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Spanky__99

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Everything posted by Spanky__99

  1. I'm of the pleasantly surprised group, if he could only figure his command his ceiling would be high, but...
  2. Or sign Montgomery or Snell, but I've read the new ownership might impact that decision, IDK, seems like a no brainer to me.
  3. I'm seeing him as the Whit replacement, and believe he's a very good replacement, hope it pans out as the projections spit out.
  4. Concerning Big Nate, I've all but lost faith in him being a multi-inning fireball stopper ala Mark Eichorn or something, just surprise me at this point kid, the control is getting old hat.
  5. Of course he would, he's a starter man? At least Max is very informative and open to learn. Now you can...
  6. Neat.
  7. Manoah, Kirk and Vlad all lost considerable weight, they were all obviously told to get their s*** together, and rightfully so.
  8. Toronto likely offered the guy 7-8M to pitch a year here, but he wasn't down for that, I was in on a Ryu signing a 1 year deal at a cheap price, have said it all winter. They went with Yariel, nothing wrong with that. Ultimately he chose home for more money, nice for him. It makes sense.
  9. You're legit, dumb as a stump, meat. Your comments are full troglodyte at this point, just STFU.
  10. Spanky__99

    NHL Thread

    Okay, bro... how about dem Sens, meat!
  11. Ryu signed in the KBO today. He went home.
  12. And that's why he's *COMPETING* for a job 3 foot, ya dingleberry.
  13. Bingo, Walker's underrated on this forum, don't get why honestly, a lot more success stories than not, all the pitchers love the guy.
  14. 45 from what I read.
  15. I know a guy that dropped Mayo for a late pick, hahahaha... what a fool. Oh sorry, my bad... Larnach and Mayo for 3 3rd's and a 4th. Dumn.
  16. It's not a secret...
  17. Pretty cool s*** to wrap your head around, I love it.
  18. 1 Coby Mayo BAL 3B 22 AA 2 Colt Keith DET 3B 22 AA 3 Xavier Edwards MIA 2B 24 AAA 4 Samuel Basallo BAL C 19 A+ 5 Junior Caminero TBR 3B 20 AA 6 Tyler Black MIL 2B/3B 23 AA 7 Emmanuel Rodriguez MIN OF 21 A+ 8 Owen Caissie CHC OF 21 AA 9 Jackson Holliday BAL SS 20 A+ 10 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 20 AA 11 Jared Jones PIT P 22 AAA 12 Jett Williams NYM SS/OF 20 A+ 13 Luis Matos SF OF 22 AA 14 Jasson Dominguez NYY OF 21 AA 15 Moises Ballesteros CHC C 20 A+ 16 Samuel Zavala SDP OF 19 A+ 17 Jakob Marsee SDP OF 23 A+ 18 Jackson Jobe DET P 21 A+ 19 Ivan Herrera STL C 24 AAA 20 Kyle Harrison SF P 22 AAA 21 Chayce McDermott BAL P 25 AAA 22 Cole Young SEA SS 20 A+ 23 Colt Emerson SEA SS 18 A 24 Sal Stewart CIN 3B 20 A+ 25 Chase Hampton NYY P 22 A+ 26 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 22 A+ 27 Evan Carter TEX OF 21 AA 28 Xavier Isaac TB 1B 20 A+ 29 Ethan Salas SD C 18 A 30 Kala’i Rosario MIN OF 21 A+ 31 Thomas Saggese STL 2B/SS 22 AA 32 James Wood WSH OF 21 AA 33 Ben Rice NYY C 25 AA 34 Carter Jensen KCR C 20 A+ 35 Colton Cowser BAL OF 24 AAA 36 Adael Amador COL SS 21 A+ 37 DL Hall MIL P 25 AAA 38 Matt Shaw CHC 2B/SS 22 A+ 39 Thayron Liranzo LAD C 20 A 40 Roman Anthony BOS OF 20 A+ 41 Justyn-Henry Malloy DET 3B 24 AAA 42 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 22 AA 43 Jackson Merrill SD SS 21 A+ 44 AJ Smith-Shawver ATL P 21 AAA 45 Hao-Yu Lee DET 2B 21 A+ 46 Jace Jung DET 2B 23 A+ 47 Chase DeLauter CLE OF 22 A+ 48 Will Warren NYY P 25 AAA 49 Ignacio Alvarez ATL 3B/SS 21 A+ 50 James Triantos CHC SS 21 A+ 51 Marco Luciano SF SS 22 AA 52 Lazaro Montes SEA OF 19 A 53 Connor Phillips CIN P 23 AA 54 Cade Horton CHC P 22 A+ 55 Luis Lara MIL OF 19 A+ 56 Juan Brito CLE 2B 22 AA 57 Everson Pereira NYY OF 23 AA 58 Leo Jimenez TOR SS 23 AA 59 Curtis Mead TBR 3B 23 AAA 60 Javier Vaz KCR 2B 23 A+ 61 Dalton Rushing LAD C 23 A+ 62 Noah Schultz CHW P 20 A 63 Colson Montgomery CHW SS 22 A+ 64 Orelvis Martinez TOR SS 22 AA 65 Carson Williams TB SS 21 A+ 66 Nathan Martorella SDP 1B 23 A+ 67 Kyle Manzardo CLE 1B 23 AAA 68 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF 25 AAA 69 Edwin Arroyo CIN SS 20 A+ 70 Termarr Johnson PIT 2B 20 A+ 71 Blaze Jordan BOS 1B/3B 21 A+ 72 Jonatan Clase SEA OF 22 A+ 73 Andy Pages LAD OF 23 AA 74 Hunter Goodman COL 1B/C 24 AA 75 Tanner Schobel MIN 2B 23 A+ 76 Jacob Misiorowski MIL P 22 A 77 Trey Sweeney LAD SS 24 AA 78 Edgar Quero CWS C 21 AA 79 Wes Clarke MIL C/1B 24 AA 80 Justice Bigbie DET 3B 25 AA 81 Ben Brown CHC P 24 AAA 82 Jorbit Vivas NYY 2B 23 AA 83 Justin Crawford PHI OF 20 A+ 84 Josue Briceno DET C 19 A 85 Caleb Durbin NYY 2B 24 AA 86 Ronny Mauricio NYM 2B/SS 23 AAA 87 Gabriel Gonzalez SEA OF 20 A 88 Kevin McGonigle DET SS 19 A 89 Jeferson Quero MIL C 21 AA 90 Abimelec Ortiz TEX 1B 22 A+ 91 Ryan Clifford NYM 1B/OF 20 A 92 Chase Meidroth BOS 2B/3B 21 AA 93 Dylan Beavers BAL OF 22 A+ 94 Carlos Jorge CIN 2B 20 A+ 95 Harry Ford SEA C 21 A+ 96 Tyler Hardman NYY 1B 24 AA 97 Joey Ortiz MIL 2B/SS 24 AAA 98 Brock Wilken MIL 3B 21 A+ 99 Jordan Lawlar ARI SS 21 AAA 100 Alan Roden TOR OF 24 AA
  19. Use the projections to your advantage While it is true that for more accurate “projections”, one should use multiple years of performance (as a player’s “true talent” is more accurately reflected by their career performance than from their “most recent three months”), RoboScout was specifically designed to quickly estimate future performance and only uses current season data. This is because it’s extremely advantageous to find prospects in dynasty leagues before before industry outlets publish their updated lists (or podcasts discuss them). In order to do so, you will need to make decisions with imperfect information. For example, if you waited until Davis Schneider was called up to the major leagues, and then performed well enough to get a rest-of-season projection that was attractive, it was too late. He was likely already rostered for weeks. If we can positively influence the decision-making process despite having only imperfect information, this would be a powerful tool. To make RoboScout as simple as possible— and as simple as possible to maintain—it is solely results-based. It does not know if a hitter is an unathletic designated hitter or an 80-grade defender in center field. RoboScout merely takes the player’s performance and ranks them, at each minor league level, based on their (1) projected major league performance, (2) projected peak major league performance, and (3) expected long-term fantasy value (generalized because of the various league formats). From all of the above, the following RoboScout 100 list was created. Unsurprisingly, there is a lot of overlap with our curated lists which had the benefit of human intervention. For example, all of the usual suspects are here: Jackson Chourio, Samuel Basallo, Junior Caminero, Coby Mayo, Jackson Holliday, and so forth. Sprinkled throughout the list, however, are a few “interesting” (read: odd) names—most of which seem to be hitters who possess an outlier ability to make contact, avoid strike outs and therefore have high expected batting averages in the David Fletcher and Tony Kemp mold. In future articles, we will look at some of these unexpected names—and some of the older players who RoboScout also liked but were not appropriate for a prospect list. Here’s the full list. You can find full scouting reports for every player ranked in our Preseason Top 30s here. RoboScout Top 100 Fantasy Prospects
  20. ARTICLEFANTASY RoboScout’s Top 100 Fantasy Baseball Prospects For 2024 February 13, 2024 February 14, 2024 Dylan White 0 Comments Orioles third base prospect Coby Mayo during a March spring training at-bat. Orioles third base prospect Coby Mayo during a March spring training at-bat. Image credit: Coby Mayo (Photo by Tom DiPace) When we put together our Dynasty 700 and the subsequent Top 100 Fantasy Prospects, we mined from our scouting reports and fantasy expertise to put it together. We also had an unsung contribution from RoboScout. A huge part of fantasy baseball involves projections. This makes sense, of course. If you can estimate, as accurately as possible, the potential contribution of a player to your fantasy roster, you can make better informed decisions on how you want to draft your team, build your roster and even make trades. Projections are a necessary ingredient for fantasy success in redraft leagues. Although the cumulative accuracy of projections dissipates as you move further and further into the future, these same principles hold true in a dynasty league. If you can estimate, as accurately as possible, the future (yearly) contributions of a player to your dynasty fantasy roster, you will have an advantage over other leaguemates who are less rigorous in their approach. What is RoboScout? The high-level basis for how projections are created boils down to one simple truism: past performance—despite what the legal disclaimers on your 401(k) may say— are related to future returns. By looking, for example, at the average paired-year performances of hitters and pitchers historically, weighting by sample size, adjusting for survivor bias, one can generate expected age curves with reasonable accuracy of various statistics, such as walk rate (of both hitters and pitchers), strikeout rate (of both hitters and pitchers), ground ball rate (of both hitters and pitchers) and home runs per plate appearance and OPS (of hitters). Given a hitter’s OPS, walk percentage, and strikeout percentage, one can reasonably infer what their batting average is, and so forth. We can apply this same approach to the minor leagues. Take paired-”level” performances of hitters and pitchers historically, one can estimate what a pitcher’s strikeout rate would be in Double-A given that he had, say, a 12% strikeout percentage in High-A. By understanding the expected equivalent performance at a higher level—including MLB—we can thus generate an “expected” major league performance based on a minor leaguer’s performance (after additionally adjusting the statistical performance to the league’s run environment and also from Matt Eddy’s park factors. Now add in the “age curve” calculations from the previous paragraphs to this expected major league projection, and you can estimate what the hitter’s projection would be in his prime performance years. Depending on how deep you wanted to go—for example, incorporating platoon splits, quality-of-competition or deriving independent age curves for different “phylums” of similar hitter archetypes—more granular adjustments can be made. Hitting a home run on opening day does not imply a player will likely finish the season with 162 home runs. Likewise, we also apply regression to more accurately reflect expected season-long performance based on performance from small sample sizes. The final piece to the recipe is minor league Statcast data. Supplementing the performance inputs used in the “projections” for hitters are barrel rate, exit velocity, contact percentage and other metrics that are shown to be correlate to future wRC+. For the pitchers, RoboScout folds in the pitch-level metrics (movement, velocity, etc.) that are inputs into traditional Stuff+ models.
  21. Spanky__99

    NHL Thread

    Did you spank to it, ya f***ing dingleberry?
  22. My guy this season... ARTICLEMINORS Understanding His Swing Is Next Step For Astros’ Jacob Melton February 19, 2024 February 19, 2024 Jose De Jesus Ortiz 0 Comments Jacob Melton’s hitting ability is the first thing that stood out when Astros farm director Jacob Buffa saw him play for Oregon State. Melton is more than a hitter, though. The Astros envision the 6-foot-3, 208-pound Melton as a big league center fielder, and that’s where the 23-year-old is likely to see most of his playing time this season. “I saw (Melton’s) swing in college,” Buffa said of the 2022 second-rounder. “My first thought was, ‘Wow this kid can hit.’ If you look at what he did in college, that’s got to be your first thought. “When I saw him in person when he first got here, my first thought was that this kid is a far better athlete than I thought.” Melton has steadily climbed the minor league ladder after signing. He reached Double-A Corpus Christi late last season after playing primarily for High-A Asheville. In 99 total games he hit .245/.334/.467 with 23 home runs and 46 stolen bases. Melton has put together solid stretches of hitting, but he must now be more consistent at the plate. “I think the big thing is hitters as they get through the system, we’d just love for Melton to start to understand himself a little bit better,” Buffa said. “So when he gets in slumps, he can anchor himself to what he does best.” Melton was a .364 hitter at Oregon State, and he must figure out a way to hit more consistently in pro ball to raise his batting average. “I think the present power is there,” Buffa said. “I feel confident saying that he can slug. We believe he can also hit for average because he’s done it before, which is why I’m most excited for him to understand his own swing.” Once Melton understands how to anchor to the positive attributes of his swing, the Astros are hopeful that he’ll have a better chance to avoid long slumps.
  23. He seemed fine in that sample we saw and was rated as an average 2nd baseman, he's fine. I agree with you.
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