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Thanks for posting the article.   I got a chuckle out of it.  Werth is 39 years old, did he really think their was a player market for his services.  

He is absolutely entitled to his opinion about the game, how the front office is changing and how long term deals are made.   He should know.   I remember when he signed a 7 year deal with the Nats in 2011 for $126M.  The problem was he had very little talent around him in 2011 (his nickname was "Werthless") and he had some very rough years at the plate because nobody was protecting him in the lineup.   I think Pandora's box has been opened with regard to baseball metrics, front office number crunching and how the game will be played from the front office down to the on field manager.   It is going to be about organizational communication & effectiveness down to the players.  There is a trend to hire younger managers with a Sabermetrics background but a human touch.  We'll see how that works until the next major shift in the game.

As always JMO.

 

fenwaysouth posted:

Thanks for posting the article.   I got a chuckle out of it.  Werth is 39 years old, did he really think their was a player market for his services.  

He is absolutely entitled to his opinion about the game, how the front office is changing and how long term deals are made.   He should know.   I remember when he signed a 7 year deal with the Nats in 2011 for $126M.  The problem was he had very little talent around him in 2011 (his nickname was "Werthless") and he had some very rough years at the plate because nobody was protecting him in the lineup.   I think Pandora's box has been opened with regard to baseball metrics, front office number crunching and how the game will be played from the front office down to the on field manager.   It is going to be about organizational communication & effectiveness down to the players.  There is a trend to hire younger managers with a Sabermetrics background but a human touch.  We'll see how that works until the next major shift in the game.

As always JMO.

 

Not only is Werth 39, he hasn’t had an .800 OPS since 2014.

Last edited by RJM

Sabermetrics is the present and future but teams now learn that communication is important too. in the first years teams would just throw the stat guys at the baseball people and it often produced conflicts, a baseball lifer is just not taking directions from a nerd. arrogance on both sides (nerds and baseball lifers) existed, that hurt communication.

in the first years the astros experimented with extreme shifts it caused a lot of clubhouse issues. because of this the astros got some baseball people with some stat understanding to communicate it to the baseball people and it worked out very well.

IMO the future is hiring baseball guys with some stat understanding to communicate the stuff, no big company lets IT and math guys talk to normal people. (I'm a certified SQL developer so I can say that)

Last edited by Dominik85
Dominik85 posted:

Sabermetrics is the present and future but teams now learn that communication is important too. in the first years teams would just throw the stat guys at the baseball people and it often produced conflicts, a baseball lifer is just not taking directions from a nerd. arrogance on both sides (nerds and baseball lifers) existed, that hurt communication.

in the first years the astros experimented with extreme shifts it caused a lot of clubhouse issues. because of this the astros got some baseball people with some stat understanding to communicate it to the baseball people and it worked out very well.

IMO the future is hiring baseball guys with some stat understanding to communicate the stuff, no big company lets IT and math guys talk to normal people. (I'm a certified SQL developer so I can say that)

The Astros also turned over a lot of staff that weren't agreeing with Luhnow's methods.

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