WEDNESDAY AUGUST 1ST MINORS FINAL: 9+ no-hit innings in FLA

we can say anderson was a signability pick forever, and he was. but if he also ends up being one of the better arms in the draft (which, believe them or not the FO at the time said they thought as much) then sorry h8ers, but it was a great move.

Gotta love relying on hindsight to evaluate moves!

It's possible to call Anderson a sign-ability pick AND call him a good prospect at the same time...all without being a "h8er".
 
People STILL forgetting Wilson... Just like I said two years ago with Soroka. He kept getting left off people's "top spect" lists.

Wilson, Wentz, Muller, Rowland, Weigel, Turang, all guys that can take the next step. And I'm a big believer in Wentz. Lefty in the 93-94 range can be nasty.

Yea, Wilson’s right there for me amongst the top tier, above those other arms you listed (who are all second-tier).
 
Gotta love relying on hindsight to evaluate moves!

It's possible to call Anderson a sign-ability pick AND call him a good prospect at the same time...all without being a "h8er".

the first part doesn't make sense to me. it's not hindsight if the people who chose him saw him developing into what he is now. did he just so happen to work out better than they thought, or is this what they thought when they drafted him, hence why they drafted him where they did? that's not hindsight.

i acknowledged his being a signability pick. he was. but if they also thought he'd develop really well, like he has, then shouldn't credit be given for that? or should they have taken somebody more highly ranked by FG even if they didn't like them as much?

i also don't think evaluating based on results is necessarily bad either. but you know.
 
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the first part doesn't make sense to me. it's not hindsight if the people who chose him saw him developing into what he is now. did he just so happen to work out better than they thought, or is this what they thought when they drafted him, hence why they drafted him where they did? that's not hindsight.

i acknowledged his being a signability pick. he was. but if they also thought he'd develop really well, like he has, then shouldn't credit be given for that? or should they have taken somebody more highly ranked by FG even if they didn't like them as much?

i also don't think evaluating based on results is necessarily bad either. but you know.

Anderson signed for 60% of his slot value because the entire MLB industry other than the Braves valued him less than that. That's why he cut that deal. That's why he agreed to sign for that before the draft even happened. He and his agent knew what he was worth to everyone else in the league. His signing bonus is a direct reflection of his value, not some ranking on FG.

He was probably a Top 10-15 guy, and those guys are good pitching prospects. Those guys develop into good pitchers quite often (relatively speaking). We are seeing a #16 pick do exactly that right now as we follow Touki's progress.

To sit here and claim that the Braves knew something special about Anderson when they grabbed him at #3 is silly. They decided to get 3 good pitching prospects, and Anderson was the best one they could get with the money they wanted to use at that pick. If Wentz or Muller were dominating, I have no doubt you would be pimping how great those picks were.
 
Anderson signed for 60% of his slot value because the entire MLB industry other than the Braves valued him less than that. That's why he cut that deal. That's why he agreed to sign for that before the draft even happened. He and his agent knew what he was worth to everyone else in the league. His signing bonus is a direct reflection of his value, not some ranking on FG.

He was probably a Top 10-15 guy, and those guys are good pitching prospects. Those guys develop into good pitchers quite often (relatively speaking). We are seeing a #16 pick do exactly that right now as we follow Touki's progress.

To sit here and claim that the Braves knew something special about Anderson when they grabbed him at #3 is silly. They decided to get 3 good pitching prospects, and Anderson was the best one they could get with the money they wanted to use at that pick. If Wentz or Muller were dominating, I have no doubt you would be pimping how great those picks were.

Didn’t Wentz just recently go like 31.2 IP without giving up a run? Muller has been pretty dominant in July as well.

Plus the Braves were much higher on Soroka and Riley than the entire MLB Industry and both are now consensus top 50 prospects. I remember people complaining we took both too high in the 15 draft.
 
Anderson signed for 60% of his slot value because the entire MLB industry other than the Braves valued him less than that. That's why he cut that deal. That's why he agreed to sign for that before the draft even happened. He and his agent knew what he was worth to everyone else in the league. His signing bonus is a direct reflection of his value, not some ranking on FG.

He was probably a Top 10-15 guy, and those guys are good pitching prospects. Those guys develop into good pitchers quite often (relatively speaking). We are seeing a #16 pick do exactly that right now as we follow Touki's progress.

To sit here and claim that the Braves knew something special about Anderson when they grabbed him at #3 is silly. They decided to get 3 good pitching prospects, and Anderson was the best one they could get with the money they wanted to use at that pick. If Wentz or Muller were dominating, I have no doubt you would be pimping how great those picks were.

This is lazy analysis. You are using industry perception to determine actual talent level. It's possible the Braves saw something that many other teams didn't. That happens sometimes in scouting. Otherwise, the only way to determine if a pick is a good one is how much the player signs for. Take a player at #1 who signs for less than #2 or 3? Then you didn't get the best talent in the draft. Oh, he turns out to be better than the other two? You got lucky.

The Braves spent less and got more talent at #3 than other teams around them. Isn't that the entire goal?
 
Anderson signed for 60% of his slot value because the entire MLB industry other than the Braves valued him less than that. That's why he cut that deal. That's why he agreed to sign for that before the draft even happened. He and his agent knew what he was worth to everyone else in the league. His signing bonus is a direct reflection of his value, not some ranking on FG.

He was probably a Top 10-15 guy, and those guys are good pitching prospects. Those guys develop into good pitchers quite often (relatively speaking). We are seeing a #16 pick do exactly that right now as we follow Touki's progress.

To sit here and claim that the Braves knew something special about Anderson when they grabbed him at #3 is silly. They decided to get 3 good pitching prospects, and Anderson was the best one they could get with the money they wanted to use at that pick. If Wentz or Muller were dominating, I have no doubt you would be pimping how great those picks were.

he had pre-draft helium; maybe the FO saw him and saw a trajectory as good as the guys seen as better at the time. so it's impossible the FO found Anderson to have as much upside as the guys supposedly a good bit better than him by industry consensus, and decided he would be not only worth the #3 pick, but also sign for less than the other guys?
this is a silly argument. that means when an org. goes off the "consensus" board and "reaches" for someone who ends up being well worth the pick, they don't get credit for it? what about soroka? can we not judge that pick in hindsight as a good pick because the FO couldn't have possibly seen something special in him?

muller and wentz have performed well overall and neither of them are 21 yet. neither of them are done being good prospects at this point. it was a good move to get Anderson+Wentz+Muller. Anderson has so far been worth the #3 pick, especially considering he signed so far under slot.
 
It's possible the Braves saw something that many other teams didn't.

nope. not possible.

plus, we don't even know what other teams thought of him. who's to say he wouldn't have gone 4, 5, or 6? maybe a team behind us saw an opportunity to get a guy they viewed as very high upside for a cheaper price than the "consensus" guys. there's a lot we don't know. but we do know that anderson has performed extremely well, whether he was the #3 pick or the #15 pick. that's all you can ask for, and giving credit for that is hardly absurd.
 
muller and wentz have performed well overall and neither of them are 21 yet. neither of them are done being good prospects at this point. it was a good move to get Anderson+Wentz+Muller. Anderson has so far been worth the #3 pick, especially considering he signed so far under slot.

Funny that the consensus, at the time, was that at least one (if not both) of Wentz and Muller needed to end up great prospects to make the Anderson gambit worth it. Instead, he’s been far-and-away the best of the three, professionally, even before his recent summer dominance. It’s made anything the latter two do a gravy of sorts.
 
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Funny that the consensus, at the time, was that Wentz and Muller needed to end up great to make the Anderson gambit worth it. Instead, he’s been far-and-away the best of the three, professionally, even before his recent summer dominance.

I like this post, but I'd like to point out that Muller and Wentz BOTH have performed well for "first rounders" also. If that group is a trifecta of arms that "make it" then what a coup that is....
 
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