Was looking through the clubs moves and can't remember who the player was but we offered them minor league assignment to stay with the organization, but they passed and signed with a Japanese club which I found amusing, only wish they had a cooler logo and I would have been interested in picking up a hat or t-shirt, etc.
The Hokkaido Nippon- Ham Fighters http://img.tapatalk.com/d/13/12/28/y6era2e7.jpg |
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But yeah that first yr or 2...he was dominant. Didn't last long...kinda like Hideo Nomo or whatever his name is. |
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edit: to be clear, since we don't actually have to pay the posting fee to talk to him (the old rules said we couldn't even talk to the guy unless we won the bid), someone in the Royals front office ought to have a chat with his agent just in case he freakishly comes from a long line of asian Royals fans and no one ever found out about it, but as soon as its clear that we can't get him, hang up the phone and never talk about it again. |
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First game of spring training is exactly 2 months away.
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Kansas City Star @KCStar 1m
The Royals sign infielder Jason Donald and outfielder Melky Mesa to minor-league contracts. More soon at http://www.kansascity.com/royals . Expand |
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I'll miss Ervin this year.
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Salvador Perez has spent almost all his time in winter ball playing 1B.
Whenever we get rid of Butler (probably next year), between DH and 1B hopefully he'll be able to field 1B well enough to play almost every day. |
Moose dominated the Venenzuela league where his hitting coach was his team's manager.
.288/.360/.515 |
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Full-time catchers can only play about 130 games. If Perez can also play 1B and if Butler is cleared out of DH, then we can get those other 30 games out of Perez. |
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Just curious... After looking at the FA's left... Am I missing something or why are we not thinking about Garza or Ubaldo? We'd have a sick rotation.
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Fire Yost, make Grifol manager! The campaign starts here.
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Nice. You just took this campaign to the next level.
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Because Garza isn't very good and Ubaldo's a huge wild card.
Seriously, I just don't understand the Matt Garza thing. He's a 2-pitch pitcher with a pretty straight fastball (with velocity that's been heading steadily downhill the last several years). He's not terribly durable. He's not a staff leader kind of personality. He was acquired to help the Rangers get over the hump and he largely spit the bit. He's probably a 4.00 ERA guy. The Royals could get that down a little by virtue of their defense, but if you're going to have to give him 4 years and $55-60 million, you'd be far better served going dumpster diving and using your defense to help out a much smaller ticket item (this is what Dave Duncan did with Cardinals pitchers for much of the early/mid 2000s). Garza's just not a smart signing for a team that has to worry about a budget. There's nothing but downside in the deal, IMO. |
Apparently the Yankees plan to blow through the $2-2.5MM limit on bonuses for international players (mostly 15-16 year olds), and spend somewhere around $15MM on them next offseason, because it won't impact their goal to get under $189MM on payroll, and the penalties for blowing through the cap on draft bonuses are too steep.
If they do that, they will pay a 100% tax on those international bonuses, and they will be prohibited from giving any international player more than a $300k bonus for 2 years, so they'd really need to make it count. (If MLB chooses to go to an international draft in 2015, then the penalty will change to forfeiting their 1st round pick for 2 years) |
I wish we would have signed Sano. There were only two teams in on him and he went for like 3.2 mil. :shake: Where are our DR scouts GMDM?
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There were a lot of questions about Sano when he was a FA. His age was widely called into question. He wanted record international money to sign (initially). Some questioned his ability to hit for average - his power was always evident. |
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is there something more to that, or did i read that statement wrong? |
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Despite the fact that the MLB had bonescans, DNA tests, appropriate birth documentation, and schooling documentation, the MLB investigator did not confirm Sano's age. It appeared to be totally underhanded and unethical. |
The documentary is available on netflix and was definitely worth watching.
Ballplayer: Pelotero |
Anyone want to put up their super-early predictions? We all can reserve the right to change our minds up to the end of spring training.
Last year I said they were roughly an 85-86 win team and would barely miss the 2nd wild card. I do not believe the Royals over or underachieved (though they were unusually healthy), a few players did well and a few did poorly but overall it was pretty much as expected. (Though if you want to be glass half-full, throw away May and look how good the record is then) I believe that on paper, if there are no other significant moves, then the Royals have improved by about 3 games even with the Loss of Santana. Replacing our 2B black hole with a credible hitter makes an enormous difference, and we also won't have to watch a few months of Frenchy. Vargas probably helps mitigate some of the loss in the rotation. Those moves are probably worth about 4 wins, and I knock one win back off by assuming we won't be as lucky with the DL this season; someone important will miss some time. So, 88-89 wins. I also think the Tigers got worse on paper, but it won't be quite enough. (though this season we won't need to be quite as lucky to catch them as we needed in 2013) The division race will not be lost until September, the Royals will grab the last wild card and play for the right to face whoever the best team in the AL ends up being in the ALDS, probably Texas. |
Prediction for next year:
Offense makes strong improvements due to following factors...
This offsets a small step back in the starting pitching from the No. 2 spot (2013 Santana vs. 2014 Vargas). Vargas performs at slightly better than his career averages, pitching in KC and with that defense behind him, to post a 3.80 ERA and 1.20 WHIP. Both numbers trump Santana, who has a fall-back year for the team that signs him. Shields and Guthrie are themselves. The starting pitching also is improved at the 4 and 5 spots, with one of the young pitchers (Duffy, Ventura or Zimmer) providing a major upgrade over what was received out of those spots in 2013. Overall: I'll call 91-71. It's aggressive, but I think the offense has improved more than many think and I think the starting pitching takes a smaller step back than many think. |
I want to know how much production we get from 3b, SS, and 2b. It has to get better, right? Right?
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Two positive predictions from two of my favorite Royals posters. I, too, think the offense will rebound and the pitching will not suffer too badly. I wonder how much better the Indians will be, though...
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Infante at 2B is an upgrade over a full season from what they get a year ago. I'm not sure he hits .300 for KC, but I'd feel good about his ability to hit .280 and OPS .725. Considering KC got a .243/.296/.304 line from its 2B in 2013, that's a HUGE upgrade. At SS, I think/hope we've seen Escobar's floor. His line doesn't kill you if he's hitting 9th. In fact, he was pretty solid while hitting 9th in the lineup .282/.297/.352. Those aren't all-star numbers, but paired with his defense, they're just fine. He's a career .282/.298/.369 hitter out of the 9th spot. That would be about an 80 point boost over what you got out him in 2013. And as for 3B... Moustakas also really can't be much worse, and they have significant insurance for him should he falter again. They have avoided the situation they started 2013 with, where they had no viable alternatives to Moustakas in the organization. Danny Valencia is a strong option against LHP at 3B, which is one of Moustakas's biggest weaknesses. He also could play everyday if needed. Bonifacio also provides nice flexibility at 3B, now that he isn't pigeon-holed at 2B. I really think they get better production out of all three spots. |
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I expect Asdrubal Cabrera to bounce back and be better than he was in 2013, when he was terrible. But Bourn and Swisher are both older guys and carry no guarantee of a return to form. The pitching staff is noticeably worse without Jimenez, who was their ace down the stretch, and Kazmir, who was a solid back-end guy. Unless Cleveland does something unexpected - like signing Masahiro Tanaka - that team takes a step back, IMO. |
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Collectively, the Royals got this line from the 4/5 starters (includes Davis, Mendoza, Chen - who was good but not great - Duffy, Ventura and Will Smith): 335 1/3 IP 173 ER 4.64 ERA 496 BB/H allowed 1.48 WHIP Worst offenders - by far - were Davis and Mendoza. 5.42 ERA and 1.66 WHIP from those guys in 204 1/3 IP as starters. Rest of the guys combined for a 3.44 ERA and 1.27 WHIP. There were several weights around the teams neck in 2013. Most have been eliminated (Francoeur, Getz, Mendoza) moved into less impactful/hurtful roles (Davis) or insured against (Moustakas). SIDE NOTE: This is a great example of WHY Wade Davis should have an extremely short leash if he opens the season in the rotation, and why I'd still look at bringing in one more back-end veteran pitcher. |
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It shows you why they paid a king's ransom for James Shields. Getting a guy to lead the AL in innings with a 3.15 ERA. Those guys are impossible to find, certainly they're impossible for our franchise to sign on the open market. Oh and this is the part where I theorize once again that Hochevar could probably out-do those numbers from our back end.
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5.44 ERA 1.41 WHIP 758 1/3 IP. 812 Hits allowed 254 BB Luke Hochevar is what he is as a starting pitcher: Not good. Terrible, in fact. Flirting with being the worst SP in major league history to throw as many innings as he was allowed to throw. |
We've already discussed FIP data and the writeup from the Boston blogger who noted his pitch selection changes..... and you said it doesn't apply to him. That's where we left it, agree to disagree style.
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However, I do hope a rival executive shares your optimism. (Note: I'd love it for Hoch to prove me wrong here, but I highly doubt that occurs) |
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I said some guys can't be looked at with FIP. Some guys constantly outperform it, and some guys constantly underperform it. FIP is a great way to explain outlier seasons. If a guy who has been good over the course of his career has a really bad year and his FIP is more in line with his traditional numbers, it helps explain the outlier. If a guy who has been bad over the course of his career has a really great year and his FIP is way higher than his traditional numbers, FIP help explains the outlier. But when your sample size is as big as Hochevar's is at this point, it's unlikely that him UNDERPERFORMING compared to FIP is ever going to change. I'd love for the guy to turn into Chris Carpenter and figure things out around age 30 after adding a cut fastball, but the odds against that are just incredibly low. |
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Everyone knows this happens if Butler is traded...for what pitching? |
Morales isn't an upgrade from Butler. He has only had 3 seasons out of 8 where he's played 130+ games. He's more injury prone than LoCain and plays DH for pete's sake. It's not like he's throwing his body around against the CF Wall. He just rejected a 14 mil - 1 year deal so he won't be cheap.. AND would cost a draft pick.
I guess if we want to get older, more expensive, take a huge dive in OBP, and lose a draft pick to acquire a guy that we basically already have at a position that we don't need. Then sure... to me... He makes little sense. |
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I just don't see where trading away Billy and then signing worse, older, less durable, and more expensive replica of him gets us for 2014.
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Oh wait, Billy is fat. |
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Just don't see it. |
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This lineup would be freaking sick. 1. Aoki 2. Hosmer 3. Morales 4. Gordon 5. Butler 6. Salvy 7. Moose 8. Escobar 9. Infante But, alas, the Royals would never do it. |
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Hosmer's DNA is as a first basemen.
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Hosmer has the arm/athleticism for RF, I just don't know that we want to take the time to develop him there. And Butler is a ****ing travesty at 1b. Plus, Hos made some great picks that definitely saved some runs.
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remember when Butler started a couple games in Left Field? That was fun.
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I keep having this dream where the Royals make it to the World Series without me knowing....
The dream happens the same way every time... in every dream I happen to stumble into a bar or someplace where they are showing the final game of the series, and I happen to catch the last few outs where we clinch the series. I watch all of the guys storm the field after the final out and I feel happy, but very underwhelmed at the same time. Had this dream last night for the fourth or fifth time. Not sure what to make of it. |
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Morales and Butler put up nearly identical seasons a year ago. But where as Butler's year was a down year for him, Morales' year was on par with what he has done since coming back from that devastating ankle injury. Morales does not = Billy Butler. He's older, would be far more expensive (probably 2x as much in salary, plus draft pick compensation), and is actually and even worse runner than Butler. |
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Wasn't Morales the jackass who tore his ACL celebrating a walk off?
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That ankle injury destroyed his lower half. |
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BTW, Kendrys Morales' agent is Scott Boras.
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Video here. Jumped, landed. Believe it was a compound fracture of his ankle and possibly a fracture of one of the small bones in the lower leg. Rehab also went poorly, which is why he missed almost 2 full seasons. You can tell from this clip, too, comparing it to pictures of him now, he has probably put on 20-30 pounds since the injury. Quote:
Cliffs: Morales has been measured at costing his team 28.2 runs since he debuted in 2006 (Butler debuted in 2007). Butler is measured as costing the Royals 31.7 runs. So Morales' total comes out to 89 percent of Butler's total. Sounds like they're about the same then, right? Well, they're not... because Morales total comes in 2284 PA, while Butler's comes in 4064 PA. Morales has just 56 percent of Butler's PA but has cost his team nearly as many runs on the bases. Spread Morales' total out to the same number of PAs as Billy, and you're looking at Morales costing you 50.2 runs... or 58 percent more than Butler. Morales isn't just worse than Butler. He's SIGNIFICANTLY worse on the bases than Billy Butler. |
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There's definitely no reason to get rid of him, however. Even though he does clog the basepaths. |
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