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Turning2

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Everything posted by Turning2

  1. I'm get paid to do what I do, not to nerd out scouring rosters to find workable upgrades. There are always guys that could be traded for. Sometimes the price might be high, but not necessarily not contract wise. It might just cost you prospect capital. If you don't have the cash but you have prospect capital, it's reasonable to spend it in the right circumstances. Since you seem to troll my posts, you already should know who I thought was a good match. No, it wasn't Castellanos.
  2. C. Didn't totally gut the team, but didn't noticeably upgrade with MLB proven talent either. Banking on future potential development as always, maintaining status quo. But maybe a few things will hit more immediately. Really needed an offensive upgrade at either SS or CF. Not many SS options and I was fine with Ortiz anyway. Should have added a real proven bat to the OF. Grade F on that.
  3. MLB INC won't be satisfied until they have stripped small markets from any possible path to a WS Championship. The only way things change is if enough fans would walk away and starve the beast financially. But that will never happen and the monied men of MLB know it. Between a TV viewing package and attending 2 games with my family, I contributed at least $500 to this insulting nonsense last year. Not sure that I can justify spending that much again unless the competitive / financial balance gets fixed.
  4. It's also all the risks that were taken in other enterprises to build up the capital prior to buying the franchise. To be balanced, I'm also not a huge fan of ownerships that extort tax bases to subsidize their ballparks.
  5. They are also not taking on close to half the investment risk.
  6. Generational money.... That term has been invented to rationalize the exorbitant salaries of even the lowest paid professional ballplayers. It's been normalized and now many just accept it. Who in the real world thinks they need to make so much money as to allow their kids, grandkids etc to not have to work? It's just a pride thing, a salary competition between millionaires and billionaires that we pay for
  7. My "spin" comment wasn't directed specifically at the posting sentiment here if that helps. It's an observation culled from various social media, and an observation of humanity in general. Most people are too cowardly to speak the least amount of opposition to acceptable opinion. I try to be as balanced and fair in my assessments and as intellectually honest I am capable of. It's not an agenda that I shed light on. It's a mindset of whistling past the graveyard, a cognitive dissonance, a herd mentality that often drapes everything in sunshine and lollipops. That is intellectually disingenuous in the "reality" you speak of. I extend hope and optimism when and where it is merited in my posts. But when something ugly needs to be addressed, I'm not going to put lipstick on the pig and lie to myself or others about the issue at hand. That's reality. The alternative is a bubble of group think, a mutual agreement society, go along to get along. Maybe I should change my handle to Neo because I kick against the matrix... LOL. I've stated previously that the Brewers do an admirable job with what circumstances they face. That does not mean I have to polish up every move they make into something it hasn't been and possibly won't be just to feel good about them.
  8. Offensively at least, I don't think we can say they are better, though some will try to spin it that way. The moves have brought some potential offense in JW but not proven offense. MLB ready is not the same as MLB proven. They are crossing their fingers that he at least replicates Durbin's production and that Mitchell can miraculously not only stay healthy but actually produce to expectations. They also have hopes pinned on a few of the other guys improving or proving certain flashes weren't a fluke.
  9. 18 stolen bags as a rookie isn't bad. He set the Arizona Fall League with SB's too, His big league SB numbers will likely increase this year.
  10. I’m not speaking in terms of success or failure. Just that so many have themselves convinced that this was a hands down steal. It could easily end up a wash with the downside being it left a large hole at 3B. Barring another trade or Williams being at least as productive as Durbin as a rookie OR Hamilton having a career year, the hot corner offense might be dicey.
  11. Well put. Not a popular exercise to suggest anything that rubs against the company line. I'm surprised you only have one down thumb currently.
  12. Conventional wisdom would seem to dictate they let him get everyday playing time in Nash at least to start the year. But you're right, he could very well be the backup from the start. MIL isn't conventional for better or worse.
  13. I'd say that is their clear focus. If not for the looming lockout and the timing of the TV revenue deal transition, they might have been a tad more aggressive after reaching the NLCS.
  14. Not necessarily. It's just as likely they coveted the comp pick, gambled that Woody would decline and lost. They were moving Peralta regardless. We could have easily been facing the opener without either and the marketing push would be how exciting all the new young arms are going to be. Miz would have been forced into the ace role ahead of schedule.
  15. That may be argued. All I see are moves, that for 2026, subtracts from the existing 97 win talent foundation rather than improves upon it - done for the hope of winning later rather than now. "Win Tonight" strikes me as clubhouse sloganeering intended mostly as something to feed the fans, give them something to rally around in the absence of economic competitive balance. For the sake of morale, the combat commander never tells his troops their licked, there is always hope that certain factors fall into place. I believe MIL's front office knows their only chance in hell of not only reaching the World Series, but winning it, is to have a whole bunch of top young/cheap talent peak simultaneously at various stages of controllable years, and that is what they strive to assemble. I'm not saying they are going to stink it up in 2026, but just that it's going to take some unlikely factors falling into place to be better than they were in 2025.
  16. This is still sinking in. Initial reaction is that the Brewers are, at best, positioning for '27 (with them presuming no lengthy lockout), but more likely positioning for '28 (presuming a lengthy lockout) and beyond. Unless another trade is in the works, 2026 feels like a placeholder, mail it in season just biding time until all the new prospect saviors arrive to save the day. It also reveals how the organization feels about the young pitching depth. This is all going to take some time to digest.
  17. Can’t blame a guy whose body betrays him. Regardless, I don’t really even consider Mitchell when looking ahead to the season. I expect CF to look much like last year with Chourio being the only established power bat anywhere in the entire OF.. My (pipe) “dream” is now resigned to Williams putting up ROY power numbers. The best I can apply to Mitchell is hoping he stays healthy and provides some bonus power. IF.. he stays healthy and fulfills his power potential and IF Jett is a real deal short king with power, then MIL would finally have a lethal OF offense. That's a lot to hope for... too much actually. But that's what we are stuck with.
  18. Somebody was taking a swipe at me and others as being "perpetually pessimistic" because we don't see lollipops and rainbows with everything the populist view accepts. Instead of getting into a juvenile, name calling pissing match, I provided an explanation as to why someone might view a differing opinion in that manner.
  19. The debate probably isn't Suarez vrs Durbin. Suarez at 3B most likely doesn't push Durbin's bat out of the lineup. More likely, it moves it to 2B and pushes Ortiz's bat out of the lineup. What's a better infield offensive lineup - one with Suarez, Durbin, Turang and Vaughn, or Ortiz, Durbin, Turang, Vaughn? I would have been fine had they landed him at 1/18. His defense can't be that absolutely incompetent to offset probably 30 HRs / 90 RBIs. Overall I'm indifferent to not adding him.
  20. Sorry, I'm inclined towards independent thought. If that stereotypes me as perpetually pessimistic, so be it. I've heard and read plenty of online opinions which aren't as high on Pratt as they were. Some of his shine has come off. That to me equates to falling out of favor, primarily because he has a hotter prospect on his tail. I think some here misguidedly interpret that as me saying he's now viewed as a bust.
  21. Unless a major shakeup takes place with the new CBA, the writing is on the wall. We shouldn't expect to retain any player that develops into a top 3 player in the league at the position. Someone else posted an astute observation... MIL may never have another HOF player.
  22. They may or may not even have the money to spend more. The uncertainty over tv revenue and the upcoming lockout also factors in. It's not my view that they need to spend crazy money. My view is that they have an abundance of prospect capital that they could afford to part with to attempt to clear the last hurdle. In the 70's my depression era raised mother, clung tightly to an overly preservative mindset influenced from that upbringing. When my parents finally splurged on new living room furniture, she was the type that would not remove the protective plastic from the end table lamps. That's how I feel the viewers are with their prospect capital. Yes, a small market needs a steady infusion of cheap prospects to not only remain competitive, but more importantly, financially viable. I just have to question at what point don't you question how many new end table lamps do you need in storage with the plastic on when you could trade a couple you might not need for a new TV counsel / entertainment center with a built-in stereo, state of the art record player that you do?
  23. MIL has done an admirable job countering the economic / competitive stacked deck they face. In lieu of the ability to spend obscene amounts of cash, they've tried to "old school" the margins. Building with speed, defense, contact hitters, and small ball, they have achieved remarkably, consistent success. But not ultimate success. Moneyball metrics make for a great movie. It doesn't win championships for a small market team without them temporarily playing the $$$ game. Having made the playoffs consistently for so long, and making the NLCS a number of times, yet unable to clear that last hurdle - that is a plateau in my book. The "bites at the apple" approach may eventually pay off. Until then, it's a more of a "close but no cigar" approach. - and somewhat intentionally so. That's a "summer of entertainment" business model. It's been profitable for ownership and titillating for perpetually optimistic fans. It's hard to complain about the success. The model has worked for what it is built to do.
  24. Either / or would be fine. Bottom line for me is that MIL should be looking for an immediate upgrade the OF offense.
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