cajunrevenge
Well-known member
If we had signed Greinke where would he hit in the batting order when he pitched?
Im not sayin the trade was good, one of Coppy's worst, but people act like we traded an ace/#2.
Im not sayin the trade was good, one of Coppy's worst, but people act like we traded an ace/#2.
Are these the same people that think JT is an ace?
Who thinks that?
We traded away a cheaper Cole Hamels, I heard.
There is more than 1 person around here that thinks JT is that guy. They cite his 2nd half era or something.
You really are guilty of gross overstatement. Some of us--myself included--believe Teheran is better than Wood. We have our reasons. I don't think anyone sees Teheran as the next Juan Marichal.
You really are guilty of gross overstatement. Some of us--myself included--believe Teheran is better than Wood. We have our reasons. I don't think anyone sees Teheran as the next Juan Marichal.
Explain to me how Wood's WAR is higher than Julio's, this year. It makes no sense. There must be ONE thing Wood is good at that always boosts his WAR. Teheran has a much better K rate, much better BB rate, lower ERA, lower xFIP (but slightly higher FIP...). Wood's low HR rate is unsustainable so you could argue he's been a tad lucky. I guess his GB% is what WAR loves, but that hasn't stopped him from stinking up the joint.
Hey, I'm on your side. Teheran's weakness is that when his stuff gets lazy, it leaves the park. But I think he's a better pitcher than Wood. I've never claimed he was an ace. I can't speak for anyone else. I just think he's been our best pitcher since joining the rotation full-time.
Tough news for LAA. I have been down on the Andrelton trade from the Braves perspective, but I suspect the Angels may not be loving there side as much either now. Simmons is off to a brutal start offensively, and the Angels pitching depth for this season and next ain't good.
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And they literally have nothing left to trade to replenish the depth.. maybe we can ship them Newcomb and JT for Trout..![]()
From MLBTR...
Nick Swisher is off to a solid start with the Yankees’ Triple-A affiliate, batting .299/.324/.463 with three homers in 71 plate appearances, but the 34-year-old is having some difficulty running, one evaluator told the New York Post’s George A. King III. The person to whom King spoke described Swisher’s running as “hard to look at,” which is perhaps unsurprising for a player of his age coming off multiple knee surgeries.