Because we don't have a player as valuable as Ender at third base?
There are 3 OF positions.
Because we don't have a player as valuable as Ender at third base?
Does anyone trade a top 100 prospect for a 4th outfielder?
I think you do. He hasn't hit Lefties. Not much power. Not a great walk rate. Never a top prospect. Not really that good on D, just fast.
You can't play Mallex and Ender together to be good.
The fact that Kemp and Neck are Kemp and Neck does not sway me.
I think it's much more likely that DPeterson is a 2 Win RF this year than it is that Mallex is a 3 win CF.
Not to mention Mallex's skills could probably be quickly replaced by Lein or Didder. With position changes maybe a guy Like Demeritte or Seymore could be that guy in a couple of years. He's very very replaceable.
When we got Mallex would anyone think that Mallex + Simmons would get you a top 50 LH pitcher?
I will paste my same response again.
Allow me to quote the statement, and then breakdown what it means to help the folks with limited reading comprehension.
We get that you do lots of research. That's cool, and could really bring a lot to the board.
After spending all that time, would it really be hard for you to spend the minimal effort required to not be an ass?
That's a serious question, not meant in any malicious way. It's obvious that you are intentionally being an ass so I hope you aren't offended. It's just a shame, because you are actually insightful when you attempt to have meaningful discussion.
Now go through and quote the nasty things folks say to me. I'll wait for your plea to them to "play nice".
Ok, but why unload him now? Why not let him prove he can be an everyday option in CF? Why did they need another A ball pitcher right now?
Why give Garcia so many chances to prove how bad he is, but unload Mallex so soon?
Because if Mallex hits .200 this year or gets injured he's essentially a worthless player for trading.
Or did you love holding on to Grilli until he got injured/was terrible?
I think you are on to something with the Grilli fiasco. Many folks suggested the Braves had a Grilli for Severino deal lined up, but by the Braves hesitated. After Grilli got hurt, Severino had rocketed up prospect rankings, and was nearly untouchable.
So in that sense, yes, getting burned by the Grilli scenario might have added a sense of urgency to add this arm to the organization while they could.
However, if you are going to play up Mallex's risk, why are you ignoring Gohara's risk? Isn't a fat 20 year old pitcher that hasn't gotten out of Low-A ball with a history of shoulder problems a serious risk to crash and burn too?
Who is the riskier asset, Mallex or Gohara? Mallex has already produced 1 WAR at the MLB level. I think he is orders of magnitude less risky than Gohara, and I think all non-Braves-homer prospect evaluators would agree.
When I called you an asshole, it was because you condescendingly called me a homer for suggesting Teheran was probably significantly better than a 2.5 WAR and Smyly less, if he continued as he has throughout his career.
It was the condescension and the assumption that your analysis was superior to mine, assuming that mine was rooted in an inability to be objective - and the fact that you repeatedly behave this way - that led to my reaction.
Looks like you're an honors graduate of the McCarthy/Cohn/Trump School of "apologize for nothing, just attack." Your parents must be so proud.
Spoiler alert: it doesn't end well.
I challenge you to go back and find a thread where I was the first person to get nasty. In almost all cases someone, like you, gets upset because I present facts that contradict your opinion (in this case that automated projection systems somehow have something against Teheran and unfairly love Smyly, as if algorithms can show favoritism), and lash out with name calling and personal attacks.
I then proceed to demonstrate how stupid they are by presenting more facts, and throw some name calling in for good measure. Then, without fail, the other person starts whining about how mean I am, and/or starts making points that aren't even counter to the disagreement we were having. In fact, one foold just this morning decided to jump in to argue about LHers in the Braves system being better than ALL pitchers of any system, and didn't even understand the statement I contradicted...and then misunderstood it TWICE!
And then, finally, a few other members of the Goof Troop jump in with some more personal attacks. They all like each others posts attacking me, pat each other on the back, and feel a little better about themselves and how stupid they are.
I'm not complaining. I don't mind taking jabs from folks on the internet. I'm just explaining how 99% of these exchanges go.
Silliest thing is that I have stated several times I think the projections for Julio are low, and I only said Smyly was better than the 3 pitchers acquired this offseason. You took issue with me posting facts about the projected numbers of the Braves rotation compared to Smyly. I apologize that facts offend you.
Nobody scowls during cornhole matches.
You start all the personal insults EVERY time.
Ok, but why unload him now? Why not let him prove he can be an everyday option in CF? Why did they need another A ball pitcher right now?
Why give Garcia so many chances to prove how bad he is, but unload Mallex so soon?
Because he could just as easily prove he can't be an everyday CF, and the Braves seem to have believed that was more likely. And they obviously like Gohara. So in 6 months, we could be sitting here with a worse asset in Mallex and a better asset in Gohara. Again, that's what differentiates successful FOs from poor ones. You have to evaluate and make decisions.
I think you are on to something with the Grilli fiasco. Many folks suggested the Braves had a Grilli for Severino deal lined up, but by the Braves hesitated. After Grilli got hurt, Severino had rocketed up prospect rankings, and was nearly untouchable.
So in that sense, yes, getting burned by the Grilli scenario might have added a sense of urgency to add this arm to the organization while they could.
However, if you are going to play up Mallex's risk, why are you ignoring Gohara's risk? Isn't a fat 20 year old pitcher that hasn't gotten out of Low-A ball with a history of shoulder problems a serious risk to crash and burn too?
Who is the riskier asset, Mallex or Gohara? Mallex has already produced 1 WAR at the MLB level. I think he is orders of magnitude less risky than Gohara, and I think all non-Braves-homer prospect evaluators would agree.
So which asset is riskier? Mallex or Gohara?
Find a thread where I slung the first "you are an" attack. I will counter with 2 counter examples.