Terry
Verified Member-
Posts
189 -
Joined
-
Last visited
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 Terry
-
Last year, there was inconsistent miss on his sliders It looks like he killed some vertical drop on it this year and was able to pound the zone with it yesterday. I would bet it was a downgrade from last year's version on Stuff model. But due to his premium velocity, it was an acceptable tradeoff if he has more control on it. 3 BBs seemed bad, but 65.8 Strike% is an above average number from a starter, which is nice to see and hopefully it sticks.
-
Fri. 3/28 - Opening Night in Nashville (6:35 Central)
Terry replied to Jim Goulart's topic in Brewers Minor League Talk
-
Oh for sure, I think the concept is to strip away the location factor so that if you have above average numbers, you will have more room for error even if you don't locate it well. I believe facility like Tread Athletics or Driveline use a much more simple version like In-zone top-third VAA though, which is a nice alternative.
-
A couple charts I made. From today Last season It seems like there's some cut action to his fastball, not sure if it's intentional or simply because of release angle change. Really like his changeup, less velo differential with more movement separation. Also has a revamped curveball as well.
- 5 replies
-
- jackson chourio
- freddy peralta
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
In this article With His Glove-Side Pitches Fine-Tuned, Connor Thomas Makes His Pitch for Brewers' Opening Day Roster written by Jack Stern, Thomas mentioned that Below is the Spin-Based/Observed Movement plot that I generate mimicking baseball savant's style. You can think of Spin-Based spin axis as the moment capture by Hawk-eye when releasing the ball. As you can see, all of his pitches come from extremely similar spin axis, based on the spin-mirroring and non-Magnus effect concept, hitters had a hard time differentiating these pitches out of hand. Here's another example that might help you furthur undertand this concept. Although here's the part I haven't figured out how to explain yet, Aside from the similar characteristic like his other arsenal out of hand, Thomas' cutter seemed to have more expected movement than average cutter from his arm slot. Let me know if you have an idea on how to approach this!
-
- 1
-
-
- connor thomas
- brewers prospects
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Fastball command was a bit off in this start. Cutter, Sliders' command still need some work as well and I think it would be best for him to start the season in AAA, but compared to last year I'm much more confident that he can at least stick as a back end starter. Below is the previous two starts.
-
- 1
-
-
Some chart that I've been working on. It's obviously nice to see the usage of cutter and slider were up, and judging by shape, speed, spin rate it could be an average pitch. But from Zone% we can tell that control of those two pitches probably lags behind a bit.
-
Oops, both of them could be just wild overthrown pitches tho, not necessarily a cutter.
- 7 replies
-
- logan henderson
- craig yoho
- (and 5 more)
-
I got a few observations. 1. Ashby had a new cutter and his sinkers have more drop. 2. Wolfram has more rise on his 4-seam and more horizontal movement on his 2-seam. (More separations between both pitches.)
- 7 replies
-
- logan henderson
- craig yoho
- (and 5 more)
-
I think the shape change may be in correlation to the arm angle change? Cause all of his fastballs have lower IVB, kind of like the changes Jose Quintana made in season. Also interestingly, his sinkers have strong tendency to produce groundballs despite the non-optimal location. GB% amongst his BIP against sinkers improved from 60.5% to 69.5% and launch angles went from 2° to -5° this season.
-
I won't deny that, but his numbers between starter and reliever back in 2022 weren't even that far off if you dig into statcast numbers. https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/statcast_search?hfPT=&hfAB=&hfGT=R|&hfPR=&hfZ=&hfStadium=&hfBBL=&hfNewZones=&hfPull=&hfC=&hfSea=2022|&hfSit=&player_type=pitcher&hfOuts=&hfOpponent=&pitcher_throws=&batter_stands=&hfSA=&game_date_gt=&game_date_lt=&hfMo=&hfTeam=&home_road=&hfRO=&position=SP&hfInfield=&hfOutfield=&hfInn=&hfBBT=&hfFlag=&pitchers_lookup[]=676879&metric_1=&group_by=name&min_pitches=0&min_results=0&min_pas=0&sort_col=pitches&player_event_sort=api_p_release_speed&sort_order=desc&chk_stats_slg=on&chk_stats_xslg=on&chk_stats_woba=on&chk_stats_xwoba=on&chk_stats_swing_miss_percent=on#results A dominant reliever is certainly nice, but a potential mid rotation is definitely better. If he's fully healthy, I'm almost 100% certain they will start him in spring training and see what happens.
-
His advanced numbers back in 2022 as a starter was .306xwoba, 0.374xSLG, 0.366xwobacon, which is actually quite similar to the numbers Peralta posted this year(also similarly had homerun issue which inflated Ashby's FIP), whom I assumed you wouldn't call a no. 4 or 5 starter. His release point was a lot different from the past, even varied between games this season, meaning he's likely searching for what best suits him to begin the season. That early control issue is certainly not a norm. If he can get his BB/9 under 4.0 (not an easy task I know), he get the ingredient of at least being a no.3 starter.
-
So...a starter with a 4.06FIP and 3.72xERA is bad nowadays I see. There's absolutely no reason not to try stretching him out at spring training if he's fully healthy. He already showcased his ability to produce whiffs and groundballs and that his ceiling is probably the same as Peralta's, If we're seriously considering going deep in the playoffs, we're gonna have to give him a chance and hope it works. Edit: And I don't think the team had ever considered him as a DFA candidate. Yes he had command issue, but this year's early-on disatrous control issue mainly stem from his arm angle change that he's not accustomed to initially after the injury. Not because of the role he's in.
-
Thanks for the reply. Here's the pitch movements from his triple A appearance using @Tjstats app. Not sure why he only threw one slider even though the cutter is getting torched (0.510 xSlg against righties). Keith Law did mention that "The command and control are too good to give up on him as a back-end starter even if it’s still fastball or changeup 90 percent of the time." in his preseason farm analysis, so I'm holding slight hope here.
-
Jack Flaherty and Yusei Kikuchi are two other SPs I would like. As for controllable assets, Angels' pitchers might be worthy targeting (someone like Patrick Sandoval), although they might not think they are sellers lol.
- 13 replies
-
- garrett crochet
- jesus luzardo
- (and 5 more)

