Scott Carroll
Tzu-Kai Chui
Chris Dickerson
Richie Gardner
Chris Heisey
Sean Henry
Danny Herrera
Evan Hildenbrandt
Paul Janish
Sam Lecure
Derrik Lutz
Marcus McBeth
Juan Rafael
Ramon Ramirez
Justin Reed
Craig Tatum
Justin Turner
Other (please specify)
Bud Selig: "I'm the worst commissioner ever"
Rob Manfred: "Hold my beer"
https://redsintelligence.com/smforum/index.php
May have avoided homers, but McBeth was an extreme fly ball pitcher in limited major league action, 33 fly outs to only 10 ground outs. Don't know if that pattern was shown in the minor leagues over the years.
PS -- did show fly ball tendencies in minors in 2006 and 2007 based on go/fo ratio.
Last edited by Kc61; 01-02-2008 at 08:09 PM.
All these C-Grade guys are interchangeable mostly at this point. Depends on what you like. I think McBeth has a nice shot at a decent middle relief guy.
0 Value Over Replacement Poster
"Sit over here next to Johnathan (Bench)...sit right here, he's smart."--Sparky Anderson
Sam LeCure gets my vote again.
In fact I believe LeCure deserves to be in the top 12.
Last edited by Ron Madden; 01-03-2008 at 01:24 AM.
could somebody explain to me how you can vote for Herrera over McBeth?
What!? No Bartles yet?
Lecure action. He appears to have decent enough ability to eat some innings on the back end of the rotation. McBeth is the safest bet left, but he looks more like a middle relief type...not the 8th inning guy I was hoping for.
Here is BA's scouting report at the time of trade. If his slider continues to develop he could easily still be that 8th inning guy.
McBeth, 26, originally signed as an outfielder in 2001, drafted in the fourth round out of South Carolina. A former kick returner for the Gamecocks' football program, McBeth always stood out most for his arm strength. When he hit the wall offensively in high Class A in 2004, the A's moved him to the mound the following season. His primary weapon is a mid-90s fastball, and he also has a mid-80s slider that grades as a plus pitch at times. He's still working on his command and a changeup to keep lefthanders in check, but he's close to big league-ready. McBeth has a 1-0, 1.80 record and five saves in eight appearances at Triple-A Sacramento. In 10 innings, he has a 6-3 K-BB ratio, .200 opponent average and two homers allowed. He ranked fifth in the minors with 32 saves in 2006.
"You can't let praise or criticism get to you. It's a weakness to get caught up in either one."
--Woody Hayes
Did you ever see McBeth in the mid 90's last year? 90-92 with his changeup is enough to succeed, but I don't know what happened to the fastball everyone was talking about.His primary weapon is a mid-90s fastball, and he also has a mid-80s slider that grades as a plus pitch at times. He's still working on his command and a changeup to keep lefthanders in check
His player chart shows him with a wide range of speeds for his fastball between about 87-96 MPH
http://baseball.bornbybits.com/plots/Marcus_McBeth.html
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