I'd rather see Newk learning how to air it out in the BP rather than continuing to force the SP route. How many times do we have to watch the same thing?
...but tapered off near the end and didn’t do much in the playoffs. That’s what the older guys do many times...they wear down.
He isn’t young, he showed signs of running out of gas in the last month of the season.
The issue is not the rules.
The issue is which group the Braves belong: revenue recipient or not.
Each article places the Braves in a different group.
wRC+:
Mar/Apr: 133
May: 100
June: 115
July: 163
August: 154
Sept/Oct: 124
I don't think it's really accurate to say he "wore down." his 124 wRC+ in Sept/Oct was higher than his May/June, and right around his opening month. Having two monster months in between doesn't make having just a really solid month wearing down. he also had a 18.3% K rate in Sept/Oct, his lowest of any month.
using a 5 game playoff sample is useless.
doesn't seem he wore down at all.
I mean he was nursing a bruised hip at the end of the season, but yeah I agree I don't see the wear down. Even if that were true, properly resting these guys throughout the season at least once or twice a month (like what should have happened in 2019) helps to alleviate that concern.
maybe AA should focus on players who do well in October
maybe AA should focus on players who do well in October
Rosenthal's recent article on The Athletic says we'd lose our third highest pick if we signed a QO free agent.
Which means they are revenue recipients, and revenue recipients are supposed to get a pick after the 1st round if their QO FA signs for more than $50M.
What part of the rule am I missing?
I'm sure someone will clear it up at some point.
Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reports that Mitch Haniger is drawing trade interest.
Haniger's season ended in early June this past season due to a ruptured testicle and later a back ailment, but he's expected to be fully healthy for the start of spring training. Rosenthal says that the Mariners "are open to trading Haniger," who will turn 29 next month and who has three years of control remaining. It no doubt would take a healthy package to acquire Haniger, who batted .285/.366/.493 with 26 home runs and 93 RBI in 2018 while making the All-Star team.
Id certainly rather give up prospects for whats probably Hanigers peak, than sign a mediocre OF option.
Haniger's season ended in early June this past season due to a ruptured testicle and later a back ailment,
Mariners are so stupid. Trading Haniger last off-season probably gets them close to 100 million in surplus value. That's multiple top 50 overall prospects if they targeted the right team. Now, a year closer to FA and coming off an injury plagued season with a mediocre offensive showing, they might be lucky to get 1 Top 50 overall prospect and a back end Top 100 guy. He probably has somewhere around 50-60 million in surplus value. May be lower depending on how teams value his age 31 season.
I don't see us getting involved to be honest.
wRC+:
Mar/Apr: 133
May: 100
June: 115
July: 163
August: 154
Sept/Oct: 124
I don't think it's really accurate to say he "wore down." his 124 wRC+ in Sept/Oct was higher than his May/June, and right around his opening month. Having two monster months in between doesn't make having just a really solid month wearing down. he also had a 18.3% K rate in Sept/Oct, his lowest of any month.
using a 5 game playoff sample is useless.
doesn't seem he wore down at all.