The BB% improvement is the biggest deal to me. We know the power is there so that going back to pre Padre levels is very encouraging. Bodes well for next season.
Funny that ensheff and horsehide can't talk **** about Swanson's performance anymore so they go with something else.
I think you need a refresher on my comments about Swanson. I said regardless of how he produces this season it was stupid to call him up and waste service time. Then I came back and said if the service time rules change with the new CBA it might be irrelevant.
But is he ready?
Me, too. It looks like a shift in philosophy, not regaining lost bat speed. I think the Pads were telling him to be aggressive or some such, and now he's back at his historic BB level. His bat speed was fine.
He's gotten a rap as a Cadillacer - somewhat deserved, but reversible - and he was playing CF long after he'd outgrown the position. He's a big, power hitting corner outfielder, and if that's all you need him to do, he fills that role nicely. I don't care much about defensive metrics, since I don't think you can impact the team more than about .5 WAR one way or another in LF. He's always hit, sometimes a lot.
He's a small town guy who's going to like Atlanta. I look forward to him losing 20 pounds and hitting in the middle of this lineup for the foreseeable future.
My first comment about Kemp during his first game with the Braves was about how good his plate discipline looked. It was clearly apparent he still had it, and I thought it was a very good sign going forward.
A team can win with a high power, low OBP (not dreadful OBP) hitter that is a butcher in LF if the rest of the team is built properly. If the Braves continue to add a couple good hitters this offense can certainly rank in the upper half of the league in 2017. Then it's a matter of the young pitchers making progress.
My first comment about Kemp during his first game with the Braves was about how good his plate discipline looked. It was clearly apparent he still had it, and I thought it was a very good sign going forward.
A team can win with a high power, low OBP (not dreadful OBP) hitter that is a butcher in LF if the rest of the team is built properly. If the Braves continue to add a couple good hitters this offense can certainly rank in the upper half of the league in 2017. Then it's a matter of the young pitchers making progress.
Although it has never happened before, agree fully. If he's mid-.800 and adequate, and I think he will be, he's a definite plus given our marginal investment in him (I.e., the last $8.5m). If you gauge him against $21.5m, he sucks. But that was LA's silly mistake, not ours (Olivera was ours).
I don't think he has to be quite mid 800s (meaning ~.850). A guy with an OPS in the high 700s with lots of power (near .500 SLG) is probably very useful in a lineup where he hits behind 3 guys with ~.350 OBP (Inciarte, Swanson, Freeman).
There is definitely something to a balanced lineup...guys get on base and the power hitters drive them in. Statheads like to refer to sequencing as "luck", but a large portion of sequencing can be encouraged by lineup construction and balance.
Of course this ignores defense. Kemp will certainly be bad defensively, the only part in question is will he be 0 WAR bad, or 1-2 WAR bad.
Even as bad he's been defensively, he's still be around a 1-2 WAR player with us right?
Even as bad he's been defensively, he's still be around a 1-2 WAR player with us right?