aggietony2010 said:gigem1223 said:
Too many players pressing and it's mostly the vets.
The script says Adolis swings on 3 straight out of the zone.
aggietony2010 said:gigem1223 said:
Too many players pressing and it's mostly the vets.
The script says Adolis swings on 3 straight out of the zone.
I disagree.rbtexan said:I'm actually more in agreement with Proposition Joe on this.DallasAg 94 said:Perez has the stuff to be a 2/3. His issue was always falling apart when he got negativity rolling. An error, or a bad pitch for a HR would become 5+ runs in a game. I think we all saw his ability to limit the damage last year and there were comments about it (if only by me. )Proposition Joe said:
Or it's very simply that he's an average pitcher that had an anomaly year last season.
Even with the career year last season, he has a career ERA+ of 100.
He's a 4.5ish ERA, back of the rotation pitcher. There's value in that, but there's no magic approach Maddux can teach him or the like.
I think 2022 was more along the lines of what he is capable. You look at those 3 games in 2023 and that's 19ER in 11.2 IP. The other 10 games he is 18ER in 59.2 IP which is a 2.72 ERA. 77% of his outings (10/13) were really good.
We'll see where he is tonight and how he does. If his splits continue, maybe you look at him as a Home SP.
Years & years ago, I bought a giant book (probably 4 inches thick or better) that had the stats of every player who ever made the major leagues...Baseball Almanac I think it was called. At any rate, I went through the entire book and discovered players I had never heard of who had either really great seasons or careers. Hal Trosky for example looked like he was going to be a superstar and then faded - I found out later it was because of severe migraine headaches.
In looking at the historical stats, you'd be amazed how many players you never heard of who had one great season, maybe two - usually either their first couple of seasons, or later in their career. But almost everyone of them slid back to their statistical norms. A couple of Rangers examples are George Wright and Kevin Elster. Wright started out like gangbusters and faded quickly. Elster came over late in his career and had one magical season that he never replicated.
What I did NOT find was many players who put up mediocre stats for the majority of their career, and then somehow found themselves in their 30s and elevated their game substantially. There are, of course, exceptions - knuckleball pitchers for one, and former Ranger Jamie Moyer was another. But for the most part, historically speaking, what a player does is what he is.
That's why I'm inclined to believe last season was an anomaly and the Perez we're seeing this year is who he is. Hopefully he'll prove me wrong, but the preponderance of historical stats lead me to think otherwise.
aggietony2010 said:
Someone want to tell Brien Rea (post game anchor) that our lead is not dissipating.
Maybe baseball isn't for you.Grapesoda2525 said:
The Rangers didn't show up again. They are pathetic. To bad we can't bring up the AAA team for the next couple of games and send this whole roster down
Quote:
What was weird about this game is it seemed like whenever we got any runners on base, the home plate umpire expanded the strike zone by 2 or 3x its normal size.
We aren't playing great right now, but home plate umpires have been really hurting us. It seems like we've been swinging at literally everything lately, but the few times we take a pitch and it's pretty much as low as your foot. What do you expect these hitters to think?
Can't put it all on the umps, but I had no real complaints about the umpires in the TB series. We just got beat and had bad matchups. The umpires for the angels series and the one tonight all went in dry and hard on us. Very ridiculous.
I just want to get to the road trip asap. This team needs a change of scenery and maybe they'll start hitting. Scoring 1 run at home is pathetic.
Quote:
The Rangers didn't show up again. They are pathetic. To bad we can't bring up the AAA team for the next couple of games and send this whole roster down
DallasAg 94 said:Maybe baseball isn't for you.Grapesoda2525 said:
The Rangers didn't show up again. They are pathetic. To bad we can't bring up the AAA team for the next couple of games and send this whole roster down
DallasAg 94 said:I disagree.rbtexan said:I'm actually more in agreement with Proposition Joe on this.DallasAg 94 said:Perez has the stuff to be a 2/3. His issue was always falling apart when he got negativity rolling. An error, or a bad pitch for a HR would become 5+ runs in a game. I think we all saw his ability to limit the damage last year and there were comments about it (if only by me. )Proposition Joe said:
Or it's very simply that he's an average pitcher that had an anomaly year last season.
Even with the career year last season, he has a career ERA+ of 100.
He's a 4.5ish ERA, back of the rotation pitcher. There's value in that, but there's no magic approach Maddux can teach him or the like.
I think 2022 was more along the lines of what he is capable. You look at those 3 games in 2023 and that's 19ER in 11.2 IP. The other 10 games he is 18ER in 59.2 IP which is a 2.72 ERA. 77% of his outings (10/13) were really good.
We'll see where he is tonight and how he does. If his splits continue, maybe you look at him as a Home SP.
Years & years ago, I bought a giant book (probably 4 inches thick or better) that had the stats of every player who ever made the major leagues...Baseball Almanac I think it was called. At any rate, I went through the entire book and discovered players I had never heard of who had either really great seasons or careers. Hal Trosky for example looked like he was going to be a superstar and then faded - I found out later it was because of severe migraine headaches.
In looking at the historical stats, you'd be amazed how many players you never heard of who had one great season, maybe two - usually either their first couple of seasons, or later in their career. But almost everyone of them slid back to their statistical norms. A couple of Rangers examples are George Wright and Kevin Elster. Wright started out like gangbusters and faded quickly. Elster came over late in his career and had one magical season that he never replicated.
What I did NOT find was many players who put up mediocre stats for the majority of their career, and then somehow found themselves in their 30s and elevated their game substantially. There are, of course, exceptions - knuckleball pitchers for one, and former Ranger Jamie Moyer was another. But for the most part, historically speaking, what a player does is what he is.
That's why I'm inclined to believe last season was an anomaly and the Perez we're seeing this year is who he is. Hopefully he'll prove me wrong, but the preponderance of historical stats lead me to think otherwise.
You can't compare Hal Trosky... a guy with 2 appearances and 3.0 IP with a 6.00 ERA. He was 44-30 in the minors and played in the '50s. The height of the mound changed in the '70s so, comparing pitchers before and after is very difficult.
When it comes to modern day SPs... there are hundreds of SPs that don't make their MLB debut until they are 25-26.
Consider Colby Lewis who failed in MLB with the Rangers from age 22-27 with a 6.71 ERA. Went 3.93 from age 30-32.
Verlander @32 had a career 3.52 ERA. He is a 2.87 since with 136 GS and over 876 IP. He was 23 when he had his 1st full season.
Owen White at 23, just had a cup of coffee. By his age, Martin had already 213 IP with a 4.13 ERA in MLB. Leiter, Rocker, et al are still struggling in the Minors.
If Owen White were to remain in Arlington.... he likely improves over his 1st G, but he may be 2 years away from making the rotation. Think about what his ERA would be.
Modern day pitching, it isn't unusual, IMO, for a SP to be 30... 31 years old before he puts everything together.
I agree Perez' season last year may have been an anomaly... we'll see, I guess.
DallasAg 94 said:Actually, he is 4.07 in the Minors.Proposition Joe said:DallasAg 94 said:Perez has the stuff to be a 2/3. His issue was always falling apart when he got negativity rolling. An error, or a bad pitch for a HR would become 5+ runs in a game. I think we all saw his ability to limit the damage last year and there were comments about it (if only by me. )Proposition Joe said:
Or it's very simply that he's an average pitcher that had an anomaly year last season.
Even with the career year last season, he has a career ERA+ of 100.
He's a 4.5ish ERA, back of the rotation pitcher. There's value in that, but there's no magic approach Maddux can teach him or the like.
I think 2022 was more along the lines of what he is capable. You look at those 3 games in 2023 and that's 19ER in 11.2 IP. The other 10 games he is 18ER in 59.2 IP which is a 2.72 ERA. 77% of his outings (10/13) were really good.
We'll see where he is tonight and how he does. If his splits continue, maybe you look at him as a Home SP.
A lot of pitchers show the stuff to be a 2/3 but can't ever consistently harness it. That's Perez.
He's pitched almost 1400 big league innings as a 4.5ish ERA pitcher.
He pitched hundreds of AA/AAA innings as mostly a 4.5ish ERA pitcher.
And you've been on here long enough to know Martin has been well ahead of typical age at every stop.
At 17, he pitched in Spokane of the NWL. It is a Fall league where college kids drafted in June go to play. He was the 2nd youngest player ever in the league, 2nd only to King Felix. Typical age is 22-23.
At 18, he was pitching in Frisco @ AA.
He was 21.84, when he made his MLB debut.
@ 22, after his 1st full season of MLB (20GS, 3.62, 124.1 IP) he signed a deal that covered his 2 Serf years and his 3 Arb years. He got a $1M signing bonus and a committment from JD that they would help him do everything politically necessary to get his family out of Venezuela. The $1M, from what I understood would help him pay for lawyer fees.
So, I would not call his path typical. And yes, I've protective of him. I followed him from Spokane all the way through.