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Posted
41 minutes ago, BruisedCrew said:

Ortiz has undeniably been terrible at the plate. But, having him at number 9 in the order might be more acceptable if there weren’t so many other holes in the batting order. 
 

I’m less upset about Ortiz than I am that the Brewers did nothing to fill holes at 3B and the outfield corners, which are usually manned by more productive hitters who can provide some power. 

Yep, Frelick is a way bigger problem right now, playing at the #2 ranked offensive position in MLB, a position where league average OPS is 35 points higher than shortstop. And Frelick isn't making it up with his glove. 

Posted
2 hours ago, adambr2 said:

This season was supposed to be the season when Ortiz *should* have some positive regression. Instead, he got even worse.

I think we need to consider the strong possibility that 2024 was the aberration.

Given the current replacement options, if he can OPS at his 2025 rate of .593 he'll probably keep his job. 

If he continues at his 2026 rate of .445, he probably won't (and is already losing playing time as others have mentioned). 

It's frustrating since it's a very low bar that he's not reaching. 

Posted

If Ortiz continues this way, I don't think Pratt is very far off. Had a cold start to the season, has been much better recently, and the underlying numbers (Whether it's basic plate discipline or xwOBA) would suggest that he's not overmatched even when looking at the full-season numbers. Not amazing, just above average, but still not overmatched. Ortiz has option, and Pratt is on the 40-man, so wouldn't take any roster shenanigans to get it done. I think it'll be a couple weeks still at the earliest (Unless injuries force thier hand), but Pratt is closer than people think. 

There's no service time clock to worry about, so the bar is lower than for most promotions. And the performance to beat doesn't exactly raise the bar further. 

  • Like 1
Posted
3 hours ago, adambr2 said:

I really don’t think a .445 OPS and 0 extra basehits is helping us win games now.

As SeaBass mentioned, he’s already been semi-benched.

Pratt has a whopping 3 extra base hits against AAA pitching where there isn’t a Skenes, a Mitch Keller, a Edwin Cabrera, a Chase Burns, Yamamoto, Sale, Elder, etc etc.

I’m not defending Ortiz but there’s really not many replacements who are likely to be significantly better despite how low the bar is. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Pratt has a sub .700 OPS for the year and his hot streak over the last week has a 725 OPS.

Oritz had a 885 OPS in his last year in AAA.  There's no reason to bring up Pratt until you have some belief that he is at least as good a hitter as Ortiz was in AAA.

Given Pratt's small number of AAA at bats and his lack of production no one would be bothering to talk about bringing him up if it wasn't for the contract.

  • Like 1
Posted
19 hours ago, adambr2 said:

I actually think this is about as low pressure of an environment, at least as much as that can be at this level making your debut, as anyone could ask for.

He's already secured the bag and his future. Poor performance won’t take that away.

The offensive bar for him to meet couldn’t possibly have been set any lower.

You could easily argue that it’s just as beneficial for his development to start learning his craft against big league pitching.

It's not much different than what they did with Hardy, except he didn't have the contract. 
He played some at AAA, got hurt, miss the rest of the year and then they just threw him out there to sink or swim at the next level. 

I think he's still going to have pressure because of that contract, not in spite of it, but that's part of what you have to deal with. Pressure to live up to it and most baseball players with talent struggle because they start pressing, but... it's professional baseball.  You have to deal with some pressure. 

 

.

Posted

2026 Ortiz bases empty (36 PA)
188/278/188 (40 wRC+)
2026 Ortiz with RISP (24 PA)
368/455/368 (145 wRC+)

2026 Ortiz low leverage (34 PA)
194/265/194 (35 wRC+)
2026 Ortiz high leverage (8 PA)
400/571/400 (196 wRC+)

Obviously can't expect Ortiz to keep running such insane RISP/high leverage splits all season, but at least to this point he's been making the most of whatever singles he's scratched out.

Posted

The fWAR leaderboard for 3rd-base (primary position), 2024-present

Spoiler - Ortiz ranks 14th. If you filter for only when playing 3rd base, he drops down to 21st.

This isn't meant to make a claim of any kind, but it is one more indicator of the dearth of left-sided infielders in the game. Someone else could perhaps filter information more effectively than me, but when I counted down the WAR leaders in that span that are either a SS OR 3B (but not 2nd base), Joey was about 30th on the list.

I just can't shake the feeling that the Brewers don't have an Ortiz-problem, but that MLB has an infielder-problem. Heck, a right fielder led shortstops in DRS last season.

  • Like 2
Posted

Offensive production at 3B has been down for a few years now. League average wRC+ for 3B ranged between 100 and 107 every season from 2012 through 2022. This is the image of a slugging third basemen that most fans still have in their head.

Starting in 2023 it has been 96, 97, 96, and now a 98 wRC+ in the early going this year.

As far as "power positions" go, LF is even worse with a league average 96 wRC+ so far this year that would be the lowest since at least 2002, the first season FanGraphs has positional splits available.

 

Posted
1 hour ago, sveumrules said:

Offensive production at 3B has been down for a few years now. League average wRC+ for 3B ranged between 100 and 107 every season from 2012 through 2022. This is the image of a slugging third basemen that most fans still have in their head.

Starting in 2023 it has been 96, 97, 96, and now a 98 wRC+ in the early going this year.

As far as "power positions" go, LF is even worse with a league average 96 wRC+ so far this year that would be the lowest since at least 2002, the first season FanGraphs has positional splits available.

 

This is a really good observation. It's interesting that SS has been producing more offense than 3B since 2024. 

It seems like the latest young crop of stars all play middle infield. There are not many high profile 3B debuts of late, certainly not of the level needed to replace aging stars like Arenado, José Ramírez, Bregman, and Manny Machado. Austin Riley isn't that old but his production fell off a cliff. 

Posted
2 hours ago, sveumrules said:

Offensive production at 3B has been down for a few years now. League average wRC+ for 3B ranged between 100 and 107 every season from 2012 through 2022. This is the image of a slugging third basemen that most fans still have in their head.

Starting in 2023 it has been 96, 97, 96, and now a 98 wRC+ in the early going this year.

As far as "power positions" go, LF is even worse with a league average 96 wRC+ so far this year that would be the lowest since at least 2002, the first season FanGraphs has positional splits available.

 

I'm not nearly as good at it as you are but from what I've seen in the quality of defense over the same period has gone up. If there's an inverse effect going on it could be the emphasis on defense is part of the reason for the trend in lower offense. Then again better analysis leads to better positioning, which leads the same defender having better results. I don't know how one could isolate prioritizing player type as a cause. What I do think is happening is teams are starting to prioritize defense more. That alone would presumably have teams drafting and developing a player type that leads to more defense at the possible cost of offense. 

  • Like 1
There needs to be a King Thames version of the bible.
Posted
On 4/28/2026 at 11:14 AM, owbc said:

Yep, Frelick is a way bigger problem right now, playing at the #2 ranked offensive position in MLB, a position where league average OPS is 35 points higher than shortstop. And Frelick isn't making it up with his glove. 

I haven't been able to watch as much of the games this year as I would like, but from what I've seen Sal has been outstanding in the field. His first step on that catch last night had to have been a play that 90% of other RFs don't make.

Posted
4 minutes ago, thebruce44 said:

I haven't been able to watch as much of the games this year as I would like, but from what I've seen Sal has been outstanding in the field. His first step on that catch last night had to have been a play that 90% of other RFs don't make.

90% catch probability on that catch per statcast. Frelick's jumps this year have been very poor. His average jump is 1.1 feet below average. He has been fine in RF by the numbers but he's definitely been making plays look much tougher than they actually are with his poor jumps.

Posted
2 minutes ago, wiguy94 said:

90% catch probability on that catch per statcast. Frelick's jumps this year have been very poor. His average jump is 1.1 feet below average. He has been fine in RF by the numbers but he's definitely been making plays look much tougher than they actually are with his poor jumps.

Interesting, thanks for sharing the data.

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