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Jopal78

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Everything posted by Jopal78

  1. Never under estimate the value of throwing strikes and keeping the ball in the ball park. Myers gave up 7 homers and ten walks in his first 26+ innings. In the 67+ innings since he’s allowed only 7 homers and 14 walks.
  2. I think you may be being a bit naïve here. The average ticket price for the Bucks at the Fiserv Forum is $130. The court side seats are all sold out and those cost into the thousands. Likewise the Packers don’t sell a ticket for less than $135, and they go for at least double or triple that on or even more on resale sites, where I assume it is not exclusively out of town purchasers. So yes, if product on the field is good, the evidence is already there that plenty of local customers are willing to spend premium dollars for sports entertainment. Of course with 81 games the Brewers will always need to have bargain seats, however like I said earlier if the Brewers can get 500 people to spend $300 each on a game, that generates more revenue than 2000 people who eat and drink their own stuff in the parking lot and buy a $45 ticket.
  3. The family area doesn’t surprise me, right now they’re giving that stuff away for free. But even if only 15% of users were willing to pay it’s still better than the zero they’re getting now. I don’t get the charging for admission to a ball park village, but I guess it would make sense in the context of restricting tailgating to certain lots ( mainly those the furthest away from the stadium and bathrooms) so it’s more convenient to simply eat and drink in the village before and after the game
  4. That’s what happens when A ball players are put in Top 100 lists. A new crop of draftees comes in and A ball players whose numbers dip in AA fall off the lists
  5. You expected something else? People who buy a $30 ticket and eat in the parking lot before the game are not as good of customers as corporate outings or special events with catered food and open bar, etc.
  6. Echoing a similar thought as others; Podsednik was the textbook definition of a journeyman outfielder who played for eight different teams across parts of 11 seasons. If Wiemer’s career trajectory is similar It would mean the Brewers made a pretty fair deal.
  7. The NFL and NHL have held games in unique venues for years. I know MLB did some games in Asia and at the Negro league park, has a game scheduled in Japan next year and now the race track, but I’d be all for more special venues where a game can be held makes things more interesting to watch, especially given the bland nature of 2/3 of the modern baseball stadiums
  8. What an utter train wreck. Benintendi is one of the worst players in the league and they’ve got him for 3 more guaranteed seasons after this one for big money.
  9. Khris Davis had an OPS of .809 for the Brewers and hit 60 homers in 362 games for the Brewers.
  10. The number of “Top 100” prospects traded at the deadline this year: 0. All the teams are acutely aware of the importance of having minor league talent flowing to the big league roster, especially those who are luxury tax payors. That’s why the era of getting a can’t miss prospect for a rental player is largely over. The Brewers in fact got major league players for Burnes plus a draft pick, and were able to redistribute payroll picking up both Sanchez and Junis as free agents after Burnes and his 15 million dollar salary was traded. That importance of that pipeline of talent flowing is the same reason the Brewers made some ho-hum deals at the deadline this year, their own blue chip minor leaguers are more important than a rental player .
  11. That Montas went 5 innings and kept them in the game is probably what the Brewers were expecting. The workload for their bullpen is more sustainable over the long run with Montas going 5; than an opener followed by Wilson then Johnny Wholestaff.
  12. Nice one. Easy to brag in hindsight isn’t it? Though your efforts would be better spent contributing something to actually stir discussion/thought..
  13. The inverse is also true, who honestly thought 2 days ago Wiemer was going to amount to anything? He was up in 2023 primarily because Tyrone Taylor, Winker, Frelick, Mitchell all missed significant chunks of the season with injuries and was over matched in the majors. In fact his hitting numbers fell off in the minors as the competition stiffened in the upper levels. It’s not really a question of him literally being worth nothing, but for a 25 year old player who’s a four year professional, who has used two options year up, and at best has a slim chance of making it to arbitration, he’s kind of worth what the Brewers got for him: a below average starter on an expiring contract to soak up innings across 10 games or so.
  14. The Cardinals, Dodgers, Yankees, Padres and Astros didn’t make a move to get Bauer either; pretty strong indicator his career in MLB is over.
  15. See the 2014 Brewers. Even further ahead on July 1st (6.5 games) and died on the vine. They might not die on the vine this year but man their play against other NL “contenders” (SD, LA, PHI, ATL has not been good (4-12). If they manage to sneak in it’s probably another quick exit unless they get some real luck.
  16. It doesn’t matter. If Montas pitches well down the stretch he declines his end of the option and heads back to free agency where he’d get a larger guarantee. Mutual options are essentially an accounting maneuver to push salary into the next fiscal year.
  17. Maybe if the comment was Marlins got the biggest influx of talent; it would be fair. But Miami gutting their roster in order for the sole purpose of starting over for the umpteenth time really doesn’t impress me, especially given their track record in trading vets for minor leaguers.
  18. Someone’s post was “Marlins winning the deadline” to which my response was trading vets away doesn’t mean anything other than you suck. Nobody will know for 3-4 years who “won” thr deadline if anyone
  19. They gave up no value: a relief pitcher who’s been hurt most the year and their 6th or 7th best OFer.
  20. That’s the point: acquiring a bunch of minor leaguers at the deadline doesn’t mean anything other than you suck at the major league level
  21. Yes, but look at haul they got for Stanton and Yelich. None of those players turned out to do anything for Miami
  22. What about Nestor Cortes? The Yankees are trying to trade for Flaherty while flipping Cortes for luxury tax purposes. Maybe the Brewers should suggest a ménage trois flipping some minor league talent to Detroit and getting Cortes from NY.
  23. Jake Burger is pre arbitration and under team control through 2028, so the Marlins probably aren’t looking to move him unless they receive an offer, they can’t refuse
  24. I agree with you his physical tools probably got him drafted in the first place. However, it’s a results driven sport. Joey has not figured out how to even hit .260 in AAA. So it’s a pretty big assumption that he’s going to figure out how to successfully hit major league pitching. Falling steadily down the outfield depth chart; how much patience does Wiemer deserve? Not to mention being on the 40 man roster for two years and not in the majors his remaining options come into play. Seems most likely the Brewers believed Joey was at or near his ceiling and that’s why he was expendable.
  25. What is your definition of “prospect”? Someone who appeared on a list at some point in time? Since leaving A+ ball Wiemer has an OPS under .790. On top of that he’s a college player and turned professional four years ago. Plus, there’s three pre-arbitration eligible outfielders acquired after Wiemer who have passed him by to the 26 man roster. Maybe his athleticism gets him to the majors again as a defensive CFer, but I wouldn’t call that profile “decent young outfielder”. Those type of players are readily available… see Blake Perkins.
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