Jump to content
Brewer Fanatic

gregmag

Verified Member
  • Posts

    2,122
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

 Content Type 

Profiles

Forums

Blogs

Events

News

2026 Milwaukee Brewers Top Prospects Ranking

Milwaukee Brewers Videos

2022 Milwaukee Brewers Draft Picks

Milwaukee Brewers Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

Guides & Resources

2023 Milwaukee Brewers Draft Picks

2024 Milwaukee Brewers Draft Picks

The Milwaukee Brewers Players Project

2025 Milwaukee Brewers Draft Pick Tracker

2026 Milwaukee Brewers Draft Pick Tracker

Store

Downloads

Gallery

Everything posted by gregmag

  1. Did Murphy say anything after the game about pulling Myers? Like most people, I wanted to see him go back out for the 7th. But I can think of a few possible reasons for pulling him: His confidence is growing massively. Don’t mess with a good plateau. He threw 100 pitches last time out, so maybe they wanted to keep his pitch count down a bit. The bottom of the 6th took a long time. Maybe sending him back out was on the table, but the long wait tipped the scale in favor of the bullpen. All just speculation of course.
  2. I was a huge fan of the Hader trade. If the players were really so devastated to lose a one-inning pitcher in the middle of the worst stretch of his career, then they lacked the mental steel to win anything. I suspect the “clubhouse devastation” narrative was wildly overstated by poorly informed fans and online loudmouths who missed or ignored both Hader’s cratering and all the other ways the Brewers blew that season. But no way would I trade Willy now. He’s far more important to this team than Hader was to that one. He would leave a big hole in the lineup (though not at ss). He’s a leader whom everyone loves. The persistent overrating of closers and Willy’s expiring contract means the Brewers couldn’t make out like they did in the Hader trade. This is just Rosenthal not knowing or caring about what’s good for the Brewers.
  3. Nah. We played them close and just didn’t hit against great pitching on the road. First sweep of the season — in June. The offense has been inconsistent, which young players tend to be. The pitching needs reinforcements, but the present group is doing really well. It’s the team we’ve had all along — better than expected, still finding itself.
  4. There is zero reason to trade him. His value is low right now, so the opportunity cost of keeping him is minimal. The Brewers don’t desperately need him, but they could use him. This is a moment to work on getting his act together at AAA and seeing what we have.
  5. What other "biggest misses" are you thinking of? You suggest that Olson for Norris is representative ("such as") of other, equally bad trades. You criticize the OP for being selective. What's your full, non-selective argument? Off the top of my head, the worst recent trades I can think of after Olson-Norris are Richards and Francis for Tellez, Strzlecki for Chafin, Kelly and Mathias for Bush, and Toro for Patrick. None of those is consequential, let alone anywhere near as bad as Olson-Norris. Patrick may still help us. I think it's also misleading to suggest that the OP's approach mainly excludes bad trades. I don't think it excludes any great ones. But it excludes the very helpful deadline deals for Canha and Santana. In addition, Taylor / Houser looks like addition by subtraction even if we get nothing out of Coleman Crow. Same for Urias for Blalock, who is looking pretty good. Alex Jackson for McKendry won't sting and could still help. I'm not sure your point boils down to anything more than "count the Olson deal as a substantial negative," which is entirely fair. But I can't immediately think of anything else that would change the OP's bottom line.
  6. I'm a huge fan of this trade for the familiar reasons: We get six years of Ortiz and Hall for one year of Burnes. However, I think those of us who took that view in the offseason assumed that 2024 would be a year when Burnes wasn't putting us over the top. As good as the team has been, that may not end up being right. So -- if we're focusing on this year, would you undo the trade now? Would you take Burnes / some guy (Monasterio? Dunn?) at 3b over random dudes (Ross, Myers) in the rotation / Ortiz? On one hand, I think it's a closer question than offseason critics of the trade ever imagined. On the other hand, I think we'd be better right now with Burnes than Ortiz. The really interesting question is: How much better? Would our chances in 2024 of winning the division, or a playoff series, or the World Series be improved enough with Burnes to justify losing him for nothing after the season, rather than getting six years of Hall and Ortiz, including what Ortiz is contributing now? (The comp pick is basically a wash.) It's obviously a hard question empirically. I say no, but I could very well be wrong.
  7. Also, while I’m nitpicking here, I have a grammatical question / gripe . . . So first: Thank you for these recaps. They’re fun and informative. I imagine they take a bunch of time to write, and I’m grateful! Okay . . . Why do you use “would” forms to describe simple past events: “Contreras would drive in the runner” rather than just “Contreras drove in the runner”? Normally “would” only works in the past tense either to describe a repeated past event (“we would go on vacation every summer”) or to describe a past event in relation to an earlier past moment (“he thought he had a bright future, but he would end up disappointed”). You aren’t doing either of those things. It isn’t just you — sportswriters seem to do this a lot. I can’t see any reason not to use the simple past tense, which reads much more smoothly. That’s it. Sorry. Walk on my lawn all you want. Go Brewers.
  8. Unless you’re counting in some way other than adding up the seven game scores, you’re a little off on the total runs scored and allowed. It’s 49-25, not 46-28.
  9. Taylor’s now down to near replacement level, and Houser appears to be toast. I suppose you could argue that Taylor has been better than Chourio and Weimer, but those guys are part of the future, plus they’re cheap. The trade looked like a decent move when it happened. It looks better now.
  10. According to news reports this morning, much of the city will be without power for days. Officials are telling people to stay home because many roads aren’t safe and most traffic lights aren’t working. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/16/us/texas-flood-tornado-storms-outages.html?smid=url-share
  11. Really well done. This is the most thorough account of Thomas’s life and career that I’ve seen. Such a sad story. I’d like to think that teams now would be equipped to help players with major mental health issues.
  12. How exactly do we know that players can’t provide credible offense with low EVs? This is the central, unstated assumption of the article. I wish we had EV data for older players like Carew, Brett Butler, Dave Concepcion . . . all different kinds of hitters, but all successful low-power guys. Why can’t versions of that work in the modern game, especially with the demise of extreme shifting? I’m not asking that question rhetorically, like I already know the answer. I’d like to see the assumption unpacked.
  13. We have to be clear about the denominator here. The reason the vast majority of players don't sign extensions before free agency is that they aren't good enough to warrant extensions. Of course you're right that most players who do warrant extensions don't sign them, but that's a much smaller pool within which we would need to break down the reasons extensions don't happen. Often, to take the most obvious counter, particular teams don't want to do them even when a generic GM might do them. It would be interesting to identify a pool of players who were, let's say, "extension plausible" and trace what happened with them. I think the story would be a lot more nuanced than you're making it out to be. For example, you argue that Contreras wouldn't rationally sign an extension that ended at the likely point when his skills would be declining. To test that argument, we would need to know a bunch of things, including how many catchers really get paid a premium past age 33-34, how much they had shown to that point in their careers, and when (in relation to arbitration and free agency) they got paid that post-33-34 premium. As others have pointed out, comparing free agent contracts to pre-arby extensions is apples to oranges, at least without more context. I'm not sure about my ultimate take on a Contreras extension -- you and others have made a lot of strong points. But it seems at least plausible that the two sides could agree on a deal they both liked. Also, I'm as big on trusting the prospect pipeline as anybody, but developing catchers is hard. I don't think you can count on catcher development as confidently as you can count on say, outfielder development. OTOH catchers do get hurt a lot. So yeah, not sure.
  14. If we can get an actual Gasser equivalent for Adames — a MLB-ready, borderline top-100 SP, or even one who’s a year away — I think we have to do that. The problem is matching up with a team that has that guy to trade.
  15. If Boras and Hoskins were really surprised by the Burnes trade, I suggest they learn to read. If that take is coming from Burnes, then one of Boras or Burnes is likely just being a prima donna. They both have plenty of experience.
  16. Fair enough. I know nothing about poker (though the other two references are common enough that I get them). All I can do is read what you write with my ordinary understanding of what words mean.
  17. After “apparently not the nuts,” I refuse to take anything in this article seriously.
  18. I don’t see how Anderson or Escobar would count as an upgrade. Anderson is a middle infielder who just turned 30 and has been declining on both sides of the ball for three years, completely cratering last year. Escobar is 34 and has been in clear decline for at least two years, once again cratering in 2023. How is that “low risk”? Turang and Monestario were both better than both of those guys last year, and Turang and Monestario are young enough that they’re likely to improve, while Anderson and Escobar are already declining — and that’s before we even talk about Black, who’s very likely to outhit all four of the players we’re talking about. Given those options, standing pat is a better bet for both the present and the future. Urshela’s a different story. I don’t think you’ll see his 2019-2020 peak again, but he’s been solid the past few years. He’s a likely upgrade for 2024, but not a slam dunk, and after 2024 I’d bet on our young guys. So if you can get him on a short deal, sure.
  19. I’ve said this same thing for a long time. It makes a ton of sense. Excellent article!
  20. Gantner is the ultimate third wheel. He wasn’t just mediocre; he was an albatross. He was a decent player in his 20s. Then he stuck around forever and the Brewers indulged him, so they never bothered to look for a 2b who could actually help them win games — which they rarely did over the rest of his career. One of my all-time least favorite Brewers.
  21. Sorry if this has come up before and I missed it. A number of discussions I’ve seen have talked about being able to offer Hoskins a qualifying offer if he opts out. I have a dim memory that sometimes teams agree not to offer the QO in that situation as a condition of the contract. Has anyone seen anything reported about that possibility with the Hoskins contract?
  22. I think it's a great HoF year. Three deserving candidates got in, Wagner got to the doorstep, no bad candidates (like Baines or Morris) gained much ground, no good candidates (like Whitaker) got egregiously beaten down (although of course there are always good candidates who don't gain as much traction as you or I might like), and Sheffield got aggressively disrespected. Mauer stacks up solidly in the array of HoF catchers, an underrepresented position anyway. Speaking of underrepresented positions, it's great to honor a top-tier 3b. Coors deflation leaves Helton with solid HoF numbers -- 61.8 WAR, 133 OPS+, right there with Ortiz, Dawson, Guerrero, and McGriff (all of whom Helton beats on one metric and trails on the other, neither by massive numbers); better than Rice, Perez, and of course Baines but let's not even talk about that. Is Helton a first-rank Hall of Famer? No. Does he satisfy overall Hall of Fame norms? I think he does. Relief pitchers are tough. On some days I can talk myself into the idea that the only Hall-worthy primary relievers are Wilhelm, Eckersley, and Rivera. I think we overrate what closers contribute to winning. Fingers and Sutter IMHO were mistakes, but that's a big ship that's long since sailed away from my biases. Wagner was better than those guys (as was Nathan).
  23. No one other than you has Clarke as anything more than an emergency catcher at the MLB level. You have, for years, touted player after player after player as being able to play significant games at positions that the player had only played years and levels earlier. I can’t recall a single time any of those players has actually played the position you imagined going forward — please remind me if I’m forgetting any. People repeatedly provide evidence that the players in question can’t play the positions you’re insisting they play. Without fail, you either ignore that evidence or cherry-pick specious stats (like, say, a catcher’s fielding percentage in a small sample) to try to dress up your baseless arguments. This isn’t creativity, or thinking outside the box, or even good faith discussion. It’s passive aggression.
  24. I'm not sold that the positive difference between Arraez as a 2b-1b and Black as a (3b?-)2b-1b will be worth the cost. Black appears to have more power and more speed. He's substantially younger and healthier. He's substantially cheaper, if you believe opportunity costs are relevant for this front office (and whether or not you believe it, I'm pretty sure the front office does). We're just about to see the baseline, the starting point, for what Black can do in MLB. That seems like a terrible time to trade a guy who can potentially do things we need. The presence of Wilken shouldn't cause us to devalue Black, any more than the presence of Quero should cause us to devalue Contreras. Let's learn whether, hopefully how, Black can make us better.
  25. I have a recollection that Jenkins really helped his stock in the AFL after not looking great at AAA. Relatedly, I thought it was awful and classless when Bulls fans booed Jerry Krause the other night with his widow present — and I would absolutely do the same thing to Sal Bando every day of the week and twice on Sunday. Being terrible at your job is one thing. Being terrible while acting arrogant and entitled is a whole other thing.
×
×
  • Create New...