Since you can't read stats very well, this really hurts me
Keep contradicting yourself. You're really winning the argument for me.
Since you can't read stats very well, this really hurts me
He hasn't? In 2017 he was a 3 WAR pitcher and last year he was the same pitcher when not at Yankee stadium...
Keep ignoring the fact that one of those years was because of injury and one was obviously influenced by his home stadium when his velocity was still in the mid 90s and his away stats/peripherals/rates were completely in line with/better than his good seasons. I'm sure that's just a coincidence.
The point is not to compare Gray to those other pitchers, but to compare him to how well our internal options would perform.
If Gray is the best we can do in the trade market, I'd just as soon roll with some of the youngsters with upside and see how they do. If we can get Gray in a deal that is nearly revenue neutral and doesn't deplete prospect capital that could go towards filling more pressing needs, I'm fine with it. But I don't see the Yankees accepting such an offer.
An interesting question concerning that...
Aren't all these metrics there to help you keep from paying 3 win value for someone who hasn't been a 3 win player in years?
Whatever the reason, Gray hasn't performed at that level in quite some time. Sure he's a buy-low candidate who may bounce back a bit. Thing is, we've already got Gausman, Newcomb, Julio, Touki, Soroka, Gohara, Fried, and Wright who have just as much chance of being that 3 win Pitcher as Gray does.
Unless trading for Gray somehow gets you Frazier WITHOUT overpaying for either, I'll pass personally. As many have said several times, there's not much reason to go out and get what you already have - if Gray was a legit TOR option things might be different, but he's not. Given his health history, I see very little reason to gamble that he'll get through 2019 more healthy or perform better than Soroka or several others.
I'd be excited about watching both next year if we could get them really cheap but there are some here really over valuing Puig and under valuing Gray.
He hasn't? In 2017 he was a 3 WAR pitcher and last year he was the same pitcher when not at Yankee stadium...
Lol and the health thing again... one year
You keep using that word. I don't think it means what you think it means.
He absolutely was not a 3 WAR pitcher in 2017. Was he on pace? Sure. But the missed time is absolutely relevant. He hasn't thrown over 160 innings in 3 years. But we're supposed to believe it's likely that he:
A. Will rebound from a poor performance
B. Remain healthy for near 200 innings?
Give me a break with that weak sauce.
Same here and never said otherwiseI like gray if he comes cheap. I like puig if he comes cheap or neck is our other option.
An interesting question concerning that...
Aren't all these metrics there to help you keep from paying 3 win value for someone who hasn't been a 3 win player in years?
Whatever the reason, Gray hasn't performed at that level in quite some time. Sure he's a buy-low candidate who may bounce back a bit. Thing is, we've already got Gausman, Newcomb, Julio, Touki, Soroka, Gohara, Fried, and Wright who have just as much chance of being that 3 win Pitcher as Gray does.
Unless trading for Gray somehow gets you Frazier WITHOUT overpaying for either, I'll pass personally. As many have said several times, there's not much reason to go out and get what you already have - if Gray was a legit TOR option things might be different, but he's not. Given his health history, I see very little reason to gamble that he'll get through 2019 more healthy or perform better than Soroka or several others.
If 2.8 doesn't mean Gray is a 3 WAR pitcher then Porcello isn't either which you attributed to him so right back at you
Nats interested in Dallas Keuchel now.
Nats interested in Dallas Keuchel now.
This was a well thought out, intelligent, and correct statement.
Did hell freeze over?