Re: 2024 Off-Season Thread
Posted: Sun Feb 02, 2025 4:58 pm
I think they really are trying to win. They're just focused on improvement from guys like Henry Davis, Suwinski, and Hayes more than veterans. Again, they seem to have this five-year or so plan that begins with a young group like McCutchen-Walker-Marte. If that group doesn't come together, the plan just defaults back to Step 1: trade everything of value for young players. They've just been impossibly bad at getting that group together.
Trying to win with only one approach that hasn't worked very often is the same as not trying very hard.Babe Adams wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 6:32 pmI think they really are trying to win. They're just focused on improvement from guys like Henry Davis, Suwinski, and Hayes more than veterans. Again, they seem to have this five-year or so plan that begins with a young group like McCutchen-Walker-Marte. If that group doesn't come together, the plan just defaults back to Step 1: trade everything of value for young players. They've just been impossibly bad at getting that group together.
I think the players and coaches are trying to win but I can't say that the owner is. He's not giving his baseball management staff the opportunities necessary to put capable players on the field. Their inabilities to identify amateur talent, to develop players into successful big leaguers, and to make winning trades are the direct result of his decisions. I believe his lack of putting winning ahead of all else is the direct result of the organization's deficiencies.Babe Adams wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 6:32 pmI think they really are trying to win. They're just focused on improvement from guys like Henry Davis, Suwinski, and Hayes more than veterans. Again, they seem to have this five-year or so plan that begins with a young group like McCutchen-Walker-Marte. If that group doesn't come together, the plan just defaults back to Step 1: trade everything of value for young players. They've just been impossibly bad at getting that group together.
why should the Dodgers, Yankees, Red Sox etc. want the Pirates to do better? It just makes it harder for them to win. the Pirates are like the Washington Generals who can never beat the Globetrotters.Doc wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 9:55 pmI think the players and coaches are trying to win but I can't say that the owner is. He's not giving his baseball management staff the opportunities necessary to put capable players on the field. Their inabilities to identify amateur talent, to develop players into successful big leaguers, and to make winning trades are the direct result of his decisions. I believe his lack of putting winning ahead of all else is the direct result of the organization's deficiencies.Babe Adams wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 6:32 pmI think they really are trying to win. They're just focused on improvement from guys like Henry Davis, Suwinski, and Hayes more than veterans. Again, they seem to have this five-year or so plan that begins with a young group like McCutchen-Walker-Marte. If that group doesn't come together, the plan just defaults back to Step 1: trade everything of value for young players. They've just been impossibly bad at getting that group together.
Few organizations of any kind can succeed without a determined leader at the top. The trouble is, he's determined to profit first while the others in the organization are trying to win first. The two objectives aren't compatible.
I've said before that I focus my anger on Nutting more than I should. It's the way the owners, together, run the sport that's the problem. They allow, for their own greedy purposes, an owner like Nutting to operate his franchise the way he does. Until they change, and they won't, it'll remain as is.
Exactly. The Pirates help fill out the schedule for the big market clubs. The owners of those teams, in return, share money with the small market teams to keep them afloat. And at the same time, the small markets don’t stand in the way of winning a title. Everyone makes money, with about 8-10 of the clubs not having to try or take risks. The big losers are the fans in the small markets. And we haven’t even mentioned the potential loss of revenues and taxes the smaller market cities lose because baseball attendance numbers are lower than they might be if MLB were truly competitive.Ecbucs wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 10:13 pmwhy should the Dodgers, Yankees, Red Sox etc. want the Pirates to do better? It just makes it harder for them to win. the Pirates are like the Washington Generals who can never beat the Globetrotters.Doc wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 9:55 pmI think the players and coaches are trying to win but I can't say that the owner is. He's not giving his baseball management staff the opportunities necessary to put capable players on the field. Their inabilities to identify amateur talent, to develop players into successful big leaguers, and to make winning trades are the direct result of his decisions. I believe his lack of putting winning ahead of all else is the direct result of the organization's deficiencies.Babe Adams wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 6:32 pm
I think they really are trying to win. They're just focused on improvement from guys like Henry Davis, Suwinski, and Hayes more than veterans. Again, they seem to have this five-year or so plan that begins with a young group like McCutchen-Walker-Marte. If that group doesn't come together, the plan just defaults back to Step 1: trade everything of value for young players. They've just been impossibly bad at getting that group together.
Few organizations of any kind can succeed without a determined leader at the top. The trouble is, he's determined to profit first while the others in the organization are trying to win first. The two objectives aren't compatible.
I've said before that I focus my anger on Nutting more than I should. It's the way the owners, together, run the sport that's the problem. They allow, for their own greedy purposes, an owner like Nutting to operate his franchise the way he does. Until they change, and they won't, it'll remain as is.