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nochiinchamp

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Everything posted by nochiinchamp

  1. Eh. It seemed like Kantrovitz was pretty upbeat about the big bonuses they probably gave out in rounds 4-6. If those are basically done no real reason to tip toe around Barnett, who was there presumably to eat up any significant bonus money that unexpectedly fell through.
  2. I think what makes this lean more "safe" is the relative likelihood of a given college guy to play at the upper levels within 2-3 years. Yeah, a lot of these guys are hurt, but the bet is that if they're healthy they give the org options near the big league level relatively soon, at a cost that understates their talent.
  3. I never meant to imply that you thought it was bad. All I'm saying is that teams play the hand they're dealt. Their systems are in a particular state at a particular time. Their resources differ at different times. Each class has different strengths. So, they'll behave differently. 2025 feels different because they have a rapidly depleting farm and haven't had this little money relative to the rest of the league since 2021 (when they also went quite "safe" up top).
  4. I think we try to turn decisions that are ultimately based on a lot of circumstance into general principles. They took Cape performers up and down the board this year. They took an advanced college bat in the second last year too. Batted ball data was a real factor in picking up both Conrad and Hartshorn. There was no day between rounds 10 and 11 to figure out how to get that one last prep shot. There are plenty of ways to find value. You can pop in a model for an entirely different reason than someone else. I don't think Kantrovitz is picky about it when the resources are limited. He's just trying to maximize collective WAR.
  5. I don't really see it as odd at all. The Cubs had a limited pool and needed to build out organizational depth. So, they leaned on college guys. The twist is that they're also trading off injury risk to ensure that they still have a shot at impact on a discount. Fun play. Even if Coppola's arm blows out, as an example, there's a shot it does so helping a winning major league team in 2027 or something.
  6. He doesn't seem like the kind of guy who'd develop tremendous trade value or anything. Maybe he could help get them a good bullpen arm eventually? But I think they just want on-base skills and CF defense in the system and ready to contribute soon.
  7. I think the models just really like the combination of plate/contact skills + up the middle ability. I think the developmental staff's bet is that if the guy is athletic enough and has some bat speed he could get to the minimum amount of power needed to be productive overall.
  8. I think it's just that their bonus pool is limited and their farm is depleting, so they want to make sure there's not a cliff of big league ready talent and are defaulting to guys the model is indicating are good bets to be contributors come like...2027-2028.
  9. Eh. Second rounders are mostly 40ish FV types. I think that Kantrovitz was just trying to bank a player he thinks will be useful in short order and that's where the value comes from. Seems like Kepley is a really safe bet to reach the big leagues and be an optionable 1-1.5 WAR guy in a couple of years. If you get a few hundred thousand in savings, I get it, I guess.
  10. I wonder how aggressive they'll be with Kepley. Seems like the low minors are exactly the place where he just won't be challenged in a meaningful way since offensive profile is basically all OBP.
  11. Kantrovitz indicated that they'll have "flexibility". Would be fun if that means that they have enough money for Bauer or something, but I'm assuming it's more along the lines of being able to give a couple of guys close to $1M.
  12. Love the idea of Melendez. Longenhagen talked about him fitting into the Jett Williams/Kevin McGonigle mold physically while being able to rotate. Real MIF skills. Super young for the class too. Would be shocked if he's not high on their board.
  13. I was thinking more that they'd cut to get a guy firmly in their top 25 along with two players who are in their top 60ish with 56 and 90. $750K saved should accomplish that. I believe Kantrovitz talked about the draft being relatively deep after the initial drop off. That, combined with the system thinning out, has me thinking they're not going to be shooting for a guy who was expected to go in the comp A round or something.
  14. Not sure if they're going to go so prep heavy. I think they'll want a couple of shots, but they're going to need guys who could plausibly develop into big league options within the next couple of years (roster faces a cliff post-2026). I wouldn't be surprised if they went with two college guys early, took a relatively large prep shot in round 3 or something, then made a couple of smaller upside bets on day two.
  15. I think it's as simple as not knowing where to put Aloy and matching him with a team that has gone for his demo the last two years. I think they may be overlooking that Aloy had more contact issues than either Shaw or Smith. Honestly, if the Cubs are as model heavy as is being hyped, I think they might go for the 17 year old shortstop being picked one spot behind them in this scenario.
  16. Taylor is fun in his own right. No defensive value, but he hits everywhere. He's absolutely on my radar as a pick people are upset by but produces 2-3 WAR per year for a half decade and helps them float down a prep.
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