I've always been a fan of John Erardi and thought I'd share this article with the members of RZ.
http://news.cincinnati.com/article/2...bad-move-Reds-
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I've always been a fan of John Erardi and thought I'd share this article with the members of RZ.
http://news.cincinnati.com/article/2...bad-move-Reds-
Wow...that opened my eyes, especially from a well respected guy like that. Conflicts with a lot of what I have read on here.Quote:
Goldstein sees Leake and Wood as middle-to-back-of-the rotation guys (Leake a 3-4; Wood a 4-5) , "but you need guys like that to win divisions.”
nm
Loved this article. Glad he wrote it.
Definitely agree. Sappelt should be starting over both the vets.
You know, a bench with Gomes and Lewis doesn't sound half bad, actually.
Yorman Grandal? :O)
I'd ask the same about Hermida. Guy's still got the highest ceiling of any of the LF candidates.Quote:
What ever happened to Heisey?
Couple of things that I caught notice of that I didn't agree with at all.
To me this is too text book of an answer. Neither possess blazing fastballs or drop off the face curve balls so they can't be ace quality. It seems like he is to enamored with slotting pitchers on what they don't have instead of what they do have.Quote:
Goldstein sees Leake and Wood as middle-to-back-of-the rotation guys (Leake a 3-4; Wood a 4-5) , "but you need guys like that to win divisions.”
I will be actually shocked if only 84 W's takes the division. I see the Cards without Wainwright as an 85 win team. I think both the Reds and Brewers can win upwards of 90 games this season.Quote:
Goldstein thinks 84-85 victories could win the NL Central this year.
"The computer is calling for a three-team race: Cincinnati, Milwaukee, St. Louis, not in any order. Milwaukee improved their pitching a lot with Greinke and Marcum, but they've still got holes. And St. Louis lost Wainwright."
A guy from a Pirates blog reworked the old Hardball Times analysis about what teams should expect from each pitching slot, and he came up with this based on 2010 numbers:Quote:
Goldstein sees Leake and Wood as middle-to-back-of-the rotation guys (Leake a 3-4; Wood a 4-5) , "but you need guys like that to win divisions.”
So I think he's probably under-rating Wood, since a guy who definitely belongs in a major-league rotation -- as I believe Wood to be -- is (on a league-wide level) at least a #4. #5 starters are, almost by definition, not good enough to keep a job for very long.Quote:
#1 - 3.36 ERA or better
#2 - 3.36 - 3.88 ERA
#3 - 3.88 - 4.38 ERA
#4 - 4.38 - 5.15 ERA
#5 - 5.15 ERA or worse
Either of those two guys could potentially be better than a #3 but as to the distribution of "possible" versus "likely," it's hard to say.
Original article: http://www.piratesprospects.com/2010...tion-spot.html
Ryan Ludwick started to emerge at age 28. His first big year in full-time duty was at age 29. Hermida just turned 27. Given the upside, you can't close the book on him.Quote:
And if Hermida was going to put it all together, he would have by now. Guys like him don't sign minor league deals unless something's seriously gone off the rails there.
Agree with lollipopcurve on Hermida having the most upside of any LF in camp.
Also can't say I strongly disagree with Goldstein, although I'd say both Leake and Wood have the potential to fit into the #3 role based off of the Priates blogger's slot expectations. Cueto is a #2, and Volquez and Chapman are the only two arms the Reds have above A ball (and possibly in the entire organization) that have real potential to be true #1's. One could make an argument for Bailey, but I need to see a season full of consistency from him before he can be factored into the conversation for an ace. All the more reason why Chapman should get reconsideration as a starter, especially if Volquez does not return to early 2008 form and/or Bailey can't maintain consistency this year.
Not the proper forum but I'd love to see the Reds bring in some high upside arms and power bats for the corners through the draft and international signing period this year. Those are far and away the biggest glaring organizational weaknesses, especially once you look beyond the major league roster.
I can't believe anyone actually thinks there won't be a platoon in LF. Dusty was simply building up Gomes' confidence and giving him credit for having a solid (yet inconsistent) 2010 season. Gomes was really one of the leaders of the team and Dusty doesn't want to disrespect him by saying there will be a platoon. He wants to make Lewis earn it first.
I also like Erardi very much. And I'm sure deep down he fully knows there will be a platoon in LF this year: Gomes against lefties, Lewis against righties (with some Heisey mixed in at times of course).