Farmer1906 said:
I am weirdly excited to see how the ticket prices drop. Right now Stub Hub has 897 listings and Seat Geek has 704. The cheapest to get in (single) is still over 1K. I am willing to bet it drops by half before the kick.
That's why I always meet friends. Save the games with you know who for the A's or Angels.The Porkchop Express said:
Yeah ticket buying is just getting over the mental barrier of FOMO. And it's a lot easier if it's you and your friends, not you and your family because other people (you know who I mean) get their anxiety all over you when you don't have the tickets in hand. Every minute that the clock ticks closer to kickoff or first pitch or whatever is one second closer to the secondary market people having a worthless piece of paper (or digital image) in their possession. You just have to be patient.
Tier 7: Three Cys is an automatic ticket inQuote:
You can't compare the way today's starters are used to the days of Bob Gibson, because you can barely compare the way starters are used to the days of CC Sabathia, and he only retired in 2019. You also can't pretend no starting pitchers are ever getting into the Hall again, either.
Tier 8: What if they hit 500 homers?Quote:
if you get three, you are in, and is it that hard to see either deGrom or Snell putting together just one more tremendously good season? And if they do, can you really keep them out?
Tier 9: What about the relievers?Quote:
The only hitters to ever hit 500 homers and not get into Cooperstown are either not yet eligible (Albert Pujols, Miguel Cabrera) or closely identified with the turn-of-the-century PED era. Otherwise, it's long been a guaranteed ticket, and it's not out of reach for either one.
Tier 10: The young right-now starsQuote:
You thought evaluating starters was getting hard? Now let's figure out what to do with relievers, given that saves also don't mean what they used to, though some voters still rely on them.
Ummm... how the hell does 26-year-old Kyle Tucker (16.3 WAR) not make this group?Quote:
The oldest of these players are Devers and Alvarez, who will play this season at 27 years old, so it goes without saying that this entire group has a ton of work to do. Then again, if you're eyeballing a list of "best young talents in the game," setting aside the Soto/Acuña deity-level tier, this would be a good place to start, wouldn't it?
Quote:
If you want to replace Holliday and Chourio with Paul Skenes and Dylan Crews, feel free to. If you think that Wyatt Langford and Colt Keith get their first taste of the Majors on their way to all-time great careers, maybe you're right. The point here isn't that this trio is certain to start Hall of Fame careers this year, because the odds are obviously against all three of them. The point is that we know they're highly talented players who should make their debuts in 2024, and we know that each year, there's a handful of players like Beltr back in 1998 who do just that.
Marvin said:
I hope the Doyers spend another $100 million this year and force MLB to fix that deferred crap. And that they lose in the first round, of course.
I'm bringing $300 and a willingness to walk away.Farmer1906 said:
I am weirdly excited to see how the ticket prices drop. Right now Stub Hub has 897 listings and Seat Geek has 704. The cheapest to get in (single) is still over 1K. I am willing to bet it drops by half before the kick.
It caught me off guard at first too. But all he's saying is tier 2 are in but we don't know if they're going to be playing in 2024 or not. The point of the list was to identify 40 players playing in 2024.Beat40 said:
I disagree with the assessment of Kershaw. I think he should be in the absolute category despite the post-season issues.
Gotcha. Misread the way it was written.Farmer1906 said:It caught me off guard at first too. But all he's saying is tier 2 are in but we don't know if they're going to be playing in 2024 or not. The point of the list was to identify 40 players playing in 2024.Beat40 said:
I disagree with the assessment of Kershaw. I think he should be in the absolute category despite the post-season issues.
Farmer1906 said:
6. Joey Votto (59 WAR)
NEWS: The St. Louis Cardinals are set to announce the hiring of Chaim Bloom to the front office in an advisory role, sources tell The Athletic. The Cardinals had been linked to the former Red Sox exec dating back to the beginning of the offseason. #STLCards
— Katie Woo (@katiejwoo) January 8, 2024
We're just a tick above a month away from pitchers and catchers reporting. I hope we'd be willing to swoop in at the last minute if the market continues to stay slow. If we can get him at <20 M (plus some incentivies) for ~4 years, I think it would be worth it. We'd lose a pick thanks to the QO (probably hurting his market too), but we'd more than make it up by trading away Bregman.Quote:
One club, in considering free-agent third baseman Matt Chapman, researched the question: What was the biggest free-agent contract for a position player who batted under .250 with fewer than 20 homers in his platform season?
Those numbers apply to Chapman, who batted .240 with 17 homers for the Toronto Blue Jays last season. And the answer to the club's question turned out to be Curtis Granderson, who signed a four-year, $60 million deal with the Mets after batting .232 with 18 homers for the New York Yankees in 2013.
Chapman, entering his age-31 season, almost certainly will get more than $60 million, and not simply because of inflation. He is a four-time Gold Glove winner who has averaged 149 games in his five full seasons. And while he batted .205 with a .659 OPS after April 30, in part due to a right-middle finger issue that hampered him in the final two months, his hard-hit and exit-velocity numbers for the season nonetheless were among the best in the league.
https://www.chron.com/sports/astros/article/zach-dezenzo-astros-alex-bregman-18592087.phpQuote:
"Dezenzo is one internal option [to replace Bregman] with a green arrow up entering 2024," Pontes wrote. "A classic Astros late-round steal, Dezenzo hit .304/.383/.531 with 18 home runs and 22 stolen bases across High-A and Double-A in 2023. His profile is driven by his plus-plus raw power and ability to drive the ball out to any part of the field. Dezenzo's 107.9 mph 90th percentile exit velocity was in the top 99th percentile among minor league hitters.
"Theres some swing and miss in Dezenzo's game, but he balances approach, contact and plus-plus power well."
Giants emerge as favorites to land LHP Shōta Imanaga, per @Feinsand pic.twitter.com/1ISK0y1w2R
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) January 8, 2024
$205. No idea what they run on the open market, but for some reason of all the swag they had there Wagner was the one I had to have.Jackal99 said:
How much did that set you back? Looks nice. Congrats!
projected 2024 wins right now
— Codify (@CodifyBaseball) January 8, 2024
(via fangraphs, rounded):
98 Braves
97
96
95
94
93
92 Dodgers
91
90 Astros
89 Yankees
88
87
86 Blue Jays
85 Phillies, Cardinals, Mariners, Rays, Twins
84 Mets
83 Orioles
82 Marlins, Diamondbacks, Rangers, Red Sox
81
80 Padres, Brewers, Guardians,…
Farmer1906 said:projected 2024 wins right now
— Codify (@CodifyBaseball) January 8, 2024
(via fangraphs, rounded):
98 Braves
97
96
95
94
93
92 Dodgers
91
90 Astros
89 Yankees
88
87
86 Blue Jays
85 Phillies, Cardinals, Mariners, Rays, Twins
84 Mets
83 Orioles
82 Marlins, Diamondbacks, Rangers, Red Sox
81
80 Padres, Brewers, Guardians,…
AL Postseason would look like this assuming tiebreaker is in order.
1. Astros
BYE
4. Blue Jays
5. Mariners
2. Yankees
BYE
3. Twins
6. Rays