The 2021 Major League Baseball Player Chatter, News and Fantasy Thread

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  • EmpireMaker
    replied
    Shane Bieber will return to the Indians to start Friday night’s game against the White Sox, interim manager DeMarlo Hale told reporters (including Mandy Bell of MLB.com). It’ll be his first appearance since June 13. He’s on the 60-day injured list, so a corresponding 40-man move will need to be made, although that can be accomplished by simply transferring Wilson Ramos from the 10-day IL to the 60-day IL in the wake of his season-ending knee injury.
    The 26-year-old Bieber was placed on the 10-day injured list back on June 14 due to a right shoulder subscapularis muscle strain. The reigning American League Cy Young winner hadn’t been quite as dominant as he was during 2020’s 60-game sprint, but he’d still impressed with 90 2/3 frames of 3.28 ERA ball prior to landing on the injured list. Bieber’s 33.9 percent strikeout rate, while still among the best in the league, was down from last year’s remarkable 41.1 percent showing. His 8.6 percent walk rate marked a slight increase over last year’s 7.1 percent clip.
    Bieber’s injury was a major factor in Cleveland’s downfall in the American League Central standings this season, although had he been the lone member of the rotation to fall to an injury, perhaps the club could’ve withstood the loss. Instead, he was joined by both Aaron Civale and Zach Plesac for lengthy stays on the injured list, forcing the Indians to lean heavily on a group of rookie starters who spent much of the season looking overmatched.
    At this point, any postseason hopes for Cleveland have been dashed, but there’s still some value in getting Bieber a few innings to close out the year on a high note. Pitching in a game setting without experiencing any lingering or recurring symptoms will allow both Bieber and the team to head into the offseason with greater confidence that the right-hander’s injury won’t carry over into the 2022 season. As a first-time arbitration-eligible player, Bieber surely appreciates the opportunity to pick up a few more innings to help offset the missed time.
    Looking to 2022, Bieber will return to front a rotation that again looks to be stocked with quality young arms. The aforementioned Civale gives the club a strong No. 2 option behind Bieber, and while young Triston McKenzie was clobbered for seven runs in his most recent appearance, he’s shown some extended flashes of brilliance this year and looks well on his way to settling into the rotation as well. Plesac’s 2020 numbers look increasingly like an outlier, but even if that’s the case, he presents a solid fourth option. Cal Quantrill, meanwhile, has a 3.05 ERA (albeit with a 4.18 FIP) in 115 innings out of the rotation. Right-hander Eli Morgan hasn’t fared particularly well in his debut campaign but does have sound numbers in Triple-A. He’ll be a fine depth option moving forward, and the Indians have also at least gotten some big league exposure for depth options like Sam Hentges, J.C. Mejia and Logan Allen this year as well.

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  • stevenash
    replied
    Originally posted by JMobile
    Cardinals are hot. I fear for the Dodgers right now
    I'd be very afraid.

    Leave a comment:


  • JMobile
    replied
    Cardinals are hot. I fear for the Dodgers right now

    Leave a comment:


  • stevenash
    replied
    Originally posted by Stallion
    Kiermaier is a dick, he deserved to get beaned.
    He's crashed his head one too many times into a CF wall.

    Leave a comment:


  • Stallion
    replied
    Kiermaier is a dick, he deserved to get beaned.

    Leave a comment:


  • Checkerboard
    replied
    Rays' hard slide at home plate causes Jays' catcher's intel card to pop out, Rays keep card, Jays hit batter with pitch, Rays claim retaliation, Jays claim accident. Fuel for their rivalry.

    Leave a comment:


  • stevenash
    replied
    Originally posted by Otters27
    Got to believe. Automated strike zone is a not a matter of if but when
    Minor leagues are already experimenting with it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Otters27
    replied
    Originally posted by stevenash
    Umpiring has been putrid for the past five seasons now.
    Got to believe. Automated strike zone is a not a matter of if but when

    Leave a comment:


  • EmpireMaker
    replied
    The Cardinals, surging toward a playoff berth with a prodigious September winning streak, will get another boost to their postseason hopes this weekend. Opening Day starter Jack Flaherty is expected to be activated from the injured list to start the second game of Friday’s doubleheader, manager Mike Shildt told reporters tonight (Twitter links via Katie Woo of The Athletic). Flaherty isn’t fully stretched and will be more of an opener than a traditional starter, but his return is a notable development for a Cardinals club that now finds itself with a commanding lead on the second Wild Card spot in the National League.
    Flaherty missed more than two months this summer with a severe oblique strain, and his return to the club lasted just three games before he went back on the shelf with a shoulder strain on Aug. 25. He’ll be returning without a minor league rehab assignment, though Flaherty has been throwing bullpen sessions as he works back toward the big league roster. Jeff Jones of the Belleville News-Democrat tweeted this past weekend that Flaherty had thrown around 30 fastballs in a recent session, and Shildt said just yesterday that Flaherty had warmed up in the ’pen before throwing 15 or so pitches to live hitters on the field (video link via Bally Sports Midwest).
    It’d be a surprise to see Flaherty go more than a couple of innings, but Friday’s outing could help to build him up a bit more for a lengthier outing sometime next week. He may not be fully stretched out by the time a theoretical postseason series would start, but Flaherty would presumably be a multi-inning option in some capacity early on — with a chance to build up further should the Cardinals make a deep run on the heels of their recent momentum.
    It’s been another strong year for Flaherty when he’s been healthy enough to take the mound. The 25-year-old owns a 3.08 ERA with sharp strikeout and walk rates — 26.1 percent and 7.7 percent, respectively — through 76 innings so far on the season.
    In similarly encouraging news for Cards fans, Shildt revealed in tonight’s media session that Dakota Hudson was scratched from a scheduled rehab start in Triple-A Memphis in case the club needs to activate him from the injured list over the next 48 hours (link via Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch).
    Hudson, who owns a 3.17 ERA in 241 big league innings dating back to his 2018 debut, hasn’t pitched this season after undergoing Tommy John surgery late in the 2020 campaign. He was viewed as a long shot to make it back this year, but he’s now pitched 18 2/3 innings of 0.96 ERA ball across three minor league levels. Hudson pitched five innings in each of his two most recent outings and tossed 68 pitches on Sept. 17 in his lone appearance at the Triple-A level so far. Given that workload, he’d seemingly be an option to make a more conventional spot start and work on a pitch count, if needed, although he could certainly work as a multi-inning relief option as well.

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  • Cross
    replied
    Time for the robot umps, just terrible out there these days.

    Leave a comment:


  • jrgum3
    replied
    Huge game tonight by the Giants who look like they're going to gain a game on the Dodgers who lost in Colorado tonight. It is very important to win the division now because the Cards are just a team that I don't want to face in a one game playoff. The Dodgers will throw Max in that game but its hard to go against a team riding so much momentum into October and that will be definitely be on the Cards side as they just don't seem like they'll lose anytime soon.

    Leave a comment:


  • Otters27
    replied
    Reds had bases loaded twice with o outs and got onevrun

    Leave a comment:


  • Checkerboard
    replied
    Originally posted by BigSpoon
    Yankees have a really tough remaining schedule starting Friday.
    With Kluber pitching and Judge back as DH, they should get the sweep over Texas tonight.

    Leave a comment:


  • JMobile
    replied
    Originally posted by JAKEPEAVY21
    The Cubs can now sign Arrieta
    Padres wasted a pickup of him. Thought they were bringing back gold.

    Leave a comment:


  • Stallion
    replied
    Sal Perez is on fire!! I wonder what the futures were on him to have the most HR's before the season started??

    Leave a comment:


  • jrgum3
    replied
    Originally posted by stevenash
    Sal Perez.

    Your all time single season home run hitter as a primary catcher.

    Very impressive season by Salvie. I am glad he's on my fantasy team in my 2 catcher league. Such a huge advantage to have him in that league when the Catcher position in fantasy is such a thin position.

    Leave a comment:


  • BigSpoon
    replied
    Yankees have a really tough remaining schedule starting Friday.

    Leave a comment:


  • JAKEPEAVY21
    replied
    The Cubs can now sign Arrieta

    Leave a comment:


  • stevenash
    replied
    Sal Perez.

    Your all time single season home run hitter as a primary catcher.

    Leave a comment:


  • EmpireMaker
    replied
    The Padres announced they’ve designated Jake Arrieta for assignment. The move clears active and 40-man roster space for reliever Javy Guerra, who has been reinstated from the 60-day injured list.
    It proved to be a very brief run in San Diego for Arrieta. Released by the Cubs in mid-August, the former Cy Young award winner hooked on with San Diego a few days later. The 35-year-old had struggled mightily in his return to Chicago, working 86 1/3 innings of 6.88 ERA ball with the Cubs. The Friars, thin on starting pitching depth and with a few key hurlers dealing with injury, gave Arrieta a few turns through their rotation in hopes he could find more success in a new environment.
    That ultimately proved not to be the case, as Arrieta posted even worse results in his brief look as a Padre. He tossed 12 1/3 innings over four starts, interrupted by a brief injured list stint due to a hamstring strain. He was tagged for sixteen runs (fifteen earned) in that time, while his already lackluster strikeout and swinging strike rates dipped even further relative to his time with the Cubs.
    It’s now been three seasons of subpar performance for Arrieta, who was one of the sport’s best handful of pitchers at his peak. The righty reeled off consecutive seasons of sub-4.00 ERA ball from 2014-18, including a 2.53 in 2014 and a sterling 1.77 mark in his Cy Young winning 2015 campaign. That’s climbed successively from 4.64 to 5.08 to 7.39 over the past three years, though, as Arrieta has become one of the game’s least effective pitchers at missing bats while his velocity has fallen.
    Arrieta will almost certainly reach free agency in the next few days, either via release or rejection of an outright assignment. In all likelihood, today’s designation will bring his 2021 campaign to a close. Given his significant recent struggles, it’s possible he’ll need to settle for a minor league deal to work his way back onto a big league roster this winter.
    The injury woes that inspired the Padres to sign Arrieta have only intensified in the weeks since. They’re down to Yu Darvish, Joe Musgrove and the recently-signed Vince Velasquez as traditional rotation options, with Chris Paddack and Blake Snell currently on the 10-day injured list. It seems they’ll conduct a handful of bullpen games in the season’s final couple weeks as they try to claw back from a four-game deficit in the race for the National League’s final Wild Card spot.
    Guerra hasn’t pitched all season on account of a UCL issue. A former infielder, the hard-throwing righty was converted to mound work in 2019. Over 22 MLB innings, he owns an 8.18 ERA with a below-average 17.5% strikeout rate but a solid 50% ground-ball percentage.
    While Guerra hasn’t yet found much big league success, the Padres clearly remain intrigued by his arsenal. The 25-year-old averaged 98 MPH on his sinker last season, making it easy to envision him as a grounder specialist out of the bullpen. Because of his early career as a position player, Guerra has exhausted all three of his minor league option years. That leaves the Padres with no choice but to carry him on the active roster or risk losing him on waivers. They’ve evidently determined to keep him with the major league team for now, and he figures to see some action as part of the aforementioned bullpen-heavy pitcher usage the Padres will need to deploy down the stretch.

    Leave a comment:


  • jrgum3
    replied
    Lamont Wade continues to be one of my favorite Giants. Probably their most underrated pickup and he's the man you want up there in the 9th when your team needs a big hit and he delivered again against the Padres.

    Leave a comment:


  • stevenash
    replied
    Originally posted by Stallion
    The Umpire in the Jays game last night was just awful, like Angel Hernandez awful. The Cards have won 9 or 10 In a row!!!
    Umpiring has been putrid for the past five seasons now.

    Leave a comment:


  • Stallion
    replied
    The Umpire in the Jays game last night was just awful, like Angel Hernandez awful. The Cards have won 9 or 10 In a row!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Checkerboard
    replied
    Originally posted by Stallion
    Robby Ray Cy Young and Vladdy MVP!!!!
    + Jays WC, pennant and WS for the sweep!

    Leave a comment:


  • Otters27
    replied
    Originally posted by jrgum3
    Yep I keep cashing tickets with them and the books keep giving bettors incredible value on the red hot Cards at dog money most of the time.
    Might ride them out the rest of the year or too late

    Leave a comment:


  • EmpireMaker
    replied
    The Yankees announced Monday that they’ve reinstated right-hander Luis Severino from the 60-day injured list and cleared a spot on the 40-man roster by releasing right-hander Sal Romano.
    Severino, 27, will make his return to a big league mound for the first time in nearly two years. His last regular-season appearance for the Yankees came back on Sept. 28, 2019. He hasn’t pitched in a Major League game since his Game 3 start against the Astros in that year’s ALCS. Severino underwent Tommy John surgery in Feb. 2020, and his return has been delayed in 2021 by setbacks throughout the recovery process, namely some shoulder and groin injuries.
    Even including Severino’s postseason work in 2019, he’s pitched just 20 1/3 innings for the Yankees since Opening Day of that season. He missed nearly the entire 2019 campaign due to shoulder and lat strains, and his 2020 season was wiped out entirely by the aforementioned Tommy John procedure. It’s obviously not how the Yankees drew things up when signing Severino to a four-year, $40MM contract extension in Feb. 2019. That contract spanned the 2019-22 campaigns and gives the Yankees a $15MM club option for a fifth season.
    Manager Aaron Boone suggested over the weekend that Severino’s return was imminent. However, the two-time All-Star and 2017 third-place finisher in American League Cy Young voting won’t return to the Yankees’ rotation this year. Severino did not have time to build up to the point where he could work as a starter, so he’ll work as a reliever down the stretch, perhaps being called upon for two- or three-inning stints.
    Moving forward, there’s little doubt the Yankees hope to reinstall Severino near the top of their rotation. It’s been three years since we last saw a full season from Severino, but he’s among the best starters in the American League when healthy. From 2017-18, Severino logged 384 2/3 innings with a 3.18 ERA, an impressive 28.8 percent strikeout rate and a similarly excellent 6.2 percent walk rate.
    Assuming Severino’s injury troubles are behind him, he’ll join Gerrit Cole, Jordan Montgomery, Jameson Taillon and Domingo German as the top rotation options for the Yankees in 2022. Prospects Deivi Garcia, Clarke Schmidt, Luis Medina and Ken Waldichuk are among the top options in the upper minors, and it’s of course possible that the Yankees will make an offseason move or two in an effort to deepen and strengthen their collection of MLB-caliber arms.
    For Romano, today’s release marks the latest in a dizzying stretch of transactions this season. Since beginning the year with the Reds organization — where he was originally drafted and developed — his transaction log reads as followed:
    • May 14: Designated for assignment by Reds
    • May 17: Elects free agency
    • May 22: Signs minor league deal with Yankees
    • July 22: Selected to MLB roster by Yankees
    • July 31: Designated for assignment by Yankees
    • Aug. 3: Claimed off waivers by Brewers
    • Aug. 10: Designated for assignment by Brewers
    • Aug. 13: Elects free agency
    • Aug. 14: Signs minor league deal with Yankees
    • Sept. 9: Selected to MLB roster by Yankees
    • Sept. 10: Designated for assignment by Yankees
    • Sept. 13: Elects free agency
    • Sept. 14: Signs Major League deal with Yankees
    • Sept. 17: Placed on 10-day injured list (sprained finger)
    • Sept. 20: Released by Yankees

    Romano has allowed a pair of runs in 3 1/3 innings with the Yankees this year and has been tagged for a 6.12 ERA on the season overall between Cincinnati, Milwaukee and New York. Romano has had a nice season in Triple-A and had some success as a rookie with Cincinnati back in 2017, but it’s begun to feel as though he’s spent nearly as much time in DFA limbo and minor league free agency this season as he has as an active member of an organization’s MLB or Triple-A roster. He’s gotten service time and big league pay for all of the time spent in the Majors and in DFA limbo, but the manner in which he’s been pinballed on and off MLB rosters has to be nevertheless frustrating.
    Given that Romano was on the injured list at the time of his release, it remains to be seen whether he can get back to good enough health to return to the mound in 2021. If not, he’ll look for a more stable opportunity in free agency this winter.

    Leave a comment:


  • jrgum3
    replied
    Originally posted by Cross
    Cardinals unbelievable right now, hate to see it.
    Yep I keep cashing tickets with them and the books keep giving bettors incredible value on the red hot Cards at dog money most of the time.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cross
    replied
    Cardinals unbelievable right now, hate to see it.

    Leave a comment:


  • JMobile
    replied
    Looks like Tatis' attitude won't get him the MVP win

    Leave a comment:


  • Stallion
    replied
    Robby Ray Cy Young and Vladdy MVP!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • stevenash
    replied
    Originally posted by Checkerboard
    Jays' Berrios 'enjoyed' facing and beating his former Twins with 5 runs support in first inning, including a Bo homer.

    Jose said, 'I felt like I was playing back in Puerto Rico in my backyard with a lot of friends I know from a long time ago...'

    Vladimir 3 hits and an rbi, Jays 15-3 in September.

    Vlad continuing to make his MVP case.

    Leave a comment:


  • Checkerboard
    replied
    Jays' Berrios 'enjoyed' facing and beating his former Twins with 5 runs support in first inning, including a Bo homer.

    Jose said, 'I felt like I was playing back in Puerto Rico in my backyard with a lot of friends I know from a long time ago...'

    Vladimir 3 hits and an rbi, Jays 15-3 in September.

    Leave a comment:


  • EmpireMaker
    replied
    The Cubs have activated Nico Hoerner and Keegan Thompson from the 10-day injured list. To create two roster spots for the returning players, outfielder Nick Martini was optioned to Triple-A while right-hander Dillon Maples was designated for assignment.
    Maples is out of minor league options, which is why Chicago had to take the DFA route to remove the 29-year-old from the active roster. A veteran of parts of five MLB seasons, Maples had an 8.49 ERA over 23 1/3 career innings for the 2017-20 Cubs before posting a 2.59 ERA in 31 1/3 frames in 2021.
    However, Maples has benefited from a .203 BABIP, as his SIERA is 4.64 and his walk rate is an ungainly 18%. Control has been a persistent issue for Maples at both the Major League and minor league levels, and the Cubs seem to have seen enough.
    There’s some people in the organization that feel like we’ve just run out of time,” manager David Ross told NBC Sports Chicago’s Gordon Wittenmyer and other reporters. “We wish [Maples] the best in his career and hopefully for his sake he catches on with somebody, and he’s able to have a long, successful major-league career. It just doesn’t look right now at this time like it’s going to be with us.”
    Thompson will start today’s game against the Brewers after missing a little over two weeks due to right shoulder inflammation. The right-hander has shuttled up and down from Triple-A Iowa a few times this season, with a 3.54 ERA to show for his first 48 1/3 career innings in the big leagues. Working mostly as a reliever, Thompson has managed that respectable ERA despite some unimpressive peripherals, including a 12.8% walk rate.
    Hoerner suffered a right oblique strain at the end of July, and thanks to previous IL trips due to a left hamstring strain and a left forearm strain, Hoerner has played in only 39 games. The former top prospect has at least hit decently well (.312/.388/.388 in 152 PA) when he has been able to play, and the Cubs will certainly be interested in evaluating Hoerner over the season’s last two weeks to help determine his role with the 2022 team and beyond.

    Leave a comment:


  • jrgum3
    replied
    Originally posted by Checkerboard
    Robbie Ray!

    1,241 strikeouts MLB record for the most strikeouts by a pitcher over the first 1,000 innings of their career.

    Broke Yu Darvish's 1,222.

    Ray has always been solid but to be among the favorites for the AL Cy Young award is pretty impressive considering there are some pretty damn good pitchers he's mentioned in the same breath with this year pitching in the AL.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cross
    replied
    I will say it again, trotting Arrieta out there is outright tanking.

    Leave a comment:

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