Good morning.
John Sickles on –
13) Jamie Callahan, RHP, Grade C+: Age 23, second round pick by the Boston Red Sox in 2012 from high school in South Carolina; traded to Mets in Addison Reed deal; posted 2.94 ERA in 66/17 K/BB in 52 innings between Double-A and Triple-A; also put up 5/1 K/BB in seven major league innings; nice fastball at 92-96, has made good progress with his slider and overall command, looks ready for a full major league trial; ETA 2018; QUESTION MARK: grading relievers is problematic. minor league ball
8. Yoenis Cespedes, New York
Mets - The guy who was once so young and exciting and perfect that a couple of
beautiful nerds named their baseball-loving site after him is now 32 and
battling an endless series of nagging injuries. Today it's his wrist, and
though the Mets think he'll be back in time for Opening Day, you wonder, again,
which Cespedes you're going to get in 2018. His rate numbers (.292/.352/.540)
were there as always last year, but 81 games won't cut it for an offense that
needs him more than ever. Back page warning: If the injuries compile, the
tabloids will not forget that he's owed nearly $90 million over the next three
seasons.
1. Noah Syndergaard and Jacob deGrom, Mets: 9
Limited to seven starts last season due to a torn right lat
muscle, Syndergaard has a 1.38 ERA with 18 strikeouts in 13 Grapefruit League
innings. The 25-year-old right-hander lit up the radar gun in his spring debut,
throwing 11 of 22 pitches against the Astros on Feb. 26 that were clocked at
100 mph or higher. He then struck out seven straight Nationals in his third
spring start, March 8. His projected WAR in 2018 is 5.5, third-best among MLB
pitchers.
DeGrom is projected to produce a 4.8 WAR in 2018. Following
another strong campaign in 2017 (31 starts, 3.53 ERA, 10.7 K/9 innings), the
29-year-old right-hander dealt with back stiffness early this spring. He made
his Grapefruit League debut last Sunday, giving up two runs but striking out
four Astros over 2 2/3 innings, with his fastball hitting 96 mph. He followed
that up with 5 scoreless innings and eight strikeouts vs. the Orioles on
Saturday.
It's funny, but it also hits at an important point: Starting a runner on second is in many ways an equally awkward implementation to the sport of baseball. In an analysis of the new rule and how it will officially be registered, Emma Baccellieri points out for Deadspin that it doesn't even fit "into baseball's most fundamental structures — the rulebook, the scorecard."
This new rule is an assault on everything that makes baseball
baseball. And remember, dead time is the affliction, not extra innings.
A massive government spending bill that Congress is expected to consider this week could include a provision exempting Minor League Baseball players from federal labor laws, according to three congressional officials familiar with the talks.
The exemption would represent the culmination of more than
two years of lobbying by Major League Baseball, which has sought to preempt a
spate of lawsuits that have been filed by minor leaguers alleging they have
been illegally underpaid.
The league has long claimed exemptions for seasonal employees
and apprenticeships, allowing its clubs to pay players as little as $1,100 a
month, well under the pay that would be dictated under federal minimum wage and
overtime standards. But with those exemptions under legal challenge, Major
League Baseball has paid lobbyists hundreds of thousands of dollars to write a
specific exemption into the law. (update... President Trump has signed the budget and Congress has passed this legislation)
7 comments:
the current baseball mega-millionaires could start a fund to supplement minor leaguers' salaries if the cheap owners won't. Say Wright gives $50,000, Cespedes $100,000, etc. Why not? "I got mine?"
I am always puzzled why guys with the tools like a Callahan cannot identify and fix flaws sooner. If you know you need a great change up and yours is currently so-so, why take 2 years to develop it? Inconsistent release points - nail it down fast. Time passes so quickly for these guys - ruthlessly identify and fix the flaws.
Yoenis plays 150, he hits 50...that is my call.
Callahan looks like a useful piece in our future bullpens......heck, it may even be in 2018 before the season is over.
I agree with Tom.....YC is an MVP candidate if he plays in 150 games in 2018.
We are lucky to have Noah and Jake in our rotation and that gets lost sometimes when we focus on the rest of the pitchers that haven't lived up to their potential.
Lastly, I don't know enough about the minor league wage issues and when you mix in politics, I exit stage left!
"Baseball is beautiful" -- great article.
Now, if there were to be a contest for stupidest (9-inning) tie-breakers (Stupidest wins), my entry would be:
OT/penalty shots:
Ball in OF's mit at 300ft line (OF must have been in the lineup fo the 9th), 1 relay IF, catcher and runner at 3B (next guy up in lineup, no PR).
At signal (air horn?), runner starts & OF throws.
Home teams gets to match or better.
REPEAT AS NECESSARY.
STATS? RS, PO & A No pitching or batting stats. Team W-L.
Beat that (remember stupidest wins).
Jake/Thor NINTH best 1-2 combo? Who are the top 8???
Bill -
go back to Mack's Apple post that I highlighted this MLB story and click on the link
Sorry, I don't see a link.
Jake/Thor are the BEST 1-2 combo. That will be evident at season's end.
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