Tapate50
Well-known member
[TW]1349424689492287488[/TW]
So a 3B prospect. SWEET. FINALLY.... this literally gets me fired up.
[TW]1349424689492287488[/TW]
Great for baseball. Means we need two bats IMO. Do we have the money for two bats?
Great for baseball. Means we need two bats IMO. Do we have the money for two bats?
Braves are going to circle back on Adam Duvall. Duvall/Ender platoon, Pache, Acuna OF. Ozuna DH.
[TW]1349424689492287488[/TW]
Mentioned Waters' potential to contribute in 2021 as a complete guess until seeing this (really surprised no one had posted it already)...
Drew Waters has been Pache’s outfield partner throughout the minor leagues and was rated almost as highly on prospect lists before last season. Waters, a former Georgia high-school star who turned 22 last week, has yet to make his major-league debut, but his daily work at Gwinnett helped assure that 2019 wasn’t a lost year for him.
“Yeah, he was definitely a real highlight down there,” Sestanovich said. “Drew brings a lot of energy every night to the ballpark, and that was no different. He’s a really talented athlete and a very good baseball player. We saw improvements from him on both sides of the ball. I think continuing to be in an outfield with Pache on a regular basis, even with some of the younger guys like Michael Harris — again, I thought these guys sort of pushed each other. Each of our little groups, position players and pitchers, developed a nice, sort of healthy competition among themselves. I think it was no different for the outfielders.
“Drew wanted to work on his right-handed swing; I thought he made some nice strides there. I think for all the hitters there, facing the caliber of pitchers, the arms that we had on a regular basis, was pretty unique. Like, I don’t think every teams’ alternate site could provide that. Through no fault of their own. We were lucky and our guys faced really good stuff on a regular basis. I think it potentially accelerated some development despite the lost minor-league season.”
https://theathletic.com/2304360/202...rson-kyle-wright-bryse-wilson-cristian-pache/
Still just blind guessing, but the "potentially accelerated some development" part probably isn't in the Waters part of the story by mistake. The story also mentions that all 3 Catchers impressed.
I really like Waters, especially the raw tools, but his game is still really raw. The difference between Waters and Pache is that Pache refined his skills before he moved up each level, whether or not the numbers reflected it yet. Waters has seemingly been pushed by his gaudy numbers and that can be dangerous.
I have to hope that our development staff isn't just boxscore watching.
Pache does have 3 years of pro experience on Waters. Waters does have red flags of a very high babip and a high strike out rate. He is still very young.
I think most people feel like the LH swing is really good and he's going to be a good player. He seems to be a person that is expected to be at least avg in center. I really like him.
If you can get a Joc Pederson to play LF for a year it seems to be a win win. Waters should earn his way up, not be given it. And I think everyone thinks he could use more professional at bats to refine approach. Even if you are all in on waters, it would be worth 10 million to pederson to get an extra year of control on waters.
I have to hope that our development staff isn't just boxscore watching.
Pache does have 3 years of pro experience on Waters. Waters does have red flags of a very high babip and a high strike out rate. He is still very young.
I think most people feel like the LH swing is really good and he's going to be a good player. He seems to be a person that is expected to be at least avg in center. I really like him.
If you can get a Joc Pederson to play LF for a year it seems to be a win win. Waters should earn his way up, not be given it. And I think everyone thinks he could use more professional at bats to refine approach. Even if you are all in on waters, it would be worth 10 million to pederson to get an extra year of control on waters.
I don't think blocking non-elite prospects should be any consideration for the front office.
I’m going to bet we get Benintendi
His 2020 was weird. 2019 statcast data was fairly promising. Highest exit velocity and hard hit rate of his career. A spike in K rate, but all in all, you might have expected a rebound to 2018 levels in 2020. Obviously it was a super short sample size, but he was dreadful in 2020.
His 2020 was weird. 2019 statcast data was fairly promising. Highest exit velocity and hard hit rate of his career. A spike in K rate, but all in all, you might have expected a rebound to 2018 levels in 2020. Obviously it was a super short sample size, but he was dreadful in 2020.
I'm open to him, but he might just be a platoon bat. I wonder if it would be better to give up prospects for Benintendi or pay the money it would take to get Joc Pederson.
I really like Waters, especially the raw tools, but his game is still really raw. The difference between Waters and Pache is that Pache refined his skills before he moved up each level, whether or not the numbers reflected it yet. Waters has seemingly been pushed by his gaudy numbers and that can be dangerous.
The difference between Pache and Waters can be summed up by a couple data points from their AA numbers in 2019.
Pache: BABIP = .351, OPS = .814
Waters: BABIP = .439, OPS = .847
Waters and his sky high BABIP barely outproduced Pache and his much more reasonable BABIP over roughly 450 PAs.
Now, obviously there are skills players possess that translate to higher sustained BABIP values, but an absurd mark of .439 should result in much higher production than a .847 OPS if the prospect truly was an impact bat.
To me, Pache is very clearly the superior prospect at this point in time.