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Reds

  • Saturday January 25- Lexington, KY
    • Red Mile (4 p.m.)
    • President of Baseball Operations Nick Krall, Manager Terry Francona, catcher Jose Trevino, outfielder Jacob Hurtubise, former Red Corky Miller, Broadcaster Jim Day and Mr. Red

Good grief....this is embarrassing.
 
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Reds brought back Wade Miley on a minor league deal and traded for Taylor Rogers from San Francisco for a minor leaguer Braxton Roxby with an ERA over 5.00. Getting $6 million in cash from the Giants to pay towards Rogers' contract.
 
Reds brought back Wade Miley and traded for Taylor Rogers from San Francisco for a minor leaguer Braxton Roxby with an ERA over 5.00.

So go out and get a 38 yr old w/ a bum arm who won't be ready until June, and another re-tread in Rogers.

I guess Billingham and Borbon weren't available.
 
I don't know how I feel about Robert. He's talented, but I'm not sure he'll help a team win a lot of games. It may be off the table since they signed Hays anyways.

 
OT: But reading a book called "Smart Baseball" by Keith Law, who was ESPN senior baseball writer. Book was written in 2017, so it is only slightly out of date. First half of the book is all about how so many "important" stats are either overrated (RBIs and batting average) or almost worthless (saves). Has some great insight and lots of stats to back up his arguments. The best chart I have seen so far compares how much a stolen base helps the team's chances of scoring vs. how much getting caught stealing hurts your team's chances to score [Spoiler Alert - it helps, but only if you are successful almost all the time, i.e, 75-80%]

Anyway, it is a good read for a baseball nerd who is analytical, like me!
 
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I don't know how I feel about Robert. He's talented, but I'm not sure he'll help a team win a lot of games. It may be off the table since they signed Hays anyways.

I have a feeling the Sox will be stuck with Robert until the last season of his contract. It increases to $20 million for each of his last 2 years on the deal. They are said to be asking a ransom for him and he has only played over 100 games once in his career. No doubt he has shown some talent with power hitting 38 HRs/80 RBIs, a GG and being an All-Star in 2023, but a risky move for the Reds franchise. Benson could give the Reds what Robert produced in 2024. Of course injuries impacted his production, though getting hurt is a consistent theme for him. A team like San Diego likely scoops him up in the last year. Padres and White Sox organization have some history making these big trades with each other over the past 10 years moving players like Tatis, James Shields and Dylan Cease.
 
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Yeah, they have enough trouble getting people to go to games in Tampa and Miami. Orlando is less than two hours from Tampa. I get it, LA and Chicago have two teams, but the sheer sizes of those cities makes it more viable. If there is an expansion team, I could see Nashville or Charlotte being a bigger draw.
 
Yeah, they have enough trouble getting people to go to games in Tampa and Miami. Orlando is less than two hours from Tampa. I get it, LA and Chicago have two teams, but the sheer sizes of those cities makes it more viable. If there is an expansion team, I could see Nashville or Charlotte being a bigger draw.
It might work in those cities the first few years with the initial excitement of a new team, but you aren't going to convert longtime fans of Braves Country in the south to all of a sudden cheer for an expansion team. Just like adding a new team in the Mid-West would be a waste with the Cardinals, Cubs, Reds, Guardians, White Sox, Royals, Tigers, Twins & Brewers all in the region so Indianapolis wouldn't be a great idea either. Now is not a good time to expand in the league. Especially with the way small market teams are about to get buried with the shit the Dodgers and Mets are pulling making it way more expensive if you want to legitimately compete for a World Series.
 
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Yeah, they have enough trouble getting people to go to games in Tampa and Miami. Orlando is less than two hours from Tampa. I get it, LA and Chicago have two teams, but the sheer sizes of those cities makes it more viable. If there is an expansion team, I could see Nashville or Charlotte being a bigger draw.

It's been 27 years since the last expansion in MLB and it probably is as good a time as ever to add another. I agree w/ you that Orlando, while attractive at first glance, probably isn't going to create long term interest. Just because a city is massive doesn't equal fan support. I love the Nashville idea, as the central and southern TN area is a baseball hotbed in the youth/college circles.
 
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