2:01 |
: Hey everyone, welcome to the chat
|
2:01 |
: I don’t have a ton of baseball-y stuff to talk about today, though I’m hoping that changes in a week’s time or so when winter meetings heat up
|
2:01 |
: but let’s just get right into it and maybe get some grab bag topics in too
|
2:01 |
: Do you think the Snell signing may make Sasaki less likely to go to Dodgers given they have enough rotation depth/talent to easily send him down if he struggles?
|
2:02 |
: Eh… on the margin, yes. But ‘oh the Dodgers definitely have enough starting pitching’ has never been a good bet
|
2:02 |
: I expect them to go six man rotation, I expect them to deal with a ton of injuries because they always do, there will be innings for him even if he struggles
|
2:03 |
: Thoughts on the Boyd signing? Are the Cubs looking to flip him?
|
2:04 |
: I don’t think that signing someone hoping to flip them makes a ton of sense, particularly for a team like the Cubs with playoff aspirations. I do think that they’re trying to get out in front of the market in much teh same way the Mets did with Montas
|
2:04 |
: They need innings, and they probably didn’t want to be hunting for them in January or February
|
2:04 |
: That said, the price tag is not nothing for a guy who was available for free last year. I think I would have looked elsewhere, personally, though I’m not wildly confident in that view
|
2:04 |
: It seems like pitching is at least moderately more expensive than we thought it was going to be. Do you anticipate this meaning that any sort of mlb-ready cost-controlled pitching could bring back more in trades than maybe we’re used to?
|
2:05 |
: One thing that remains to be seen is whether it’s pitching or all free agents
|
2:05 |
: The first few deals have been coming in above my estimates and the crowd as well
|
2:06 |
: It’s interesting, I spent a long time trying to trim my estimates down to even lower than they ended up. I have some forcing functions in the background that try to limit the overall amount of spending per win, so that I don’t get too caught up in comps and market research and end up with a projection that is way off of what you’d expect from prior years
|
2:06 |
: and that function kept telling me to cut estimates based on what we saw in the past few years. I ended up mostly ignoring it and coming in pretty far above what it would suggest. Guess I should have ignored it even more
|
2:07 |
: I don’t think it’ll affect the trade market all that much because pitchers were already very valuable in trade, I think that’ll just continue
|
2:07 |
: I’m sure you’ve seen the ‘Yanks are topping out at $550mm for Soto and he already has several $600mm offers in hand’ report by now. Do you buy it, and will the Yankees regret (lol) letting Soto go to the Red Sox (for example) for $600mm?
|
2:07 |
: I don’t buy it
|
2:08 |
: Like I’m sure someone said that to a reporter, or something similar
|
2:08 |
: but I doubt it is set in stone or even the current situation on the ground
|
2:08 |
: like maybe they offered 10/550? but this feels like a deal they aren’t going to lose for money’s sake
|
2:08 |
: Chaim Bloom’s 2021-23 drafts were amazing high-ceiling talent grabs followed by strong development. He won’t be there when the Red Sox ascend, but do you think the success they’ll likely have will soon get him another job at the top of an org? Gracias.
|
2:08 |
: I do! Maybe, I dunno, the Cardinals? 🙂
|
2:08 |
: 2025 Cardinals – one last wholehearted try for Mozeliak, or a year for Bloom to start enacting a retool? Players wise thinking mostly if Arenado and Sonny Gray stay with the Club.
|
2:09 |
: I am leaning more towards the retool. You don’t bring in Chaim Bloom to stick with the same old plan of trading for major league producers and whatnot
|
2:10 |
: I’m not sure what that means for Arenado, it sure feels like he wants out but it feels like a tricky trade. Gray, on the other hand: I think he’ll be gone if they’re retooling because he’s on a short deal at a reasonable price
|
2:10 |
: that’s the kind of trade package that every team is looking for
|
2:10 |
: Do all (most) players have agents? Even the guys making minimum, Quad A, etc.?
|
2:10 |
: Is it harder to pitch Aaron Judge up because in order to get the ball high enough you have to throw what is normally a waste pitch and that is just weird to do on purpose?
|
2:11 |
: Just like it’s easier to pitch Altuve up
|
2:11 |
: on the other hand, it’s a lot easier to attack Judge low for basically the same reason
|
2:11 |
: and he gets too many strikes called on him low in the zone because umpires have the same issue
|
2:11 |
: Im playing a game of chicken with teams on Garrett Crochet. Am I smart for waiting for the big SP and Soto to go off the board before I deal my ace or am I just limiting my options if the Dodgers/Red Sox/Orioles/etc sign pitchers in free agency instead?
|
2:12 |
: I am generally a fan of setting a price and waiting to either have it hit or for someone to get desperate before changing tactics
|
2:12 |
: there isn’t enough pitching to go around, particularly for teams who aren’t dropping 150 million on a free agent, so I think the market will remain robust no matter where the top guys sign
|
2:12 |
: Let me start by saying I do not want a salary cap. BUT is there a way to inspire non-Dodger teams to get creative with their contract offers as well? Is it only the Dodgers’ desire to flout the luxury tax that inspires them?
|
2:12 |
: The Nationals have been doing this for more than a decade
|
2:13 |
: the A’s offered Marcus Semien the most insulting contract of all time but in a goofily structured way
|
2:13 |
: one year, $10 million, but paid in 10 $1 million installments over 10 years
|
2:14 |
: the Dodgers don’t have a monopoly on weird, deferred-y deals. but honestly, the deferred isn’t helping them out THAT much, it’s the fact that they’re willing to spend to win
|
2:14 |
: like they’re still setting aside $46 million a year for Ohtani
|
2:15 |
: do you think the Boyd and Montas signings make the Kikuchi deal look any better?
|
2:15 |
: I think that every pitching deal has comein above ‘consensus’ and it’s entirely plossible that most deals do, now that the economic picture feels a little less unsettled than a year ago
|
2:15 |
: Will the Dodgers be limited by all the deferred money they’ll be paying next decade? Or will the economic realities of baseball allow them to basically shrug it off?
|
2:15 |
: I don’t, because of the way the escrow works
|
2:16 |
: they don’t get to just not think about the money until the future, they’re required to set an NPV’ed amount aside in the year it’s earned
|
2:16 |
: so they’re setting aside a bunch of money right now. I’m not 100% sure what investments are allowed with that money, but they have to pony it up now, which means they’re not going to suddenly need to pay out $100 million out of nowhere in 2030 or whatever
|
2:17 |
: it seems highly likely to me that due to declining media revenue offers to mid-range free agents are going to be fewer and smaller than players and agents have come to expect. What’s your view?
|
2:17 |
: I thought that before the offeseason
|
2:17 |
: that certainly was the case in the 2024 offseason
|
2:17 |
: I suppose we’ll see. but Frankie Montas and Matt Boyd feel very mid-range to me, and they both got good deals
|
2:18 |
: Shouldn’t the price begin to drop for starting pitching? They’re throwing fewer innings and turning it over sooner to the bullpen.
|
2:18 |
: The price per WAR hasn’t changed much, so I suppose what you’re saying is already happening
|
2:19 |
: but it’s tricky, because salary is as much about scarcity as value, and good starting pitching is scarce these days
|
2:19 |
: Wouldn’t the Yankees be better off letting Soto walk and filling roster holes with other free agents so Judge can move over to a corner?
|
2:19 |
: what free agents
|
2:20 |
: like, they’re gonna go sign Alex Bregman and Gleyber Torres?
|
2:20 |
: I think that would probably cost more per year than Soto will
|
2:20 |
: do you actually think that offense would be better than one with Soto and a prospect? I sure don’t
|
2:21 |
: why can’t Judge move to a corner even with Soto in town anyway?
|
2:21 |
: I’d be trying Dominguez out in center for sure
|
2:21 |
: Which FanGraphs festive light colours are you using?
|
2:21 |
: I’m liking the classic ones
|
2:21 |
: the A’s lights look kinda cool, but I just like regular christmas colors
|
2:21 |
: There have been rumblings about the Phillies trying to get out from under the Nick Castellanos contract. Is there a damaged-goods trade that would line up for the Phillies and some other partner to move him out of town?
|
2:22 |
: How do you see the Phillies “shaking up” their roster? I’ve heard Bohm tossed around as a trade piece, but other than him who could you see them moving?
|
2:22 |
: I’m skeptical that the Phillies can make a Castellanos trade work, because most teams are valuing him at roughly 0
|
2:22 |
: like, league average hitter with completely unplayable defense
|
2:23 |
: so either they’re going to eat most of the money, at which point why are we doing this trade in the first place, or they’re going to send out a prospect with him, and that feels like it wouldn’t happen given the way Philly has operated in recent years
|
2:23 |
: Bohm makes sense to me as a trade piece if they’re intent on shaking things up, but they could also just run things back. It was a pretty good team in 2024, you know?
|
2:24 |
: Can an Arenado to the Phillies trade work?
|
2:25 |
: I don’ think the Cardinals would be interested in Bohm, because the whole point of moving on from Arenado would be to take a step back for the next few years. Mayyyyybe you could get the Castellanos contract out the door, plus a prospect or two, for Arenado, but that would just be window dressing (i.e. you can choose between the Cardinals covering $30 million of Arenado’s deal and trading them Castellanos and the $40 million he’s owed)
|
2:26 |
: So I’d say it’s not impossible but depends on finding value for Bohm elsewhere
|
2:26 |
: I’ve heard trade rumors for the Tigers (Arenado, Bohm), but is there any realistic trade that the Tigers could make that would make more sense than just signing Bregman or Christian Walker so they don’t have to bat Matt Vierling 3rd anymore?
|
2:26 |
: yeah I like Walker there quite a bit
|
2:26 |
: Not so into Bregman, to be honest, I feel like his swing and Comerica wouldn’t be friends
|
2:27 |
: I want to do my best by the Giants, but I don’t have the Dodgers money and i don’t have their brain trust. Any way I can dislodge them from first in the next years?
|
2:27 |
: I’m skeptical
|
2:27 |
: I hope I’m wrong, SF is more fun when the Giants are good
|
2:28 |
: we haven’t really seen much of the Posey regime yet, I’ll withhold judgment for a year or so until we see what their MO is, but the Giants have been pretty uninspired in recent years after whiffing on a few big free agents, and it feels tough to fix that quickly
|
2:28 |
: How do the market dynamics vary between pitching (~everyone can use another pitcher, but there are many available) vs specific positions (maybe only a few teams need a catching upgrade but there are very few options available)
|
2:29 |
: oh, good question. I think it makes for a first-one-in-wins mentality in the position player case, where there are meaningful differencdes in what someone will offer you based on when you sign and who’s still looking. Pitcher salaries are a lot more static/fungible, because if the Mets don’t sign you the Yankees might, or whatnot
|
2:30 |
: that puts more pressure on the agents of the position players whose spots aren’t guaranteed but are potentially mnore valuable. Whereas being an agent for a starter is probably a lot about calling every team and showing that your guy is healthy/working hard
|
2:30 |
: What’s the best holiday dish?
|
2:30 |
: I actually don’t think this is all that close
|
2:30 |
: I like a lot of holiday dishes, but I crave stuffing
|
2:31 |
: we made some this year and I devoured it in record time
|
2:31 |
: it’s pretty fun to make, also
|
2:31 |
: Over/under Brewers’ NL Central division wins in the next 3 years: 2.5?
|
2:31 |
: easy under for me
|
2:31 |
: not because I think they’re in a bad spot, but b/c 2.5 out of 3 is just too high
|
2:32 |
: at 2 I’m torn, I think I’d probably still take the under but I’d feel bad about it
|
2:32 |
: Is ATL kind of screwed? They have at least three holes to fill (LF/SP/RP) and maybe more if you don’t think Ozzie will bounce back (second basemen age horribly) or if Arcia doesn’t improve. They have money to spend but it’s not a huge amount if they want to avoid penalties (around $30 million). Their farm system isn’t particularly deep and many of their best prospects project to be back end starters or relief pitchers.
|
2:33 |
: the Braves had a truly ridiculous number of injuries last year, including the reigning MVP and Cy Young favorite, not to mention several other All Stars. BP’s injury tracker has them down for 13 missing WAR last year, vs. a league average of around 5
|
2:33 |
: so will they be as good as they were in 2023? probably not
|
2:33 |
: but will we project them as the best team in the NLE again? almost certainly
|
2:34 |
: Arcia is bad for a first division shortstop, and Albies might be more good than elite now (I’ve actually had him in that range for years, witness his slide down the trade value series)
|
2:35 |
: but they just have a ton of good players still. I’d expect more in ’25 out of Riley and Harris, I really like Schwellenbach and I think AJSS has some juice
|
2:35 |
: I agreed with you a lot until you thought that stuffing was better than pecan pie. What a brutal take.
|
2:35 |
: pecan pie is my favorite pie
|
2:35 |
: I’m just a savory over sweet kind of person
|
2:35 |
: angels need either a 3B or a 2B. any chance they can poach HSK from san diego?
|
2:35 |
: yeah, this feels very reasonable to me
|
2:35 |
: I think that Kim’s market is going to go one of two ways
|
2:36 |
: one is that he picks a team where he’s comfortable to sign a pillow contract. Maybe the Giants? Something west coast probably
|
2:36 |
: Angels aren’t out of the question here either
|
2:36 |
: or: someone really wants him and so they offer him a nice five-year deal
|
2:36 |
: and he just says eh, pillow contracts are overrated, let’s just secure the bag now
|
2:37 |
: that second option, I think a team doing that would more or less guarantee signing him, whereas if he’s signing 2/40 with an opt out after the first year, a ton of teams would offer him that
|
2:37 |
: so if you want to guarantee Kim’s services, you offer him a long-term deal. If you’re comfortable taking a risk that he’ll sign somehwere else based on fit, enter the pillow contract sweepstakes
|
2:37 |
: “Any pie is a good pie”
|
2:38 |
: oh man, has anyone had the frozen pies from Ace Hardware?
|
2:38 |
: I didn’t know this was a thing and then I picked one up for this Thanksgiving because I was doing an Ace run (snow shovel, some random wrench) and remembered that they have a freezer near the checkout
|
2:38 |
: I learned from my neighbor that this is a common thing at Ace locations, and the pie was absolutely amazing
|
2:38 |
: like, maybe the best apple pie I’ve ever had
|
2:39 |
: If Eric isn’t around and somebody asks you what Triple-A catcher, Agustin Ramirez or Drake Baldwin, you prefer. What do you say?
|
2:39 |
: I’d probably make a Drake pun first
|
2:41 |
: but I prefer Baldwin, I am a little more willing to believe his batting line given the peripherals and while I don’t have a ton of visibility into minor league catcher defense, they seem comparable there
|
2:41 |
: Some reports today that the NYM are interested in Walker Buehler. I like gambling on him in a vacuum, but are they really going to hit on WB and Montas in the same season the way they did with Sevi and Manaea? Seems like too much risk.
|
2:41 |
: I’d actually argue that it’s a risk mitigation strategy
|
2:41 |
: sure, sometimes you can hit on every signing and things work out great, but generally speaking, signing more lottery tickets increases the chances of hitting on at least one
|
2:42 |
: there’s obivously some contract amount where it switches to being downside risk because you’re paying him as if he’s going to be elite
|
2:42 |
: but that’s tougher to judge, and I don’t think Buehler is gonna get that amount
|
2:42 |
: Have you ever given a gift that you’re still proud of?
|
2:43 |
: I’m gonna mention a gift my wife gave first, because it was just that awesome: for her mom’s 70th, she got 70 people to write messages and put them all in a book together
|
2:43 |
: that was a great one, I thought
|
2:44 |
: not counting that: I got my wife a set of knives in 2015 that we still love today, and they’ve been incredibly useful the whole time, so I’ll say that
|
2:44 |
: If the Yankees lose out on Soto, how much would Bellinger help them?
|
2:44 |
: not much, imo
|
2:45 |
: I will say, I’m lower on Bellinger than consensus
|
2:45 |
: he was in my top 50 provisionally when it seemed like he might opt out and I got a lot of comments that I had him too low
|
2:46 |
: I think that plenty of people believe he’s a 20% above average bat who can play an excellent center field, whereas I think he’s an average bat and average outfield defender
|
2:46 |
: So if he DOESN’T get Soto after he’s spent several years talking up his spending, is that considered a real ding? (Obviously not on his overall tenure)
|
2:46 |
: If it’s because of a lack of a serious offer, yes
|
2:47 |
: if it’s because he and the Yankees both offer 13/700 and Soto wants to hang out with his buddy Aaron, well, I think it depends on how hard the Mets pitched him
|
2:47 |
: but nothing about this pursuit, and his pursuit of free agents generally, has made me think that Cohen is unserious about getting the best players
|
2:47 |
I still think they have a shot, but it’s unquestionably harder to sell him on going there when, in a perfect world, he would look like the odd man out in the playoff rotation. I’d imagine he wouldn’t be in over Snell, Glasnow, Yamamoto, or Ohtani. So that brings me to my point, do you believe the Snell signing means they still very much believe they will get him? Or they didn’t belive they were going to get him in the first place? |
2:48 |
: Yeah, that’s fair. I think it’s more the second, that they weren’t sure if they would get him – how could they be? And they also weren’t sure if he’d be an impact arm in 2025. so they’re just trying to win a bunch now, because that seems smart
|
2:48 |
: take the deal in front of you and deal with tomorrow tomorrow, that kidn of thing
|
2:48 |
: hoenstly I think the Dodgers are so well-run that it’s almost un-fun
|
2:49 |
: they make the decisions I would make on a strategic front plenty of the time, and when they do something I wouldn’t have done, I frequently find that I liked their choice after the fact
|
2:49 |
: If Soto ends up staying partially because he likes playing with that big guy, on top of Judge just casually throwing up a second 11fWAR season, how not terrible is that Judge contract?
|
2:49 |
: yeah the Judge deal is looking like quite a bargain so far, amazingly enough
|
2:50 |
: he’s already cranked out 16 WAR since signing it, captured an MVP, dragged the team to an ALE win
|
2:50 |
: How bad are the Yankees’ vibes going to be when Soto signs with the Mets or Red Sox?
|
2:50 |
: Dodgers and escrow – I had not heard about this before. I know that the Dodgers get hit with an-NPV like hit to their luxury cap number. For Ohtani, is the escrow the same as that roughly $46 million cap hit?
|
2:51 |
: yeah more or less. Here’s a nice little Gemini summary, shout out to Google
|
2:51 |
|
2:51 |
: With the caveat that nobody really knows yet, can you say which is more suspect in pitcher injuries: increased velocity or emphasis on spin rates?
|
2:51 |
: i think it’s kind of a hybrid of these – it’s the velocity on the bendy pitches
|
2:52 |
: 91 mph sliders are hard on the arm on multiple fronts
|
2:52 |
: You think the angels will go after any more starters? Based on Perry’s comments it sounds like Anderson or Detmers will be dealt and they’ll bring in another arm
|
2:53 |
: I do – maybe someone in the Pivetta/Sevy tier?
|
2:53 |
: I don’t think Anderson has much of a trade market. not that his contract is underwater, just that he’s more of a ‘trade this guy for a prospect at the deadline when a team has an injury problem’ option instead of a ‘swap him for immediate major league help in January’ option
|
2:54 |
: Detmers could get them something helpful right away, so if they want to move him, they’d find takers
|
2:54 |
: Or maybe it’s because Soto wants to spend time with his even better buddy Vlad did u think of that Ben??
|
2:54 |
: living in Toronto does sound pretty n ice
|
2:54 |
: I’d definitely be interested. I’d even accept less than Soto
|
2:54 |
: Is Thairo Estrada just done? Feels like the Giants gave up on him early.
|
2:55 |
: I’m not sure he’s done, but: I have been a seller for years, I just don’t quite see how he can deliver above average value without something significant changing
|
2:56 |
: I don’t think his defense is as good as it was graded in 2023, his offense is surely at least a little below average, I have him as a second division regular or nice utility guy
|
2:56 |
: maybe the Giants gave up on that a little early but I don’t think he’ll get paid more than his arb award would have been, and he certainly didn’t feel like a long term solution to me, so I see why they moved on
|
2:57 |
: Do you buy the Boras narrative that Chicago winds suppressed Bellinger last year and he would be a buy low if he was dealt somewhere?
|
2:58 |
: one person who probably agrees with me: Cody Bellinger, who chose to remain on the Cubs instead of testing free agency
|
2:58 |
: Is plossible a combination of possible and plausible? If so, I like it
|
2:58 |
: it wasn’t supposed to be but now I’m with you
|
2:58 |
: Is there a negotiating universe where Cohen just tells Boras ‘we’ll give Soto $600mm or match whatever the highest offer is’? It feels like that’s an Uncle Steve kind of move.
|
2:58 |
: I think that’s fairly likely, in fact
|
2:59 |
: that’s how the Ohtani and Judge negotiations apparently went down; the Giants offered those guys the exact deals they received elsewhere
|
2:59 |
: There’s a narrative in NYC that says that Luisangel Acuna was “bored” in the minors and that’s why he didn’t perform better. I find it very difficult to believe. You?
|
2:59 |
: Yeah, I don’t buy it
|
2:59 |
: or well, if that’s the case, we have a completely different problem
|
2:59 |
: Occam’s razor here, for me, though
|
3:00 |
: You’re GM Ben Clemens of the Yankees/Red Sox/Dodgers/Blue Jays/ other team serious about Soto. At what financial point do you just say it’s too much money and let him go somewhere else?
|
3:00 |
: Probably depends more on ownership, to be honest, and how those teams construct budgets
|
3:01 |
: I think that around 13/700 I’d be telling my owner that this deal doesn’t make financial sense, but I figure if I’m a GM I’m going to be frequently asking the owner to spend more and compete more frequently, so this would seem like a good time to push that message
|
3:02 |
: Am I crazy to have Wyatt Langford as a top ten position player in fantasy next year?
|
3:02 |
: Top ten seems a little aggressive
|
3:02 |
: but higher than he finished this year by a good bit, for sure
|
3:02 |
: Out of the Jays’ return for Kikuchi — Wagner, Loperfido, and Bloss — who will produce the most value in the near future … and beyond?
|
3:03 |
: at this point I guess Wagner is looking pretty good. But gimme Bloss, I talked myself into him when he started hopping levels in Houston last year
|
3:03 |
: the Wagner throw-in was a great move by Toronto
|
3:03 |
: Regarding “we’ll match whatever the highest offer is”, do teams actually know what the highest offers are? Seems like they are all left in the dark to various degrees and only Soto’s team knows. I guess Soto’s team could tell you what their highest offer is, but would you believe them? Or are FA negotiations fairly transparent?
|
3:03 |
: Truthfully, I’m not sure
|
3:04 |
: My guess is that Boras and most agents are fairly truthful about this, though
|
3:04 |
: It’s a repeated game, and if you get caught lying once, the costs in future rounds of negotiation are huoge
|
3:05 |
: profit-maximizing behavior in a one-round negotiation might be to lie, but trust feels important to Boras’s ability to do his job well
|
3:05 |
: What do you mean that Nick Castellanos isn’t a good defender?! His fielding percentages are fantastic!
|
3:05 |
: I’ve actually never committed an error in professional baseball
|
3:05 |
: for what it’s worth
|
3:05 |
: I recall a discussion of a relief pitcher who was out of options and this was put on waivers to let the team call up a fresher arm. The player was claimed by a second team who pitcher him for a few weeks before they did the same thing and a third team claimed him. It was mentioned the player was accruing service time but does a player at this level ever end up signing a free agent deal or do they tend to retire/sign a minor league do once they are no longer eligible for this kind of roster shuffling?
|
3:06 |
: Oh yeah, the guys in this situation aren’t reaping free agency wealth
|
3:06 |
: that said, the service time matters for things like pensions and arbitration
|
3:06 |
: also, they’re getting paid a major league salary while they accrue service time, which is no joke
|
3:07 |
: the Triple-A minimum this year was 35,800. MLB minimum was 740k
|
3:07 |
: What kind of money changes hands of Arenado is traded? Does the Rockies money follow him?
|
3:07 |
: oh hey I just noticed that Arenado had 50 million deferred in his deal
|
3:07 |
: look, everyone is the Dodgers now
|
3:08 |
: the Rockies money would follow him, though. the Rockies are paying $4 million of his salary each year, and they’d just continue to do that
|
3:08 |
: Living in Toronto from April 1st thru October 31st seems like an ideal plan. And spend the winter somewhere much warmer.
|
3:08 |
: I’m not a winter person, and I think it’s a good bet that Juan Soto isn’t either
|
3:09 |
: Miami offseason home? easy
|
3:09 |
: Should MLB change the way the offseason works? pick up steam faster? Feels like the draft lottery should have happened already.
|
3:09 |
: I think it’s set up reasonably well, but I do think there should be a transaction freeze for most of November so that things really start cooking around the winter meetings
|
3:10 |
: Yainer Diaz or Patrick Bailey?
|
3:10 |
: for fantasy? Diaz. For real life? Bailey
|
3:11 |
: I’m just a big sucker for catcher defense, and Bailey is the best there is there
|
3:11 |
: Did the LAD make enough money on advertising and marketing deals with Japanese corporations that they’re essentially not paying Ohtani’s ~$45M out of the usual budget?
|
3:11 |
: If Soto signs with the Red Sox, Yankees sign Walker & Bregman, Jays sign Santander & Manaea. What is your ranking of the AL East teams?
|
3:11 |
: I think I’d go Yankees/Sox/Jays, but with error bars bigger than the differences between teams
|
3:12 |
: Are there enough upgrades on the trade and free agent markets to make the Nationals a contender in 2025?
|
3:12 |
: I mean, sure
|
3:12 |
: give them Soto, Bregman, Burnes, maybe Teo and two other starters, bam
|
3:12 |
: realistically no, though?
|
3:12 |
: do u think renting pretty much just always smarter than homeownership rn
|
3:13 |
: Context-dependent
|
3:13 |
: in big cities, almost certainly yes, though
|
3:13 |
: rental yield is so low in SF, it would be pretty expensive to own my place instead of renting it
|
3:13 |
: Is Pecan Pie pronounced pecan or pecan?
|
3:13 |
: I’m a ‘peh-con’ guy
|
3:14 |
: I think this is a regional deal, though I’m not 100% sure
|
3:14 |
: Except you can be forced out of your apartment by rent increases every year if your apartment isn’t rent stabilized (source: live in NYC)
|
3:15 |
: I mean, sure. but housing in NYC is fairly fungible, you can rent another place. that said, in my experience a huge amount of NYC housing is rent controlled, or at least several of the places I lived there were, even in newer buildings
|
3:15 |
: rental yields in NY are in the 2-3% range from what I’ve seen, that’s wild
|
3:15 |
: I know it’s mostly just noise, but has anyone done research into player success in even or odd years? Matt Olson’s yearly wRC+ graph looks like the Mammoth Mountain logo.
|
3:16 |
: this sounds like a job for Dan, but I haven’t seen any effect and doubt it’s real
|
3:16 |
: Housing is not fungible if you have a family, man. You can’t move your kids every year.
|
3:17 |
: well sure, but rental increases of say 10% a year are not particularly common either, and you might be paying double to have a mortgage instead of rent for the same place. Obviously there are a ton of different factors, and a baseball writer isn’t going to solve the problem in his chat, but from a cost effectiveness standpoint, I’ve been happy renting in high cost of living cities
|
3:17 |
: Josh Allen for Shohei Ohtani who says no?
|
3:17 |
: throwing a touchdown pass to yourself does feel like an Ohtani-ish feat
|
3:18 |
: Rent or buy is a math problem. Albeit with a lot of variables that are either unknown or very uncertain.
|
3:18 |
: Will Soto’s contract be insured? Is it possible to insure a contract like that?
|
3:18 |
: probably for injury and not for anything else
|
3:18 |
: How much would a team pay a guy who could cure any injury instantly? Is that worth $20 million a year? Asking for a friend
|
3:18 |
: easily, right?
|
3:18 |
: the Dodgers would pay that for sure
|
3:18 |
: If the team is depositing the present value and they are allowed to spend the interest then once the future becomes the present they will be short by the difference between the original present value and the paper value.
|
3:19 |
: I don’t know the specifics of teh CBA, but I’d guess that it needs to be trued up to present value every so often
|
3:19 |
: and that you can spend the difference
|
3:19 |
: that’s how I’d do it, at least
|
3:19 |
: alright, this was a fun chat and it ran a little longer than I expected
|
3:19 |
: who knew everyone wnated to hear my housing hot takes?
|
3:19 |
: that said, keep your eyes peeled for another article on lessons I learned in financial markets and how they apply to baseball
|
3:19 |
: ETA tomorrow, I think
|
3:20 |
: and have a wonderful week, everyone
|
3:20 |
: On the housing front: I bought in 2021 at ~3% interest and would love to move, but feel golden handcuffed to my current low mortgage payment. Isn’t there some financial instrument that would allow someone to take on my EV+ low interest loan and let me recoup some of the costs of what would be a higher rent / mortgage payment?
|
3:20 |
: ooh bonus last one
|
3:20 |
: some scandinavian country has transferable mortgages
|
3:20 |
: Shoutout to Edwin Burton if so
|
3:20 |
: i took his class!
|
3:20 |
: cya later, everyone
|
Ben is a writer at FanGraphs. He can be found on Twitter @_Ben_Clemens.