As we all know, just before the Rule 5 Deadline, the Dodgers cut ties with Billy McKinney and Zach Reks while adding Jacob Amaya, James Outman, Eddys Leonard, Jorbit Vivas, and Michael Grove to the 40-man roster. On a team with plenty of LH bats, Zach Reks and Billy McKinney were expendable. You do not get to this level if you are a chump, so it is possible that one or both will become useful major leaguers. It was just a numbers game. Luke Raley made the grade and I would advise everyone to not judge him by last season. He has prodigious power. Adam Duval never amounted to anything until he was 27. I see similarities.
Eddys Leonard and Jorbit Vivas have never played above A-ball, but both are interesting prospects. Leonard has the profile of a utilityman who can play all over the diamond and might have some pop, while Vivas is most likely a second-baseman or trade bait. Jacob Amaya could break with the team in 2022… if he can continue to hit as he has in the AFL. I have heard that the Dodgers have been working on his swing, but have not seen it… only the stats to back it up. James Outman could be a 4th or 5th outfielder soon as he has great speed, developing power, and can play all over the outfield.
Eddys Leonard
Jorbit Vivas
Michael Grove dropped out of the Dodger’s Top 30 prospects, but he has some filthy stuff… if he can control it. The Dodgers think he can and believe he could help the team in 2022. It has certainly taken him a long time to come back. I wonder if it might be best to put him on a reliever’s path, rather than a starter. Maybe there is yet hope for Morgan Cooper…. nah!
The Dodgers are still re-tooling Kody Hoese’s swing, though the results are not apparent… as yet. One scout told me that he expects Kody to respond very well to the re-tooling and that his swing is becoming much quicker… he called it, “whip like.” I have not seen that either. Progress is not linear.
Trevor Bauer broke his silence to comment on the Kyle Rittenhouse acquittal in Kenosha, Wisconsin (home of Gavin Lux). He tweeted this:

I think Trevor is itching to tell his side of the story. The fact that the media were total lying monsters in the above case should shock no one. There’s more to be told about Bauer and shame on you if you believe the media! We all know that Prosecutors lie, but we should expect more from journalists. OK, I am jesting. You can’t expect much from lying scumbags… but why don’t I just tell you how I really feel? BTW, Kyle Rittenhouse is not a hero! He does not deserve to be made a hero any more than George Floyd! OK enough! A person here who shall remain anonymous wrote this:
What I find interesting is this: people are all for the rule of law, unless it diverges from their narrative. Then they want “justice”. Regardless of law. I see that on both sides. They want law to to agree with their “feelings” on any given issue. I want consistency. For the rule of law. Not people freaking out every time they don’t like an outcome. Just like the last election. 50+ court cases in countless States confirmed there was no fraud in the election. The courts are solid. Rittenhouse got a fair trial. So did Trump. On every election challenge. My argument is largely based on if we believe our court system is fair. Or not. I believe it is. And Rittenhouse received a fair verdict. And Trump received a fair hearing in all the various State and Federal Courts. What I can’t handle is the picking and choosing. Either our court system is fair, or it’s not. And I’m tired of both sides claiming it isn’t based on the outcomes they LIKE or dislike. That is what I’m tired of. We have one of the most independent and functional court systems in Western civilization. Yet I hear a vast number of people negatively judge our court system based on their political and ideological perspectives. Which also tells me it is working. If nobody is happy, ideologically, then it’s working.
Boo-Yah! Amen! Move on folks, nothing to see here.
Would You…
- Trade Eddys Leonard, Miguel Vargas, Edwin Rios, and Landon Knack for the two Matts – Chapman and Olsen? It might take another Top Prospect as well. It is reported that the A’s want a very high Price for Chapman and Olsen, so…. I would have to think about it. Olsen would move Muncy to 2B, and Seager would be gone. (I wrote this last night only to find MLB Trade Rumors suggested the exact same thing…. well it was only Olsen). Chapman is a comeback candidate and Olsen would really make the lineup so much more productive. I hate giving up Vargas… but look at this powerhouse lineup:
- Betts RF (R)
- Bellinger CF (L)
- Turner SS (R)
- Olsen 1B (L)
- Smith C (R)
- Muncy 2B (L)
- Chapman 3B (R)
- Pollock/ Lus LF (L-R)
- JT DH (R)
- There are lots a trade possibilities, but most of them are just talk. Steven Matz allegedly wants to sign before December 1st!
- The Red Sox are talking with CT3. Kike, CT3, Verdugo, Wong, Jeter Downs… sounds like Dodgers East!
- I still say that if Clayton does not retire, he will be back with the Dodgers even though Ranger Blogs are blowing up with “Clayton is Coming to Dallas!”
- Tsutsugo is still out there… 😉
Other News
- I hear that it is a sure thing the DH and Shift Banning are coming to MLB. The Pitch Clock is getting much consideration but Electronic Balls and Strikes is at least another year away. I happen to like limiting the number of throws to 1B. Back in the day, hitters and pitchers did not study film and learn all the “little personal tendencies” which indicated what was coming. This would add more excitement back to the game.
- If the MLBPA and MLB do not reach an agreement by December 1st, it appears that the Owners may lock out the players… or… they could not. It might be smart for the owners to say “As a gesture of good faith, we are going to continue the bargaining process. All we ask is that you do the same.” A conciliatory tone might help seal this deal.
- Did you see that the Rays traded former Top Prospect Brent Honeywell to the A’s for cash? Wow. It wasn’t that long ago that Honeywell was rated as one of baseball’s elite prospects. Along the way, a slew of elbow injuries derailed his progression and pushed him down Tampa Bay’s depth chart to the point where he became stuck in a roster crunch.
Grace Slick recently turned 82!
Reggie Jackson Adirondack Pro Ring Bat

This is my granddaughter, whom I call Rey Skywalker (she calls me Obi Wan). She was in my office and insisted on playing with my rare (very used, but uncracked) Reggie Jackson 35″ 38 oz. bat from 1971 or 1972. Of course, it is an ash bat and I used it a lot over 35 years. It is really beat up, but unbroken… kind of like me!
I kind of like this… posting one day a week on Sunday suits me fine.






Discussion (44)
Disagree, not disagreeable
Wow, Cardinals signed Matz to a 4 year 44 million dollar deal.
Dodgers have signed Jason Michaels, an outfielder and Beau Burrows, a RHP to minor league contracts. Burrows was with the Twins organization and Michaels with the Rangers.
MLB and the MLBPA agree to move the tender date to Nov 30th. Was originally the 2nd of December. This way those players will know before a possible lock out if they have been tendered a contract or not. Bum you are probably the only guy on here who wants them to trade for Chapman. I have seen no one else in that corner.
For the record, I think the Dodgers are fine at 3B with Rios and Turner… actually, they are more than fine!
I do not want Chapman, although I think he might be an All-Star next season (too much to pay).
Olsen would be a game-changer, but he would cost too much.
I like the Suzuki move, but what I like even better is Clint Fraizer in RF!
He has a huge upside, is a huge comeback candidate, and is just about FREE.
His bat is lightning quick and he should be over his concussion issues.
I would forget Suzuki and focus on Frazier.
MLB NAMES FIVE DODGERS TO ALL-MLB TEAM
LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles Dodgers led all Major League teams with five players named to the All-MLB team, which was announced today by Major League Baseball. Right-handed pitchers Max Scherzer and Walker Buehler were named All-MLB First-Team selections, while shortstop Trea Turner, left-handed pitcher Julio Urías and closer Kenley Jansen were All-MLB Second-Team selections.
Scherzer receives his second career All-MLB selection after being named All-MLB First Team in 2019. The 37-year-old right-hander split the season between Washington and Los Angeles, going a combined 15-4 with a 2.46 ERA (49 ER/179.1 IP), recording 236 strikeouts against 36 walks in 30 starts. He finished the season amongst the National League leaders in ERA (2nd), wins (4th), strikeouts (2nd), batting average against (1st, .185), WHIP (1st, 0.86), FIP (3rd, 2.62), strikeouts per 9 (2nd, 11.91), SIERA (2nd, 2.90) and winning percentage (3rd, .789). He was acquired by the Los Angeles Dodgers on July 30 from the Washington Nationals along with Trea Turner and in 11 starts to finish the season with the Dodgers, he posted a 7-0 record with a 1.98 ERA (15 ER/68.1 IP) and 92 strikeouts. The Dodgers went 11-0 in his starts and on Sept. 12 against San Diego, he became the 19th player in Major League Baseball history to record his 3,000-strikeout with a strikeout of Eric Hosmer.
Buehler receives his first All-MLB honor after finishing fourth in the NL Cy Young voting. The Kentucky native posted a 16-4 record with a 2.47 ERA (57 ER/207.2 IP) and 212 strikeouts in 33 starts for the Dodgers. He set career-highs in wins, innings, pitched, ERA, and winning percentage (.800), while recording his second 200+ strikeout season and being named to his second All-Star team (2019). In his fifth season in the Major Leagues, he ranked amongst the National League leaders in wins (3rd), ERA (2.47), strikeouts (7th, 212), starts (T-1st) and Opp. Avg (2nd, .212). He was NL Pitcher of the Month in July after compiling a perfect 3-0 record with 38 strikeouts, nine walks and a 1.67 ERA over 32.1 innings pitched, while permitting 20 hits and not allowing a home run in his five July starts.
Turner finished the season as the National League batting champion (.328) and won the stolen base title as he earned his first All-MLB selection. In 148 games between Washington and Los Angeles, he batted .328 (195-for-595) with 34 doubles, 38 homers, 32 stolen bases and 77 RBI and became the first Dodger to win the batting title since Tommy Davis won back-to-back crowns in 1962 and 1963. In addition to leading the league in batting average and stolen bases, the Florida resident led the league in hits (195), average vs. left-handed pitching (.392), multi-hit games (58), infield hits (33) and total bases (319). He was selected to his first Mid-Summer Classic in July and was the NL Player of the Week for the final week of the season after slashing .458/.480/.917 with three homers and nine RBI from Sept. 27 – Oct. 3.
Urías was the Major League’s first 20-game winner since Scherzer in 2016 and first Dodger to win 20 games since Clayton Kershaw went 21-3 in 2014. Urías made a career-high 32 starts in 2021, going 20-3 with a 2.96 ERA and 195 strikeouts against 38 walks and recording his first All-MLB selection. He led the Major Leagues with a .870 winning percentage and became the fourth Mexican-born pitcher to win 20 games, joining Fernando Valenzuela (1986), Teddy Higuera (1986) and Esteban Loiaza (2003). The southpaw set career-highs in wins, ERA, winning percentage, strikeouts and WHIP (1.018) while finishing the second half of the season with a perfect 9-0 record and 2.04 ERA (18 ER/79.1 IP) and 76 strikeouts in 14 starts.
Jansen completed his 12th season in Dodger Blue with a 4-4 record, a 2.22 ERA (17 ER/69.0 IP) and 38 saves in 69 games to garner his first All-MLB selection. The three-time All-Star finished tied with Liam Hendriks for second in the Major Leagues in saves, finishing one behind MLB leader Mark Melancon. In his last 30 games, he finished the season 3-0 with 17 saves and a 1.17 ERA (4 ER/30.2 IP) with 42 strikeouts and recorded his 350th career save on October 1st against the Brewers, which is an ongoing Dodger record and ranks 13th all-time in Major League Baseball history. His accolades extend past the regular season, as he passed Brad Lidge (18) and became the National League postseason saves leader with his 19th save in Game 3 of the National League Championship Series against the Braves. His 19-career postseason saves rank second all-time behind Mariano Rivera (42).
Former outfielder and manager of the Pirates, Bill Virdon passed away today at age 90. RIP.
Bums has been pushing for AF to tab Oakland’s GG and Big K 3B, Matt Chapman, in a proposed trade. While 3B is not a necessity it is certainly a position with some question marks, especially with the continued health of JT. If the Universal DH becomes a reality, then perhaps a window is cracked and a new 3B could make for an improvement. I have been steadfast in my opinion that I want nothing to do with Matt Chapman.
However I was reading Jim Bowden from The Athletic, and while I find his takes often somewhat speculative and head scratching, he did make an observation about the Guardians (I know I am not going to remember this name for much of the time) that I found intriguing. He intimated that Cleveland is not ready to contend, even in the weak AL Central. Detroit and KC are rising while Cleveland not so much. Cleveland exercised their option on Jose Ramirez for 2022 ($12MM), and will undoubtedly exercise it for 2023 ($14MM). He will not agree to an extension. Thus, this winter seems to be the ideal time to move him to a team that is willing to provide Cleveland with multiple ML ready players.
What is even more interesting is that Ramirez came up as a SS/2B, and can still play2B well. He can also fill in at SS in a pinch. He is a switch hitter with fairly even splits. He has been top 6 in AL MVP voting in four of the last five years. He is 29, and would be an ideal candidate for a five year extension after this year. His career line is .278/.351/.501/.855. His career OPS is almost equal to Chapman’s best OPS of .864 (2018).
Ramirez is one player I would like to see AF target.
Dickerson DFA’d by the Giants. Opening a spot for DeSclafani. Wood also close to signing. White Sox closing in on a deal with Graveman. Report by Rosenthal says Seager wants to sign before Dec 1.
Breaking news. Rays sign Franco to a 12 year 185 million dollar contract per MLBTR. The contract could max out at 223 million. Kid is set for life.
Yo Mark, can I get out of timeout? Don’t think I posted anything out of line.
Matz is considering multiple offers. None of those from the Dodgers according to MLBTR.
Dodgers: LA Showing Interest in Japanese Star Seiya Suzuki, According to Insider
by Adam Salcido
The last time the Dodgers tried to recruit and sign a Japanese star player they came out swinging yet they struck out. They missed out on a once-in-a-generation talent in Shohei Ohtani as he made his way down the 5 in Orange County with the Angels.
This time around the Dodgers are hoping for better luck as a new star from Japan hit the market for MLB teams to try and sign. Outfielder Seiya Suzuki was posted this Monday and will be available for all 30 MLB teams to bid on him. According to am570LASports host David Vassegh, Los Angeles has shown some interest in the 27-year old star. Former Dodgers Mike Scioscia who managed against Suzuki in the 2021 Olympics noted that he sees his power translating into MLB and has a “tremendous throwing arm from Right Field.”
Fromer MLB all star pitcher Doug Jomes dies at 64 from complications of Covid.
First timers on the Hall ballot, David Ortiz, Alex Rodriguez, Ryan Howard, Tim Lincecum, Jimmy Rollins, Justin Morneau, Carl Crawford, Mark Teixeira, Jonathan Papelbon, Jake Peavey, Prince Feilder, AJ Pierzinski, and Joe Nathan. Last shot for Bonds, Clemens and Schilling. Schilling was closest to election last year with 71.1 % of the vote. Bonds had 61.8%. Clemens, 61.6%. Holdovers are Abreu, Pettitte, Buehrle, Helton, Hudson, Torii Hunter, Andruw Jones, Kent, Manny, Sosa, Sheffield, Vizquel and Billy Wagner. A new report says the Dodgers are really trying to bring Seager back. We will see. I think Schilling might squeeze in by a hair. Ortiz might make it on his first ballot. Rodriguez will most likely get the same treatment from the writers that the other suspected PED users have so far. Bonds needs to pick up 13 %. Not easy to do in a single voting cycle.
Rose, Bonds, Clemens, and all the rest: Let ’em in!
He that is without sin, let him cast the first stone.
MLB, the writers, and others all knew about the roids.
It was part of the fabric of baseball, just like “greenies” – Move on. Nothing to see here!
AC, funny story about Bonds. I’ve only heard people say negative things about him. It’s enlightening to hear another point of view.
There’s some noise that the Dodgers are interest in Suzuki. There’s a Scioscia quote out there in the Houston Mitchell article that says he’s got power that will translate to the MLB and has a rifle of an arm in right field. He’s also won a few of gold gloves in Japan and might be capable of some positional flexibility. Of course, the Houston Mitchell article comes with speculation about trading Pollock to hand Suzuki the left field job. I find that speculation nonsense.
Anyways, he sounds like the type of player that the Dodgers would be interested in and there’s some buzz out there. I hope he’s a Dodgers’ fan.
Great story. Of course the public and the press had their own impressions of him. I felt that way about Tommy Davis who I had a long discussion on hitting with when I was 11. He was just as patient and nice as could be. Asked to see my stance and how I swung. He gave me a couple of pointers which I never forgot and used over the years. Talking to Norm Sherry was pretty easy too. He had a way with us kids and made us feel special when we shagged balls. Larry was a lot more reserved. Of course Wes and I had more than a couple baseball discussions. He was one of those guys ya just felt you could go out and have a beer with.
The best hitters I ever saw were
Pete Rose
George Brett
Tony Gwynn
Rod Carew
Ichiro Suzuki
The most prolific hitter I ever saw was Barry Bonds. I am not talking about his character, but his hitting prowess. I also have a different take on attitudes directed to Bonds. Mine is more personal as he went out of his way to have a very long conversation with my son at the San Jose Airport. While on a college weekend series in Santa Clara, the team had a couple hour wait for a return trip to Reno. The team saw Bonds and dared my son to go up to him and talk with him. He did, and Bonds spent the next 30-45 minutes just talking with him. Andy said that Barry was one of the easiest people to talk with that he encountered in baseball. Never asked for an autograph or anything, and nothing was ever offered. Just two guys sitting in an airport BSing.
MLBTR also reporting that the Giants are close to a 2 year deal with Alex Wood that would pay him 10 mil a season. Saw a picture of Caleb Ferguson with his new bride. Boy did well. Girl is a 10 plus easy.
Some movement happening around the MLB now. Angels signed Aaron Loup. Jackson traded by the Giants to the Braves and the Giants signed DeSlafani to a 3 year 36 million dollar deal.
Rangers acquired Billy McKinney and Zach Reks from the Dodgers for cash.
D-Backs signed Matt Davidson to a minor league deal with a spring invite.
I respect Aaron. I have zero respect for Bonds. Respect is a lot different than love. I saw both of them play many times. If you were to ask me who the best hitter I ever saw was, it would be Tony Gwynn. With Rod Carew a close second. Best ballplayer, Mays hands down. Best pitcher, Koufax. Next best, Bob Gibson. Bonds never admitted anything, that is true. Neither did anyone accused of that stuff except one, Jason Giambi. Two guys accused of using or at least linked to it will be on the Hall ballot for the first time this year, Rodriguez and Big Papi. I just think we will never see eye to eye on this subject and that is fine.
Bear, it seems that your love for Hammerin Hank is jading your reasoning skills. If you need hard proof, than you shouldn’t accuse Bonds of using steroids either. Bonds claims that he was given substances, but he didn’t know what they were. That smells like bull crap to me.
Hank says he used amphetamines a couple of times (yeah right). And a pitcher on his team claims that nearly half of the players on his team used steroids. Hank’s best season was in his age 37 year where he hit 47 homers. Not a normal decline like most players. I put all those things together and I can make a rational decision about what I think.
So, Hank actually admitted to using performance enhancing drugs. His teammate said a bunch of players on that team used steroids and his best season was when he was 37. That’s enough for me. But, I’m certain you’re going to dig your heels in because no one ever convinced anyone to change their mind on the Internet.
So, go ahead and be certain that Bonds took steroids even though he never admitted to it and ignore that Hank actually admitted to doing amphetamines and justify some how, some way, that a guy that took amphetamines would pass up the chance at taking steroids even thought his teammates were.
As a former drug user, I know from personal experience that it’s unlikely that Hank would take speed and then draw the line at steroids.
If your nose runs and your feet smell, Are you built upside down? Go Dodgers
OK, let’s play nice.
Everyone has strong opinions about things that are both objective and subjective.
There is no RIGHT answer… just opinions which are like… well, don’t be one!
For anyone that wants to argue about Bonds being the best hitter ever, 762! You may think batting average or hits makes you a better hitter, but being the all time home run king means he’s in the conversation.
I hate the Giants and hated Bonds, but watching him hit was like watching a robot hit against humans. I saw what I saw and he was the best I personally have ever seen. It kills me to even think that about a Giant. That’s how good he was.
The crowning moment to me was seeing him take Gagne oppo over half way up the pavillion when Gagne was at the top of his game. Bonds was a machine. Maybe if I saw Williams or Ruth play, I would think differently. But, it doesn’t make me wrong.
I dislike Barry Bonds period. I respected him as a player until all the steroid stuff came out. I do not like drugs in any way shape or form. I take mine simply because my doctor tells me I have to. If I had a choice, I would not take any of them. I do not like players who put themselves above the game. I don’t like Bauer simply because he made a bad choice and it cost the Dodgers a lot. To me, that is selfish. Bonds was a damn good player before he decided to juice. He would have been a first ballot Hall of Famer, because of his choices, this is his last time on the writers ballot. For the same reason I do not want to see someone like Correia on the Dodgers, I do not want to see Bonds in the hall. That is simply my opinion of the man. But to me, he is not worthy to carry Hank Aaron’s equipment bag, let alone have the all time HR title. Hank was more forgiving about it.
Somewhere we learn that what we do may be technically legal but still be unethical. Somewhere we learn that we can legally do some things that will ruin our lives and others’. Shining a spotlight on such things can hopefully help a few people to think a little more deeply before creating situations that were best not created.
I don’t like strike outs. Chapman had too many in 2021 but not in his best year in 2019.
I like defense and speed. I don’t know who would provide that at 3B so I will take defense.
Given a choice, I would like to see Seager play third next year, Trea at short, Lux at second, and Bellinger at first. But if Seager leaves then I am looking for a third baseman.
If Muncy is not the first baseman then he should be traded and not moved to another position. Maybe a Muncy for Gleyber with Gleyber playing 3rd.
I still want Buxton in CF and Betts in RF.
Barry Bonds is a scumbag of a person to begin with, and he is for sure miles from being the best hitter ever.
Calling Barry Bonds the best hitter in baseball history is just plain wrong. Ted Williams was the best pure hitter in MLB history. Had he not lost 5 seasons to the wars, he would have beaten Ruth’s 714 easily. we all know what Bonds did to get to where he did. He is in the last season of his eligibility for election by the writers because of that. BP, they were not taking steroids in the 50’s and 60’s. That type of drug was not even available to players then. Trainers then would regularly give the players greenies or cortisone injections. But anabolic steroids were not in use. And Bonds would have been a Hall of Famer had he not chosen to use. But the greatest hitter ever??? Pure bull puckey. Maybe the best in his era. but not even close all time.
The “bridges”.
The Dodgers need several “bridges” some are already on the team and others it needs to acquire.
Pollock is the bridge for Andy Pages, he will come very young to MLB, he is a precocious player, he will play very good defense, hit HR and many RBI and a high number of strikeouts, nowadays if players can do all that teams don’t mind the strikeouts.
Turner and Rios could be the bridge to Miguel Vargas, another precocious player who will get to MLB very young.
Treinen or Jansen, if he returns, could be the bridge for Graterol in the closer’s position, Graterol is still a project and is in the best team to develop, he has the youth, character, personality and weapons to be a great reliever.
The Dodgers need a bridge or two to wait for the arrival of May, who should be an established starting pitcher in 2023, and Miller a little later.
Signing “bridges” this year on 1-2 year deals, max 3,( Kershaw-Scherzer ?)should allow the Dodgers to sign extensions, down the road, to Buehler, Bellinger, Julio and Trea, obviously, if they continue to play at this season’s level and in Bellinger’s case if he regains his level.
A starting rotation for the next few years of: Buehler, Julio, May, Miller, Pepiot, if all goes well, could be fabulous.
Watching USC yesterday was completely embarrassing. Defense, horrible. Offense, suspect. Undisciplined with tons of penalties. I don’t follow closely enough to have an opinion on who should come in and take over the reigns, but I can say that I really miss Pete Carroll, but not enough to be a Seahawks fan.
It will be interesting to watch the domino effect with all of the college football openings already. I don’t remember so many jobs open prior to the end of the season; USC, LSU, Wa, WSU, TCU, Va Tech and now Florida. Surely there will be more to come.
We’ve all seen the usual cast of characters mentioned as replacements including Lane Kiffin leaving Ole Miss all ready for LSU and now Florida probably.
One name I never see mentioned as a replacement for a brand name job is Kyle Whittingham. Maybe after 17 years with the Utes, he’ll have no interest elsewhere but he’s one of the best coaches out there if you want physical football.
USC can’t get this one wrong.
Since it has been brought up…YES I was embarrassed as a USC Trojan after yesterday’s disaster. The one positive aspect is that we are now one week closer to a new coach, and UCLA is still going to be stuck with Chip Kelly. At 18-25 his record is very reminiscent of Clay Helton.
Word is that a new coach will be made prior to the December 4 makeup game against the Cal Bears. The tea leaves are leaning towards current Baylor HC, defensive guru, highly disciplined, and SoCal native Dave Aranda. The team will still have the Helton stench for at least one season, but with the new portal system, problems can be minimized. The team will lose the disastrous coordinators in Graham Harrell and Todd Orlando, and hopefully retain some semblance of recruiting. Since this is LADT and not USCTalk, I will defer to RudyByrd and William for their bragging rights. Well for one year anyway.
I never believed Barry Bonds took steroids to generate more power. I always believed he took steroids to help him heal quicker. I would surmise had Junior took to steroids as did Bonds (and he did), we would probably be talking about Junior as the career HR leader, and IMO the greatest baseball player of all time. He was fun to watch offensively and defensively. Certainly the best talent I ever saw since Willie Mays. And no Mark, he did not need the mountains of computer reports to tell him where to position himself.
I find this interesting. There is a small town in Pennsylvania which has produced two of MLB’s best players ever. Both are Hall of Famers. Philadelphia has one native son in the hall, Roy Campanella. Same with Pittsburgh, Bobby Wallace. The town, Donora, birthplace of Stan ” The Man ” Musial and Ken Griffey Jr. Even stranger, they both have the same birthday. November 21. Stan was born in 1920, and Griffey 49 years later in 1969. Just think how much closer to 700 HR’s Griffey would have been if he had just been able to stay healthy later in his career. Musial got the nick name “The Man ” from Dodger fans. After a particularly great doubleheader against them, the fans would groan, here comes that man again when Musial came to bat. When he was coming up, he was known as the Donora Greyhound. He was back then considered more of a pitching prospect that a hitter. I also remember the day when Griffey Jr. and his dad homered back to back. Only time a father and son have ever done that in the majors. Happy Birthday to them both.
Good morning guys. Hope you all have a great Sunday. Baseball news at a minimum right now. And unless some sort of agreement is reached soon, there won’t be much after Thanksgiving either. I hope all of you have a great Thanksgiving with your family’s. Myself, I will most likely spend the day here doing research on some articles. I do not watch the NFL, so football on that day is not happening. But LA teams are taking it on the chin this year. Lakers look like a dysfunctional family of overpaid prima donna’s. Rams started out good but have been flat lately, Kings, middle of the pack, and USC needs a new direction 8 weeks ago. I have to believe if AF makes any trades they will be for a need. Your do not trade for a third baseman if you feel you can get at least 120 games during the regular season there from Turner. I think they probably feel they have plenty of players who can back him up since McKinstry, Rios, Muncy and Beaty have all had time there. The needs obviously are on the bench and starting pitching if they do not sign at least one more starter in free agency. The bench lacks RH pop. The pen will be rebuilt in some form or another. The thing about Suzuki is that not only are you going to have to pay the posting fee, usually a lot of cash, then you have to sign the guy to a contract. MLBTR says he is going to get 55 mil for 5 years. Since the outfield is well manned, I see no way they go after the guy, but that is just a guess. I have to believe AF is covering all his bases and looking at a bunch of free agents who might be good fits for the team and who will cost a lot less than others who might be traded for. I do not think Olson or Chapman are great fits here. Chapman strikes out way too much. He is a plus fielder, but how many runs is he going to leave stranded while he whiffs at 3 straight pitches, He hits it a long way when he hits one, but to me, the guy just does not make enough contact.
Isn’t Amaya’s brother in the Majors?
Geez Mark, if Rey Skywalker keeps hefting Reggie’s telephone pole 35-38, she’ll have no trouble catching up to anything when she’s older. She’s darling.
Jeff mentioned yesterday about my impressions of Jacob Amaya in fall ball.
I really like this kid. As we all know, hitting will be his question. I love his actions at Short and think he has the arm to stay there. Really solid and smooth actions.
I saw him hit at the top of the order and DH as well, to get more at bats. I see him as a bat-to-ball guy who needs to cut down on strike outs. I did not see him chase this fall which has been a problem. I also see gap power until he grows up. I see no need right now for him to try to lift and power the ball. His goal should be to swing at strikes and improve his contact rate. He hit the best he’s ever hit in Fall Ball, which was refreshing to see. He did not look over-matched with velo.
To me, I see a very prototypical middle infielder at 6’0″, 180 who starts out as being valued for his defense and who’s hitting comes around with time, as he gets comfortable with PT at a position. Kinda like the old days when a guy was valued for his SS defense, got comfortable, and improved at the plate to become valued as a hitter.
I wish he switch hit. I think he’s trade bait with the Dodgers however.
Yeah, it’s pretty fun to talk about offseason trade possibilities, but it doesn’t make a whole hell of a lot of sense to have three left handed first basemen on the same team. I guess they really need to replace Chris Taylor’s epic strikeout numbers with Chapman? Muncy is not a second baseman. If he was, we all would have seen Albert play more 1st base with Muncy at second base last year.
It’s not often you see two stars traded to the same team in the same deal. But, Scherzer and Trea showed us that it is as least possible, but not probable. The difference is that Grey and Ruiz were a perfect fit for the Nats. They were also at the tippy top of the Dodgers prospect rankings at the time. This package is not.
I guess there’s a couple of ways to approach trades. You trade for a player to fill a need, or you trade for a player as an opportunistic move to acquire elite talent, then wedge them into the lineup and in the field the best you can.
I guess we are now identifying both 3B and second base as a need? If that’s the case, I would say the Justin Turner signing last year was a mistake. They should have signed a more capable third baseman to bridge the gap. However, JT wound up playing the second most innings at 3B in his entire career. He also had a very good year at the plate except for the non existent postseason. Since all this is true, I can’t really call 3B a need.
It seems to me, it would make much more sense to not give away your best third base prospect who is probably about a year away in a trade to get someone who strikes out 200 times a year even if he’s a great defender to fill a need that doesn’t exist. They should probably just focus on acquiring that second baseman instead. Maybe it would make the most sense to go after a guy like Whit Merrifield or resign Seager or another shortop instead of trading a lot of prospects to get a first baseman you don’t need and a third baseman you don’t need.
Seiya Suzuki To Be Posted Tomorrow Morning
By Darragh McDonald | November 21, 2021 at 9:41am CDT
MLB has told teams that outfielder Seiya Suzuki will be posted tomorrow morning, per MLB Network’s Jon Heyman. That will open a 30-day window for teams to negotiate with him, with the deadline being 4:00 pm CT on December 22. If he doesn’t sign a contract by then, he will return to the Hiroshima Carp, his team in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball.
It was reported weeks ago that Suzuki was going to be posted, but the official timing of the posting is significant. The Collective Bargaining Agreement between MLB and MLBPA is set to expire at 11:59 pm ET on December 1. Due to the fact that it seems unlikely a deal will come together by then, the expectation around the industry has been that December 2 will see the implementation of a lockout and transaction freeze that would last until a new agreement is reached. Commissioner Rob Manfred discussed this scenario recently and seemed to point to its likelihood.
There’s a ten-day span from Suzuki’s posting tomorrow until that potential lockout day. Joel Sherman of the New York Post confirms that a transaction freeze would indeed apply to Suzuki as well, meaning no team could sign him while the freeze is in place. It had been previously reported that MLB and NPB were discussing an agreement wherein Suzuki’s 30-day clock would be paused during the freeze. That agreement seems to have been reached, as Sherman also reports that Suzuki’s 30-day clock will not move during a lockout. That means Suzuki is going to have to decide between hastily working out a deal in just over a week or dealing with the uncertainty of waiting out this winter’s labor strife and then having around 20 days of negotiating time on the other side of that.
Suzuki came in 20th on MLBTR’s list of Top 50 Free Agents and was predicted to get a contract of $55MM over five years. The 27-year-old seems capable of stepping right into the middle of the lineup for an MLB team, along with providing a strong arm and competent right field defense. Any big league team that signs Suzuki would owe the Carp a fee equal to 20% of the contract’s first $25MM, 17.5% of the next $25MM and 15% of any dollars thereafter. For example, if Suzuki were signed for $55MM as MLBTR predicted, the signing team would have to pay the Carp $10.125MM, bringing the total bill to $65.125MM. ,
If you were the G M and could only keep one player long term who would it be ?
Cody Bellinger or Corey Seager
Have I missed something, ha of course I have, but haven’t heard from Badger lately. Do hope you are well sir.