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Jason Ross

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Everything posted by Jason Ross

  1. Woah! Graced by Aram! Speaking to what Bertz said...I'm one of those people who uses your Twitter as a source in my own articles fairly regularly.
  2. Yeah, the way Rogers and Sharma have suggested the trades is what's really interested me. It feels like they're hearing something more than just spitballing/speculation. It'd be nice to hear something more concrete on the returning names, but hopefully we'll know that sooner rather than later.
  3. I'd be curious as to what trade he could be alluding to, here. I feel like Cleveland would prefer hitters over arms in a Bieber trade, so I wonder what they're looking at, and how close something is to getting done. It almost sounded like he suggested a trade for a hitter with the way he worded how every team needs pitching but the Cubs can deal from that stockpile.
  4. Right. The point I'm not making is what I'd like to see, but going back to my original comment of why people are concerned with his ability to play CF long term and his batted ball data. People have concerns about fit, about Bellinger and the like. It isn't to say these will happen, only that those fears/worries aren't unwarrented. As you said, no contract is without risk. I think people are just pointing out the risk. On Bieber, the Cubs can still get Naylor without Bieber, so I'm not super worried even if he goes to LAD. They can still grab Imanaga, Snell, Montgomery...etc. I like him as a bit of a bounceback, But I'm not so desperate for him that I'd be too bummed to see him head elsewhere. With that said, it is just another option off the board that the Cubs let go. At some point the Cubs do need to get someone in.
  5. The one thing I'd be jealous of is having the infrastructure of being capable of trading for luxury (and it's not that the Dodgers can't use Clase, only that trading for a closer like Clase feels like luxury). I really don't want the Cubs to spend on Clase because they have other things to fix. And I think Bieber is an interesting data point for next season, but I won't miss him either. It's that ability to send a few good prospects for Clase and say "Yeah, we have everything else, and we have the capital, so let's go get this closer".
  6. I think it's pretty unlikely the Cubs will trade PCA regardless of what they do with Bellinger. We'll see, but there hasn't been a single rumor concerning the Cubs moving PCA. Maybe it's something really have kept quiet, but there doesn't seem to be much out there to make you think they'll deal them. This is a team who talks consistently about not blocking prospects, loves defense (especially at premium positions) and loves players who run the bases well. I don't want to make it seem impossible, but it seems like a false equivilency to say that the options are "sign Bellinger and trade PCA" or "sign Montgomery". I think the Cubs are far more likely to sign Bellinger and keep PCA by having Bellinger take CF for 1-3 months and then moving him to 1b than trading PCA for an arm. We'll see what they do. I have no idea what they're going to do. And that's not saying it's not a valid option or the Cubs shouldn't consider trading him, only that I think the Cubs are very unlikely to do so. But I think there are more options than the ones you laid out, and why people are concerned about Bellinger, his position and his batted ball.
  7. Of course there's risk with any contract. With Bellinger him playing CF though is a primary reason you'd be interested in him for 8 years. His bat at 1b is iffy with his batted ball. So you're either talking the risk of him sticking at a premium position or the risk with his batted ball data and offense at a less premium position. It doesnt mean you dont sign him, but it does mean people are going to rightly point our these factors, too.
  8. I would say it's fair to question Bellinger long term in CF. He's 28, and we know defense does tend to fall off around the early 30s traditionally. It doesn't mean he will, but anyone questioning how long he will last there is pretty fair. It isn't like Bellinger hasn't had his fair share of injuries, even if they haven't been leg injuries, which likely adds questions here on his durability.
  9. Bobby Hill for the Cubs. Bellhorn for the Dodgers, for me. Both finished .3%. Not awful.
  10. This helped me greatly on Immaculate Grid today. Though...not the obvious box.
  11. Garver to Mariners. 2/$24m
  12. His xData is really good. His ISO got better from 2022 (when he had a 130 wRC+) and his xWOBA remained a very good .350. Awesome K:BB. His LA got a really big bump, too. His BABIP dropped .50 points, and his hard hit numbers got worse, however. His Savant page in 2022 was impressive as hell, and while there's plenty of excellent stuff in his 2023, there were those issues and his Savant page looks worse too. There's probably a small tweak needed to get him back to where he was. But there's also plenty underlying where you can see Vinnie P putting up 130 wRC+ with excellent plate approaches for the next 5 years of control. If you feel like you're capable of making that tweak, there aren't many DH/1b who have the combination of approach, power, and control that Pasquatino offers.
  13. Positives of living in Lexington: Bourbon is readily available. Negatives of living in Lexington: Kentucky is still Kentucky.
  14. Yeah, real bummer with how Trace does things. But it's only 90 days between purchases on specific brands. So if they drop Blantons on Thursday and Taylor Friday, you can get one of each. The rub is getting the right days! Each distillery has a few different rules. Make sure if you're doing Trace that you get tickets early. It's free but they fill up (so people can get drops). Sadly Turkey probably won't be up and running yet...they're recovering from a fire. Loved Woodford, really good tour.
  15. Speaking as both a Kentuckian and someone who was just at Trace yesterday...EH Taylor is a fine choice (sadly, missed their recent EH Taylor drop by one day. Yesterday was a Blanton's day...which...is good but I'd rather the Taylor, myself).
  16. I don't think he'll spend $200m on Bellinger, either. But I don't really know any team is going to spend $200m on Bellinger. Boras may want that, but that doesn't mean someone will. We aren't the only people concerned with the batted ball data, and if we know, teams know. I think the Cubs would spend $160m on Bellinger. And I think that's on the table as we wait this out.
  17. On the first end, we did, but I have a lot of questions about that. The Cubs did a lot of run scoring in blowout games, and how much that should truly count, I think, is debatable. Looking up and down the roster, I don't see a 90 win team last year like RD suggests. And PECTOA projections have the Cubs currently sitting at like 78 wins with the current roster; I don't think the Cubs have last 12 wins, for example. PECOTA has it's own issues, but general point. I think the amount the Cubs under performed is a bit over stated. On the second, I really don't know. I think people overrate how bad Ross was (I think he was as good/bad as any manager normally would be). I think people overstate how much Counsell will add at times. But I do think he'll make some difference. I'm just not confident enough to suggest a win-number. Even if it's just on the margins, it's a good thing.
  18. As much as I've been frustrated with the Cubs lack of agency...yeah of course. It might not be sexy, but trade for Bieber, add a Chapman/Bellinger, add a Hoskins/Belt, and a RP? The Cubs are paper division champions with the possibility of 4+ top-10 prospects (PCA, Horton, Brown, Caissie, Shaw are your most likely candidates) capable of helping at the MLB level at some point. Can add a tradable asset or two at the deadline, too. I've been vocal about my concerns with the Cubs. But I don't think that's a particularly crazy offseason for anyone to hope for and it probably puts the Cubs right on that doorstep. It's not even an offseason I love. But hey, the path is there.
  19. They don't. But the Ohtani contract is also, for all intents and purposes, one of a kind. We have only seen a handful of 10+ year contracts to begin with. And then at that, no one has ever deferred 97% of his contract to 10-20 years down the road. Unlike any other, this is a contract that looks one way, but acts very differently. Yamamoto will get paid more in year 1 of his contract than Ohtani will in the first 10 years of his. Granted, there's a reason for that, and Ohtani is easily the most marketable human being in the sport right now, so he'll be fine.
  20. They'll pay him $700m net. But because of deferrals and time, when we factor in how long he'll wait to get that money (including inflation) he'll get what would be the equivalent of $460m.
  21. Which is fair point. But they didn't have a waitlist before Ohtani and Yamamoto signed in LA. I was very careful in the post you quoted in that I said "we can debate the Cubs actions..." I think the Chicago Cubs have done themselves a disservice by acting the way they have. But the Cubs decided, on their own, to create this situation. If the Cubs want to put forward mediocre products year over year, they'll get mediocre attendance. Ohtani signing in LA didn't make the Cubs waitlist drop. The Cubs did that. If the Cubs put forward a team capable of winning 88+ games next year...I'm sure they'll be just fine.
  22. Sure. It's an imperfect study, I don't want to suggest it's flawless. But what's more imperfect? Looking at the correlation of actual data or just saying "well, ticket prices will go up because of spending because I think so?" This comes back a lot of the time to things like when we use defensive metrics when evaluating a baseball player. Just because something is imperfect, does not make it invalid in the face of a competing argument based on feelings. The cost of baseball games is likely, partially effected by spending. But it's not so heavily correlated it's a worry here. End result, Ohtani getting paid isn't a bad thing, nor does it matter to me. Glad the best baseball player we've ever seen in our life got paid like it.
  23. Which is fair, and your choice, I don't want to suggest your individual choice can't be effected. But here's the thing: someone else will buy those tickets so while I think your personal agency here matters, it's an anecdote, not a trend.I don't think baseball will have any long term effects. Now, we can debate how the Cubs actions will effect things, but as long as the Cubs put out a team who can win 85 games...they'll be fine. And baseball itself will be fine. If other teams take the John Fisher route with Oakland...well things will be bad. But they were doing that before Ohtani and Yamamoto anyways.
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