2015 Chicago Cubs

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  • seanjeezy
    The Future
    • Aug 2009
    • 3347

    #16
    Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

    Originally posted by Figment
    The last article I read (on Bleed Cubbie Blue) said Bryant will be called up between April 17-20. I am assuming that is the 12 days you were talking about.

    As far as Schwarber being a B+, I mean that more of the 89 potential, 88 at the lowest. Given how he is only 21 years old and still likely a couple years from pushing for MLB playing time, that potential will only go up. One thing I have realized is that there are two potential ratings, one is their actual potential rating, and the other one is their age. By the end of season one he WILL be an A- at the least, after season two he would definitely be a solid A. That was just my thought process with him though. Still, he is a good argument to be an A- to A potential player, I definitely do not disagree with you.
    What's your take on where Schwarber ultimately ends up at ratings-wise? Is it something like .290/.370/.500 with below average / fringe-average defense? That's roughly low-mid 80's contact, mid 70's power, and high 50's / low 60's defense. After plugging those in I get around 85-87 OVR depending on the position, with LF being the highest rated.

    Fangraphs has him with a .280/.360/.480 line and a 60 FV, but those are more realistic projections and not pure upside. Pure upside I guess you can argue for a 65 but there's also a chance that his upside takes a hit from the rigors of being a catcher.

    From what I've read, Schwarber and Alex Jackson are pretty similar ceiling-wise, and I personally have Jackson as an 86 potential. To get to 90+ a player has to either have a couple of outstanding tools or be extremely well rounded.

    Now that Kris Bryant guy, he's a different story lol
    Bakin' soda, I got bakin' soda

    Comment

    • OhioCub
      Rookie
      • Apr 2014
      • 409

      #17
      Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

      Originally posted by Figment
      I am curious on how everyone is setting their lineup right now, or how they would set it up. I started a new franchise since we got Fowler and I am running this:

      vs RHP
      CF Dexter Fowler
      RF Ryan Sweeney
      SS Starlin Castro
      1B Anthony Rizzo
      C Miguel Montero
      2B Javier Baez
      3B Mike Olt
      RF Jorge Soler
      Pitcher

      vs LHP
      CF Dexter Fowler
      LF Chris Denorfia
      SS Starlin Castro
      1B Anthony Rizzo
      RF Jorge Soler
      2B Javier Baez
      3B Mike Olt
      C David Ross
      Pitcher

      My bench is:
      CF Arismendy Alcantara (2B/3B/SS)
      LF Chris Coghlan
      2B Tommy La Stella (3B)

      I have not yet called up Kris Bryant. I'm thinking he should be my number 3 or 4 with Rizzo, but not sure yet. Thinking something like:

      vs RHP
      CF Dexter Fowler
      SS Starlin Castro
      1B Anthony Rizzo
      3B Kris Bryant
      C Miguel Montero
      2B Javier Baez
      RF Jorge Soler
      LF Ryan Sweeney/Chris Coghlan

      vs LHP
      CF Dexter Fowler
      SS Starlin Castro
      1B Anthony Rizzo
      3B Kris Bryant
      RF Jorge Soler
      LF Chris Denorfia
      2B Javier Baez
      C David Ross/Miguel Montero

      Any thoughts on my lineup when I call up Kris Bryant? How does your lineup/roster look different for your franchise? When it comes to sports, I am quite the football expert, but when it comes to baseball, I am really more of just a fan. I would appreciate some outside input.

      Thanks.
      I haven't played the game in months due to being the offseason and Madden, NBA2k15 and NHL 15 taking up all my gaming time so I couldn't tell you what my in game lineup would look like right now without having the ratings in front of me but I can give you my input on how I think the real life team will shape up with the roster as it stands right now.

      Lineup vs. RHP
      Fowler - CF
      La Stella - 2B
      Rizzo - 1B
      Soler - RF
      Castro - SS
      Montero - C
      Olt - 3B
      Coghlan - LF

      Lineup vs. LHP
      Fowler - CF
      Alcantara - 2B
      Rizzo - 1B
      Soler - RF
      Castro - SS
      Olt - 3B
      Denorfia - LF
      Ross - C

      Don't assume by that that I think Alcantara will only play against LHP's as he will get spot starts all over the place (2B, 3B, LF, CF, SS). From what I've read Maddon sees Alcantara as a super-sub utility Ben Zobrist type player.

      Pitching wise we know who the top 4 starters will be and we know who will be in the back end of the bullpen with the rest up for grabs.

      I think both Baez and Bryant will start in Iowa and I think it's very possible Bryant sees big league action before Baez (if you haven't heard, Baez is really struggling in winter ball, striking out almost 50% of the time and not showing any signs of making adjustments, very worrisome). I don't know what Baez's ratings look like in the game right now but if it were up to me I'd set his contact, discipline and vision ratings VERY low and his power VERY high while keeping the same potential.

      As far as when Bryant comes up in mid-April, I see him sliding into Olt's spot both at 3B and in the lineup to start out (possibly hitting ahead of Montero vs. RHP). By the end of the year, if he lives up to the projections that are being forecast for him (he's already being projected to hit 30 HR, this year), he'll be hitting in the 4 spot.

      If Castillo doesn't get traded before camp breaks I could see em carrying 3 catchers with Castillo getting most of the AB's against LHP and Ross simply being Lester's personal catcher. Eventually a trade involving Castillo will happen, just not sure when.

      One last thing, I noticed you have Sweeney in your lineup, I would be completely shocked to see him retained beyond spring training.
      Last edited by OhioCub; 01-23-2015, 12:01 AM.

      Comment

      • OhioCub
        Rookie
        • Apr 2014
        • 409

        #18
        Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

        Originally posted by seanjeezy
        What's your take on where Schwarber ultimately ends up at ratings-wise? Is it something like .290/.370/.500 with below average / fringe-average defense? That's roughly low-mid 80's contact, mid 70's power, and high 50's / low 60's defense. After plugging those in I get around 85-87 OVR depending on the position, with LF being the highest rated.

        Fangraphs has him with a .280/.360/.480 line and a 60 FV, but those are more realistic projections and not pure upside. Pure upside I guess you can argue for a 65 but there's also a chance that his upside takes a hit from the rigors of being a catcher.

        From what I've read, Schwarber and Alex Jackson are pretty similar ceiling-wise, and I personally have Jackson as an 86 potential. To get to 90+ a player has to either have a couple of outstanding tools or be extremely well rounded.

        Now that Kris Bryant guy, he's a different story lol
        Personally, I haven't looked into Schwarber enough to project a slash line for him yet (just too early in his career for me to say I guess) but I do know he has 30 HR potential and excellent plate discipline for his age. And from what I've read he's picking up on the finer details of catching much faster than the player development department thought he would.

        Comment

        • Figment
          Pro
          • Jan 2009
          • 772

          #19
          Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

          Originally posted by seanjeezy
          What's your take on where Schwarber ultimately ends up at ratings-wise? Is it something like .290/.370/.500 with below average / fringe-average defense? That's roughly low-mid 80's contact, mid 70's power, and high 50's / low 60's defense. After plugging those in I get around 85-87 OVR depending on the position, with LF being the highest rated.

          Fangraphs has him with a .280/.360/.480 line and a 60 FV, but those are more realistic projections and not pure upside. Pure upside I guess you can argue for a 65 but there's also a chance that his upside takes a hit from the rigors of being a catcher.

          From what I've read, Schwarber and Alex Jackson are pretty similar ceiling-wise, and I personally have Jackson as an 86 potential. To get to 90+ a player has to either have a couple of outstanding tools or be extremely well rounded.

          Now that Kris Bryant guy, he's a different story lol
          Once again, I am a football expert, not a baseball expert, but I do love sports so I will give it a shot.

          Lets start by comparing his stats at the various levels with a couple other top prospects:
          A+ Daytona
          Schwarber: 191 PA, 19.9% SO, 14.1% BB, .302 BA, .393 OBP, .560 SLG (.952 OPS), 5.2% HR
          Bryant: 62 PA, 27.4% SO, 8.1% BB, .333 BA, .387 OBP, .719 SLG (1.106 OPS), 8.1% HR
          Soler: 236 PA, 16.1% SO, 9.3% BB, .281 BA, .343 OBP, .467 OPS (.810 OPS), 3.4% HR
          Rizzo: 364 PA, 19.5% SO, 11.5% BB, .278 BA, .357 OBP, .442 SLG (.799 OPS), 2.2% HR

          Schwarber started off his minor league career getting promoted in only 5 games, his bat is tremendous. Of these four players, nobody else has a higher on base percentage, he also has the largest walk percentage showing he does the one thing Billy Beane loves, get on base. He has what would appear to be an average strikeout rate compared to these guys and the second highest OPS. What this all says to me is he can be a Rizzo type hitter in the Majors. The power is there, he hits a home run 5.2% of the time, second only to Bryant. His bat and ability have the ability to be the best of this group, once again though, see how he handles the higher levels first. Given this info, I could see him projecting to be a .275/.360/.500 hitter once adjusted to the major league level, but you were probably a bit closer to what will really happen.

          The more important question is, where does he play? I don't think the Cubs stick with him at catcher. He played 20 games at catcher last season with a .981 fielding % and 36 games at left field with a .985 fielding %. Neither are that great, but when you look at the fact that he played 9 games at catcher and 8 games at LF in A, but played 9 at Catcher and 26 at left in A+, it seems obvious to me they don't intend to keep him at home behind the plate. If it were any other team, I would say that he is a guarantee to switch to 1B, but Rizzo has that locked up. So what do we do with the prospects? Our current future stars look as follows:

          C- Open
          1B- Anthony Rizzo
          2B- Javier Baez (if he can strike out less and raise his BA)
          3B- Kris Bryant
          SS- Starlin Castro
          LF- Open
          CF- Open (Pretty sure Fowler is gone after this season)
          RF- Jorge Soler

          When you look at it this way it seems obvious that the only home for Schwarber is at Catcher. Albert Almora is the current CF star of the future, and I feel confident that Addison Russell can make the switch to LF with ease, after that there are no openings unless someone gets traded. But once again, he is likely to stay in the minors another couple years and a lot can change til then. Hope this is a good answer, let me know.

          Comment

          • Figment
            Pro
            • Jan 2009
            • 772

            #20
            Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

            Originally posted by OhioCub
            One last thing, I noticed you have Sweeney in your lineup, I would be completely shocked to see him retained beyond spring training.
            As far as the game goes, Sweeney has very high contact ratings against RHP's, and Coghlan is only decent. I don't think Sweeney is going to make it out of spring training in real life, and I do not intend to keep him long in the game either, only a holdover until I call Bryant or Lake up (my rule of thumb is I only call players up if they are on fire or if an injury occurs and they are the obvious call up).

            Comment

            • redsox4evur
              Hall Of Fame
              • Jul 2013
              • 18169

              #21
              Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

              Originally posted by Figment
              Spoiler
              I would think that Russell is going to be the SS of the future not Castro. I think they will flip him for a starter in the next couple of years. I also think Bryant could be headed out to LF. And you may see Castro go to third if they don't want to trade him.
              Last edited by redsox4evur; 01-23-2015, 01:03 AM.
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              Comment

              • Figment
                Pro
                • Jan 2009
                • 772

                #22
                2015 Chicago Cubs

                Originally posted by redsox4evur
                I would think that Russell is going to be the SS of the future not Castro. I think they will flip him for a starter in the next couple of years. I also think Bryant could be headed out to LF. And you may see Castro go to third if they don't want to trade him.
                I am not buying the Starlin Castro trade rumors. Castro is a proven MLB star, one of the best short stops in the game. He does not have a major injury history, and his bat is one of the best in the game as far as OBP and BA go. If anyone is going to go, I would think it would be Baez, and soon. He is to much of a risk/reward player. I think if the Cubs are smart, they should let another team take the risk on him and get someone of great value back while Baez is still a top prospect. I get that he has the potential to bat .260-.270 and blast 30+ home runs, but his approach reminds me a lot of Carlos Pena, all power and no vision. The highest his OBP would probably ever be is like .310. Trade him to the Mets who are still looking for a Short Stop and pull one of their top pitching prospects. I would rather build up Addison Russell to be the 2B of the future, he actually projects as a decent on base batter, who could blast 20+ home runs, and be an above average base runner. Let's not forget that he is a great fielder too. Once again, I am no baseball expert, but this is just my two cents. Thoughts?
                Last edited by Figment; 01-23-2015, 02:16 AM.

                Comment

                • OhioCub
                  Rookie
                  • Apr 2014
                  • 409

                  #23
                  Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                  Originally posted by Figment
                  Once again, I am a football expert, not a baseball expert, but I do love sports so I will give it a shot.

                  Lets start by comparing his stats at the various levels with a couple other top prospects:
                  A+ Daytona
                  Schwarber: 191 PA, 19.9% SO, 14.1% BB, .302 BA, .393 OBP, .560 SLG (.952 OPS), 5.2% HR
                  Bryant: 62 PA, 27.4% SO, 8.1% BB, .333 BA, .387 OBP, .719 SLG (1.106 OPS), 8.1% HR
                  Soler: 236 PA, 16.1% SO, 9.3% BB, .281 BA, .343 OBP, .467 OPS (.810 OPS), 3.4% HR
                  Rizzo: 364 PA, 19.5% SO, 11.5% BB, .278 BA, .357 OBP, .442 SLG (.799 OPS), 2.2% HR

                  Schwarber started off his minor league career getting promoted in only 5 games, his bat is tremendous. Of these four players, nobody else has a higher on base percentage, he also has the largest walk percentage showing he does the one thing Billy Beane loves, get on base. He has what would appear to be an average strikeout rate compared to these guys and the second highest OPS. What this all says to me is he can be a Rizzo type hitter in the Majors. The power is there, he hits a home run 5.2% of the time, second only to Bryant. His bat and ability have the ability to be the best of this group, once again though, see how he handles the higher levels first. Given this info, I could see him projecting to be a .275/.360/.500 hitter once adjusted to the major league level, but you were probably a bit closer to what will really happen.

                  The more important question is, where does he play? I don't think the Cubs stick with him at catcher. He played 20 games at catcher last season with a .981 fielding % and 36 games at left field with a .985 fielding %. Neither are that great, but when you look at the fact that he played 9 games at catcher and 8 games at LF in A, but played 9 at Catcher and 26 at left in A+, it seems obvious to me they don't intend to keep him at home behind the plate. If it were any other team, I would say that he is a guarantee to switch to 1B, but Rizzo has that locked up. So what do we do with the prospects? Our current future stars look as follows:

                  C- Open
                  1B- Anthony Rizzo
                  2B- Javier Baez (if he can strike out less and raise his BA)
                  3B- Kris Bryant
                  SS- Starlin Castro
                  LF- Open
                  CF- Open (Pretty sure Fowler is gone after this season)
                  RF- Jorge Soler

                  When you look at it this way it seems obvious that the only home for Schwarber is at Catcher. Albert Almora is the current CF star of the future, and I feel confident that Addison Russell can make the switch to LF with ease, after that there are no openings unless someone gets traded. But once again, he is likely to stay in the minors another couple years and a lot can change til then. Hope this is a good answer, let me know.
                  Not sure if you saw my post above in regards to this but the Cubs have said the reason he didn't catch much last year was just to get him comfortable in pro ball. They've been working with him on his catching all offseason and he's apparently made believers out of them that he can stick there.

                  Comment

                  • OhioCub
                    Rookie
                    • Apr 2014
                    • 409

                    #24
                    Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                    Originally posted by Figment
                    I am not buying the Starlin Castro trade rumors. Castro is a proven MLB star, one of the best short stops in the game. He does not have a major injury history, and his bat is one of the best in the game as far as OBP and BA go. If anyone is going to go, I would think it would be Baez, and soon. He is to much of a risk/reward player. I think if the Cubs are smart, they should let another team take the risk on him and get someone of great value back while Baez is still a top prospect. I get that he has the potential to bat .260-.270 and blast 30+ home runs, but his approach reminds me a lot of Carlos Pena, all power and no vision. The highest his OBP would probably ever be is like .310. Trade him to the Mets who are still looking for a Short Stop and pull one of their top pitching prospects. I would rather build up Addison Russell to be the 2B of the future, he actually projects as a decent on base batter, who could blast 20+ home runs, and be an above average base runner. Let's not forget that he is a great fielder too. Once again, I am no baseball expert, but this is just my two cents. Thoughts?
                    I agree with most of what you said. As far as Castro being one of the best shortstops in the game, I don't think I'd go that far. He's above average but still lacks focus at times and although he may be a good contact hitter and can hit for a good average he's not really good in the OBP department as he doesn't draw many walks at all. That said, I don't think he's going anywhere either. Pretty much everyone knew all along that Baez has the biggest bust potential of anyone in the group and with his recent struggles in winter ball I fear that bust potential may come true. As far as trading him for one of the Mets top pitchers, I don't know if they'd give up much for him right now. He's been exposed and until he can show that he can make an adjustment noone's gonna part with a top pitching prospect for him. What I see happening is when Russell is ready either Castro moves over to second or Bryant moves to left and Russell takes his spot at third. It all depends on how Bryant does defensively and/or if Russell outgrows shortstop (which many scouts seem to think he will and will eventually be better suited for 3B similar to A-Roid). If Baez does somehow figure things out and noone's traded it almost guarantees Bryant gets moved to LF.

                    Comment

                    • Figment
                      Pro
                      • Jan 2009
                      • 772

                      #25
                      Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                      Originally posted by OhioCub
                      I agree with most of what you said. As far as Castro being one of the best shortstops in the game, I don't think I'd go that far. He's above average but still lacks focus at times and although he may be a good contact hitter and can hit for a good average he's not really good in the OBP department as he doesn't draw many walks at all. That said, I don't think he's going anywhere either. Pretty much everyone knew all along that Baez has the biggest bust potential of anyone in the group and with his recent struggles in winter ball I fear that bust potential may come true. As far as trading him for one of the Mets top pitchers, I don't know if they'd give up much for him right now. He's been exposed and until he can show that he can make an adjustment noone's gonna part with a top pitching prospect for him. What I see happening is when Russell is ready either Castro moves over to second or Bryant moves to left and Russell takes his spot at third. It all depends on how Bryant does defensively and/or if Russell outgrows shortstop (which many scouts seem to think he will and will eventually be better suited for 3B similar to A-Roid). If Baez does somehow figure things out and noone's traded it almost guarantees Bryant gets moved to LF.
                      So, with that possible scenario, is this the future:

                      C Kyle Schwarber (21.3 YO)
                      1B Anthony Rizzo (25.2 YO)
                      2B Javier Baez (22.1 YO)
                      3B Addison Russell (21 YO)
                      SS Starlin Castro (24.3 YO)
                      LF Kris Bryant (23 YO)
                      CF Albert Almora (20.3 YO)
                      RF Jorge Soler (22.3 YO)
                      and sprinkle in some utility player from Arismendy Alcantara (23.1 YO).

                      One thing to consider with all of these prospects is that the average age of an MLB player is 28.7 years old, hell, the average AAA player is about 28 years old too. These guys are all relatively much younger than the MLB average age right now, even our current MLB stars, Castro and Rizzo. We as Cubs fans have had a needed these guys to be at Wrigley so bad, that even I am just now realizing that many of them might not be a year off, they may be 2, 3, 4, or even more years away from the majors, and they will still be below the MLB age average. I believe Bryant is ready for the majors, but maybe Baez should still be in AA working on pitch recognition, maybe Alcantara got pushed because he had a pretty good AA and AAA season, maybe he needs more at bats in AAA. We sent Junior Lake (24.3 YO) down and even Mike Olt (26.2 YO) and are critical of the way they played, but they may even need some developmental time, even though Olt has about as much of a spot on the team as Dan Vogelbach (22 YO).

                      I kind of got a little off track here, but I ended up starting on to what I believe is a very interesting point. We worry about what place their is for Schwarber or Russell on the team, but at this point it may not even matter for a couple more years.

                      Comment

                      • OhioCub
                        Rookie
                        • Apr 2014
                        • 409

                        #26
                        Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                        Well, it's possible Russell could make his debut this year although unlikely. Schwarber, offensively could arrive next year but because he's learning how to catch properly he's probably at least a couple years away. Lake has no future on this team. Olt could be kept around to backup the corners.

                        Comment

                        • Figment
                          Pro
                          • Jan 2009
                          • 772

                          #27
                          Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                          Originally posted by OhioCub
                          I agree with most of what you said. As far as Castro being one of the best shortstops in the game, I don't think I'd go that far. He's above average but still lacks focus at times and although he may be a good contact hitter and can hit for a good average he's not really good in the OBP department as he doesn't draw many walks at all. That said, I don't think he's going anywhere either.
                          As far as Castro goes, lets break his bat down first:
                          in 2014 his batting average was best of all short stops. His batting average was second among all shortstops only to Hanley Ramirez. He even has the number three SLG and OPS of all short stops in the league. Of all current MLB players, he currently has the 47th best career batting average, 3rd of all shortstops behind only Troy Tulowitzky and Hanley Ramirez. His career on base percentage is a .325, but if you get rid of the Dale Sveum years, he is up to around a .340 OBP, not elite but definitely respectable.
                          As far as fielding goes, I have watched him make some brilliant defensive plays, he is actually quite good in my opinion. I have also seen him have his back to the pitcher during a pitch, he sees a squirrel or something shiny and his focus is gone, point is that I don't believe it is necessarily his fielding ability, I think that is pretty far above average, but more of a problem with his ability to stay focused on the field. I do not recall any of those incidents happening this season, so I will call that progress with age for the only 24 year old. That said, I just realized I am now older than all of these players we have been talking about, combine that with just starting the new semester at school, and I now feel really old, so I am going to go cry, eat some ice cream, and watch some old Spiderman cartoons on Hulu lol.

                          Comment

                          • OhioCub
                            Rookie
                            • Apr 2014
                            • 409

                            #28
                            Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                            Join the crowd, most of these kids are a decade plus younger than me. lol

                            Anyway, I'm not saying Castro's not good and that he doesn't have the potential to be great. I'm just saying he's not quite there yet. He needs to stop having these little gaffes in the field and he needs to be more selective at the plate. A career .325 OBP for a career .284 hitter isn't good at all in that department. Even if you throw out 2013, yes everything goes up but the gap between BA and OBP stays relatively the same. To be considered a good OBP guy you should have a gap of at least 80 between your BA and OBP, for Castro that would be about .360.

                            Comment

                            • Figment
                              Pro
                              • Jan 2009
                              • 772

                              #29
                              Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                              Originally posted by OhioCub
                              I agree with most of what you said. As far as Castro being one of the best shortstops in the game, I don't think I'd go that far. He's above average but still lacks focus at times and although he may be a good contact hitter and can hit for a good average he's not really good in the OBP department as he doesn't draw many walks at all. That said, I don't think he's going anywhere either. Pretty much everyone knew all along that Baez has the biggest bust potential of anyone in the group and with his recent struggles in winter ball I fear that bust potential may come true. As far as trading him for one of the Mets top pitchers, I don't know if they'd give up much for him right now. He's been exposed and until he can show that he can make an adjustment noone's gonna part with a top pitching prospect for him. What I see happening is when Russell is ready either Castro moves over to second or Bryant moves to left and Russell takes his spot at third. It all depends on how Bryant does defensively and/or if Russell outgrows shortstop (which many scouts seem to think he will and will eventually be better suited for 3B similar to A-Roid). If Baez does somehow figure things out and noone's traded it almost guarantees Bryant gets moved to LF.
                              Just screwing around on my franchise and the Mets will trade SP Noah Syndergaard for SS Javier Baez and SP Felix Doubront.
                              Wondering if I should do it or not, Baez in 8 games so far is hitting .433/.452/.733 for me. Syndergard would go down to AAA and obviously be my top pitching prospect for next season, my next in line for 2nd are Tommy La Stella, Arismendy Alcantara, or call up Addison Russell, or Logan Watkins if I want. What do you guys think I should do?

                              Comment

                              • MrOldboy
                                MVP
                                • Feb 2011
                                • 2653

                                #30
                                Re: 2015 Chicago Cubs

                                I'll keep an eye on this thread as always. I may make a new one labelled OSFM if I do work on the Cubs again with info in the OP so you guys can give input. I haven't started to think about OSFM yet since I typically try not to play that much of The Show this time of year since the new game is out so soon, but It's about that time of year again. Some interesting players will need to be created and also some old favorites will now be officially in the game and I pray they'll get their stances/pitching motions right. I'll probably have nightmares about Baez having some horribly ugly bat flick (See Marcell Ozuna) in the game and having to go through every stance again to find a suitable replacement.

                                You guys always provide a ton of info, albeit sometimes with obvious Cubs fan bias we all have, but I try to be as impartial as I can since everyone uses the OSFM set not just Cubs fans.

                                It's an exciting time to be a Cubs fan, that's for sure even without OSFM. The Major League roster is looking to be interesting this year even if no prospects made their debut this year.

                                Comment

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