Don't remember off the top of my head did Wren force Clark out behind the scenes or did Clark want to take a bigger position in Wash as Assistant GM?
I think we need to be even-handed here. Wren didn't personally conduct the draft either. But he empowered the people who did. Similarly he empowered Johnny Almaraz and his team of international scouts to sign guys like Acuna and Albies. In both cases, he should get some of the blame and credit for what the people he empowered did.
Btw while we are on the topic of being even-handed, I'm fine with saying Wren drove away good people like Roy Clark. But we should also give the current front-office a demerit based upon the fact that Almaraz left after they took over.
Don't remember off the top of my head did Wren force Clark out behind the scenes or did Clark want to take a bigger position in Wash as Assistant GM?
ex-bravesitis even applies to execs
So you are just going to disregard reports from non-Braves sources like Keith Law who said that Wren didn't listen to scouts and pissed them off?
I'm sure he was a dick.
But he presided over some incredible results.
Nice when you are given Heyward/Freeman/Kimbrel/Teheran/Medlen/Minor/Prado all at absurdly cheap rates.
But Wren made excellent trades like Upton & EOF.
Coppy was handed Heyward, Upton, Freeman, Gattis, Simmons, Teheran, Wood, Kimbrel at cheap rates.
Results haven't been too good, yet
I'm sure Wren did all the legwork to sign Acuna.
LOL did you really just type this?
Do you realize you are starting to sound as dumb as clv haha?
It's funny that the consensus among people who are paid to evaluate farm systems are pretty much in unanimous agreement that the Braves' rebuild has gone very well, yet on this site the consensus seems to be that they are dumb and have clearly achieved poor results from the phenomenal hand they were dealt.
I can't wait until we start winning so I don't have to hear about freaking Frank Wren anymore.
It's funny that the consensus among people who are paid to evaluate farm systems are pretty much in unanimous agreement that the Braves' rebuild has gone very well, yet on this site the consensus seems to be that they are dumb and have clearly achieved poor results from the phenomenal hand they were dealt.
I can't wait until we start winning so I don't have to hear about freaking Frank Wren anymore.
I think that's a bit of a stretch. Theres certainly flawed moves like Andrelton for Newk. Newk has taken longer to develop than the FO expected and who knows how long and patient we'll have to be with him.
The FO since 2015 kept saying 2017 would be the year. Now many have revised from 2018 to 2019 on here because the first line of pitching prospects we acquired at beginning of rebuild: Blair, Wisler, Folty, Jenkins, Fried, Newk have not stepped up and become mainstays in the rotation. Hell if Tehearn keeps struggling that's another piece of the puzzle we potentially have to fill again when most assumed he'd be anchoring our rotation.
Two years ago Indont think anyone thought we'd have to think about acquiring a guy like Verlander because we just sort of thought Wisler wouldn't be AAAA, Blair wouldn't be getting lit up like a Christmas tree, Fried being injured again and moved to pen, and Newk still not figuring out what Control is.
Who knows how long it'll take Ian, Rok, Wright, to all get up here. The assumption is Gohara should be here soon but will he have to take his lumps? are we gonna be patient with him for 3 years like we have with Folty?
IMO, the front office never really promised any sort of special season in 2017 and certainly never did much to deliver it.
IMO, the front office never really promised any sort of special season in 2017 and certainly never did much to deliver it. I think they said they wanted a competitive team to open the ball park. How anyone took that is there own business, but I wouldn't take marketing speech as gospel.
I always expected the Braves would have to acquire outside pitching along the way. It just didn't seem likely they could come up with a rotation internally over any sort of short period of time. There just aren't that many great pitching prospects and most of them are not available in trade and drafting them takes awhile.
I think all of the Braves prospects can be expected to struggle to some extent for extended periods for the most part. Whether Gohara struggles like Folty, I don't know. It's certainly possible.
If they weren't competing for 2017 New Stadium year then we would have never brought Dansby up last year, wouldn't have signed Dickey and Colon, traded for Phillips, or even Kemp.
If we spent all that money and traded for "stop gaps" then I'm gonna seriously question the FO. I'm usually not someone that harps on service time like others here but if the real goal was to compete in 2019 why did we rush Dansby to the bigs 2.5 years early?