This world series is coming out great after all. I'm kind of pulling for the Braves
The 2021 Major League Baseball Player Chatter, News and Fantasy Thread
Collapse
X
-
JMobileSBR Posting Legend
- 08-21-10
- 19074
#3081Comment -
StallionSBR MVP
- 03-21-10
- 3616
#3082Braves will win, have faith.Comment -
CrossSBR Hall of Famer
- 04-15-11
- 5777
#3083No NFL games, maybe people will watch baseball again tomorrow.Comment -
jrgum3SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-21-17
- 7005
#3084If I didn't have to work I'd watch the game. This has been a very good series with most of the games being competitive. I think the Astros might send this to a game 7 but the Braves do have their pitching lined up so it should be a good game tomorrow.Comment -
Otters27BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-14-07
- 30750
#3085Should be a good game. Will be sad if Braves only chance was being up 4-0 Sunday NightComment -
stevenashModerator
- 01-17-11
- 65433
#3087**oops, double post**Comment -
mr. leisureSBR Posting Legend
- 01-29-08
- 17507
#3088Lets go Braves
We don`t want a game 7Comment -
EmpireMakerSBR Posting Legend
- 06-18-09
- 15578
#3089Per a Tuesday morning press release, the Braves have placed utilityman Ehire Adrianza on the postseason paternity list and activated infielder Johan Camargo ahead of tonight’s World Series Game 6. MLB rules require that Adrianza spend a minimum of one day and a maximum of three on the paternity list, though the latter will not come into play with the season set to conclude in less than 48 hours. Both players are switch hitters capable of offering serviceable defense at multiple positions.
While neither would be likely to see game action with the series shifting back to an AL park, the move represents a marginal downgrade for the Braves, who had used Adrianza as their top pinch-hitting option in the NLCS (when Jorge Soler was sidelined following a positive COVID test) and a secondary option in the World Series. Though he’s hitless in two at bats against the Astros, Adrianza did deliver a crucial two-out double ahead of Eddie Rosario’s game-deciding three-run homer in the fourth inning of Game 6 of the NLCS. Camargo, who had been on the Braves’ NLCS roster, is hitless in four trips to the plate so far this postseason.
With time at six positions in 2021 in something of a super-utility role, Adrianza also would have likely represented a top option at a number of positions in the event of an injury. He amassed a .247/.327/.401 across 209 plate appearances in his first season in Atlanta — all of which slightly exceeded his career averages — as he helped to bridge the gap that arose following Ronald Acuña Jr.’s season-ending injury and Marcell Ozuna’s season-ending legal troubles.
Should such a need arise, it may now fall to Camargo, who slashed .272/.349/.457 across 524 plate appearances as the Braves’ primary third baseman during the 2018 season. The 2019 arrival of Josh Donaldson and subsequent emergence of Austin Riley have largely rendered Camargo surplus to requirements in Atlanta, however. He’s struggled mightily since his breakout 2018, slashing a combined .212/.260/.361 (good for a dismal 58 OPS+), and has recorded a meager two walks and zero hits in 18 big-league plate appearances in 2021.
Camargo has mashed in Triple-A (.958 OPS in 436 PAs this year), however, suggesting his struggles with the parent club may be attributable to a small sample size and irregular playing time. He’s also been a significantly better hitter against lefties than righties, posting an .833 OPS hitting from the right side against .700 from the left, but the Braves are still likelier to turn to mid-season pickup Orlando Arcia should a pinch-hitting situation unexpectedly arise.
Still, Camargo does replace some of Adrianza’s positional versatility, potentially enabling Braves’ manager Brian Snitker to pinch-run for a starter in a late-game situation (speedster Terrance Gore is on the roster) without sacrificing too much defensively. All in all, the move is unlikely to amount to much with the DH in play from Game 6 (and a possible Game 7) of the World Series, but it is possible Camargo may be asked to play a role.Comment -
StallionSBR MVP
- 03-21-10
- 3616
#3090Braves win Tonight!!!Comment -
JAKEPEAVY21BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 03-11-11
- 29263
#3091Will we get a game 7?Comment -
BigSpoonSBR MVP
- 11-04-10
- 4113
#3092Congrats to Atlanta.Comment -
CrossSBR Hall of Famer
- 04-15-11
- 5777
#3093Former Cub the World Series mvp, it stings!Comment -
EmpireMakerSBR Posting Legend
- 06-18-09
- 15578
#3094The Rays are expected to receive a fourth option year on left-hander/first baseman Brendan McKay, reports Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times. If that indeed proves to be the case, Tampa Bay would be able to option McKay to the minor leagues through the end of next season.
Most players can be optioned for three seasons. After a team exhausts those option years, they have to keep a player on the active roster or remove him from the 40-man roster entirely (thereby allowing other clubs an opportunity to trade for or claim that player off waivers). However, for players who have accrued fewer than five full professional seasons — defined as years with at least ninety days on a major league or minor league active roster — teams may be granted a fourth option year.
Fourth options most often come into play for players who have missed a significant amount of time in their careers on account of injuries. McKay is no exception, as he has barely pitched at any level over the past two seasons. After missing all of 2020 and the first half of this season recovering from shoulder surgery, the southpaw suffered a flexor strain in August that ended his 2021 campaign after just seven minor league outings.
More from the American League:
- The 2021 season was a disappointment for Angels star Anthony Rendon, who was held to 249 plate appearances by three separate injuries. His season came to a close in early August, when he underwent surgery to repair a right hip impingement. Fortunately, it doesn’t seem that injury is expected to carry over into next season, as Rendon told Grant Paulsen and Kevin Frandsen of MLB Network Radio on SiriusXM (Twitter link) this afternoon that he intends to be ready for Spring Training. “That’s the gameplan,” Rendon said. “That was what kind of pushed us to get the surgery done sooner than later. We were dealing with it for the entire year, trying to figure out what was going on and figure out the best way to approach it. … Once we knew where we stood in the standings and whatnot, we needed to knock it out so I could have an entire offseason to be able to get ready for Spring Training. That’s the goal.” The ongoing issues with his hip could certainly offer an explanation for Rendon’s downturn in production. The typically-excellent hitter posted a slightly below-average .240/.329/.382 line, the worst showing of his career at the plate.
- For the first time in a decade, the Mariners will enter an offseason with some uncertainty at the hot corner. With the club set to buy out longtime third baseman Kyle Seager, Seattle could look to address the position outside the organization. Corey Brock of the Athletic explores the various possibilities, ranging from internal options like Ty France and Abraham Toro to a big-ticket free agent pursuit. Mariners president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto has spoken a few times about the team’s ability and desire to make some meaningful upgrades to the roster on the free agent market. Dipoto voiced a specific preference for “adaptable” players who have shown an ability to move around the diamond. Kris Bryant and Chris Taylor — each of whom Brock suggests as a speculative possibility for the M’s to target this winter — both have demonstrated the capacity to bounce between multiple positions, including third base.
Comment -
jrgum3SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-21-17
- 7005
#3095Boy in the 4 games Atlanta won they really shut down that powerful Astro lineup. That's impressive and Atlanta proved to be the better team. Really amazing since they did it without Acuna. Their front office deserves a lot of credit for this world series victory with all the shrewd moves they made after Acuna went down. Of course the players deserve credit too for staying the course after that terrible injury and believing they could still achieve their ultimate goal of a World Series championship.Comment -
JAKEPEAVY21BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 03-11-11
- 29263
#3096Congrats to the Braves!
On to next year...Comment -
Otters27BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-14-07
- 30750
#3097Max Fried was a star.
What were Braves odds after 162 games?Comment -
stevenashModerator
- 01-17-11
- 65433
#3098Is Soler's homerun ball still orbiting Neptune?Comment -
StallionSBR MVP
- 03-21-10
- 3616
#3100The Braves bullpen was great this season.Comment -
EmpireMakerSBR Posting Legend
- 06-18-09
- 15578
#3101Padres utilityman Jurickson Profar won’t opt out of his contract with the team, instead choosing to exercise his $6.5MM player option for the 2022 season, MLB Network’s Jon Heyman reports (Twitter link).
Profar’s free agent deal with the Padres last winter contains three guaranteed years, though Profar had opt-out clauses after both this season and the 2022 season. Opting out would have allowed Profar to pocket a $1MM buyout and then test the open market, though he will now receive a $6.5MM salary from the Padres in 2022, plus $1.5MM in remaining signing bonus money. Profar is set to earn $7.5MM in 2023 if he doesn’t opt out of that year, with another $1MM buyout attached. The two sides also have a $10MM mutual option on Profar’s services for the 2024 season ($1MM buyout).
There wasn’t much suspense behind Profar’s decision, as leaving $15.5MM on the table wouldn’t have been advisable considering Profar’s lackluster 2021 numbers. Profar hit .227/.329/.320 with four home runs over 412 plate appearances, and was a sub-replacement level player in the eyes of Fangraphs’ WAR metric (-0.7). While Profar had strong walk and strikeout rates, he simply didn’t make much hard contact, finishing in only the seventh percentile in hard-hit ball rate and barrel rate. Profar was further hampered by a pair of stints on the COVID-related injury list, which cost him around three weeks of action.
It seemed as if Profar was turning on the corner after a solid 2020 season, yet his struggles this year only added to his history of inconsistency at the big league level. Once considered the game’s top prospect during his time in the Rangers farm system, Profar hasn’t been able to put everything together, and his progress hasn’t been helped by a number of injuries along the way. After playing in parts of eight MLB seasons, Profar has only 4.6 fWAR and a .236/.320/.384 slash line to show for 2444 plate appearances.
This track record notwithstanding, Profar’s good 2020 season and his top-prospect reputation garnered him quite a bit of interest on the open market last year, and the Padres were willing to go to three years to retain him. That investment doesn’t look great one season into the deal, as while Profar was intended for something of a super-utility role in the first place, he doesn’t have a clear path to regular at-bats on next year’s Padres roster. There is still hope for a late breakout at age-29, and while Profar’s salary isn’t exorbitant by itself, San Diego is already pushing the luxury tax threshold even before making any offseason roster adds.Comment -
jrgum3SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-21-17
- 7005
#3102As a Giants fan its tough to see Buster Posey retire so abruptly after 12 years but I understand why he did it. He probably didn't want to sign an extension and become a broken down Catcher at the end of his career like so many do. So he went out after a really good season and I'm glad that at least he went out playing at a high level even though I'll miss not watching him play next year and in the years to come. He'll be tough for the Giants to replace that's one thing for sure.Comment -
Otters27BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 07-14-07
- 30750
#3103Buster Posey was a College World Series hero tooComment -
JAKEPEAVY21BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 03-11-11
- 29263
#3105Bye bye Buster, that is a blow to the Giants so I'm pleased to see that.Comment -
CrossSBR Hall of Famer
- 04-15-11
- 5777
#3106Braves bullpen was a weakness until the end of the season and post season.Comment -
EmpireMakerSBR Posting Legend
- 06-18-09
- 15578
#3107This year’s free agent market features a number of starters who could deepen a Major League team’s rotation. Beyond the abundance of former Cy Young Award winners and All-Stars, however, is a recently dominant but much less heralded name: Nick Martinez. Martinez, who has spent the past four seasons in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball, is slated to reach free agency next month and could draw major league interest, notes Jon Heyman of the MLB Network.
Martinez was an 18th-round pick by the Rangers in the 2011 draft who exceeded expectations by posting solid run prevention numbers up and down his minor league career. The starting pitcher’s steady production led to a 2014 Major League promotion that looked a lot like the ensuing three seasons of his Rangers tenure. Throughout his time in Texas, the right-hander followed this trend: average-ish ground-ball, walk and fly-ball rates, not nearly enough strikeouts, and too many home runs. Thanks to the sheer amount of contact Martinez allowed, opponents were able to hit a hearty .277/.343/.476 off him.
After a 2017 season that saw his ERA climb to new heights, Martinez was non-tendered by Texas. Several teams must’ve been dreaming on the chance to tap into Martinez’s upside, however, as the starting pitcher rebuffed multiple Major League offers and signed overseas with the NPB’s Nippon-Ham Fighters for a guaranteed $2.2MM. While his career abroad started promisingly, his next two seasons with the team saw his ERA and walk rates trend in the wrong direction.
This all leads us to the 2021 season where Martinez latched on with the SoftBank Hawks, also of NPB. The veteran’s performance for his third organization was, in a word, incredible. Across 149 innings, he stymied hitters, producing a 1.62 ERA, significantly slashing his home run rate, and striking out nearly a batter per inning. His 2021 performance was further bolstered on the world stage when he twirled 11 equally dominant innings with Team USA’s Olympic team. That success in NPB and international play should put the 31-year-old on some MLB teams’ radars, although Heyman hears that the Hawks are unsurprisingly expected to make an effort to keep him in Fukuoka.Comment -
jrgum3SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-21-17
- 7005
#3108Comment -
stevenashModerator
- 01-17-11
- 65433
#3109
Bullpens have replaced the starting rotation as the most important component of a teams pitching staff.Comment -
stevenashModerator
- 01-17-11
- 65433
#3111You can look this up but take my word, 2021 was a record low for starters that 'qualified' with at least 162 IP.
Just 39 starters in MLB this season pitched 162 innings, and no pitcher made more than 33 starts.
Back in the day, not that long ago starters made 40 starts per season.Comment -
jrgum3SBR Hall of Famer
- 07-21-17
- 7005
#3112Bullpens have become very important in the modern game with all the analytics. Managers are so quick to pull their starters and lean on guys that are filthy out of the pen. You can look back at all the champions of the 21st century and I'm pretty sure you'll find that they had one thing in common and that's a solid bullpen.Comment -
CrossSBR Hall of Famer
- 04-15-11
- 5777
#3113All bullpens have multiple guys with nasty strikeout pitches.Comment -
EmpireMakerSBR Posting Legend
- 06-18-09
- 15578
#3114The Phillies announced that six players — outfielders Odúbel Herrera and Travis Jankowski, infielder Ronald Torreyes, catcher Andrew Knapp and right-handers Ramón Rosso and J.D. Hammer — have all cleared outright waivers. Each member of that group has elected free agency.
Herrera is the most notable of this bunch, although it was apparent his time in the Philly organization was nearing its end when the team declined his option on Wednesday. He has fewer than six seasons of big league service, so he’d technically remained eligible for arbitration, but he was an obvious non-tender decision at that point. Rather than wait until next month’s non-tender deadline, the Phils will cut him loose and clear a roster spot a few weeks early.
The move officially brings to a close Herrera’s six-season tenure in Philadelphia. Selected out of the Rangers’ organization in the 2014 Rule 5 draft, the left-handed hitter offered strong production on both sides of the ball over his first few major league campaigns. The Phils rewarded him with a long-term extension in December 2016, but his production started to slip by 2018.
Herrera performed terribly for the first month and a half in 2019 before being arrested and charged with domestic assault. MLB suspended him for the remainder of that season, and Herrera spent all of last year in the minor leagues after being outrighted off the roster. He returned to the majors in 2021, serving as Philly’s primary center fielder and hitting a slightly below-average .260/.310/.416 over 492 plate appearances.
Knapp has been a career-long Phillie, appearing in the majors in each of the past five seasons. The switch-hitting backstop has worked primarily in a reserve capacity, mashing in a brief 2020 run before stumbling to a .152/.215/.214 mark over 159 trips to the plate this past season. Projected by MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz for a $1.2MM salary if tendered an arbitration contract, he’ll instead be let go as the Phils look elsewhere for a J.T. Realmuto backup.
Torreyes and Jankowski have bounced around the league as role players in recent seasons. Both players were arbitration-eligible, with Torreyes projected for a $1.6MM salary and Jankowski slated to make around $900K. The Phils will let both go and look elsewhere to fill their respective utility infielder and backup outfielder roles. Torreyes hit .242/.286/.346 in 344 plate appearances in 2021; Jankowski slashed .252/.364/.351 in 157 tallies at the dish.
Neither Rosso nor Hammer had been eligible for arbitration, but the front office decided to reallocate their spots on the 40-man roster. Rosso posted a 6.11 ERA/4.95 SIERA over 17 2/3 combined MLB innings between 2020-21. Hammer owns a 4.38 ERA/5.07 SIERA in 39 frames dating back to 2019.Comment -
JAKEPEAVY21BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 03-11-11
- 29263
#3115You can look this up but take my word, 2021 was a record low for starters that 'qualified' with at least 162 IP.
Just 39 starters in MLB this season pitched 162 innings, and no pitcher made more than 33 starts.
Back in the day, not that long ago starters made 40 starts per season.Comment
SBR Contests
Collapse
Top-Rated US Sportsbooks
Collapse
#1 BetMGM
4.8/5 BetMGM Bonus Code
#2 FanDuel
4.8/5 FanDuel Promo Code
#3 Caesars
4.8/5 Caesars Promo Code
#4 DraftKings
4.7/5 DraftKings Promo Code
#5 Fanatics
#6 bet365
4.7/5 bet365 Bonus Code
#7 Hard Rock
4.1/5 Hard Rock Bet Promo Code
#8 BetRivers
4.1/5 BetRivers Bonus Code