Jump to content
North Side Baseball

Transmogrified Tiger

Community Moderator
  • Posts

    38,761
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    70

 Content Type 

Profiles

Joomla Posts 1

Chicago Cubs Videos

Chicago Cubs Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

2026 Chicago Cubs Top Prospects Ranking

News

2023 Chicago Cubs Draft Picks

Guides & Resources

2024 Chicago Cubs Draft Picks

The Chicago Cubs Players Project

2025 Chicago Cubs Draft Pick Tracker

Blogs

Events

Forums

Store

Gallery

Everything posted by Transmogrified Tiger

  1. well when you miss your spot by 3 feet that's the benefit of the doubt you get I guess
  2. Why did Fox put a star on the runners on base icon Who thought that was something needing fixed
  3. I think Heyward surprised himself with how quickly he got to 2nd
  4. Neither does the overall underwhelming performance for a guy who brings no other tools or skills to the table. like I said, he has a career .872 OPS in the minors with a .388 OBP. the only ones underwhelmed by that are those who aren't really paying attention. Vogelbach had an .814 OPS at Kane County, .798 in Daytona and an .828 OPS at Tennessee. His career mark is driven by this year's promising breakout, and short season performance that isn't terribly applicable. Or to be more to the point, prior to this season, the most likely outcome for Vogelbach was not being an MLB regular in any sense of the word. That's why I originally said that this year's performance is what makes him at all valuable, instead of super duper valuable.
  5. Vogelbach's skill(and like Tom I think you're overselling the certainty that Vogelbach is an above average MLB hitter today) is only valuable if there is a place to put him. Could Vogelbach be useful to a number of teams? Sure. But teams aren't going to shell out much for someone who can play 0.5 positions and hasn't demonstrated that one skill at the MLB level. I mean, you just said he'd be the Yankees best hitter today, that's silly. There's more of an adjustment from AAA to MLB than just scaling down the triple slash line, even if the peripherals are promising. Especially for a guy who hasn't been within 150 points of OPS of this year's production at any full-season stop.
  6. new market inefficiency is hitters named Ian Happ went 2 for 4 today
  7. Kendrys Morales, Corey Dickerson, Byung-ho Park, Avisail Garcia, Billy Butler, off the top of my head. these are guys that aren't any of those things and guys that Vogelbach would outperform. yet they've been deemed worthy of regular spots in the order by major league teams...and some of them contenders. It's not like the DH is something where you absolutely positively must have every single nuanced need accounted for. you can simply be a guy that hits reasonably well and gets on base at a pretty good clip to provide value. in addition, John Kruk provided a lot of value on teams that couldn't even sit him on the bench when they went out in the field, and he didn't hit an exceptional amount of home runs. that's the type of player Vogelbach looks to be, even looking past the obvious disgusting body type and oddly conservative political viewpoint. he's got that type of understanding of the strike zone. You're a lot higher(or maybe more certain) of Vogelbach's MLB production than most people. I get why, and I don't think he's going to be a AAAA washout, but that doesn't move the needle enough for most teams to think of him as a centerpiece of a trade. There are no shortage of bat-first guys in the high minors who you can make similar extrapolations with, and most of them will not end up with Kendrys Morales' career, or they have some positional value(like Dickerson and Garcia) that gives them second chances. Put more simply, teams are not going to line up to give real MLB value exclusively for Vogelbach, a likely DH who likely won't be much better than league average at being a DH in a positive outcome. Just like the Cubs are not going to trade Baez for someone like Matt Wisler.
  8. Last year Tseng would've narrowly missed by virtue of a .301 BABIP. This year the walks are up a bit(along with HR) and the K's are down some so he only meets the BABIP threshold. He's not terribly far off though, and his 2014 is a terrific example of that archetype.
  9. Preface: I like Vogelbach, recently I said his breakout was the least publicized good news of the minor league season. That said, Vogelbach having his power show up in games and carrying a high OBP isn't a plus that makes him extra valuable, it is the bare minimum to him being a worthwhile major leaguer. His complete lack of defensive value puts him in so much of a hole otherwise, and players that DH most of the time are either albatross contracts(Mauer, Pujols, Fielder), or they really rake(Cruz, VMart, Encarnacion). If you think Vogelbach can fake his way at 1B, then he has a decent amount of trade value, especially to an AL team and especially an AL team that needs a prospect's cost effectiveness. But his defense and positional value lower his ceiling so much that he's not going to be the lead player in any trade for real MLB value. He's the guy who helps fill out the 3-4 person deal, he's not going to be lead piece for Andrew Miller even if the Yankees weren't delusional about Miller's value.
  10. His stuff is fine, the command is poor. That doesn't necessarily mean injury. Isn't this the pitcher he was in Baltimore though? Finding the most unfavorable combination of starts that we can(aside from silliness like his last 1 start), Arrieta has a 3.73 ERA(including the 2 ER/1 IP today). This is bad Arrieta and it is still a huge difference from his Baltimore days.
  11. I was thinking about this in a broader sense a little bit ago. The focus on strike throwers probably self-selects for guys who have more repeatable and clean deliveries, which helps in injury prevention(another thing I think the front office is probably ahead of the curve on). As it relates to Williams specifically, I definitely think the injury hurts in the quest to be Hendricks v2. Like I mentioned at the end, not living up to the Hendricks standard isn't the worst thing in the world, Williams himself looks like he might be an ideal AAA taxi guy to plug at the end of the rotation when needed for his option years.
  12. If you've heard Theo Epstein talk about player development, you've probably heard this phrase: Control the Zone. Short hand for how Theo wants Cubs players to use the strike zone to their advantage, people generally understand the application when it comes to hitters. Work counts in your favor, and attack pitches you can drive, not just pitches that happen to be strikes. The same logic applies to pitchers as well. The Cubs want to control the zone, which means throwing strikes and more importantly, not walking people. What's missing in that equation is the corollary to 'attack pitches you can drive'. Just like the Cubs want hitters to focus on strikes that they can drive, they want pitchers to throw strikes that are less likely to be driven. This isn't easy to do, and almost as difficult to measure, but I think contact management is something the Cubs put a lot of weight behind. You can see that emphasis in who they entrust with MLB innings. Specifically in the rotation you see Jake Arrieta, who is certainly good in the fielding-independent sense, but also has earned the title 'king of weak contact'. The real shining example though is Kyle Hendricks, who without elite stuff continues to confound major league hitters to the tune of a 3.30 ERA in 351.1 IP. A large part of that is Hendricks' elite control and underrated ability to get strikeouts, his career FIP is a nearly identical 3.38 after all, but he also does a great job of managing contact, as Rob Arthur thoroughly demonstrated with Statcast data. With that in mind, what I'd like to do is focus our attention to the Cubs farm system, and try to find other examples of pitchers we might be overlooking, similar to how Hendricks became a MLB mainstay without fanfare. To simulate those 'control the zone' tenets I put together a few criteria: - Pitchers with < 7% BB%. You need to throw strikes to avoid walks. - Pitchers with > 10% K%-BB%. While avoiding walks is important, especially when facing minor league hitters you need to strike some of them out if you have a shot to do so against MLB hitters. - Pitchers with < .300 BABIP. As contact management is the hardest to measure, this is the crudest metric we'll use. But to repeat what we said above, if you're giving up lots of hits to minor leaguers, you probably aren't going to turn that around at the Major League level without a big adjustment. Our criteria in hand, let's look at a few prospects who narrowly missed the cut: - Jonathan Martinez - Martinez is one of the first pitchers of this mold that the front office acquired, getting him in the 2014 Darwin Barney deal. He was only a few K's short of meeting our criteria last year, but everything has been worse in repeating Myrtle Beach this year. - Jeremy Null - Null is an elite strike-thrower(his MiLB BB% is better than Hendricks) and he gets enough K's to give some optimism too. When hitters make contact though they're hitting him hard(.356 BABIP in Myrtle Beach this year), which bodes poorly for him as a college draftee in High-A. - Brad Markey - Markey checked all the boxes last year, across two levels he combined a BB% in the 3's with solid K rates and strong contact prevention(including 1 HR in 84 IP). While his ERA at AA has been solid, his performance in our criteria has fallen off. His walk rate has almost tripled, his K rate has collapsed, and he's given up 9 HR in 77 IP. So who does measure up? Let's focus on 4 pitchers in particular. Casey Bloomquist You could be forgiven for not recognizing Bloomquist's name, as a 17th round pick last year from Cal Poly he didn't draw raves from scouts(Baseball America ranked him their #382 prospect in the draft). The Cubs signed him for the slot value of $100k, and until the past month he had been a piggyback starter/multi-inning reliever for Eugene and South Bend. That last fact in particular should make us want to wait and see before putting too much hype on Bloomquist, but he's done good work as a pro pitcher. In 85.1 IP he has a 2.43 ERA, 77/10 K/BB ratio, .31 HR/9, and .263 BABIP. Most importantly, in his brief time as a starter he's matched our criteria too: 3.5 BB%, 14.2 K%-BB%, and a .267 BABIP, driving a 1.93 ERA. A long ways to go, but Bloomquist is a name to keep an eye on. Zach Hedges Another name that won't show up on a Top 10 or even a Top 30 prospect list, Hedges was a 26th rounder in the 2014 draft from Azusa Pacific University. In both 2015 in South Bend and thus far in 2016 for Myrtle Beach he's met our criteria, and the encouraging fact is he's been better at the higher level. A 4.9% BB%, 10.1% K-BB%, and .271 BABIP are the real drivers behind his 2.61 ERA. Only 2 home runs in 79.1 IP is a good sign too. On the downside, Hedges turns 24 in October and with his very modest K rate he'll have to continue to hold onto this year's improvements to have an MLB future. Not a likely outcome, but Hedges has shown improvement at a higher level already so there's some room for optimism. Ryan Kellogg Here's a name prospect enthusiasts might be more familiar with, Kellogg was a 5th round pick last year and has had a solid, if inconsistent, first full season in pro ball. At South Bend he's carrying a 5.4 BB%, 13.9% K%-BB%, and .274 BABIP, and even more encouraging has been his recent progress. June saw him post a 1.6 (!) BB%, 20% K%-BB% and .250 BABIP, powering a 1.67 ERA. If he can build on that June he has enough prospect pedigree to be taken seriously in the Hendricks mold, he even carries a similar repertoire, with his 88-91 mph sinker and changeup as his two best weapons. Ryan Williams Williams caught a bit of attention for his quick rise to AA last year, but probably not as much as he deserved. After proving too much for Low-A hitters in early 2015, Williams spent most of last year at Tennessee, where he posted a 2.76 ERA, driven by a 4.7 BB%, 13.2 K%-BB%, .273 BABIP, and only 2 HR in 88 IP. That's exciting performance for someone who was in college the previous year, and tempered mostly by his lack of elite velocity. Like our ideal contact manager Hendricks, Williams sits in the high 80s with late movement, but he can touch 92-93 when he wants to. Despite the great success and rapid movement, Williams doesn't have much prospect helium, Baseball America barely fit him into the Cubs Top 30 for this year at #27. This year hasn't seen quite as much success for Williams, but starting at AAA less than 2 years after he was drafted, he's still met our criteria. His 3.30 ERA in a hitter's league is solid, and a 6.7 % BB%, 10% K%-BB%, and .293 BABIP are worse than his AA numbers but still match our parameters. In what is maybe the most telling statement about how underrated Williams is, he's been hurt for 6 weeks and it has barely drawn any attention. Williams hasn't pitched since May 19th with an unknown arm injury, which is too bad as his May (3.1% BB%, 18.3% K-BB%, .270 BABIP) was much better than his April. The good news is that Williams's rapid rise to AAA means he has plenty of time to get healthy and continue the improvement of his last few starts. He doesn't need to be put on the 40 man roster until after next season, and with a relative dearth of quality SP prospects in the Cubs system(especially at high levels), Williams will have plenty of opportunity to make the final adjustments he needs for MLB readiness. One takeaway that should be had here is that the Cubs are very lucky to have Kyle Hendricks, he's a pretty rare and valuable commodity even if the prospect industry didn't think as much of him going through the ranks. The other bit of good news is that Hendricks sets a high enough bar that even those who don't clear it can still be major leaguers, and potentially good ones. So next time you see a sparkling ERA on a prospect but sigh at the fact that they aren't striking out the world, give a look to how else they control the zone, with walks and lack of hard contact. There might be more substance than you expect.
  13. If you've heard Theo Epstein talk about player development, you've probably heard this phrase: Control the Zone. Short hand for how Theo wants Cubs players to use the strike zone to their advantage, people generally understand the application when it comes to hitters. Work counts in your favor, and attack pitches you can drive, not just pitches that happen to be strikes. The same logic applies to pitchers as well. The Cubs want to control the zone, which means throwing strikes and more importantly, not walking people. What's missing in that equation is the corollary to 'attack pitches you can drive'. Just like the Cubs want hitters to focus on strikes that they can drive, they want pitchers to throw strikes that are less likely to be driven. This isn't easy to do, and almost as difficult to measure, but I think contact management is something the Cubs put a lot of weight behind. You can see that emphasis in who they entrust with MLB innings. Specifically in the rotation you see Jake Arrieta, who is certainly good in the fielding-independent sense, but also has earned the title 'king of weak contact'. The real shining example though is Kyle Hendricks, who without elite stuff continues to confound major league hitters to the tune of a 3.30 ERA in 351.1 IP. A large part of that is Hendricks' elite control and underrated ability to get strikeouts, his career FIP is a nearly identical 3.38 after all, but he also does a great job of managing contact, as Rob Arthur thoroughly demonstrated with Statcast data. With that in mind, what I'd like to do is focus our attention to the Cubs farm system, and try to find other examples of pitchers we might be overlooking, similar to how Hendricks became a MLB mainstay without fanfare. To simulate those 'control the zone' tenets I put together a few criteria: - Pitchers with < 7% BB%. You need to throw strikes to avoid walks. - Pitchers with > 10% K%-BB%. While avoiding walks is important, especially when facing minor league hitters you need to strike some of them out if you have a shot to do so against MLB hitters. - Pitchers with < .300 BABIP. As contact management is the hardest to measure, this is the crudest metric we'll use. But to repeat what we said above, if you're giving up lots of hits to minor leaguers, you probably aren't going to do so at the Major League level without a big adjustment. Our criteria in hand, let's look at a few prospects who narrowly missed the cut: - Jonathan Martinez - Martinez is one of the first pitchers of this mold that the front office acquired, getting him in the 2014 Darwin Barney deal. He was only a few K's short of meeting our criteria last year, but everything has been worse in repeating Myrtle Beach this year. - Jeremy Null - Null is an elite strike-thrower(his MiLB BB% is better than Hendricks') and he gets enough K's to give some optimism too. When hitters make contact though they're hitting him hard(.356 BABIP in Myrtle Beach this year), which bodes poorly for him as a college draftee in High-A - Brad Markey - Markey checked all the boxes last year, across two levels he combined a BB% in the 3's with solid K rates and strong contact prevention(including 1 HR in 84 IP). While his ERA at AA has been solid, his performance in our criteria has fallen off. His walk rate has almost tripled, his K rate has collapsed, and he's given up 9 HR in 77 IP. So who does measure up? Let's focus on 4 pitchers in particular. Casey Bloomquist You could be forgiven for not recognizing Bloomquist's name, as a 17th round pick last year from Cal Poly he didn't draw raves from scouts(Baseball America ranked him their #382 prospect in the draft). The Cubs signed him for the slot value of $100k, and until the past month he had been a piggyback starter/multi-inning reliever for Eugene and South Bend. That last fact in particular should make us want to wait and see before putting too much hype on Bloomquist, but he's done good work as a pro pitcher. In 85.1 IP he has a 2.43 ERA, 77/10 K/BB ratio, .31 HR/9, and .263 BABIP. Most importantly, in his brief time as a starter he's matched our criteria too: 3.5 BB%, 14.2 K%-BB%, and a .267 BABIP, driving a 1.93 ERA. A long way to go, but Bloomquist is a name to keep an eye on. Zach Hedges Another name that won't show up on a Top 10 or even a Top 30 prospect list, Hedges was a 26th rounder in the 2014 draft from Azusa Pacific University. In both 2015 in South Bend and thus far in 2016 for Myrtle Beach he's met our criteria, and the encouraging fact is he's been better at the higher level. A 4.9% BB%, 10.1% K-BB%, and .271 BABIP are the real drivers behind his 2.61 ERA. Only 2 home runs in 79.1 IP is a good sign too. On the downside, Hedges turns 24 in October and with his very modest K rate he'll have to continue to hold onto this year's improvements to have an MLB future. Not a likely outcome, but Hedges has shown improvement at a higher level already so there's some room for optimism. Ryan Kellogg Here's a name prospect enthusiasts might be more familiar with, Kellogg was a 5th round pick last year and has had a solid, if inconsistent, first full season in pro ball. At South Bend he's carrying a 5.4 BB%, 13.9% K%-BB%, and .274 BABIP, and even more encouraging has been his recent progress. June saw him post a 1.6 (!) BB%, 20% K%-BB% and .250 BABIP, powering a 1.67 ERA. If he can build on that June he has enough prospect pedigree to be taken seriously in the Hendricks mold, he even carries a similar repertoire, with his 88-91 mph sinker and changeup as his two best weapons. Ryan Williams Williams caught a bit of attention for his quick rise to AA last year, but probably not as much as he deserved. After proving too much for Low-A hitters in early 2015, Williams spent most of last year at Tennessee, where he posted a 2.76 ERA, driven by a 4.7 BB%, 13.2 K%-BB%, .273 BABIP, and only 2 HR in 88 IP. That's exciting performance for someone who was in college the previous year, and tempered mostly by his lack of elite velocity. Like our ideal contact manager Hendricks, Williams sits in the high 80s with late movement, but he can touch 92-93 when he wants to. Despite the great success and rapid movement, Williams doesn't have much prospect helium, Baseball America barely fit him into the Cubs Top 30 for this year at #27. This year hasn't seen quite as much success for Williams, but starting at AAA less than 2 years after he was drafted, he's still met our criteria. His 3.30 ERA in a hitter's league is solid, and a 6.7 % BB%, 10% K%-BB%, and .293 BABIP are worse than AA but still match our parameters. In what is maybe the most telling statement about how underrated Williams is, he's been hurt for 6 weeks and it's barely drawn any attention. Williams hasn't pitched since May 19th with an unknown arm injury, which is too bad as his May(3.1% BB%, 18.3% K-BB%, .270 BABIP) was much better than his April. The good news is that Williams's rapid rise to AAA means he has plenty of time to get healthy and continue the improvement of his last 4 starts. He doesn't need to be put on the 40 man roster until after next season, and with a relative dearth of quality SP prospects in the Cubs system(especially at high levels), Williams will have plenty of opportunity to make the final adjustments he needs for MLB readiness. One takeaway that should be had here is that the Cubs are very lucky to have Kyle Hendricks, he's a pretty rare and valuable commodity even if the prospect industry didn't think as much of him going through the ranks. The good news is that Hendricks sets a high enough bar that even those who don't clear it can still be major leaguers, and potentially good ones. So next time you see a sparkling ERA on a prospect but sigh at the fact that they aren't striking out the world, give a look to how else they control the zone, with walks and lack of hard contact. There might be more substance than you expect.
  14. Re: Teheran and beating FIP: http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/is-julio-teheran-an-ace/ It's too bad they didn't make things work for him when his pricetag would've been lower over the offseason, although it's hard to complain about the Cubs' current lot in life. I think FIP-beaters/contact managers are a spot where the Cubs are generally ahead of the curve, and their past interest is probably another validating anecdote towards Eno's thesis in that article.
  15. Also the Cubs had late leads in 2 of those games, which is the difference in their actual 3-7 record and being 5-5 in those games. I know it feels like there's backlash to any negativity that's brought up, but that's for pretty good reason. The Cubs have the best record in baseball and a division lead so large that Vegas won't allow bets on it. They will lose games still this year, maybe even have an extended losing streak. That will continue to not bother me. The offense may go into funks or struggle to score runs against good pitchers. That will continue to not bother me, especially if it's partially due to a combination of injuries that are not season-ending. The bullpen will give up runs, especially in middle relief. That will continue to not bother me, as last year's pen is a perfect illustration of the fickle nature of non-elite relievers. Here is a list of things that will cause me to worry, and some only slightly: - Serious injury to Arrieta, Lester, Rizzo, Bryant, or Rondon; especially if it comes in August or later after the chance to make a deal to compensate is lost - End of list
  16. You are the absolute worst. You really feel good about playing these guys in October? One million percent yes. The Cubs are the best team in the National League, and no others are particularly close. While no playoff series is much better than a 60/40 or 65/35 proposition, there are no terrifying teams to the 2016 Cubs. Most especially not this Mets team.
  17. Portugal has led for 22 of 510 minutes of their tournament and are a win against Wales from the final. Incredible.
  18. I'm not sure about the frequency I'd be able to commit to, but I'd be down for putting some minors posts together.
  19. For as long as Almora plays like he's played so far, he's an MLB asset and should stay, IMO. If/when he shows some sustained struggles, different story. Until then, I think Joe can get him enough looks. I think the problem is that you might be forced to make that decision before you'd ideally like to. You've got Ross, La Stella, Szczur, Coghlan, Contreras, Almora, and Soler for 5 spots, and Sczur and Coghlan can't be sent down. So the moment Fowler(or Soler) is healthy you have to make a call between Almora/Contreras/Szczur/Coghlan where one has to go. If you anticipate Almora struggling more than he has so far, I can see the logic in him being the one to go down so that you can buy some more time Coghlan/Szczur. Especially since there's less playing time available anyway with Fowler back.
  20. I would set the odds of Montero going anywhere before the offseason at negative one billion percent(and honestly, maybe only slightly better than that in the offseason). Contreras has played more innings in 1B/LF than at C for a reason, they aren't going to entrust him as the primary catcher with a backup(Ross) who isn't all that great and can't play every day at his age. Before Contreras's callup though I would've been pretty confident in the worse of he and Almora being sent down. If Joe is okay with Contreras in LF and he continues to hit, then Coghlan could definitely be DFA'd when folks get healthy, which is something I would not have guessed at all when he was added.
  21. Can't argue with those numbers. If only he weren't about to turn 23. It'd be nice to see what he can do in Myrtle Beach. Which leads me to a question. This is not to say that Araujo is that good and would necessarily be high on team's lists, but with Araujo eligible to be selected in the rule 5 draft this off season, would the Cubs (or any team) leave him (or any player in a similar situation) in Low-A so as to not let other teams see what he can do at High-A or higher? It makes sense especially with IFA guys who reach rule 5 eligibility often when they're still quite young and haven't come stateside until they're 20 or so. Despite Araujo's readiness for High-A, if keeping him at South Bend improved his chances of him not being selected, the Cubs would be able to evaluate him at High-A and AA next year (assuming he earns the promotion) and be in a much better position to know whether they want to roster him. Do you think this is a common practice? The Rule 5 thing is a small issue(and definitely small, because the upshot here is already capped at reliever), but I don't particularly care about Araujo's age. He's not a 25 year old beating up on guys in Eugene, nor is he an advanced College guy killing the lower levels either. The Rule 5 question I don't have a good answer to. My guess is that it's not terribly common, I would think that if a team cared enough to hold a player back to keep him, that they'd push him forward instead. That way it'd be easier to justify rostering that player, and at higher levels they're more likely to struggle or have flaws exposed that make them less attractive to drafting teams. Leaving them to dominate the same lower level gives other teams more to dream on.
  22. Pedro Araujo stateside: 2014 Mesa: 16.1 IP, 12 H, 27/8 K/BB, 1 HR 2015 Eugene: 50.1 IP, 43 H, 70/9 K/BB, 1 HR 2016 South Bend: 19 IP, 7 H, 23/4 K/BB, 0 HR
×
×
  • Create New...