Author Topic: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing  (Read 116161 times)

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Offline blue911

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1500 on: January 24, 2010, 12:48:55 pm »
BTW last night I had a dream where Jordan Zimmermann died. That was odd.

What did his pet squid wear to the funeral?

Offline PatsNats28

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1501 on: January 24, 2010, 08:35:10 pm »
What did his pet squid wear to the funeral?

Better yet, did a piano fall on him?

Offline cmdterps44

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1502 on: January 24, 2010, 08:39:04 pm »
:rofl: :rofl:

Offline hammondsnats

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1503 on: January 25, 2010, 10:28:04 am »
please sign Ben Sheets

Offline UMDNats

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1504 on: January 25, 2010, 10:29:40 am »
please sign Ben Sheets

don't get your hopes up

Offline hammondsnats

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1505 on: January 25, 2010, 10:33:42 am »
don't get your hopes up

i'm just trying to get a conversation back on topic.  And btw, no I can't make it, but wanted to support your show group.  Big game tomorrow.

Okay ... now back on topic. 

Sheets = sign him.

Offline Minty Fresh

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1506 on: January 25, 2010, 11:19:07 am »
i'm just trying to get a conversation back on topic.  And btw, no I can't make it, but wanted to support your show group.  Big game tomorrow.

Okay ... now back on topic. 

Sheets = sign him.


+1

Rizzo:  it's a sign.  You must sign Sheets.  I actually AGREE with hammondsnats on something.  DO IT RIZZO.  Bring peace to wnff!

Offline Obed_Marsh

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1507 on: January 25, 2010, 12:25:25 pm »
Is there anyone who doesn't want to sign Sheets?

Offline I can Throw

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1508 on: January 25, 2010, 12:30:08 pm »
Sheets - depends on the money.

Offline JCA-CrystalCity

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1509 on: January 25, 2010, 01:02:07 pm »
Is there anyone who doesn't want to sign Sheets?

Tom Boswell.  He prefers Jarrod Washburn.

Offline KnorrForYourMoney

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1510 on: January 25, 2010, 01:31:49 pm »
Tom Boswell.  He prefers Jarrod Washburn.
lol, well Boswell isn't known for evaluating players in a meaningful way. :?

Offline JMW IV

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1511 on: January 25, 2010, 01:41:45 pm »
Tom Boswell.  He prefers Jarrod Washburn.

wait till Boz's next column. He'll endorse Sheets then for sure.

Offline blue911

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1512 on: January 25, 2010, 01:47:13 pm »
wait till Boz's next column. He'll endorse Sheets then for sure.

 :crackup:

Offline JCA-CrystalCity

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1513 on: January 25, 2010, 03:09:48 pm »
Excerpts from his chat last Thursday:

Quote
So, they need to get busy and nail down Jon Garland, Jarrod Washburn or Vincente Padilla (not my favorite). They went to a Ben Sheets workout, but he still wants star money, which the Nats won't give. The "last resort" is always Livan hernandez, but I don't think they want to go that path.

I'd go hard for Garland (ultra-consistent but 4.41 career ERA) or Washburn (11th in A.L. in ERA). What's fun about both of them is that they have spent their whole careers in the A.L. __the varsity league. You figure all their numbers will get better in the N.L. facing pitchers at the plate. Probably knocks 25 to 50 points off the ERA of either. Garland's six starts for the Dodgers late last season, his first in the N.L., produced a 2.72 ERA.

Quote
Washington, DC: Tom - You're response above about Garland / Washbrun / Padilla / Sheets suggests that you prefer the stable, predictable vet (Garland and Washburn) as the last starting pitcher. You don't seem as enthused about maybe taking on a riskier vet (e.g., Wang, Bedard, Smoltz, Martinez) with better peak performance. With Olsen on board, and several 4th / 5th system guys on board, do we really need the 200 IP more than the potential better performance in the 3d/4th slot?

Tom Boswell: If you want a one-hour "fun" project, go to baseball-reference.com or your fav site and look at the rotations of every team in '09. If you want to be even a close-to-.500 team (let alone good), you absolutely have to have three stable starting pitchers who can give you 600 innings with a 4.00-to-4.30 ERA.

You don't come to camp hopin' and wishin'.

The Nats now have Lannan and Marquis. That is IT. Nobody else counts. Stammen, Martin and the rest are projects, possibilities, the same old Nats song and dance. Olsen may come back to his nold form, but probably won't, imo.

Believe me, even after adding a third starter on a 1-2 year deal, the Nats have plenty of rotation room to accomodate anybody who wants to Arrive On The Scene. And pitchers get hurt every year. But Lannan, Marquis and Garland (so far) haven't.

In '11, you're going to have Strasburg and maybe Zimmermann and Detwiler. That's why you probably hope for a one-year deal on your last rotation piece for '10. But "too much starting pitching" would be a ridiculous worry for a team that gave up the most runs in baseball last year.

Also, there's no high end on Martinez, Smoltz. They're ancient. Bedard has never stayed healthy or been popular on any team. Though he'd interest me the most. He's smart, silent and arrogant. I can live with that.


By the way - for fun, I'll amend this post later, but I think it is closer to 50/50 on +.500 teams from 2009 that got 600 IP from 3 pitchers. 

Offline PANatsFan

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1514 on: January 25, 2010, 03:11:31 pm »
Boswell ratted him out. NotLD is Scott Olsen :lol:

Offline Evolution33

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1515 on: January 25, 2010, 03:55:31 pm »
Boswell ratted him out. NotLD is Scott Olsen :lol:

I think he meant to use an i instead of and all and Olsen is looking to return to noid form. and we all know we should avoid the noid.

Offline UMDNats

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1516 on: January 25, 2010, 04:54:38 pm »
Quote
Ken_Rosenthal
#Nats sign former #Braves lefty Chuck James to minor-league contract. Missed all of last season recovering from extensive shoulder surgery.

Offline PANatsFan

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1517 on: January 25, 2010, 04:55:58 pm »
I like Chuck James actually. Good AAA depth.

Offline sportsfan882

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1518 on: January 25, 2010, 04:59:41 pm »
Excluding his 2008 numbers when he was injured he has a 4.00 ERA and 22-14 record in 286 IP.

Still, he has had some serious injuries since then and may not be the same.

Offline sportsfan882

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1519 on: January 25, 2010, 05:33:43 pm »
Quote
Ken_Rosenthal: Nats add another reliever - RHP Tyler Walker on 1-yr deal pending physical.

Offline sportsfan882

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1520 on: January 25, 2010, 05:35:38 pm »
Tyler Walker last year with Phils:

35.1 IP 31 H 12 ER 4 HR 9 BB 27 K (2-1, 3.06 ERA, 1.13 WHIP)

Offline houston-nat

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1521 on: January 25, 2010, 05:40:01 pm »
Tyler Walker last year with Phils:

35.1 IP 31 H 12 ER 4 HR 9 BB 27 K (2-1, 3.06 ERA, 1.13 WHIP)
Whoa! Is he really as good as the numbers say, and if so, how come I've never heard of him?

Offline imref

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1522 on: January 25, 2010, 05:42:00 pm »
So put him with Zimm & Dunn and we'll have Tyler Walker and the All Stars?

Offline houston-nat

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1523 on: January 25, 2010, 05:42:11 pm »
Tyler Walker's nickname is "The Gobbler."

Quote
His velocity was the lowest of his career in 2009, but the right-hander still averaged 91 MPH on his fastball.  He also features a low-80s slider and a changeup with nice velocity differential in the high-70s.

In 35.1 innings with Philadelphia last season, Walker posted a 3.06 ERA.  His decreased velocity equated to more control and fewer strikeouts.  Opposing batters also only managed to hit .237 off him.  That opposing batting average was aided a bit by a .271 BABIP, but the low batting average has been a recent trend.  Walker has not allowed opposing hitters to bat more than .238 against him since 2006.

This recent low opposing batting average is likely due to his shift in approach on the mound.

Like most pitchers with an above-average fastball, Walker used to rely on his fastball and supplement it with a slider and changeup.  Recently, however, his fastball percentage has dropped below 50%.  The percentage of sliders is up dramatically.  With the uptick in sliders thrown, the opposing batting average has plummeted from .274 in 2006 to .238 in 2008.
http://community.sportsbubbler.com/blogs/bernies_crew/archive/2009/11/17/tyler-walker-an-attractive-minor-league-option.aspx

Quote
While Walker has never given an explanation for the nickname's origins, former Cal team captain Jonathan Petke says the nickname started in college, according to his account given to the University's student paper, the Daily Californian April 15, 1996 Issue. Apparently, as Walker was making the transition from catcher to relief pitching, and fighting nerves, Walker would take a shot of Wild Turkey (bourbon) whiskey before jogging down to the bullpen. Walker had played the large majority of his 10 previous years of organized baseball behind the dish, and relieving took some adjusting. Walker recorded one save and maintained a 3.58 ERA that season.


Offline UMDNats

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Re: 2010 Offseason Wheeling and Dealing
« Reply #1524 on: January 25, 2010, 05:48:26 pm »