Fear The Chorizo
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Everything posted by Fear The Chorizo
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His stuff is flat out unhittable to MLB-caliber hitters if they guess the wrong pitch - and make no mistake MLB hitters have to sit on a particular pitch and location to do damage to the filth that both these pitchers have in their arsenal. Adding an established MLB catcher and detailed scouting reports on opposing hitters allows Mis to have a game called with more planning/intent than at any point in his minor league development when he was mostly working on command/pitch development. Bottom line, if he can command his pitches reasonably well within the zone and the scouting reports keep hitters guessing (i.e., Mis doesn't tip pitches or get too consistent a sequence for certain situations), Misiorowski is a top 10 starter in the game right now with a ceiling that only Skenes can match as a young arm.
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Glad it doesn't appear to be something requiring a surgery where Wilken is out until this time next year....but this still really sucks as he was really making a case for a promotion and being on the doorstep of a corner IF position with the Brewers as early as next Spring. Dog piles of grown men wearing metal spikes sprinting towards pitching mounds or home plate celebrating are generally not a good idea. It's amazing how frequently players actually do get hurt in these scenarios. I get being excited and celebrating, but can there be at least a little bit of "act like you've been there before" mentality to avoid these sort of injuries?
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Honest question - is there anyone right now who would rather have Adames at short the next 3-4 seasons and have to pay him his contract instead of Ortiz? My answer would probably still be no even if contact amounts weren't a factor That's how well Ortiz has been hitting recently on top of stellar SS defense
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They've played 0.500 ball in their last 10, including a split in a rain-shortened Brewer series, and the Brewers have basically cut their division lead in half over that stretch of games. So much baseball left to be played - a 3.5 game lead is nothing in late June for a baseball season. The Cubs will need to make some moves to pick up more pitching if they hope to be a runaway favorite for the division, and that assumes their offense continues overperforming. Throw in a couple significant injuries at the wrong positions and who knows what will happen in the standings a month or two from now.
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I think getting healthy Walker AND Cooper on the field at the same time as LBs in this system, where Walker can play more on the outside, is the hope. I feel like Quay was a square peg in the round hole of a 3-4 MLB and is a much better fit as a rangy 4-3 OLB.
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There should be zero reason for Mis to throw another pitch in the minors the rest of his career unless he is rehabbing from an injury. Innings management, whatever - then let him pitch those innings in the majors and not waste them in AAA If Woody is ready and is a better option than one of the other brewer starters, you make another trade to make room and Mis stays in the rotation.
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Yes - the secondary offerings he has that are significant velo changes (curveball and changeup), if command continues improving, can make Mis a routine no-no watch every time he takes the hill. Just unfair offspeed stuff when he's locating it, and his exploding heater + slider/cutter are speeding bats up.
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Jacob Misiorowski gets the call to the show!!!
Fear The Chorizo replied to Jastro's topic in Milwaukee Brewers Talk
Just me, but if Mis doesn't fall on his face at the MLB level with command and the onfield performance warrants a quick trip back to the minors, there's no way I want the primary resaon for one of the most electric arms in baseball to go back to the minors being consistent innings management. If they are adamant about a hard IP ceiling, there's a ton of time and pitching depth to allow him to steadily reach that point without a manipulative demotion. Those bullets are major league quality filth - they should be fired at the major league level. -
Which Chourio is the real Chourio?
Fear The Chorizo replied to Turning2's topic in Milwaukee Brewers Talk
At this time last season there were quite a few people who wanted to see Chourio back in the minors, and then he proceeded to play at a borderline MVP level the rest of the season (if Ohtani wasn't in the NL) . He is 21 and goes through stretches where he is way too aggressive and gets himself out by swinging at balls. Not much more to it than that. You hope he keeps developing a more patiently aggressive approach, because if he does he's one of the best players in baseball for the next 8 seasons. -
And that includes a terribly slow start still...Wilken has been destroying the baseball to get those numbers up to where they now are
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The Brewers' biggest weakness is their offense going dormant due to a lack of power, and the most obvious spots to bolster their lineup would be at 3rd and SS, to be sure. However, trading for a glove-first 3B who frankly doesn't have enough pop to dramatically improve what they're currently getting out of the hot corner offensively, who also happens to be having a brutal season while getting half his plate appearances in Denver, is a really bad idea. Couple that with taking on any of what's left on this guy's contract makes it a joke. McMahon is barely scraping 20 HR a year over full, healthy seasons in his prime playing at Coors - that's not good enough to think removing that ballpark from his stats keeps him at that slugging projection. His career splits glaringly bear that out over just about an identical # of games: 82 HR at Coors vs 48 on the road 0.819 OPS at Coors vs 0.658 on the road 0.265 BA at Coors vs 0.214 on the road No freaking thank you...
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It seems to me like once they started buying up rights to broadcast games (which actually started their slope of budget problems as an entity), their brass opted to limit the amount of actual sportscenter shows (which is what made ESPN great in the first place). It's like once they could broadcast games, they couldn't fill the rest of their space with actual sports news content/highlights/actual analysis anymore - especially for games they didn't carry on one of their stations. It's too bad. Reels of some of the old Sportscenter commercials are just fantastic. The "Michael Jordan" one that follows an unassuming everyday joe around who happens to be named Michael Jordan and seeing everyone's initial reaction of disappointment when they realize he isn't "his airness" when he gets to the hostess stand, hotel lobby, answers the door for pizza, etc. is one of my all-time favorites
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I would add to what others have posted that the most important thing is starting - whether it's through work or in your own investment account, sort out what you can readily afford to set aside for investing at a routine frequency and make it a point do so regardless of what the larger markets are doing. Even if it's seemingly a marginal amount, continually feed that investment account. With regular work 401ks, one thing you'll notice is contributing the first couple %s of your income towards that type of retirement account barely reduces the amount of takehome pay you'd receive, because that amount reduces your taxable income. And most employers offer rollovers without fees/costs from old company plans into new ones, so even if you're thinking of making a job switch I'd get enrolled in your current company's plan, especially if they have any sort of match to take advantage of.
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He is by far the best player going right now....but to know that he only has 3 majors over this stretch of time makes you realize the gap between him and the field is nowhere close to what it was between prime Tiger and the field back in the day. Scheffler's 3 majors are over portions of four seasons, and prime Tiger won 11 over a 8 year span (1999-2006)...with 3 of his other wins coming just before or after that stretch. I think the rest of the PGA/LIV field is better/more competitive now than the PGA field TIger faced when he got rolling. So what Scheffler is doing IMO is historic if he keeps it rolling another year or two and picks up a few more major titles.
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I think this is where pitching in general is headed in today's MLB - it's not about fielding a 5 man rotation of overpriced veteran "aces", as much as it's carrying a boatload of arms on the 40 man that can get through the batting order 2-2.5 times over 5 innings, most of who happen to be in early stages of arbitration if they aren't elite pre-arby talents, and then churn through the pile of #4-#5 starters as they either get injured or ineffective without worrying too much about options or years left of team control. Spent the capital to bring in a veteran ace and odds are you're the DBacks this morning with Burnes, or the Dodgers (who have money to burn but the pitching staff they have on the IL right now probably has a higher payroll than the entire Brewers' roster)
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I'd just say, don't do it - pay them the going rates via arbitration during what their actual prime pitching years are if they don't want any sort of longterm guarantee that buys a year or two out of free agency at discount rates, and then wish them well. The market hasn't fully come around to this, but pitchers are on their way to becoming the MLB version of what running backs are in the NFL - all the extra roster spots devoted on team 40 man roster and MLB 26 man game day rosters have created tons of space for guys throwing high 90s to make league minimum, get outs, and promptly be cycled through once they start getting expensive/injured.
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Rule 5 to CWS - Shane Smith Discussion Thread
Fear The Chorizo replied to jesusoftheapes's topic in Brewers Minor League Talk
And that ERA actually is way under inflated compared to runs given up in that span. It's not lost on me that his struggles are building as the MLB exposure and innings pitched increases. Shane Smith does not equal Johan Santana in terms of Rule 5 draft casualties that make an organization rue the day they let him go for years. I will say that he'd fit right in as a starter capable of consistently giving the Brewers 4+ IP and keeping the team in most games he starts - but those type of arms are everywhere. Was it a roster management mistake to leave Smith exposed and lose him? I would say yes - but does losing Smith dramatically alter the longterm outlook of the Brewers at the MLB level? Absolutely not. I think we are going to have to get used to some Rule 5 purging / 40 man DFA casualties the next few years as prospects continue maturing in the Brewer system - it's a product of a good minor league organization. -
One thing I'd say is that while I also hate it, Murphy's philosophy fits right in with the organizational approach of having a ton of interchangeable arms available to churn through the regular season - and not have too much concern over burning options/IL stints because there's always more fodder down on the farm. It's kind of how a small market organization needs to operate to be competitive, but it still stinks - and is definitely NOT how uber-talented young arms capable of starting at the MLB level (i.e., Mis, Henderson to name a couple) should be managed or handled.

