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Post by Blunashun on Sept 9, 2019 19:26:15 GMT
Dodgers' Kenta Maeda: Set for high-leverage October role Rotowire 11H ago
Maeda will be used in high-leverage relief situations in the postseason, J.P. Hoornstra of the Orange County Register reports.
Since being moved to the bullpen in early September, Maeda has been used as a long reliever, making two appearances of four innings apiece. However, manager Dave Roberts indicated Sunday that this is not the role Maeda will take in the playoffs; rather, the 31-year-old will be used in the same important high-leverage situations that he has thrived in the past two postseasons. In 17 playoff relief appearances between 2017 and 2018, Maeda pitched 17.1 innings and compiled a 2.08 ERA and 1.10 WHIP.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 9, 2019 19:32:29 GMT
Dodgers' Julio Urias: Moving back to bullpen
Rotowire 10H ago
Urias is moving back to the bullpen for now, Alanna Rizzo of Spectrum SportsNet LA reports.
He logged two scoreless innings Sunday against the Giants, giving up three hits while striking out four. However, he needed 43 pitches (29 strikes) to get through those two frames, and that lack of efficiency may be the reason the Dodgers would prefer to use him as a reliever. While he will be available as a reliever in the upcoming series in Baltimore, qhe could open for Kenta Maeda again next weekend against the Mets. Either way, it seems the Dodgers will continue to groom Urias for a 2-to-3-inning role for the postseason.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 9, 2019 19:36:09 GMT
"He logged two scoreless innings Sunday against the Giants, giving up three hits while striking out four. However, he needed 43 pitches (29 strikes) to get through those two frames, and that lack of efficiency may be the reason the Dodgers would prefer to use him as a reliever."
Gonsolin game, it took Jansen 21 pitches to get through one inning. Urias game it took Kenley 24 pitches to get through one inning. Not very efficient.
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jrgreene6
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Sept 9, 2019 22:33:51 GMT
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Post by jrgreene6 on Sept 9, 2019 22:33:51 GMT
Dodgers' Julio Urias: Moving back to bullpen Rotowire 10H ago Urias is moving back to the bullpen for now, Alanna Rizzo of Spectrum SportsNet LA reports. He logged two scoreless innings Sunday against the Giants, giving up three hits while striking out four. However, he needed 43 pitches (29 strikes) to get through those two frames, and that lack of efficiency may be the reason the Dodgers would prefer to use him as a reliever. While he will be available as a reliever in the upcoming series in Baltimore, qhe could open for Kenta Maeda again next weekend against the Mets. Either way, it seems the Dodgers will continue to groom Urias for a 2-to-3-inning role for the postseason. Using Urias to “open” for Kenta - hmm. Sounds like LA would prefer to pay Maeda “by the inning” as opposed to the 1.5 mil they’d owe him with another four starts which with yesterday he had a legitimate chance of reaching. 😝 Then again - if they continue to work like they did yesterday, despite the high pitch count for Urias, why mess with that formula? Can’t imagine Kenta or his agent being dancing banana happy over this, but hey - they both knew and signed off on that contract so they pretty much have to accept whatever role LA feels Maeda fills. And if that’s out of the pen, so be it. I’d LOVE to get $10 large an inning playing a kids game and I doubt there’s too many out there that wouldn’t give up their left nut to trade places with him. GO DODGERS!!!
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20DodgerMiracle24
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Sept 10, 2019 3:19:14 GMT
Dodgers' Julio Urias: Moving back to bullpen Rotowire 10H ago Urias is moving back to the bullpen for now, Alanna Rizzo of Spectrum SportsNet LA reports. He logged two scoreless innings Sunday against the Giants, giving up three hits while striking out four. However, he needed 43 pitches (29 strikes) to get through those two frames, and that lack of efficiency may be the reason the Dodgers would prefer to use him as a reliever. While he will be available as a reliever in the upcoming series in Baltimore, qhe could open for Kenta Maeda again next weekend against the Mets. Either way, it seems the Dodgers will continue to groom Urias for a 2-to-3-inning role for the postseason. Also that could be a blessing in disguise: he can be used as a spot starter and anywhere in relief, including closing. Back in May, I think he got a save and a clutch K w/RISP. He's definitely worth keeping.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 10, 2019 10:06:35 GMT
Dodgers' Julio Urias: Moving back to bullpen Rotowire 10H ago Urias is moving back to the bullpen for now, Alanna Rizzo of Spectrum SportsNet LA reports. He logged two scoreless innings Sunday against the Giants, giving up three hits while striking out four. However, he needed 43 pitches (29 strikes) to get through those two frames, and that lack of efficiency may be the reason the Dodgers would prefer to use him as a reliever. While he will be available as a reliever in the upcoming series in Baltimore, qhe could open for Kenta Maeda again next weekend against the Mets. Either way, it seems the Dodgers will continue to groom Urias for a 2-to-3-inning role for the postseason. Using Urias to “open” for Kenta - hmm. Sounds like LA would prefer to pay Maeda “by the inning” as opposed to the 1.5 mil they’d owe him with another four starts which with yesterday he had a legitimate chance of reaching. 😝 Then again - if they continue to work like they did yesterday, despite the high pitch count for Urias, why mess with that formula? Can’t imagine Kenta or his agent being dancing banana happy over this, but hey - they both knew and signed off on that contract so they pretty much have to accept whatever role LA feels Maeda fills. And if that’s out of the pen, so be it. I’d LOVE to get $10 large an inning playing a kids game and I doubt there’s too many out there that wouldn’t give up their left nut to trade places with him. GO DODGERS!!! It kinda looks that way. Kenta just seems to carry a different mentality into games he relieves in. If he could pitch like that in starts I'm pretty sure the Dodgers would be happy to give him his bonus money. Didn't the Dodgers say last year they wanted him to attack hitters the same way he does out of the pen? It gets boring watching him nibble.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 10, 2019 10:12:50 GMT
Dodgers' Julio Urias: Moving back to bullpen Rotowire 10H ago Urias is moving back to the bullpen for now, Alanna Rizzo of Spectrum SportsNet LA reports. He logged two scoreless innings Sunday against the Giants, giving up three hits while striking out four. However, he needed 43 pitches (29 strikes) to get through those two frames, and that lack of efficiency may be the reason the Dodgers would prefer to use him as a reliever. While he will be available as a reliever in the upcoming series in Baltimore, qhe could open for Kenta Maeda again next weekend against the Mets. Either way, it seems the Dodgers will continue to groom Urias for a 2-to-3-inning role for the postseason. Also that could be a blessing in disguise: he can be used as a spot starter and anywhere in relief, including closing. Back in May, I think he got a save and a clutch K w/RISP. He's definitely worth keeping. For sure he's worth keeping for right now. It'll probably come to a loggerhead in the winter though. The union won't allow him to restructure his contract to take less money. (Assuming he would take less money.). The Dodgers won't pay him that much for spot starting, long relief & occasional closing. Maybe he can take Kenley's spot & they can make the bonuses for games finished & saves.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 10, 2019 19:28:32 GMT
Why the Dodgers' handling of Kenta Maeda highlights the potential conflicts of interest with contract incentives
Maeda has been pitching out of relief at a time when he's nearing certain bonuses by R.J. Anderson @r_j_anderson 3 hrs ago • 4 min read
The Los Angeles Dodgers can become the first team to clinch their division on Tuesday, either by defeating the Baltimore Orioles or having the New York Mets top the Arizona Diamondbacks. Whenever it happens, the Dodgers are certain to enter October as the favorites to win the National League pennant. After all, the Dodgers' run differential (plus-234) is twice as good as the next-best NL club -- the Washington Nationals, who will have to brave the Wild Card Game.
For as good as the Dodgers are, and as happy as these times should be, one blemish has emerged as of late: their deployment of Kenta Maeda, and how it impacts his pay.
Maeda, for those unaware, was recently reassigned to a relief role after spending the season in the rotation. He has a 102 ERA+ and 3.40 strikeout-to-walk ratio on the year -- both marks are beyond acceptable for a mid-rotation starter. This isn't the first time the Dodgers have asked Maeda to pitch out of the bullpen, but there are questionable aspects to the decision.
Maeda has one of the least-favorable contracts in the sport: an eight-year pact that guarantees only $25 million and is incentives heavy to the point of being laughable -- the result, reportedly, of the Dodgers finding "irregularities" during his physical. (Why the Dodgers would want eight seasons of someone they deem an injury risk is a question worth asking.) Maeda's contract is structured in a way where he's compensated best as a starter, based on innings and starts.
According to Cot's Contracts, Maeda is paid $1.5 million for his 25th, 30th, and 32nd starts of the year. He's also paid $250,000 for every 10th inning beginning with his 90th. As it stands, he's made 26 starts and has thrown 146 innings in 2019. Had he been allowed to continue starting, he would've topped 30 starts and -- based on his average -- threatened 170 frames. In other words, Maeda would've received another $2 million for hitting those marks. (And the Dodgers, for their part, would then have that much less separation from the luxury-tax line.)
Instead, the Dodgers have shifted Maeda to the bullpen again, as they have in two of the three prior seasons. To what end? The move was supposed to be two-pronged in intent: 1) allow Julio Urias to stretch back out and 2) prepare Maeda for the postseason, when he'll pitch in relief. Neither adds up, however: Urias is already returning to relief after two short starts, and Maeda's current role does not match up with the one he's expected to fill come October.
This isn't us speculating, either. Take a look at how manager Dave Roberts described what he anticipates from Maeda come the playoffs, per Pedro Moura of The Athletic:
"In the postseason, Kenta's value essentially is to be available every game," Roberts said. "And so, a long guy is definitely not Kenta. Kenta is to pitch leverage innings in the postseason, very important innings."
It's fair to suggest that a pitcher moving from the rotation to a nightly relief role could benefit from a transition period. But the Dodgers have asked Maeda to pitch in relief twice so far, and both times he's thrown four innings, including after Urias's most recent start. If the Dodgers are willing to use Maeda as a long reliever in September, why wouldn't they just keep him in the rotation -- other, that is, than to potentially avoid paying him his bonus for reaching 30 starts?
Now, obviously, it's possible this is all a coincidence. The Dodgers do have a ton of quality starters, and the case can be made that Maeda is the weakest of the bunch -- especially with Urias removed from the equation. Maeda has also already thrown more pitches this year than he had in his previous two seasons, and the Dodgers may have concerns about how he'll hold up deeper in the year, meaning his move to the bullpen is about preservation as well as preparation. Additionally, if the Dodgers wanted to nickel and dime Maeda, they could have prevented him from making his 25th start. Besides, permitting him to rack up innings in relief could still cost them money, albeit not as much as they would've had to pay out if he remained in the rotation.
Even so, there's a thin line between operating in good and bad faith, and incentives tied to player usage -- especially as it pertains to pitchers -- create the potential for these kinds of conflicts of interest. Some might claim it's cynical to even raise the point, but remember: baseball has seen teams operate in shady ways before. In 2017, the Los Angeles Angels flipped Bud Norris and Jesse Chavez's roles in order to avoid paying each incentives that would've tallied $750,000 -- a trifling amount for a MLB team.
Heck, even the Dodgers have tip-toed the line. In 2015, they limited Brandon Beachy to two appearances and eight innings -- had he reached 10 innings, his contract would have included a $250,000 buyout on the subsequent club option. Beachy performed poorly enough for everyone to handwave off suspicions of wrongdoing, but it's always valid to wonder about these things given how teams have historically operated.
The Dodgers have had a brilliant season, and could well soon appear in a third consecutive World Series. They don't have to operate in a way that raises eyebrows about their true intent, which makes the possibility of suppressing Maeda's earnings all the more maddening.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 10, 2019 19:41:57 GMT
Oh, for f'n Christ's sake - now they're obligated to spoon feed the guy so he reaches his incentives. This idiot even used Brandon Beachy as an example. The Dodgers opened the year with a payroll of $196,279,677. Now they're cheap? This is like when they were carrying those massive payrolls before they rebuilt the farm system & morons like Plaschke were saying they were tight.
"Maeda has one of the least-favorable contracts in the sport: an eight-year pact that guarantees only $25 million and is incentives heavy to the point of being laughable -- the result, reportedly, of the Dodgers finding "irregularities" during his physical. (Why the Dodgers would want eight seasons of someone they deem an injury risk is a question worth asking.) Maeda's contract is structured in a way where he's compensated best as a starter, based on innings and starts."
Because if Kenta got hurt he would get a base salary of $25,000,000 over eight years. It was a risk free investment, you cretin. Why do you think he signed it?
"According to Cot's Contracts, Maeda is paid $1.5 million for his 25th, 30th, and 32nd starts of the year. He's also paid $250,000 for every 10th inning beginning with his 90th. As it stands, he's made 26 starts and has thrown 146 innings in 2019. Had he been allowed to continue starting, he would've topped 30 starts and -- based on his average -- threatened 170 frames. In other words, Maeda would've received another $2 million for hitting those marks. (And the Dodgers, for their part, would then have that much less separation from the luxury-tax line.)"
They must get bonus points for being further away from the line.
"Now, obviously, it's possible this is all a coincidence. The Dodgers do have a ton of quality starters, and the case can be made that Maeda is the weakest of the bunch -- especially with Urias removed from the equation. Maeda has also already thrown more pitches this year than he had in his previous two seasons, and the Dodgers may have concerns about how he'll hold up deeper in the year, meaning his move to the bullpen is about preservation as well as preparation. Additionally, if the Dodgers wanted to nickel and dime Maeda, they could have prevented him from making his 25th start."
Just answered your own question.
If KENTA has a problem with the way he's being used then a trade can accommodate him this winter. He doesn't need shit stirrers in the media to do it for him.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 10, 2019 19:53:47 GMT
So Ryu has an ERA of 2.45. Kershaw's is 3.06. Buehler's is 3.28. Hill (if he makes it back) is at 2.55. Stripling's at 3.42. Hell, Gonsolin is at 2.81. Maeda is at 4.07. 4.14 as a starter. 3.00 out of the bullpen. Our pen has been shaky. This is some really confusing shit. Glad we have those brain damaged pundits to point out the inequity of it all.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 10, 2019 20:17:04 GMT
Oh my GOD! Mystery solved.
September 7, 2019 04:44 PM
Dodgers' Rich Hill: Ready to return
by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Hill (forearm) will return from the 60-day injured list to start Thursday in Baltimore, Ken Gurnick of MLB.com reports.
Hill missed most of April with a knee injury and only made it into mid-June before being shut down with a forearm strain. He's finally ready to get back on the mound, though he'll likely be limited at first, as he'd only gotten up to 30 pitches in a simulated game Friday. He'll have time to make four starts before the end of the regular season as he prepares to help the Dodgers in October.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 11, 2019 3:34:01 GMT
Caleb Ferguson pitches well again & nails down the victory with a four run lead.
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20DodgerMiracle24
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Sept 11, 2019 3:51:58 GMT
Oh my GOD! Mystery solved. September 7, 2019 04:44 PM Dodgers' Rich Hill: Ready to return by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire Hill (forearm) will return from the 60-day injured list to start Thursday in Baltimore, Ken Gurnick of MLB.com reports. Hill missed most of April with a knee injury and only made it into mid-June before being shut down with a forearm strain. He's finally ready to get back on the mound, though he'll likely be limited at first, as he'd only gotten up to 30 pitches in a simulated game Friday. He'll have time to make four starts before the end of the regular season as he prepares to help the Dodgers in October. As he should. 31 pitches sounds about right. After his, say, 2 innings, we can give some relievers a little work, as we did on Sunday. By Hill's second start, he should be up to 5 IP or 91 pitches and at that rate, he should be ready for the playoffs. Honey knows what he's doing; I wonder if he had an argument with Roberts about it.
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 11, 2019 4:07:21 GMT
Oh my GOD! Mystery solved. September 7, 2019 04:44 PM Dodgers' Rich Hill: Ready to return by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire Hill (forearm) will return from the 60-day injured list to start Thursday in Baltimore, Ken Gurnick of MLB.com reports. Hill missed most of April with a knee injury and only made it into mid-June before being shut down with a forearm strain. He's finally ready to get back on the mound, though he'll likely be limited at first, as he'd only gotten up to 30 pitches in a simulated game Friday. He'll have time to make four starts before the end of the regular season as he prepares to help the Dodgers in October. As he should. 31 pitches sounds about right. After his, say, 2 innings, we can give some relievers a little work, as we did on Sunday. By Hill's second start, he should be up to 5 IP or 91 pitches and at that rate, he should be ready for the playoffs. Honey knows what he's doing; I wonder if he had an argument with Roberts about it. He almost would have had to if he knows what he's doing.
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jrgreene6
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Post by jrgreene6 on Sept 11, 2019 4:40:05 GMT
Seems like DDF II comments a month or so back regarding the return of Hill this season (he was not expected) were a bit premature.
Anyone here shocked by this development?
Seventh title in a row - ho hum! How about we put it ALL together in October and win eleven before our opponents do?
GO DODGERS!!!
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