-
Posts
100,945 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
35
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Everything posted by caulfield12
-
Abreu fishing. Kremer ERA down to 1.96 now.
-
Mancini Santander top trade targets... And we finally executed a relay throw?
-
$16.5 million reasons.
-
Sox .258 with runners in scoring position fifth best in the AL. Definitely not with bases loaded.
-
Leary always comes up with runners on base. "Not ideal when your two catchers are Seby Zavala and Reese McGuire."
-
Pretty sure Yermin Mercedes could do better...
-
I wonder how many of the owners care more about player health with the abbreviated spring training than net profits? Probably just 2-3. That's being optimistic.
-
Too many cumulative ouchies. Mateo now on an 0/17 streak.
-
You're assuming our lefty hitters are at least major league average, though.
-
But you can compare Giolito 2019-20 to today. Which pitcher is he as of this week? Also remember he mostly faced the AL East with a poor defense previously.
-
Wish Giolito could be so mediocre as to have a 2.20 ERA.
-
Exactly. It’s almost like Lou Gehrig was getting the call. The same thing happened around the time of Owens/Fields/Wasserman/Richar/Andy Gonzalez where the system was so weak that Top Ten organizational guys get excessive amounts of attention. There was a Latin American catcher who always was Top 5 for a number of years who never even made it. At least we know he will be starring for the Giants, Rays, Brewers or A’s a couple of years from now.
-
Though he started as a basketball scout, Krause switched to baseball during the 1970s and 1980s and worked for the Cleveland Indians, Oakland A's, Seattle Mariners and White Sox. After his retirement from the Bulls, Krause worked for the New York Yankees, New York Mets and Arizona Diamondbacks. He took over as the White Sox international scouting director in 2010 and worked through 2011 until current director Marco Paddy was hired. "I have two different Jerry Krause experiences," current White Sox general manager Rick Hahn said. "I had grown up in Chicago as a kid, seeing the Bulls teams he built and feeling a sense of gratitude toward him before I even met the man once given what that team was able to accomplish. From a personal level, when he was here and involved in our scouting operations, I found him to be an excellent evaluator and a very thoughtful individual who knew a tremendous amount about the game and was generous with his time and was certainly an asset while he was here." https://www.nbcsports.com/chicago/chicago-white-sox/how-jerry-krause-impacted-2005-white-sox-world-series-title https://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/ct-jerry-krause-baseball-scouting-last-dance-20200502-d3owq32ltjgrzl4e5ihwiogmam-story.html https://www.mlb.com/news/white-sox-scout-jerry-krause-dies-at-age-77-c220288534 The Wilder era significantly set back the White Sox’s international program, between the years he spent supervising their Latin American scouting and the time it has continued to take them to rebuild. After firing Wilder in 2008, the White Sox did little to overhaul their pre-existing systems in Latin America for two years until they hired Jerry Krause—the former Chicago Bulls general manager—to lead their international scouting department last April. As a result, the White Sox have spent more effort overhauling pre-existing systems and adding personnel to their Latin American scouting staff than signing top players. Aside from the Cuban market, the White Sox have sat on the sidelines for top international talent the last few years, as they spent just an estimated $345,000 overseas last year. Between the draft and the international market, no team in baseball spent less than the White Sox on amateur talent in 2010.
-
Average lifespan for an American male roughly 77-78…TLR is right there. Along with Williams, McKeon and Connie Mack. NFL and NBA coaching much more demanding…almost nobody can survive in terms of energy and commitment required even in their early 60’s these days.
-
https://www.southsidesox.com/minors/2013/2/11/3975216/the-tawdry-tangled-history-of-the-white-sox-latin-american-operations In some ways, it’s really quite simple. We never really had competitive advantage in the DR, Puerto Rico or Venezuela. Same with the Pacific Rim where the Mariners, Red Sox, Angels, Dodgers, etc., tend to dominate. Of course the why behind it is another story. That basically left Panama (C-Lee), Colombia (Quintana), Brazil (Jerry Krause, Andre Rienzo, Silverio, Anderson Gomes) and, as things, evolved, Cuba. Given the limited budget and distaste for competing over 14 and 15 year olds, not sure what they actually could have done differently. I mean, it seems we have/had a Vladimir Guerrero relation (wrong one), Reyes (wrong one, Franklin instead of Franmil), Carlos Martinez’s son, Tatis brothers (Elijah might never get to A ball)…but 50% of the organizational philosophy has been targeting the former MLB bloodlines and selling that to JR as the best possible return on investment.
-
“The previous year the Dominican Republic supplied the same number, 86, while Venezuela had 58. At one point, 23 Major League Baseball teams had training facilities in Venezuela; today the number is down to just four—the Philadelphia Phillies, the Detroit Tigers, the Seattle Mariners and the Tampa Bay Rays.” It should be noted that the White Sox didn’t ever have an academy down there despite the team history with Ozzie, Freddy Garcia, Magglio, Aparicio, Carrasquel, etc. The Astros, fwiw, historically had one of the best operations down there in the 1990’s and early 2000’s. https://bleacherreport.com/articles/1070082 Harvesting Baseball Talent Easier in Dominican Republic Than Venezuela
-
https://ouresquina.com/2021/marco-paddy-stocked-deep-white-sox-roster/ asinwreck Reply to Richard 1 year ago “I’m not Jim, but the Sox are unique, for better or worse. Reinsdorf’s allergies to handing big money to teenagers means the team’s big splashes are for older talent. That means focusing on Cubans. I don’t know if the Sox beat out the Cardinals for Robert if Abreu and Moncada aren’t already on the team. Paddy establishing an advantage in signing Cuban players is the single biggest accomplishment of Sox scouting and development this century. As Jim’s wonderful resource in this post reveals, Paddy has occasionally been able to sign a teenager from the Dominican Republic to a high-six or (Guerrero, Adolfo) low-seven-figure bonus. It’s a guess, but I suspect forwarding the “good bloodlines” argument (his uncle’s a Hall of Famer! His dad’s a longtime infielder!) allows Jerry to make some exceptions. Still, the international scouts are constrained by the same policies that recently lead to drafting every University of Louisville player who is ambulatory (and further constrained by the baffling decision to trade slot money). One of my dashed hopes after 2005 was that the Sox would establish the kind of Venezuelan talent pipeline that the Astros had in the 1990s. Ozzie was the first Venezuelan-born manager to win a World Series, and it doesn’t take much imagination to see a way that the team could have established a sales pitch on that (and competitive bonus offers) that might have us talking about the team’s ability to sign and develop players in the 21st century that builds on the successes of the 20th century. Instead, we had the David Wilder scandal destroy the international scouting program for years.” https://soxmachine.com/futuresox/a-record-of-white-sox-international-signings-during-the-marco-paddy-era/
-
If you call the Guardians and Twins a breather...at 1-7 combined against.
-
https://www.yahoo.com/sports/oneil-cruz-is-the-first-6-foot-7-shortstop-youve-ever-seen-he-might-not-be-the-last-213409398.html Mike Morse shout outs, Seager/Correa/Tatis/Ripken/ARod and Reds' similar prospect Elly de la Cruz.
