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Fear The Chorizo

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Everything posted by Fear The Chorizo

  1. I think Wilken could be a fast mover if he keeps heating up, and frankly should be - not sure if this season as a Brewer happens, but seeing him with a legit shot at the everyday 3B or 1B option in Milwaukee next Spring Training makes too much sense if he's past that HBP to the face last year and continues to put up gaudy #'s in AA/AAA this year (despite a still very low BA). He's got the pop and potential to be an everyday corner IF this organization has lacked pretty much since Prince was a Brewer.
  2. Yes, but in the smallest market in all of baseball, those "shots" need to be in-season trade acquisitions to bolster a playoff-caliber roster that gets built through draft/develop + pre arbitration extensions - it's a fool's errand and strawman argument to think they should try and compete in free agency with the huge market behemoths to try and sign the veteran star free agents. There may be no salary cap, but that doesn't mean the smallest markets can compete with signing the best players in the open market - that's actually proven to make it more difficult than if there was some sort of cap that only a handful of teams would ever dream of exceeding, and forcing premier free agents to seek more money with other teams. Adding all the deferred contract shenanigans to skirt/limit luxury tax penalties and it's even more egregious. The Brewers have enough in their minor league system to be significant players at this year's trade deadline to try and fill holes for the stretch run - if their team is good enough to be considered a contender this season another month or so into the schedule. The alternative option is for them to be soft sellers at this year's deadline and make way for some more of their prospects to get their feet wet at the MLB level. Such is life for the Brewers, like it or not.
  3. It's time for the Mis in Milwaukee...use those bullets in the majors. My goodness that ball explodes out of his hand
  4. The answer to the title of this article is pretty simple... No
  5. I guess my outlook is the exact opposite, honestly... Q1 growth stalled because companies imported a ton of stuff end of Q1 to stockpile prior to tariffs taking effect in part due to confusion, but also as a safeguard - even if whatever they stockpiled wouldn't be enough to sustain a longterm trade war without alot of pain stateside. We are now not even 1 month into OMG TARIFFS!!!!!! and China is already foregoing a ton of their imposed tariffs on imports because if the US doesn't totally cave, China's economy implodes if they can't sell their crap elsewhere - not in a couple years, more like months. Factor in the corporate behemoths who rely on China for way.too.much. and all parties involved don't want that sort of implosion to happen overnight. Low level tariffs will get carried through in a deal that still allows for the flow of cheap stuff coming in stateside from the far east, and a smaller can gets kicked further down the road. Deals are gradually being sorted out with friendlier nations to reset the marketplace to a new normal. Meanwhile prices on essentials continue to drop. The market has been gradually coming to terms with the fact that sometimes what the 🍊 man says either isn't exactly what he means or isn't an absolute that things have to shift 100% his way to "make a deal" . That should come as no surprise to anyone who's got a pulse over the past decade, but apparently it still does with far too many. I think now is still a very good time to buy, and it will continue to be, for awhile. When the market tries to play the jump to conclusions game based on what comes out of Washington verbally, or even on a sandwich board in the Rose Garden, it tends to overreact more than a touch.
  6. I honestly think if you don't get an early long term extension with a bonafide stud prearbitration (Chourio, Braun, etc), small market teams are almost always better off trading away players the offseason before they reach free agency...I think at times it's ok to hang onto position players until their free agent year (adames, fielder) and just recoup the comp pick for them declining the option. For really good pitchers, I think it's better to trade them ahead if time to replenish the cupboard (Hader, Devin, Burnes) rather than risking injury that last year. Look at the Dodgers' current IL pitching staff's payroll - the Brewers can't take that financial risk to have a bunch of pricey veteran arms on the roster only to see them cashing checks to be injured. You get those mid to late 20's years of prime production of their arms before moving on from them and having to pay crazy money to watch them get injured or regress. Cortes and Woodruff are among the highest paid Brewers' pitchers....enough said
  7. Yeah, they simply don't - their pitching as constructed is too thin to sustain a team that will be able to win 7 out of every 10 games, regardless of who they are playing. The Cubs could opt to empty a decent farm system to bring in veteran arms and probably will need to at some point, but with how fast pitchers are dropping like flies with the Dodgers there's going to be other huge market teams driving the price of pitching up via trade, too. One thing about their offensive barrage to start the season - Their early season schedule has been incredibly favorable towards games with good hitting conditions. Most of their Wrigley home games in April have been good weather, most with wind howling out - which makes that park a bandbox. And then playing most of April in CA or AZ also limits those 40 degree, misty nights where hitting is no fun. The Brewers have uncharacteristically lost a handful of games they should have won with their own bullpen struggles here and there - that's magnified early in the season standings, because adding those ~3 games in the win column now would have the Brewers equal to the Cubs in 1st.
  8. I think Johnson might still be available tomorrow, too
  9. I see Golden's potential as Amon-Ra St Brown, but with much better speed - I'd take a shot at that 2/3 into the first round in every single draft year.
  10. Golden might resemble a few of the Packers' current stable of wideouts, but he plays more physically and is faster than anyone they have in the room, even with a healthy Watson (if that ever happens again). Not a reach to pick him where he went, and a big need position - hard to fault the pick looking at it from any number of ways.
  11. I think there's a knee concern in there, too - if a corner can't run a 40 at any point leading up to the draft, you can't take him in the 1st round.
  12. This is the player some of us thought he could develop into once he filled out a bit and didn't look like a gust of wind could send him into orbit. It's also the type of player a bunch of draftniks though he could turn into one day when he was considered a potential 1st overall draft pick heading into his senior year in H.S. for a time. He'll never give you 30HR in a season, but man he can give you just about everything else on a baseball field.
  13. Adames was surprised the Brewers never called after he declined the qualifying offer....and after the Brewers approached him about longer term contract extensions an offseason or two earlier that he declined. I mean, what did he expect would happen once he reached free agency and the GM has all but indicated if he got to free agency he most certainly would get more $$ elsewhere? A great guy/great teammate is more than fine in my book to earn a good year to year salary playing through his prime years. A guy past his prime making a ton more guaranteed money for multiple seasons is a franchise-crippling anchor, no matter how great of a teammate he is. That's, quite frankly, what Adames is now that he signed for $182M as a 29 yr old SS showing signs of defensive decline on top of the extended stretches of bad at the plate.
  14. They don't have the pitching - but they'll score alot of runs, especially if the wind blows out of Wrigley more than it blows in.... If all goes right with them, they just might claw up over that 83 win total for a change...and they should considering their payroll is roughly $60M over the Cardinals and ~$75M over the rest of the teams that would be among the threats to win this division. Pittsburgh just isn't there yet.
  15. Wanted to steer some discussion away from the daily "OMG the sky is falling" in the markets and see if I can get any recommendations for dividend ETFs people would recommend looking into to further diversify my mix of investments. I'm in good shape with my 401k/roth retirement account, and now have a healthy rainy day savings account built up to the point where I'll have extra cash month to month to invest elsewhere. I'm at a spot where I'm thinking of using the routine funds that built up my rainy day savings to invest in a low fee ETF that also pays a dividend instead of further increasing how much I'm putting straight into my retirement plan. Anyone have some solid ones they'd recommend? Looking for one that's a good option to continually invest in over time that does pay a decent sized dividend. I've done some research on my own but also looking to see if there's similar ETFs others like to what I'm considering. With the market chaos unfolding it actually feels to me like a good time to dip a toe into this type of investment. thanks in advance!!
  16. Unfortunately for the Cobs, they still have all of their remaining g games against the Brewers left to play a full month into the season
  17. lol, guess that comp pick is starting tonight in Milwaukee for the Brewers!
  18. It's not that I dislike Adames....he seems to be a great guy and good on him for securing a generations-changing contract from someone to play baseball past his prime. I'm just happy it wasn't the Brewers who paid Adames given how the economics in baseball works, and I'm looking forward to the comp pick in this year's draft. He's just off to one of his typical extended cold streaks where he kills the lineup he's in, but good for the Giants to have been finding other ways to win without expecting Adames to carry them.
  19. I'd actually wager quite a bit that won't be the case - i think he'll muddle into obscurity in short order due to middling performance and/or injury and wind up on some other team's AAA squad 2-3 seasons from now. Nothing but my Easter dinner-filled gut to base that on, but I'll stick with it, lol.
  20. They signed the top safety and one of the top RBs to their team last offseason in free agency. Gute signed the Smiths in the same free agent offseason. Despite the current cap room, they do have in-house talent that will need to get paid over the next calendar year if they don't want to have cap issues again in the near future, and some of this year's cap room will get eaten up with extension signing bonuses. Gute has been fine in free agency when both a need and the right players are available to sign. You can't play in that sandbox every offseason as a GM though
  21. Call it anecdotal I guess - an athletic 3B with a wet noodle arm who could run down more pop fly fouls than a statue with a rocket arm probably doesn't create many more outs in a season since foul territory is so small and since most fair pop flies towards left get run down by SSs. The range a guy built for middle infield excels when they're playing ~125 feet plus from the plate compared to ~90-100. There's just not enough time for balls hit towards the gap between third and short for a 3B to move towards the hole to field before it's past them. That's a dive play, and if it's an athletic but short player at third their dive is a range-limiting factor, too. There's a reason 3B has seen players with frames like Arenado, Machado, Mike Schmidt, etc playing there over the decades.
  22. Range just isn't as important at 3rd - if you have to cover alot of ground to get to a ball at 3rd the SS should probably already have gotten to the ball. Arm strength/accuracy is probably equal with reaction time/sure handedness to catch shots at you cleanly for 3B defensive ability. Not having a quality arm over there is forcing a square peg in a round hole for defense, which is something the Brewers shouldn't be doing longterm if they prioritize run prevention to win games
  23. Yeah, I can see Ortiz being the odd man out, too - or packaged with some blocked prospects when another SS is ready in the brewers system
  24. I know the batting average and uneven start to his career is a large red flag, but I still have hope that Wilken is going to be the longterm answer at 3rd (or potentially 1st) in the next couple of years. You've got to give power like that as many chances as possible, and he's sitting in AA with a 0.421 on base percentage despite currently hitting below 0.160. The Brewers also have a wave of IF prospects in the low minors, where one of them could fill that 3B void. Hoping Durbin makes the most of his opportunity at 3B, because he's the type of player that can wreak havoc in a lineup with his speed. He just doesn't have the frame or arm to play an above average defense at 3B. I see him as an ideal utility IF, or potentially as a trade chip to bring in a legit 3B from a team looking for an everyday 2B. If Turang is going to be the Brewers 2B longterm, Durbin is blocked at his best everyday position,
  25. Yeah I don't buy the Packers are the worst drafting team in the NFL....how much of that metric is based on consistently picking towards the end of most rounds? Every team has significant misses - I think the current Packer front office does a great job in the middle rounds finding starting caliber players on both sides of the ball, but where they struggle is drafting a guy at one of the marquee positions in today's NFL (WR, DL/edge rusher, T) early and have it be obvious they hit a HR as soon as that player steps onto the practice field. Frankly, a big part of that issue is the Packers either don't draft those positions in round 1 (WR, T), or they take raw development projects like Gary/LVN who take years to sort out if they're going to make an impact. At some point they need to target obvious holes on their roster in round 1 drafts at positions like OLB or WR, with the expectations that those players turn those existing roster weaknesses into strengths simply by entering the building. The Packers have hit on QBs drafted early - they've only had to attempt doing it twice in the last ~25+ seasons, which is insane, but assuming Love is at minimum an above-average NFL starter you can't question their approach with how they've maintained quality at by far the NFL's most important position compared to pretty much any other team in the league over the same timespan.
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