BedellBrave
It's OVER 5,000!
We now have the ace you guys have been clamoring for
[tw]1219383573561651201[/tw]
Worth a shot.
We now have the ace you guys have been clamoring for
[tw]1219383573561651201[/tw]
How much more evidence do we need that the playoffs are an absolute crapshoot and that staying competitive long term is the name of the game?
And yet you have the Royals in back to back WS, the Giants winning three World Series, the Cardinals, the Rangers, etc.Yeah I don’t buy the playoffs being a crapshoot either. Playoff success requires a different roster build than regular season success. In the regular season quality depth wins out. In the post season top heavy talent wins out.
Yeah I don’t buy the playoffs being a crapshoot either. Playoff success requires a different roster build than regular season success. In the regular season quality depth wins out. In the post season top heavy talent wins out.
Tell that to the '91-'05 Braves, who sported either the best or 2nd best roster in baseball for a big chunk of that time period and only won 1 championship.
Tell that to the Dodgers. They have accumulated 214 WAR through 2013-2019 and don't have a single WS ring to show for it. For context, the next closest team in that time frame is the Red Sox with 184 WAR and no other team has more than 170.
Tell that to the Astros, who the pundits said were the biggest WS favorite in years after they acquired Greinke last year.
Tell that to the Nationals, who at one point had a 1% chance of winning the World Series last year and still ended up winning it.
This is all anecdotal evidence that is pretty useless, objectively. But there is a ton of data that supports the idea that there is a tremendous amount of luck involved in playoff baseball. There is so much luck that mortgaging several years of competitiveness in order to "go all in" almost never makes any sense. That doesn't mean that it never makes sense to trade future value for present day value, but it has to be balanced with the reality that playoff baseball is all about luck and parity.
I suggested we take a flier on him about a month ago. $1m deal is great
We are in the midst of a pretty terrible streak of losing 9 straight series/WC games, but stuff like that just happens occasionally.
It is interesting to consider the case of Kyle Seager.
The past 3 seasons he's put up WAR of 3.5, 1.5, 2.9.
He is 32. I'd project him at 3 WAR in 2020 and 2 WAR in 2021.
He's making 19M in 2020 and 18M in 2021. There is a reasonable option for 2022.
Expected surplus value over the life of the contract is about 1 WAR, meaning he would not cost us any of our prospects who has sniffed a Top 100 list. Assuming Seattle is willing to sell early.
The in-house options at third project to generate about 1.0-1.5 WAR.
Seager in principle should give us a couple extra wins. If he is avaiable the price should be reasonable. And we would have avoided the long-term risk of signing an older player to a 4 year deal.
The question is whether Seattle is ready to deal and on what terms.
Just one last note. It is unrealistic to think acquiring Seager now will not affect AA's ability to make mid-season moves. A budget is a thing. Something that a lot of people seem to have lost sight of.
There’s literally no risk in signing Hernandez. He either wins a spot or doesn’t, that’s it. Love it.
This is the only sentence there I disagree with. That nine straight ties the all time record, and it took the Cubs 109 years to do it.
This is the only sentence there I disagree with. That nine straight ties the all time record, and it took the Cubs 109 years to do it.
He literally has nothing left and he's too rockheaded to make the changes he needs to make. Waste of resources.