NEWS/RUMORS/AROUND MLB Thread

Discussion in 'Los Angeles DODGERS' started by irish, Apr 3, 2016.

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  1. ColoradoKidWitGame

    ColoradoKidWitGame DSP Legend Administrator

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    Such a stupid fucking suspension. MLB Radio just had someone come on and say that the drug doesn't even have any positive effects for a baseball player. It is used for rapid weight loss (guessing for guys to get shredded) and was proven to be in a cough syrup he took over the counter in the D.R.
     
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  2. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    really?
    didn't know that
    in that case i agree; it is a stupid suspension
    should have been a slap on the wrist
    50 games is excessive
     
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  3. Fall Winslow

    Fall Winslow McRib

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    Yuuup, it is what it is unless they bring in that major league ready elder Gourriel or pull off a trade of some sort.
    Calhoun is disappointing me thus far at AA, would love to see them add Lourdes to the young 2B crew.

    You know it's bad offensively, or at least that our confidence is shaken, when we're thinking about guys with zero MLB experience sparking them and getting them over the top.
    I know we agreed that Yuli Gourriel could be the best hitter on the team before the season even started, but right about now that's looking like a pretty solid projection
     
  4. ColoradoKidWitGame

    ColoradoKidWitGame DSP Legend Administrator

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    They reduced it from 80 to 50 because it was proven that he took it on accident. 15 games is reasonable, but yeah 50 is excessive.
     
  5. Gebbeth

    Gebbeth DSP Legend

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    When Raul Mondesi's name came up, I was first thinking "that lazy ass is STILL playing? He must weigh 400 lbs by now."

    Then I saw the Jr.
     
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  6. fsudog21

    fsudog21 DSP Legend

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    Count me as a skeptic.

    I've seen these MLB ready Cubans before.
     
  7. Fall Winslow

    Fall Winslow McRib

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    I don't blame you, but some do work out
     
  8. BigDaddyKaine

    BigDaddyKaine DSP Legend

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    Not just the games suspended being excessive but this will ruin his rep as a cheater, forever.
     
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  9. THINKBLUE

    THINKBLUE DSP Gigolo

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    Dodgers’ offensive struggles tied to lack of homers, launch angle

    Trayce Thompson
    ‘s walk-off home run was a welcome sight on Tuesday night. Any time the Dodgers hit a home run, it’s a welcome sight (no matter what Steve Lyons might try to tell you). But the Dodgers haven’t been as prominent in the home run department in 2016, and it’s impacting their overall offensive production.

    Last season, the Dodgers had a triple slash of .269/.351/.488 through their first 33 games. This season, it’s .241/.314/.381. It’s been even worse in the last three weeks. That’s when I wrote about the Dodgers’ offense and how it was scoring. They were averaging 4.7 runs per game through their first 14 games, and doing it by not hitting home runs (just eight).

    Since then, the offense has been quite anemic:
    • 19 games
    • 67 runs
    • 3.5 runs per game
    • 16 home runs
    • 29 doubles (five of which came on Tuesday night)
    The home runs per game numbers have increased from the first 14 games, but it hasn’t resulted in more runs being scored — mostly because they are sporting a .310 on-base percentage in that time (.321 in the first 14 games). But the home run numbers are still down dramatically from last season. The Dodgers had 53 home runs through 33 games last season.

    Last season, some wondered whether the Dodgers were hitting too many home runs, which is just silly. I wrote about their reliance on the dinger to score runs in May of last year.

    “The Dodgers are leading the major leagues in home runs with 47. They’re on pace for 272 home runs. They cannot keep up this pace (right?), so the amount of runs their scoring from home runs is somewhat alarming.

    The team has 247 hits, 47 of which have gone over the fence. That’s the highest percentage of hits-to-home runs in baseball (19 percent). That number was at 9.1 percent last year (134 home runs). They have an almost identical HR/FB percentage of 19.3 percent, which also leads the majors. And since they’re hitting so many home runs, it only stands to reason they’re leading the majors in percentage of runs from home runs at 74 runs 51.7 percent. More than half of their runs have come via the long ball.”


    The Dodgers are tied for 28th in baseball with the Phillies in home runs per fly balls at 9.1 percent — well ahead of the last-place Braves (3.3 percent, based on their eighthomers). In 2015, they had a 13 percent home run per fly ball rate (sixth in MLB). The problem could be the fact they aren’t hitting the ball far enough when it is hit in the air. They rank 25th in baseball as a team in with an average batted distance on fly balls of 313 feet. Last season, they averaged 314.1 feet per fly ball. Obviously not a big difference, but they were hitting the ball farther when average distance is filtered for hits. The average distance number jumps to 352.6 feet — still, just 22nd in baseball. It was 360.9 feet last season (ninth in baseball). They aren’t hitting the ball in the air as much this season (32.1 percent) as they did last season (35.8 percent), so that makes the average distance stand out even more.

    Joc Pederson is doing his part, as he leads the Dodgers with six home runs and a 26.1 HR/FB%. His platoon mate Thompson has four homers and a 25 HR/FB%. Adrian Gonzalez (12.5 percent) is the only other Dodger with a HR/FB percentage better than 10 percent, and he has just three home runs on the season.

    What I’m getting at is the Dodgers need to hit more home runs (#analysis). Or at least start hitting their fly balls farther. The problem isn’t with their exit velocity, either. Since April 20, their average exit velocity as a team is 90.7 MPH — fourth-best in baseball. Fun fact: Clayton Kershaw has the fourth-highest exit velocity on the team since that time (91.8 MPH).

    The issue is with the launch angle. The Dodgers are 28th in baseball since April 20 with an average launch angle of 8.2 degrees. That means they’re hitting a lot of ground balls. Through April 19, their average launch angle was 11.1 degrees (16th-highest in MLB). On the season, it works out to 9.4 degrees (25th in the league). In 2015, they were seventh in baseball with an average launch angle of 11.7 degrees (i.e., a line drive-hitting team).

    Here’s a breakdown of how the Dodger hitters have hit the ball in 2016 (BBE = batted ball events).

    Fly ball (25-50 degrees)
    Austin Barnes
    : 8 BBE, 36.2 degrees
    Scott Van Slyke: 8 BBE, 25.7 degrees
    – (Obviously small sample size)

    Line drive (10-25 degrees)
    Joc Pederson
    : 48 BBE, 19.1 degrees
    Justin Turner: 81 BBE, 17 degrees
    Yasiel Puig: 79 BBE, 12.6 degrees
    Enrique Hernandez: 46 BBE, 11.6 degrees

    Ground ball (less than 10 degrees)
    Chase Utley
    : 71 BBE, 8.3 degrees
    Trayce Thompson: 39 BBE, 7.2 degrees
    A.J. Ellis: 42 BBE, 7 degrees
    Carl Crawford: 30 BBE, 6.8 degrees
    Corey Seager: 93 BBE, 6.1 degrees
    Adrian Gonzalez: 89 BBE, 5.9 degrees
    Yasmani Grandal: 43 BBE, 2.5 degrees
    Howie Kendrick: 59 BBE, -0.3 degrees

    The Dodgers don’t have many players with elite speed on the bases, so hitting the ball on the ground isn’t going to do much good. Everyone in the ground ball category is down from last season, as all but Kendrick (2.8 degrees) were line drive (10-25 degrees) hitters in 2015. I’m not sure why that is. It might not be Turner Ward‘s coaching, as the Diamondbacks had an identical 11.7 degree launch angle the Dodgers had in 2015. Guys are swinging down on the ball, and it’s resulting in more grounders (47.9 percent, fifth-most in baseball) and fewer runs scored.

    While the Dodgers are hitting the ball hard, they’re hitting it into the ground. Without elite speed, that isn’t going to be too effective. Raising the launch angle for specific players (Gonzalez, Grandal and Seager, namely) could help the Dodgers improve their run production going forward.

    Or, you know, just hit more dingers.
     
  10. Doughty8

    Doughty8 DSP Legend

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    ^What? LOL. So a higher BBE is good, bad or indifferent?
     
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  11. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    Arrieta hints he’s worth more than Strasburg
    Cubs ace says he won't give Cubs hometown discount
    by Jesse Rogers | ESPN Staff Writer — 20 minutes ago

    CHICAGO -- Reigning Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta on Wednesday hinted that he's worth more than the $175 million deal given to Stephen Strasburg and said he's not ready to give a hometown discount to stay with the Chicago Cubs.

    "I'll let you judge that," Arrieta told reporters Wednesday morning about what he believes his market to be. "Just look at the numbers."

    Strasburg, who signed his seven-year extension with the Washington Nationals on Tuesday, has never had a sub-3.00 ERA over a full season of starts, though he's 5-0 with a 2.76 mark right now.

    Arrieta, meanwhile, has seen his ERA improve dramatically over his three seasons with the Cubs, going from 3.66 in 2013 to 2.53 in 2014 to 1.77 as he won the National League Cy Young Award last season. That trend has continued so far this season as he's gotten off to a 6-0 record with a 1.13 ERA.

    "That's why starting pitching is so valuable," said Arrieta, whose agent is Scott Boras, who also represents Strasburg. "There's not many guys that can pitch at the top of the rotation floating around the league."

    Arrieta, whose ERA is a measly 0.92 over his past 27 starts, is making $10.7 million and has one year left of arbitration before he can become a free agent after the 2017 season. The Cubs have won his past 20 regular-season starts.

    "The misconception is that Scott wants everyone to go to free agency," Arrieta said of Boras. "I made it clear I like Chicago. I think everyone knows that. If I had it my way, I'd stay here. That's just one side of the story. We'll see."

    When asked whether he'd give a hometown discount to the Cubs, Arrieta flatly said "no" while shaking his head.

    First baseman Anthony Rizzo signed a team-friendly deal (7 years, $41 million) with the Cubs in 2013, but that came years before he was eligible for free agency.

    Arrieta said "aces get 7 years" -- just as Strasburg got -- so think of that as a starting point. And think $200 million as one, as well.

    "Financially I'm fine, regardless," Arrieta said. "You want to be paid in respect to how your peers are paid. I don't think that changes with any guy you ask. It happens around baseball every year."

    Arrieta's comparables are more likely to be David Price (7 years, $217 million) or Max Scherzer (7 years, $210 million), who is also a Boras client. Both won the Cy Young Award before signing huge free-agent deals with the Boston Red Sox and the Nationals, respectively.

    As for the Cubs' opinion of how Strasburg's deal might affect Arrieta's situation, team president Theo Epstein is playing it close to the vest.

    "You pay attention to everything that goes on in the game, but it doesn't impact us too much," Epstein said Tuesday afternoon. "Obviously, it will impact markets and we have to operate in markets, but it is what it is."

    Arrieta said that he's open to the sides talking, even in-season, but that a deal doesn't seem imminent.

    "Most of the focus has to stay on what we're trying to accomplish today," Arrieta said. "If we keep winning, those kinds of things work themselves out in time. If they want to talk, they know where I'm at and we can get something going ...

    "In a perfect world, I prefer it be done quickly. Let's get it over with and go play."
     
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  12. Fall Winslow

    Fall Winslow McRib

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    In a perfect world Arrieta would throw a 20,000MPH fastball across the country and nail Crawford before tonight's game
     
  13. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    i like what you did there
    1 MPH for each one of carl's illegitimate childern
     
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  14. carolinabluedodger

    carolinabluedodger DSP Legend

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  15. lastatman

    lastatman DSP Legend Staff Member Moderator

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    Damn, Howie has a negative launch angle. That almost sounds like a condition for a blue pill.
     
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  16. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    lol
    he could walk across the country and still nail agon
     
  17. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    carl had a very positive launch angle back in the day
     
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  18. Fall Winslow

    Fall Winslow McRib

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    Captain Nemo has taken the challenge of searching for all 20,000 of CC's kids
     
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  19. rube

    rube DSP Legend Staff Member Administrator

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    A bad hip will turn anyone in their prime into an old man.
    I can relate.
    You have to adjust your launch angle.
    Now get off my lawn.
     
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  20. Fall Winslow

    Fall Winslow McRib

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    Bad hips...reminds me of Kemp
     
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