Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raisor
So no one wants to go out on a limb and give us a straight answer on what Mes needs to do?
I give you the following:
After two months, Hannigan is playing to his career averages. Mes is OPSing 850 and is an average defender. What happens next?
It depends largely on how the pitchers are pitching.
If Hanigan's guys are dominating (at this point, three of Bailey, Latos, Cueto, and Chapman), why would you mess with a good thing? The offense is going to be good enough without Mesoraco's help.
However, late in a game, I wouldn't be averse to Mesoraco pinch hitting and a double switch with either a reliever or Heisey in CF.
(And I kind of resent the insinuation of "straight answer." You can't give a straight answer to any of these.)
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Scrap Irony
Mesoraco isn't as good as Hanigan yet.
And it's not really close.
Mesoraco was below replacement level last season. Hanigan was very good.
And the snake eats it's tail.
How can Mes prove he's ready for more when he doesn't get enough playing time?
If Mes is getting 9 starts a month, and does well, what does it prove? The sample size is so small that there is no way to know what the Reds have?
Mes had two months last season where he OPS'd over 775, and two months where he OPS'd close to 800 (one over, one slightly under) and two months where he was under 600. Neither bath of plate appearances was enough to figure out what his real level is.
His entire 2012 season worth of PA's isn't enough to say anything other than "what's next".
He had less than 200 PA's last year. That's less than two months worth for a regular player.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Scrap Irony
It depends largely on how the pitchers are pitching.
If Hanigan's guys are dominating (at this point, three of Bailey, Latos, Cueto, and Chapman), why would you mess with a good thing? The offense is going to be good enough without Mesoraco's help.
However, late in a game, I wouldn't be averse to Mesoraco pinch hitting and a double switch with either a reliever or Heisey in CF.
(And I kind of resent the insinuation of "straight answer." You can't give a straight answer to any of these.)
Ok, so its in the pitchers hands.
If Mes isn't catching Cueto, for example, how is Cueto going to get comfortable with pitching to Mes?
Sounds to me that Mes' biggest asset to the team will be as a trading chip.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raisor
Won't sample size be an issue?
9 games a month will make it a long time before we can figure out what we have in Mes.
Sample size isn't nearly as important for professional baseball coaches, managers and the like as it is for posters on a baseball message board.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Scrap Irony
It depends largely on how the pitchers are pitching.
If Hanigan's guys are dominating (at this point, three of Bailey, Latos, Cueto, and Chapman), why would you mess with a good thing? The offense is going to be good enough without Mesoraco's help.
However, late in a game, I wouldn't be averse to Mesoraco pinch hitting and a double switch with either a reliever or Heisey in CF.
(And I kind of resent the insinuation of "straight answer." You can't give a straight answer to any of these.)
Do Bailey, Latos, Cueto, or Chapman dominate because they are significantly above-average pitching talents, or because they are typical pitchers who have the opportunity to pitch to Hanigan?
Hanigan isn't doing the pitching, the pitchers are. If pitch framing is the issue, then coach Mesoraco to better frame pitches. If pitch calling is the issue, then call pitches from the dugout.
Verlander put up an 8.3 fWAR season in 2009, while throwing the brunt of the time to Gerald Laird, who is horrible.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Raisor
And the snake eats it's tail.
How can Mes prove he's ready for more when he doesn't get enough playing time?
Enough playing time is also apparently subjective.
I disagree completely with your insistence of enough playing time and insist that Mesoraco got plenty of playing time last season, considering how badly he played in that time.
I don't believe this is that difficult.
Mesoraco stunk last season. Therefore, he needs to improve before he gets more playing time.
As to the pitchers, yeah, it kind of is in their hands. If Cueto-- or Latos, or Bailey, or whomever Baker chooses to pair with Hanigan-- is dominating as a starter with Hanigan behind the plate, why switch his catcher? It makes no sense.
If Hanigan gets injured (which is a distinct possibility), Mesoraco gets increased time. If Hanigan struggles offensively to the point where his bat becomes more of a detriment than his defense is an advantage, Mesoraco gets more playing time. If Mesoraco dominates offensively and proves that his defense was a blip, he gets more playing time.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wonderful Monds
Well, Homer at the very least improved last year in the stretch run once Mesoraco was demoted and he started pitching to Hanigan.
Which he does every year in September, whether he's pitching to Hanigan or not. His August and September numbers are far and away his best of any months. In September/October, he's basically Felix Hernandez, and that isn't because in 2012 he started pitching to Hanigan instead of Mesoraco.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Plus Plus
Do Bailey, Latos, Cueto, or Chapman dominate because they are significantly above-average pitching talents, or because they are typical pitchers who have the opportunity to pitch to Hanigan?
A combination of the two, IMO. Hanigan is superior defensively-- the best in the National League (or at least on equal footing with Y. Molina).
That has monstrous value, IMO.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Scrap Irony
Mesoraco isn't as good as Hanigan yet.
And it's not really close.
Mesoraco was below replacement level last season. Hanigan was very good.
He had a .230 babip last year in 160 sparse at bats throughout the season. Say what you want about his below replacement level season, but it really wouldn't shock me at all if he was better than Hanigan right now.
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Superdude
He had a .230 babip last year in 160 sparse at bats throughout the season. Say what you want about his below replacement level season, but it really wouldn't shock me at all if he was better than Hanigan right now.
Then he will have no problems proving it on the field in his (limited) ABs and thereby increase his playing time.
Great!:thumbup:
(BTW, I am likely Mesoraco's biggest doubter, but I hope you're right. His emergence would make the team much better.)
Re: Reds catching 2013 and after
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Scrap Irony
Then he will have no problems proving it on the field in his (limited) ABs and thereby increase his playing time.
Great!:thumbup:
He'll be well on his way to 50% of the team's catching ABs, but not those that happen when the pitchers who pitch only to Hanigan pitch.