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Cool Hand Lucroy

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Everything posted by Cool Hand Lucroy

  1. I am definitely in the Ortiz fan club. Turang is best at 2B, and Joey has shown he can hit MLB pitching, or at least he did in 2024. I am not ready to move on from him this year, let alone for the future. I keep coming back to him having to adjust to SS, and maybe that's impacting his offense. Let's at least give him the next home stand.
  2. All in all, and aside from the NHL being able to do international tournaments during their ASB, MLB has the best all-star situation. Granted, a lot of that is just because there's not a lot else happening sports wise in mid-July. The NHL has it super great, though. Too bad that kind of thing wouldn't work for baseball.
  3. This. Which by my count is...today. The Brewers have a history of this stuff it seems. Not a huge deal, but one very minor area where I disagree a bit with the team's approach. I suppose if Sal can PH by Saturday, it doesn't matter at all.
  4. Kind of feel like this thread has derailed a bit. I suppose my takeaway is that a) the Brewers probably owe Woody significantly more than the other way around and b) the Brewers still did right by him--lots of teams would've done worse.
  5. IIRC, many on this board thought the Woody contract was a really bad for a small market team to offer at the time. There were legit concerns, and I think it was a tough call for the FO. BUT plenty of us also felt that it was the right thing to do, even given the chance that Woody never fully recovered (and, hey we're only two MLB starts in). That determination was based on the idea that even a half year of good Woody might net enough WAR to justify the cost of the contract, even before you consider the added benefit of the goodwill and the team appreciating Woody's early-career, very economically advantage for the club, contributions. I think this is a situation where both sides should feel really good about what they did. I don't think anyone owes or should expect anything moving forward, but I will say this: I know Woody says he had multiple offers. I absolutely believe him. It's hard for me to see anyone paying THAT much more than 2yr/17.5, though, especially when you know one of those years is a total rehab year. I mean, maybe the Dodgers and Yankees can afford to spend 9 mil on zero production. But would they? In practice? I mean, why commit that much of your luxury tax space in a given year to a guy you are SURE will do nothing? Especially when you can just let some other team take a shot, see if he's good, and then offer him a boatload to take him away after you KNOW he's still got it? It doesn't make sense. And no smaller market is going to do that deal either, unless they have deep history with Woody. All of which is to say, I don't think Woody gave the Brewers a hometown discount. The team stepped up and gave him, in the immortal words of Will Wade, a "strong-[keister] offer." I disagree with Turning's idea that Woody was lucky to get as much as he did, but I certainly buy the point that the Brewers committed to the guy in a way that demonstrates real belief and loyalty. The team made a hard choice and the right ethical choice if you ask me. It may even end up being the smart baseball choice too. I just wouldn't want to see the Brewers' role here reduced to some kind of "pity pick." No one's saying that, exactly, but I think maybe the team's commitment here might be being underrated by some. I have no idea what a 32-year-old Big Woo is getting on the open market. Hard to imagine much more than a 3-4 yr deal. I'd absolutely pay the guy 3/70 and feel fine about it. You'd be betting on the guy to be worth about 7 WAR over those three years. The QO will probably be what? 22-23 mil? I'd do that.
  6. 1-3 weeks for a grade 1. Pretty much best case. I'd just IL the guy, but I am sure Sal only wants that as a last resort.
  7. The Brewers did the right thing. I am sure it engendered some goodwill. Maybe it "pays off" (part of the argument for paying Woody to rehab is that it shows a commitment to the player and shows the organization cares), but I wouldn't say Woody "owes" anything.
  8. Crickets. Sal posted something very banal (no mention of any injury) on Instagram Monday. I don't know. I would guess the MRI didn't find anything major but probably showed something. Would bet on an IL stint but imagine the team is waiting in order to a) see if things improve or b) see what internal/external option is best. Perkins is easy choice, obviously, but trade talks are probably hot, and maybe an OF is involved.
  9. Yeah, no need to mess around. Seeming like an IL stint because what better time, when you can back date to today? We'll see how they handle it and what the MRI says. Hopefully nothing a couple of weeks can't fix, and then he's back in true Sal form before August gets too far along.
  10. Yeah, nice to have Perkins ready for this kind of thing. Hopefully Sal only needs a week or two.
  11. I remember losing 8 in a row before the break in 2018. Maybe this can be (very close to) the inverse of that.
  12. I generally think NHL expansion is a not great idea, given that 34 teams would be more than any other pro sport. Hard to believe hockey can sustain that level of commitment in that many places. The league is already pretty unstable. OTOH, it always seems to be thriving in the South and Southwest. Players love those markets much more than they seem to want to play on Quebec or Halifax or even Winnipeg or a genuinely great city like Vancouver. I'd much prefer a team in Halifax (which would make the NHL the only four time zone pro league if I am not mistaken), but I get that the money is elsewhere. I will be interested to see how this plays out. It is a unique, high-risk, high-reward business strategy. You expand to collect expansion fees and hope you own markets like Raleigh and SLC and Austin all winter. Maybe those teams go bust, or maybe you'll get a league with a massive map.
  13. Long way to go here, but Mis finally gave up the big inning. Learning experience, let's hope. Always pretty much figure a split on double-header days, so at least we have the one in the bag.
  14. Not worried about any other teams (way too early for that yet). Do our thing and keep it rolling. 4-2 home stand is about the minimum for a Pirates and Rockies stretch. 5-1 would be excellent if we can make it happen tomorrow. Good day to get greedy. I think the Padres, Giants, and Cardinals are going to fade a bit (SD and SF have all those games against LA and each other, and the Cards are out over their skis IMO). I don't know if we can catch the Cubs. I feel like we should be right in the WC race up the end at the very least.
  15. This was the first time I have really seen Mis pitch live on video (I have seen clips from the minors and full highlights from his two earlier starts, but haven't been able to sit live for any of his starts until today--I have been missing out. The cutter/slider is really the standout for me. That thing is so filthy, and it has more movement than Burnes' cutter, which was up there with the Sheets curve in terms of the best single pitches I've seen a starter throw (really, Devin's change and Hader's FB are the only relief pitches that come close to those. From what I see, the guy is doing insane things. He'll probably get hurt. I don't know what to count on in terms of how excited I should be about the guy's future. But, man, the present is fun. Not going to be missing any more of these starts.
  16. That was fun. Really fun. I loved those first few innings for many reasons, not least of which was the Brewers very Brewers second inning. It's interesting how much this matchup says about modern baseball. Huge hype. Two starting pitchers throwing unreal stuff. Tons of legit excitement, a JUNE AFTERNOON SELL-OUT. And then the main reasons for all the attention are both done halfway through the game. Not saying it's a bad thing at all. You can like it, hate it, appreciate it, whatever. I just think it's an interesting barometer for the modern game.
  17. Well, Chuorio is awesome. But that was not a well-played fly ball in the first. I thought, "wouldn't it be so baseball if we lose 1-0 after the last four days?" Obviously that has no bearing on how these next 7 innings go. I hate MLB's system as much as the next guy (no salary cap has always been a competitive fairness issue and gets more so all the time in an era of increasing inequality and massive TV deals). But, take it from a Winnipeg Jets fan, caps don't solve everything. Ultimately, free agents want to play in big markets. That's hard to fix. Baseball can do better, but I'm also the world's biggest fan of appreciating how the Crew has been the best-run team in baseball the last near-decade.
  18. I kind of feel like the Contreras clan are...old school eating baseball types. Not sure either of those dudes knows how not to play (I don't necessarily mean this as a compliment, or an insult, just a loaded observation).
  19. Yeah, I find AmFam/Miller to be much more accessible than Target Field, just because the bar shuttles are so good, and it's so easy to find parking in those nearby neighborhoods. Also, much easier entrance/exit in my experience. Still, I think TF is a better place to watch a baseball game. As others have said, it's not unique in terms of its aesthetic. Just a nice urban ballpark, but there's a reason they built like 10 of them that way. Anyway, I haven't much enjoyed the stadium experience in the last 5 years or so. Much prefer attending the local high-A games just due to it being more reasonable and less crowded (older I get the more I hate being cramped, and I tend to be a peripatetic baseball watcher too, preferring to wander the stadium rather than stay in one spot), so my opinion ain't worth much. Go Crew!
  20. Briefly wanted to walk Arraez to get to Machado lol. Wrong about Anderson, wrong about that.
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