I don't entirely disagree here. Hoerner and Happ were both first round picks, and while I think you can be happy with what they've turned into overall, neither of them are offensive standouts. The rest of the line up is outside hires, typically at a premium, and then Morel (2.8 fWAR in 1100 PAs), and Amaya (which, so far, yikes). Looking through the 2021 top prospect lists is pretty bleak: Davis, Amaya, Hernandez (still hope yet), Howard, Morel, Strumpf, Preciado, Caissie (please save us), Roederer, Pinango, Made. Obviously the typical hit rate is low, but....that seems really low. And that's before someone like Hoerner seemingly levelling out at a 100-105 bat, Happ not taking the next step, etc.
I'm more pro-Hoyer than most, but when things are going bad he kinda starts to look like the guy in the fantasy football auction draft who got a bunch of 'steals' in that they were projected to go for $20 and he got them for $15, but he never spent more than $30 and is left with the 7th best player at every position. I still don't think there's a bad contract on the roster, which is good. Individually, I don't think Happ, Belli, Suzuki, Swanson, Hoerner, Busch, even Morel are problems to be fixed given their expected production and cost. But it's also increasingly clear that we don't have an elite offensive bat at the major league level, we're scraping Ricketts imposed budget ceilings on all these second division starters, and we've limited ourselves on how much runway we can give the PCAs (and eventually Caissies and Shaws) of the world because handing them a starting spot comes at the cost of reliable MLB production during a 'competitive window'.
I've taken issue, and will continue to take issue, with people saying guys like Happ and Swanson suck, should be traded, are the main issue on the team, etc. They're good players being paid like good players. But starting to wonder if we've eliminated the possibility of a 95 win team for the sake of putting out an 85 win team.