putting consistent pressure on opposing defenses. Of course Simba, Peterson, and Maybin weren't able to keep that up and Markakis became the only guy consistently getting on (his WORST month was July, and even then his OBP was .321). When Freddie went down during the middle of the season, there was no way for the team to score runs.

My point is that they've all but begged Andrelton to cut down on his swing and be that guy that just sprays the ball all over and it just hasn't happened - to this point. That's what the Braves needed from him. If he could do that, he'd be impossible to keep from being the NL starter at SS for years and years to come (think Jeter). His glove makes him a really good player - if he'd just make that offensive adjustment, he'd be absolutely elite.

But Simmons showed signs throughout last season. Would have liked for him to have another offseason with Seitzer. That's why I'm saying there was no need to rush trading him. You want to talk about resembling the Royals eventually, a big component of that is being strong up the middle.
 
But Simmons showed signs throughout last season. Would have liked for him to have another offseason with Seitzer. That's why I'm saying there was no need to rush trading him. You want to talk about resembling the Royals eventually, a big component of that is being strong up the middle.

Probably where Albies comes in.
 
I would loooooove to see the list of "a lot of other pundits" who didn't think Marte was a top 5-10 prospect.

BA: #9 (#11 the year before)
ESPN/Sickels: #1
BP: #1

Those were the top thee "prospect pundits" at the time, and they represented basically the full spectrum of "Scout-Hybrid-Stats" opinions.

The majority of outlets had him that high at the time, according to many he was "can't-miss" - especially the widely known outlets, you're right Alex. But we both can recall questions raised, even by posters on the old board who had watched him consistently as he moved up the ladder. I'm willing to bet the BA guys would even admit they'd like to have that 2005 list back to do all over again...

4.) Ian Stewart
5.) Joel Guzman ("He's Juan Gonzalez waiting to happen.")
6.) Casey Kotchman
9.) Marte
11.) Lastings Milledge
12.) Dallas McPherson
14.) Frenchy
17.) Jason Kubel
18.) Jeremy Hermida
21.) Brian Dopriak

The only hitters they "hit" on were Mauer (#1), Delmon Young (#3), Rickie Weeks (#8), Hanley Ramirez (#10), Prince Fielder (#15), Carlos Quentin (#22), and Swisher (#24). Not their best list by any stretch of the imagination.
 
But Simmons showed signs throughout last season. Would have liked for him to have another offseason with Seitzer. That's why I'm saying there was no need to rush trading him. You want to talk about resembling the Royals eventually, a big component of that is being strong up the middle.

No doubt. But I'd argue that even Maybin showed that he'd "bought in" even more than Andrelton the vast majority of the time. I hated to see him go as well. I'm just saying that I see the rationale behind being hesitant to gamble $53 million that he was going to ever be better than he was last season.

As it was, Andrelton was exactly what Escobar is to the Royals. With better defense? Yes, but Escobar's no slouch.

Would you pay Escobar $53 million over the life of Simmons' contract? I bet DMGM won't.
 
We aren't even a month into the offseason and the Braves have been the most active team in baseball. This is SO early in the process that any kind of conclusion about the makeup of the 2016 team is bound to be way, way off.

As for 2017, I see a rotation that is going to include some hellacious young guns: Miller, Wisler (who I REALLY like), Newcomb, Fried, Sims and likely Folty in the bullpen.

Yes, Teheran is the likely trade target, but one who will command a strong return because he finished the season in such good shape.

Aybar is more than a warm body; Copo has already stated a hope of signing him to an extension. He is an ideal No. 2 hitter behind Markakis or Maybin (or Mallex). Pencil Freeman in at No. 3 and it clearly shows that they have staked much of the immediate future on Olivera.

Would be happy if they re-sign KJ (even Uribe) for third, but all of a sudden, the Reds have put Todd Frazier on the table. What if the Braves put together a package including Teheran and Maybin and, say, a Soroka. Maybe Frazier is a rental, but maybe he re-ups.

2017 can be a realistic target. Looking forward to future developoments.

FYI: Simmons' offensive dropoff was vastly underplayed last year in light of his defense. Seems like I heard and read in more than one place that he was tough to coach and unwilling to accept instruction at the plate. I also haven't forgotten how the Nationals (and others, to be honest) made it clear than they felt he was a dirty player. I have a decent gut feeling that the Braves got the best Simmons had to offer.

I'm not going to go as far as say Simmons was a dirty player, by all accounts he seemed like a great guy and great teammate. However, the hitting situation has been a bit troubling. You'd have thought Seitzer was the type of guy who could make an impact with Simmons. There were very slight improvements in the BB and K rate, but his power has seemingly vanished. I mean he's not even hitting doubles. I'm in the camp who says we should have held on longer and see if the bat developed, but if the Braves knew something we don't, then it made sense to trade him.
 
I think next year will be a repetition of the Markakis-Heyward discussion moved to short. Aybar is a competent pro. He will not hurt your team in the field and he is a professional hitter. But we will notice that he makes a much smaller proportion of the difficult plays that we got used to seeing made at short the past few years. I think the current FO is a bit behind the curve when it comes to valuing defense. We do very little shifting compared to a growing number of teams. And now we are going to go through a season with Pierzynski at catcher, an outfield of Markakis, Maybin or Bourn, and apparently Olivera. It will be interesting to see how much of a hit our pitching performance takes.

It will be interesting to see if they push more to strike out pitchers. It appears Newcomb is that. Sims is developing into that.

I think great infield defense becomes more important the heavier you rely on ground ball pitchers.
 
It will be interesting to see if they push more to strike out pitchers. It appears Newcomb is that. Sims is developing into that.

I think great infield defense becomes more important the heavier you rely on ground ball pitchers.

It also comes into play against teams with good contact hitters. As the Mets and others found out this post-season.
 
Yes it's a lie.

We've seen worst to first before. But if the plan is to be legit in 17 then u have to be a real team in 16. You don't want a team of rookies in 17. A bunch of pitchers with inning limits if you are going to go to the playoffs

I wonder if the mets success scared them off.

If anything the mets show me that you don't have to be good to win. Some stud pitchers. Downside wright trade for cespedes timely hitting
 
It also comes into play against teams with good contact hitters. As the Mets and others found out this post-season.

True but everything is relative. Ideally you would have Simmons hit .270/.340 and either steal 30-40 bases or hit 15 hr PLUS keep his defense. But, I don't think we will ever see that. I think Simmons is a modern day Rafael Belliard which is ok if you have Gant, Justice, Pendelton, Blauser providing the offense.
 
Yes it's a lie.

We've seen worst to first before. But if the plan is to be legit in 17 then u have to be a real team in 16. You don't want a team of rookies in 17. A bunch of pitchers with inning limits if you are going to go to the playoffs

I wonder if the mets success scared them off.

If anything the mets show me that you don't have to be good to win. Some stud pitchers. Downside wright trade for cespedes timely hitting

The Mets took advantage of the fact that the NL East was a horrible division this year. They got into the short series of the playoffs where their dominant SP could show out and they did.
 
Isn't it interesting that people like to cast blame of the young, talented players we trade away? "Tough to coach." "Dirty player." It's been strongly implied more than once that Heyward was a "problem in the clubhouse."
 
Isn't it interesting that people like to cast blame of the young, talented players we trade away? "Tough to coach." "Dirty player." It's been strongly implied more than once that Heyward was a "problem in the clubhouse."

Not me. For me it's all about performance and how they fit into the fabric of the team and what you are trying to do with the team. I look at it like this: I hope traded players go away and develop into superstars because that makes any future player trades I might make more valuable.

There was a time not too long ago where the Braves "won" every trade where every pitching prospect traded away turned out to be fools gold. It eventually got to the point where teams didn't want Braves pitching prospects.
 
I'm not saying that being a wizard with the glove isn't enough (or a bad thing). It's obvious that the Braves - as constructed recently - need more than that.

Freeman's not your typical power guy at 1B (again, not a bad thing). Little to no power at 3B (CJ, KJ, Uribe). Little power in RF (Heyward and Markakis). The only place "quick strikes" came from were J-Up and Gattis in LF (and when Evan was behind the plate).

For the offense to improve - especially after you removed Justin and Gattis from the equation - it was much more important that you have guys who "keep the line moving". It's no surprise the team was flirting with .500 as late as June -

May OBPs:

Simba - .342

Peterson - .351

Maybin - .371

Markakis - .339

June OBPs:

Simba - .340

Peterson - .362

Maybin - .366

Markakis - .395

If those guys could maintain that level, this team could be pretty competitive - even without adding big bats. For a stretch early on they resembled the Royals offense (that also doesn't rely on power) with runners on seemingly all the time, putting consistent pressure on opposing defenses. Of course Simba, Peterson, and Maybin weren't able to keep that up and Markakis became the only guy consistently getting on (his WORST month was July, and even then his OBP was .321). When Freddie went down during the middle of the season, there was no way for the team to score runs.

My point is that they've all but begged Andrelton to cut down on his swing and be that guy that just sprays the ball all over and it just hasn't happened - to this point. That's what the Braves needed from him. If he could do that, he'd be impossible to keep from being the NL starter at SS for years and years to come (think Jeter). His glove makes him a really good player - if he'd just make that offensive adjustment, he'd be absolutely elite.

That's all fine but sometimes players are what they are. I'm sure it hasn't helped that we bring in hitting coaches every year or so who likely try to make hitters hit a different way. Sometimes you just got to let them be themselves. Yeah Andrelton is a drain on the offense but in the end it doesn't matter to me. He's a good player at a premium position that the Braves now have to fill long term. Which says to me that we aren't looking to compete in 2017 but a few years after that.
 
Back
Top