Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

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  • jasontoddwhitt
    MVP
    • May 2003
    • 8095

    #1

    Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

    2018 Cincinnati Reds Preview

    It’s taken 136 seasons of professional ball to work their record to 246 games over .500, which becomes a more pertinent reference point when placed side by side with the 96 games under .500 the Reds have been since 2014. The Reds, of late, have done copious amounts of losing, a stretch of cellar-dwelling rivaled only by their putrid run in the early 1930s.

    It has been largely calculated and deliberate. In more than one way, it has been exhausting, the turnstile of players in a nonstop rotation. The hope is, however, that the 2018 season becomes the first berm against that flood of losses, and that the young core put together after a years-long teardown will finally start to score more runs than their opponents.

    The 2018 Cincinnati Reds have a lot of talent, which is something that merely looking at their previous records and offseason transactions wouldn’t really tell you. There are also precious few position battles going on in camp, something that also doesn’t usually jive with a team that’s been on the losing end of so many games for so long. That, too, is by design, as GM Dick Williams and the front office have been adamant about letting the young players they’ve brought in through their litany of trades take their lumps and mature at the big league level. The hope is that the patience will pay off with incremental improvements year by year.

    Key Player


    Joey Votto has led all of Major League Baseball in wOBA (.423) since 2015, yet the Cincinnati Reds have been a whopping 86 games under .500 in that time. The man’s a future Hall of Famer and one of the best hitters of his era, but he needs help in the biggest way to get the Reds finally out of the NL Central cellar.



    Luis Castillo just might be that help. The 25-year-old bounced from the San Francisco Giants’ system to the Miami Marlins while coming up, and he even was shipped to the San Diego Padres before being returned as part of the Colin Rea injury fallout. He also spent much of his first few MiLB seasons exclusively as a reliever and has only 460.1 IP of minor league pitching under his belt — none of which has come at AAA, even. That led to him being largely under the radar throughout his development, and despite never once cracking a major Top 100 prospect list, the Reds actively sought him as the centerpiece in return for trading Dan Straily to Miami after the 2016 season. So far, that looks like quite the savvy move.

    The righty’s 97.5 average fastball velocity was the second best in all of baseball among pitchers who threw at least 80 IP in 2017, and with a change-up that’s a full 10 mph slower, he’s got a devastating strikeout pitch to match it. That, paired with a career minors walk rate of just 2.4 per 9 IP, gives hope that his breakout rookie season in 2017 is just the beginning and that the 3.12 ERA, 1.07 WHIP, and 3.41 xFIP he produced last year is replicable in a larger sample going forward. If so, he is absolutely the keystone around which the Reds will hope to continue building, and he’s worth watching every single time he takes the mound.

    Best Case Scenario
    The Reds finished in last place in the NL Central in 2017, despite Joey Votto having another MVP-caliber campaign and the lineup, in general, being around league-average. The issue was the pitching. Not a whole lot of progress was made toward changing that outcome this offseason, other than hoping that the slew of pitchers in their 20s can improve on what the likes of Bronson Arroyo and Scott Feldman managed. If Luis Castillo, Robert Stephenson and Co. can do just that, though, then 2018 would have seen some success for the rebuilding Reds.

    Worst Case Scenario
    Another year where the negatives outweigh the positives, where Billy Hamilton just can’t get his offensive game together, and where that doesn’t actually matter because none of the Reds pitchers can stymie the opposition enough for what Hamilton does or doesn’t do to be the reason why games turned out the way they did.

    Projected Starting Lineup
    CF Billy Hamilton
    SS Jose Peraza
    1B Joey Votto
    LF Adam Duvall
    RF Scott Schebler
    3B Eugenio Suarez
    2B Scooter Gennett
    C Tucker Barnhart/Devin Mesoraco

    Projected Starting Rotation
    1. Luis Castillo
    2. Sal Romano
    3. Yovani Gallardo
    4. Tyler Mahle
    5. Homer Bailey

    Preseason Projection
    Last edited by jasontoddwhitt; 11-21-2018, 08:30 PM.
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  • jasontoddwhitt
    MVP
    • May 2003
    • 8095

    #2
    Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

    Flurry of moves finializes the Reds roster

    The Reds made several moves in the days leading up to Opening Day to fill out the 25-man roster.

    "We felt like we needed to add a little depth to our bench and our bullpen to get us through the initial weeks of the season," said GM Dick Williams. "Especially considering the injuries we are currently dealing with."

    The first signing was of 35-year-old reliever Jason Motte to a one year deal worth $545k. Last season, Motte made 46 relief appearances with the Atlanta Braves, going 1-0 with a 3.54 ERA. Motte saw a sharp decrease in his strikeout rate last season, compared to his career averages. The Reds are hoping he can regain the form he had two years ago.

    The next signing was of 38-year-old reliever Chien-Ming Wang to a one year deal worth $1 million. Wang didn't pitch in 2017, having last pitched for the Royals in 2016. Health is always going to be the wonder for Wang, as his career has been derailed by a multitude of foot and arm troubles.

    The final signing was to find some right-handed pop for the bench, and they found it in 37-year-old Jose Bautista. Bautista signed a one year deal worth $1.16 million. Bautista had a very down year last year for the Blue Jays, but when he did hit the ball, he hit it hard. Will most likely just be used as a pinch hitter for the Reds.
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    • jasontoddwhitt
      MVP
      • May 2003
      • 8095

      #3
      Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

      April 2018

      One month into the season and it is apparent that the problems of 2017 are still here in 2018 as well. Offensively, the team is doing great. The Reds rank 5th in the league in runs scored. Joey Votto, notorious for his slow starts throughout his career, is off to a hot start. Eugenio Suarez and Scott Schebler are also off to great starts. Billy Hamilton is on pace to steal 92 bases.

      Unfortunately for the Reds, while the retooled bullpen is performing well, the retooled rotation is already on the skids. The starting rotation ranks 13th in the NL in ERA at 5.78. In his sixth start, Luis Castillo was pulled early due to severe shoulder pain. A torn rotator cuff was revealed by the MRI, ending Castillo's season before it even got started. Chien-Ming Wang's latest comeback attempt ended after 20 pitches, as he suffered a torn flexor tendon that will require Tommy John surgery. Anthony DeSclafani is still 3-4 weeks away from returning from the strained oblique that cost him all of 2017.

      With the injury to Castillo, Brandon Finnegan has been called up from Louisville to take his spot in the rotation. Finnegan was 3-1 with a 3.38 ERA and 26 strikeouts in 24 innings pitched. After the injury issues that sidelined him in 2017, it was nice to see him get off to a good start down in AAA.

      SS Jose Peraza got off to a very slow start (.212/.217/.303) and drew the ire of the front office. SS Alex Blandino got off to a very hot start (.318/.423/.409) in Louisville and we made the decision to bring up Alex and have him and Jose split starts at short. Blandino came up and kept on hitting (.346/.393/.577), taking the SS job from Peraza. Looking to get Peraza regular at-bats, we sent him back down to Louisville, where he's still not hitting (.214/.313/.250).





      American League Batter of the Month
      Mike Trout (Angels) - .388AVG, 9HR, 33RBI, 24R

      National League Batter of the Month
      Paul Goldschmidt (Diamondbacks) - .396AVG, 9HR, 22RBI, 23R

      American League Pitcher of the Month
      J.A. Happ (Blue Jays) - 5-0, 39K, 2.75ERA, 36IP

      National League Pitcher of the Month
      Yu Darvish (Cubs) - 4-0, 38K, 1.35ERA, 33IP

      American League Rookie of the Month
      Carson Fulmer (White Sox) - 4-0, 26K, 0.00ERA, 24IP

      National League Rookie of the Month
      Lewis Brinson (Marlins) - .306AVG, 1DBL, 3TPL, 3HR, 11R, 8RBI
      Last edited by jasontoddwhitt; 11-26-2018, 10:53 PM.
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      • jasontoddwhitt
        MVP
        • May 2003
        • 8095

        #4
        Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

        May 2018

        Heading into the season, we thought we had a chance to have a .500 record as this team was ready to take the next step. Two months into the season, and we've come to the realization that we may have to hit the reset button on this rebuild.

        One game, in particular, this month showed what is great about this team and what is horrible about this team.



        Offensively, we are doing great. Joey Votto is doing Votto things and Eugenio Suarez is building upon his breakout 2017.

        Votto: .355/.459/.552, 203 AB, 10 HR, 2 SB, 171 wRC+, 2.5 WAR
        Suarez: .302/.372/.578, 199 AB, 15 HR, 2 SB, 153 wRC+, 2.2 WAR

        Our bullpen is also doing great, ranking fifth in the National League in ERA at 3.90.

        The rotation........is it even worth talking about? None of the pitchers are panning out. We've got a bunch of prospects who are trending more towards being relievers than legitimate starters. With an ERA of 6.28, we rank dead last in the National League.

        Four of my five starters are currently on cold streaks...

        Homer Bailey: 3 GS, 1-1, 10.38 ERA, 13.0 IP, 9 K
        Brandon Finnegan: 4 GS, 0-4, 16.20 ERA, 15.0 IP, 13 K
        Tyler Mahle: 6 GS, 2-3, 9.91 ERA, 26.1 IP, 22 K
        Sal Ramano: 2 GS, 0-1, 10.24 ERA, 9.2 IP, 8 K

        I'm going to vomit.

        Hopefully, we get Anthony DeSclafani back this month from his oblique strain. We should've gotten him back in May, but a setback pushed his return to June. We are also hoping to get Adam Duvall and Scott Schebler back in June as well. I'm not feeling confident about starting Jose Bautista in right field. Meanwhile, Devin Mesoraco is complaining about playing time and demanding a trade. Good luck to us trying to move that $13M contract. Talk about a promising player getting his career derailed by injuries. Meanwhile, we're thinking about trading RP David Hernandez simply because he's making the rest of the team look bad. He's low cost and has two years on his contract, so maybe a pennant-chasing team needing bullpen help will give us a decent piece or two.





        AL Batter of the Month
        1B Edwin Encarnacion (Indians) - .371 AVG, 8 HR, 30 RBIs, 21 R

        NL Batter of the Month
        1B Cody Bellinger (Dodgers) - .388 AVG, 10 HR, 28 RBIs, 22 R

        AL Pitcher of the Month
        SP James Paxton (Mariners) - 6 GS, 5-0, 2.28 ERA, 42 K

        NL Pitcher of the Month
        CL Drew Steckenrider (Marlins) - 13 G, 2-0, 7 SV, 0.00 ERA, 23 K

        AL Rookie of the Month
        C Chance Sisco (Orioles) - .288 AVG, 3 HR, 7 RBIs, 4 R

        NL Rookie of the Month
        RF Lewis Brinson (Marlins) - .278 AVG, 4 HR, 11 RBIs
        Last edited by jasontoddwhitt; 12-09-2018, 06:45 PM.
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        • jasontoddwhitt
          MVP
          • May 2003
          • 8095

          #5
          Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

          MLB News


          All-Star Voting Update

          Joey Votto - Leading all first baseman with 521,863 votes. Cody Bellinger of the Dodgers is only 3,677 votes behind.

          Scooter Gennett - Ranks second among second baseman with 332,378 votes. Trails Daniel Murphy of the Nationals by 47,360 votes.

          Bryce Harper of the Nationals is the leading vote-getter in the National League with 579,119 votes. Mike Trout of the Angels is the leading vote-getter in the American League with 639,648 votes.

          MLB Amateur Draft

          First Round Pick: C Noah Naylor - St. Joan of Arc High School (Mississauga, ON)
          - OSA Grades: 60 Contact, 35 Gap Power, 35 Home Run Power, 50 Discipline, 35 Avoid K's
          - Our Scouts: 65 Contact, 55 Gap Power, 55 Home Run Power, 55 Discipline, 50 Avoid K's

          Summary: Noah has a strong, lean frame. He has a great stroke and projects to hit for a high average. He is a well above average defender. He has above average power potential, the kind that could generate 30 homers a season in the future. Noah could develop into a productive regular on a contending team.

          Second Round Pick: RP Jason Rackers - Jefferson College High School (Hillsboro, MO)
          - OSA Grades: 75 Stuff, 50 Movement, 35 Control, 70 Fastball, 70 Slider, 55 Changeup
          - Our Scouts: 80 Stuff, 45 Movement, 50 Control, 70 Fastball, 80 Slider, 45 Changeup

          Summary: Jason projects to have a filthy slider and a dominant fastball in his three-pitch repertoire. His big stuff gets people's attention, and he combines that with average control. Rackers projects to be an elite reliever.

          Third Round Pick: SS Alex King - St. Louis University (St. Louis, MO)
          - OSA Grades: 35 Contact, 40 Gap Power, 60 Home Run Power, 40 Discipline, 40 Avoid K's
          - Our Scouts: 50 Contact, 35 Gap Power, 60 Home Run Power, 55 Discipline, 40 Avoid K's

          Summary: Alex is a long, lean athletic shortstop who has raw above-average power. He is above average on the basepaths. He shows good pitch recognition at the plate. King's bat and his hustle should make him a frontrunner for an audition as a shortstop.

          Fourth Round Pick: SP Luke Shilling - University of Illinois (Champaign, IL)
          - OSA Grades: 75 Stuff, 45 Movement, 20 Control, 70 Fastball, 80 Curveball, 55 Changeup
          - Our Scouts: 65 Stuff, 55 Movement, 40 Control, 70 Fastball, 75 Curveball, 60 Changeup

          Summary: Luke is a 6'5" starting pitcher who could be a force with three quality pitches in his arsenal. His raw stuff continues to improve and is projected to be among the best in the league. With some seasoning, Shilling has the makings of a fifth starter.
          Last edited by jasontoddwhitt; 12-10-2018, 07:15 PM.
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          • jasontoddwhitt
            MVP
            • May 2003
            • 8095

            #6
            Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

            News Update

            - Jason Motte returned from injury and we inserted him back into the bullpen. His first appearance was a little rocky. Okay, rocky is an understatement. Homer, homer, and double was how the first three hitters went. Though he got out of the inning by retiring the next three hitters, we've seen enough. Motte was supposed to bring some veteran leadership and perhaps milk the last little bit of baseball he had left in him. Through April, we thought we had made a savvy move. Motte had a 3.18 ERA out of the pen and nine of his 12 relief appearances were of the scoreless variety. The wheels came off in May. Before he got hurt, he had given up four runs in less than two innings, walking four hitters. With Wandy Peralta pitching great out of the pen since being recalled from Louisville, Motte became expendable and we designated him for assignment. He cleared waivers, refused the assignment, and good luck in your future endeavors.

            - Speaking of Wandy Peralta, in ten relief appearances, he already has a higher WAR than every other pitcher on this staff. He's been very dominant since coming up and has quickly been moved from middle relief to a setup role.

            - We've started the month of June with one win in nine games. I seriously believe we are the worst team in baseball. Maybe it wasn't all Bryan Price's fault?

            - Brandon Finnegan aggravates me. His first two starts in the rotation were beautiful. Threw a complete game two-hitter in his first start and pitched a six-inning quality start in his second start that the bullpen blew. He hasn't had a quality start since. (2-5, 7.52 ERA). Honestly, he should probably be in the bullpen, but I don't know who I would replace him with. Robert Stephenson? He's doing okay in Louisville (5-1, 2.82 ERA, and most importantly, a 3.6 BB/9).

            - Anthony DeSclafani has been sent on an injury rehab assignment in Louisville. Now I just need to decide if I want to eat Homer's contract or kick somebody else out of my Isle of Misfit Starters rotation.

            - Joey Votto has slipped to second in All-Star voting behind Dodgers 1B Cody Bellinger by 76,256 votes. In Votto's defense, Bellinger just recently had a 25-game hitting streak snapped and he plays in LA. Considering how much we suck (as a team, not Joey), I'm shocked Joey is getting as many votes as he is getting.

            - Scooter Gennett remains in second place in All-Star voting behind Nationals 2B Daniel Murphy by 74,400 votes.

            - The Angels Mike Trout (1,156,493) and the Nationals Bryce Harper (1,032,814) remain the leading vote-getters in their respective leagues.
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            • jasontoddwhitt
              MVP
              • May 2003
              • 8095

              #7
              Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

              June 2018

              7-19

              That was our record in the month of June. There was also a 13 game losing streak thrown in there as well. Without Scott Schebler and Adam Duvall in the lineup, our offense came unglued. I mean we have Phil Ervin in the starting lineup. Because of the lack of protection in the lineup, Joey Votto struggled. He still got his walks, but he was getting absolutely nothing to hit, and when he did make contact, it seemed to go right at somebody. He did start heating up towards the end of the month, as did the team as a whole as we finished the month winning six of our final nine games. Yes, at one point, we were 1-16 in the month of June.

              Reinforcements should be coming soon. Duvall's strained hamstring is FINALLY healed. What was initially listed as a 4-5 week injury turned into a seven-week ordeal following a setback and then a note from the training staff saying they weren't sure when it would heal. Duvall starts a rehab assignment in Louisville at the time of this article. Schebler should be back within the week from his fractured rib.

              After missing nearly two years due to multiple injuries, Anthony Desclafani was activated from the disabled list to make the start June 23rd against the Cubs. Desclafani is currently on a pitch count limit as we work to stretch him out, but he has looked good in both his starts. He is currently sitting at 0-1 with a 2.00 ERA and 12 Ks in nine innings of work.

              Desclafani took the spot of Brandon Finnegan in the rotation, who was optioned back to Louisville and immediately put into the bullpen. In 9 starts, he was 2-5 with an 8.04 ERA. He struggled when he went through the lineup a second and third time, so while he may have the stamina to be a starter, he doesn't have the pitching make up for it. Hopefully, he can regain the form he had as a reliever when the Royals won the World Series.




              MLB News

              - The Boston Red Sox and CL Craig Kimbrel put the finishing touches on a 3-year extension worth $52.6 million. Kimbrell also will get a $100k bonus for each time he's named to the All-Star team.

              - The Cleveland Indians and LF Michael Brantley agreed to a 2-year extension worth $26.4 million. Brantley will also get a $600k bonus for reaching 550 plate appearances.

              - The Chicago White Sox make the first major trade of the season, signaling they are throwing up the white flag on this season. The Sox sent CL Joakim Soria and $1.83M in cash to the Cleveland Indians for three minor leaguers. Soria had struggled with the White Sox, blowing five saves and having a 7.15 ERA, but a move to the division-leading Indians, and being the 8th inning guy behind Andrew Miller, could be what Soria needs to get back on track.

              - Ichiro Suzuki held a press conference today in Seattle announcing that he would retire at the end of the year. Ichiro, who turns 45 later this year, is a lifetime .310 hitter who has collected 3,135 hits, 118 home runs, and 800 RBIs at the time of this publication. Ichiro has been getting regular playing time for the Mariners this year, making 61 starts so far on the year.

              - The American League Hitter of the Month for June was Los Angeles Angels CF Mike Trout. Trout hit .380 with 10 home runs, 29 RBIs, and 29 runs scored. For the year, Trout is batting .340 with 30 home runs and 89 RBIs.

              - The National League Hitter of the Month for June was Pittsburgh Pirates 1B Josh Bell. Bell hit .391 with seven home runs, 17 RBIs, and 28 runs scored. For the year, Bell his hitting .322 with 15 home runs, 49 RBIs, and 62 runs scored.

              - The American League Pitcher of the Month for June was Minnesota Twins CL Trevor Hildenberger. Hildenberger made 12 relief appearances, throwing 13 innings and collecting eight saves, a 3-0 record, 10 strikeouts, and a 2.08 ERA. For the year, Hildenberger has made 37 relief appearances and nailed down 18 saves. In 37.2 innings, he has fanned 41 batters and walked nine. His record is 4-2 with a 3.11 ERA and the opposition is hitting .210 against him.

              - The National League Pitcher of the Month for June was St. Louis Cardinals SP Luke Weaver. Weaver racked up an impressive 5-1 record in six starts. This month, he fanned 33 batters in 37 innings and compiled a 2.43 ERA. For the season, Weaver has a 7-5 record, 16 starts, 91 innings, 91 strikeouts, and a 3.66 ERA.

              - The American League Rookie of the Month for June was Minnesota Twins C Mitch Garver. In 12 games, Garver hit .364 and collected 12 hits, one home run, four RBIs, and six runs scored. For the year, Garver is hitting .267 with two home runs, six RBIs, and 11 runs scored.

              - The National League Rookie of the Month for June was Philadelphia Phillies SS J.P. Crawford. Crawford hit .333 with five home runs, 17 RBIs, and 22 runs scored. For the year, Crawford is hitting .273 with 12 home runs, 34 RBIs, and 54 runs scored.
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              • jasontoddwhitt
                MVP
                • May 2003
                • 8095

                #8
                Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                Reds News

                A few minor moves have been made by the Reds front office. The Reds purchased 23-year-old SP Adalberto Pena from the Pennsylvania Road Warriors of the Independent Atlantic League for $250k. Pena was originally discovered in the Dominican Republic by the Dodgers. The Dodgers released him on June 1st, where he was quickly picked up by the Road Warriors. Pena hadn't made an appearance for the Road Warriors before the Reds picked him up. Pena projects to throw a solid fastball with two lesser pitches. He has average stuff, but he is inclined to run up some high pitch counts. Pena will probably be relegated to warm-body duties in the pen.

                The Reds also signed 17-year-old international amateur free agent Johanser Pontier for an $890k signing bonus and has been assigned to the Reds international complex. The centerfielder has above-average power potential, the kind that could generate 30 homers a season in the future. He can be too passive at the plate at times and projects to strike out a lot. Pontier is likely to be on the bubble for a big league role as he matures.

                Finally, the Reds purchased 25-year-old reliever Pat Peterson from the Gateway Grizzlies of the Frontier League for $250k. Peterson was originally drafted by the Mariners in the 23rd round of the 2014 draft and has pitched in the independents the previous two seasons. Peterson's ceiling is likely minor league depth, with an outside shot at a mop-up role in the majors.

                SP Tyler Mahle (6-6, 7.25 ERA, 70 K) left his start against the Chicago White Sox after just 16 pitches with tenderness in his forearm. Mahle was diagnosed with a strained forearm and was placed on the DL. The Reds decided to recall SP Brandon Finnegan from Louisville to take his spot in the rotation. Some people around the organization openly opined why Robert Stephenson (7-2, 2.76 ERA, 93 K @ Louisville) didn't get the call, but with Mahle expected to only miss one start, the Reds decided to give that start to Finnegan. A more long-term absence would've seen Stephenson likely get the call.

                The Reds announced they were able to sign all but two of their amateur draft picks. 8th Round Pick SP Lyon Richardson decided to return to San Diego State. 21st Round Pick C Caleb Marquez also decided to return to Avila College. The Reds will not receive any compensatory picks.

                MLB News

                The fire sale on the South Side of Chicago continues, as the White Sox finalized a deal that sent 31-year-old 1B Jose Abreu to the New York Mets for two minor leaguers. Abreu should slot right into the three hole in the Mets lineup. On the year, Abreu is batting .256 with 20 home runs, 53 RBIs, and 43 runs scored.
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                • artoodeetoo
                  MVP
                  • Dec 2015
                  • 3696

                  #9
                  Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                  Digging this so far.

                  Comment

                  • milldaddy35
                    MVP
                    • Feb 2013
                    • 1515

                    #10
                    Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                    Looking good. Glad to get in early and follow along.
                    Watch me game on Twitch!

                    College Football - Iowa Hawkeyes
                    College Basketball - Iowa Hawkeyes

                    MLB - Minnesota Twins
                    NBA - Oklahoma City Thunder
                    NFL - New York Jets
                    NHL - Minnesota Wild

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                    • jasontoddwhitt
                      MVP
                      • May 2003
                      • 8095

                      #11
                      Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                      Originally posted by artoodeetoo
                      Digging this so far.
                      Originally posted by milldaddy35
                      Looking good. Glad to get in early and follow along.
                      Thanks for reading!
                      Time Warp Baseball (OOTP 25)

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                      • jasontoddwhitt
                        MVP
                        • May 2003
                        • 8095

                        #12
                        Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                        MLB All-Star Teams Announced

                        American League All-Stars



                        National League All-Stars



                        Reds First Half Statistics



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                        • j2thec
                          Rookie
                          • Jul 2009
                          • 19

                          #13
                          Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                          I'm digging this so far....as a life-long Reds fan it'd be nice to see a return to the glory years. I think the trade they did with the Dodgers could end up being something, I hope.

                          Comment

                          • jasontoddwhitt
                            MVP
                            • May 2003
                            • 8095

                            #14
                            Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                            Originally posted by j2thec
                            I'm digging this so far....as a life-long Reds fan it'd be nice to see a return to the glory years. I think the trade they did with the Dodgers could end up being something, I hope.
                            Yes, the Dodgers trade was a very nice surprise. I think I'm more happy by the fact we were able to get Homer's albatross of a contract off the books.

                            Thanks for reading!
                            Time Warp Baseball (OOTP 25)

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                            • jasontoddwhitt
                              MVP
                              • May 2003
                              • 8095

                              #15
                              Re: Rebuilding the Machine (OOTP19)

                              MLB Transaction News

                              - The American League Central race may be over already, with the Indians holding onto a 14 game lead over the Twins and a 20 game lead on the Tigers. That doesn't mean the Tigers are out of the playoff hunt, only six games out of the second wildcard spot. It was with that in mind that the Tigers attempted to bolster their lineup, sending 27-year-old reliever Drew VerHagen to the Philadelphia Phillies for 35-year-old LF Seth Smith. In 60 games (42 starts), Smith is hitting .230 and has collected six home runs, 13 RBIs, a .339 OBP and has scored 25 runs. VerHagen has made seven relief appearances for the Tigers, compiling a 1-0 record with an ERA of 3.28. Opposing batters were hitting .258.

                              - With the Padres sitting in the National League West cellar, it came as no surprise that the Fathers would begin moving some pieces. The Padres sent 31-year-old reliever Kirby Yates and a minor leaguer to the New York Mets for three minor leaguers. Yates has struggled this season, compiling a 3-2 record with an 8.15 ERA. He has given up 38 hits in 38.2 innings of work but has struck out 67 hitters. The Mets are hoping Yates can regain the form he had last season, and joins an already stacked bullpen that ranks third in the National League in ERA at 3.75.

                              - The Holy Fathers were not done yet, as the Padres traded 31-year-old starter Tyson Ross and a minor leaguer to the New York Yankees for two minor leaguers. Ross showed promise early on in his career before a shoulder injury seriously derailed his career. However, he found himself back in the Padres rotation, though he struggled with a 4-8 record with a 5.19 ERA. With the struggles of CC Sabathia, the Yankees were needing to strengthen the back end of their rotation and are hoping Ross can regain the form that made him an all-star back in 2014.

                              - The Minnesota Twins also made a move to bolster their lineup in a bid to strengthen their hold on a wildcard spot, trading 28-year-old SS Ehire Adrianza and a minor leaguer to the Kansas City Royals for 32-year-old 1B Lucas Duda. The trade of Adrianza allows the Twins to insert 25-year-old Jorge Polanco into the shortstop position and adds another power bat to the Twins lineup in Duda. In 82 starts, Duda is hitting .198 with 17 homers and 38 RBIs along with 43 runs scored. In 76 games (62 starts), Adrianza was hitting .300 with two homers, 29 runs, and 27 RBIs.

                              - The Toronto Blue Jays, looking for some bullpen help, sent a minor leaguer to the Milwaukee Brewers to acquire 31-year-old relief pitcherDan Jennings. Jennings has struggled this year for the Brew Crew, compiling a 4-4 record with two saves with a 5.67 ERA in 53 relief appearances. The Blue Jays are hoping a change of scenery will see him come back towards his career ERA of 3.23.
                              Time Warp Baseball (OOTP 25)

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