The Twins currently employ Sandy Leon. Choosing Plawecki over Leon seems like a pretty reasonable choice.Why would playoff teams have wanted a backup catcher who can't throw and was opsing .500?
The Twins currently employ Sandy Leon. Choosing Plawecki over Leon seems like a pretty reasonable choice.Why would playoff teams have wanted a backup catcher who can't throw and was opsing .500?
Disagree. Sandy León’s a plus-plus pitch caller and several Twins pitchers have improved a lot since he got there (Gray, Archer, Ryan). He’s better defensively, has a much quicker poptime and he’s better than Plawecki at throwing runners out.The Twins currently employ Sandy Leon. Choosing Plawecki over Leon seems like a pretty reasonable choice.
Neither can hit, 1 can actually play catcher. Also not that it matters much, but Leon might be about to be DFAed too as the guy he replaced on the roster is nearing a return.The Twins currently employ Sandy Leon. Choosing Plawecki over Leon seems like a pretty reasonable choice.
I honestly don't know the answer to this question. I don't think that you're wrong that the Sox needed more time to determine whether McGuire was up to the task of handling the team and whether Wong was ready for the Majors. But at the same time, Plawecki has pretty much sucked all year so if McGwire or Wong didn't take to the job, what exactly was he going to do? If those two guys are collectively batting .220 with no power and shitty defense, it's not Plawecki is going to come in and save the position.This is well argued but I still think the reaction is overblown. Releasing Plawecki today may be a “mistake” if we gauge public reaction, but so too would have been cutting him in late August while the team a) was breaking in a brand new catcher in McGuire and b) arguably still had a chance to make a run.
If there’s simply no way for Bloom to avoid making mistakes, according to media narratives, then I think the real problem is elsewhere.
You know how baseball's unwritten rules are (and I absolutely abhor them as much as anyone, I think that they're so dumb and is a huge reason why baseball never seems to move forward), but a majority of ball players attempt to follow them and give folks the stink eye who don't. With that being said, I think that many ballplayers think that cutting a guy with two weeks left is a bad look. And if there's one thing that ballplayers hate is the look of injustice, especially against a popular teammate. Does this mean that Bloom needs to take the temperature of the room before he makes every move? Absolutely not. But at the same time, I would bet that Eovaldi (or whomever) would argue that there's no harm in giving Plawecki the dignity of finishing out the year*. Maybe Bloom should have given that a little thought before letting him go on September 16.Going to play Devil's Advocate here, but doesn't DFA'ing Plawecki now at least give him a chance to say good-bye to the clubhouse?
You don't get it. Freddy is liked. His dad has one of the nicer minivans for carpools. His mom brings NAME BRAND JUICE BOXES and Fruit Rolls when it is her turn to bring snacks, not Kirkland crap. The kids are going to see him in school every day.Mountain out of a molehill. Nobody will remember this in two weeks and it will have zero impact on any future negotiations.
Fuck, you're right. Good luck on the 11U free agent market.You don't get it. Freddy is liked. His dad has one of the nicer minivans for carpools. His mom brings NAME BRAND JUICE BOXES and Fruit Rolls when it is her turn to bring snacks, not Kirkland crap. The kids are going to see him in school every day.
We'll be reading about the "coca cola and pop rocks" culture in the clubhouse next offseason in the Globe.Fuck, you're right. Good luck on the 11U free agent market.
Leon used to be a good defensive catcher - he hasnt been for a while. Plawecki hits better than a pitcher, Sandy does not.Neither can hit, 1 can actually play catcher. Also not that it matters much, but Leon might be about to be DFAed too as the guy he replaced on the roster is nearing a return.
Not that I have an issue with the timing of his being DFAed, but why wouldn't he? He's a free agent at the end of the season who isn't likely to be back. Martinez is likely done here, he's not going to be able to say good bye to his team or the clubhouse after the last game?Going to play Devil's Advocate here, but doesn't DFA'ing Plawecki now at least give him a chance to say good-bye to the clubhouse?
He doesn't really get that chance dropping him in the off-season.
Plawecki’s offense was fine for a backup catcher. But backup catchers gotta throw out base stealers too, and he sucked at that.It's apparently easy to forget that the previous two seasons, Plawecki OPS'd .857 and .737. Sure, he fell off a cliff this year, but "never should have been on the roster" seems like a pretty spicy take given his past performance.
I don't think catching is a job you can parachute into in September. It's basically the only position on the team where you have to know a bunch of other guys on the team really well in order to help. Sure, the Sox can bring in a couple new guys because who cares, but a playoff team probably doesn't want to do that for a marginal upgrade.Leon used to be a good defensive catcher - he hasnt been for a while. Plawecki hits better than a pitcher, Sandy does not.
I'm not even saying that I'd make that call, but the question is who would and picking Plawecki over Leon is a defensible decision.
This is already happening. Just last week, the Cubs released Frank Schwindel, the Pirates designated Tyler Beede and Dillon Peters for assignment, and the Reds released Albert Almora. Almora and Beede joined their respective teams in early May while Peters and Schwindel were members of their respective clubs’ Opening Day rosters. If non-competitive teams do not take advantage of limited opportunities to evaluate players against major-league competition, they likely remain non-competitive teams.I expect similar situations to happen to other teams in the coming years now that active rosters are capped at 28 instead of 40 for September.
Ah, so you strike again, about tens years after the original. Touche!25 players, 25 car seats
My god, the way the Boston media is handling this DFA you’d think the queen had died.Looks like Plaw Dawg’s career may not be over after all.
https://nesn.com/2022/09/al-west-team-reportedly-interested-in-ex-red-sox-kevin-plawecki/
So, according to the media and some posters here, among those team's GMs, Bloom must be the only one that doesn't care about team chemistry. Or doesn't know when to DFA a veteran player. Or doesn't know how to evaluate their team's AAA players on the cusp of making it to the majors. Or something. /sThis is already happening. Just last week, the Cubs released Frank Schwindel, the Pirates designated Tyler Beede and Dillon Peters for assignment, and the Reds released Albert Almora. Almora and Beede joined their respective teams in early May while Peters and Schwindel were members of their respective clubs’ Opening Day rosters. If non-competitive teams do not take advantage of limited opportunities to evaluate players against major-league competition, they likely remain non-competitive teams.
All of them, come on. You really think you know how an MLB roster works better than these guys?Over/under on number of "upset" RedSox that know the roster limit is not 40 anymore?
The first 5 minutes was Bradford forcing Bloom to ask him a question about his profession. It was extremely cringe.(Holy shit Bradford needs to stop interrupting Chaim. He's a terrible interviewer.)
I thought Bloom made an interesting point in that interview that one aspect of this move was that the team needed the playing time to evaluate McGuire and Wong, so Plawecki wouldn't be playing going forward. He's going to be an FA — getting zero plate appearances for the last few weeks of the season would hurt his free agency much more than getting DFA'd by a last-place team auditioning its young guys, a move whose motivation everyone understands.
And now we read that he's catching on with the Rangers. So he'll presumably get a few games in, get a few more PA, get a few more innings caught, get a few more opportunities to show that he's finishing the year healthy...
(Holy shit Bradford needs to stop interrupting Chaim. He's a terrible interviewer.)
Embarrassing stuff. At least we get a wholesale admission from Bradford that new internal metrics show that conventional media coverage doesn’t translate into subscriptions so their editors now encourage them to cover baseball “like a reality show.”The first 5 minutes was Bradford forcing Bloom to ask him a question about his profession. It was extremely cringe.
That's super interesting, basically a mission statement. Don't throw money at guys unless you have the depth to make the investment part of a winning structure. He inherited a pretty thin system of support, has been patching things together while building the foundation, and now seems to think it's go time? It makes total sense, although I'm not totally won over by the Sox' system resembling the Dodgers' or Rays'. Sounds like Bloom hedged a bit there too.This wrap up-- as far as the future goes in regards to keeping and/or signing higher costing agents (homegrown entering FA or otherwise)- and that it has to be done with a strong farm system makes total sense. Those posters here that argue that, this supports that view, as opposed to the PAY THEM!!! types. It covers the possibilities of injury. It's why the Sox made a mistake signing Sale to that long term contract without having young cost controlled pitchers to step in. An injury to a super paid super star kills the team unless they have an affordable option... they can't just sign another FA contract "pitcher with no injury history". It's impossible to do.
Bloom argued that teams cannot afford to sign players to big contracts until the farm system exists to support them. He noted that the Dodgers could extend Betts for over $300 million not just because of their financial resources, but because they had developed a pipeline of homegrown talent to augment the big expenditures.
Juxtaposing the Betts trade with Rafael Devers' situation today, Bloom suggested that the Red Sox have positioned themselves to take that next step as a franchise.
"I do feel really strongly that we're pointed in the right direction with that, that we're on much better footing than we were a few years ago," Bloom said. "But we still need to keep going with that. If we make good choices, we should be able to win and contend along the way."
Yeah. Who'd want to spend 162 games watching Mike Trout? And Ohtani. Those Angels fans just don't know how bad they have it.Also seems to be saying that they didn't keep Mookie because it would have just been a waste, like Trout on the Angels I guess?
Oooh, sounds like a poll: Would you rather watch a team with Trout and Ohtani that never wins, or a team that wins without superstars?Yeah. Who'd want to spend 162 games watching Mike Trout? And Ohtani. Those Angels fans just don't know how bad they have it.
Who's the team without superstars? It's not the Sox. (At least for the time being). JMOH seems to continuously think the Sox have no fun players to watch, won't spend a dime and don't really even want to win.Oooh, sounds like a poll: Would you rather watch a team with Trout and Ohtani that never wins, or a team that wins without superstars?![]()
For a team with 2 of the biggest names in the league, including the biggest, and who play in one of the biggest markets in the country, the Angels don't draw particularly well, so apparently those fans don't want to spend 162 games watching them.Yeah. Who'd want to spend 162 games watching Mike Trout? And Ohtani. Those Angels fans just don't know how bad they have it.
They've drawn 2.3 million this year, good for 5th in the league, despite being 20 games under .500. Seems like they're drawing pretty well. Ohtani and Trout are undoubtedly a large reason why.For a team with 2 of the biggest names in the league, including the biggest, and who play in one of the biggest markets in the country, the Angels don't draw particularly well, so apparently those fans don't want to spend 162 games watching them.
Is that what I continuously think? Interesting.Who's the team without superstars? It's not the Sox. (At least for the time being). JMOH seems to continuously think the Sox have no fun players to watch, won't spend a dime and don't really even want to win.
Wonder why you picked 5th in the AL instead of saying they're 14th overall? When you're in the 2nd biggest market in baseball being 14th in attendance isn't very good.They've drawn 2.3 million this year, good for 5th in the league, despite being 20 games under .500. Seems like they're drawing pretty well. Ohtani and Trout are undoubtedly a large reason why.
Perhaps I should have been clear that it likely was just hyperbolic wrap-ups of what you're saying as a point to say you're being hyperbolic (your comments about the Angels fans, Trout and Ohtani). The entire board here continues to make pretty outrageous claims of what the "other sides" is supposedly saying which is rarely true from supposed "Bloom Apologists" to "Bloom Haters", etc.Is that what I continuously think? Interesting.
I guess I should just stand on my head and check out the standings. This has been a fun team to watch this year. Non stop thrills and action!
I wasn't saying anything about whether the Angels are fun to watch, just that -- applying Bloom's team-building philosophy from the quoted interview -- having one (actually two) megastars may not translate to wins. The Angels have clearly not surrounded their top two guys with the foundation that Bloom is talking about. Whether it's fun or not is a different topic.Yeah. Who'd want to spend 162 games watching Mike Trout? And Ohtani. Those Angels fans just don't know how bad they have it.
Yeah. This seasons sucks, that's all I'm saying. It's a little disingenuous for ultra Bloomers (not saying that this is you, Sandy) to keep saying, "No. Actually this team is really good! We've been unlucky (Or hurt. Or the stars didn't align. Or the rain forests.)" It's a shit team that wasn't put together well. And maybe that was the point, IDK.Perhaps I should have been clear that it likely was just hyperbolic wrap-ups of what you're saying as a point to say you're being hyperbolic (your comments about the Angels fans, Trout and Ohtani). The entire board here continues to make pretty outrageous claims of what the "other sides" is supposedly saying which is rarely true from supposed "Bloom Apologists" to "Bloom Haters", etc.
I'm sorry you find no joy at all in this team. Yeah, it's been a shitty insanely god awful team but there's been some great moments and a very good run. Also, we're getting some views into the future of the team which I'm pretty excited about, at the ML level. What do the Angels have in the future? Trading Ohtani (maybe they'll get someone as good as Verdugo or as promising as Downs was?) and seeing Trout continuously injured? Watching Rendon continue to be horribly overpaid? Not developing good supporting cast and/or good pitching?
I know you weren't and I wasn't making those comments toward you. I understand that was Bloom's philosophy and it's one that I 1000% disagree with. Baseball is entertainment, I want to watch good ballplayers play good baseball. You can't always have a good team, but good players are fun. I stay up to watch Angels games on MLB Network when I know that Trout or Ohtani are coming to bat (or in Ohtani's case, pitching). It stinks that Angels aren't good, but that's not their fault.I wasn't saying anything about whether the Angels are fun to watch, just that -- applying Bloom's team-building philosophy from the quoted interview -- having one (actually two) megastars may not translate to wins. The Angels have clearly not surrounded their top two guys with the foundation that Bloom is talking about. Whether it's fun or not is a different topic.
I picked 5th in the AL because that's how B-Ref lists them on the team page.Wonder why you picked 5th in the AL instead of saying they're 14th overall? When you're in the 2nd biggest market in baseball being 14th in attendance isn't very good.
Compare their attendance this year to every year since 2003.