Lets start this off on a good note, and look at Bobs beautiful 1996 Edgar Matinez
Lineup: For my lineup for the Mariners I led off with the 24!! speed Mallex Smith, and while his card isn't outstanding like last years, I still am a fan as a third drafted outfielder to potentially hit 8th or 9th for your team. The out through 6 makes him a tough leadoff hitter but if he gets his chart and rolls a 7 or higher it is time to get running. Second is Mitch Haniger, I know back to back 7s what am I doing, another downgrade from last seasons card but he atleast bring some good pop to the lineup. Third we have Daniel Vogelbach in an 8 on base that moves a one third the speed on Mallex Smith. Clean up I chose Kyle Seager and I think he is a sneaky steal in a draft. He is very affordable, out through 2, hits for tons of power and has some good defense to go with it. Navarrez is the only other 8 in the line up bringing slow speed and not a lot of extra base hit chances. Dominog Santana feels like another value player you would take late in a draft to fill point needs and can plug into the 7th or 8th spot in a batting order. I am a fan of this J.P Crawford card as well. The feeling with this Seattle team is that most of the players in this lineup are drafted for late value to fill a specific role or need. Beckham is the DH and yikes to have him as a DH and finally Dee Gordon rounds out the lineup, and if all goes right you could get Gordon and Mallex on base at the same time to give outfielders fits.
Bullpen: Now for the bullpen I am going to start with the extended rotation, and if youre playing as Seattle it is nice to have these guys there for when the starters are getting shelled, not that they will make a huge difference as well. LeBlanc can get you 5 innings, but has a home run on his chart, and Milone while having that 5 control to help has two doubles and a home run making if difficult to trust him in key situations. The bullpen after that is pretty solid. Anthony Bass has a 6 control out through 14 and no doubles, and Brennan and Magill are also serviceable out of the bullpen.
All in all this team is rough, hard to look at, and should be sold for spare parts. Seattle has always been one of my favorite teams because of growing up while Griffey was there it sucks to see them like this. Hopefully they can find some nice young pieces and turn it around so we can see some teal in the playoffs. The Seattle Mariners have 18 players and come in at 3170 points or 176 points per player. Sadly that is good for 2nd last so far in the teams released.
Astros - 300
Nationals - 295
Twins - 293
Rays - 285
Cubs - 278
Red Sox - 269
Brewers - 268
Indians - 259
Braves - 256
Athletics - 248
Cardinals - 245
Reds - 238
D-Backs - 236
Padres - 233
Phillies - 213
White Sox - 185
Mariners - 176
Blue Jays - 167
This ain't pretty, but as you said, when sold for spare parts there's some salvageable pieces.
ReplyDeleteLineup: Vogelbach is the power hitter here at a measly 4.05 runs which really shows you the limited upside this team has. That being said Seager comes in .13 behind him, and Narvaez .06 further back. I understand the Smith lead off but the 6 outs absolutely destroys his value- 2.77 expected runs. Haniger is in at 3.33 runs, and Santana is at 3. Beckham and Gordon are the same as Smith.
Rotation: Gonzalez is the top dog at 7.46 expected runs which is solid...for a back end guy. Felix, god damn warrior he is, comes in at 9.72 expected runs, Kikuchi is at 9.08 and Sheffield actually is at 8.79.
Bullpen actually has some serviceable people with Bass being the top dog at 6.36 Brennan is just over 7, and Magill is just shy 7.43. Leblanc is at 8.22. Bass can slot in as a middle bullpen reliever, and some of the guys can be innings eaters.
That King Felix picture choice is PERFECT!!!
ReplyDeleteAgree 100%
DeleteThat sure is a nice Edgar.
ReplyDelete