Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Nas wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Nas wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Augie wrote:
Maybe it's already happening, but I'm waiting for a manager who is a figurehead and whose decisions are 100% controlled by the front office and analytics staff during the game. Baseball moves at a slow enough pace where that would be possible.
Don't get me wrong, I would hate it. But, it has to be coming.
The problem with that is the White Sox lack a true analytics department. They have 5 analysts. The Rays now have 37.
https://baseballcloud.blog/2020/07/02/p ... g-forward/The Sox are an organization trapped in the past. And it's sad because they had a leg up with their relationship with John Dewan and STATS, Inc. before anyone had ever heard of "Moneyball." I suspect that choosing Kenny Williams over Dan Evans was the tipping point.
Billy Beane and Williams were both considered "can't miss" prospects. Beane recognized that he himself was not a player he would want as a GM. Kenny Williams keeps trying to draft versions of himself hoping for different results. When one isn't completely a bust like Tim Anderson, it makes him believe his approach is correct. That's why he selects Jared Mitchell when Mike Trout is on the board. It's a fucking disaster.
What has Billy Beane won with his approach?
Come on now. He spends less per win than probably anyone else. Only Tampa might be close in recent years.
That's just for free agents. Unlike Tampa or Miami or Atlants, his draft picks haven't put his team in the World Series. Neither has the trading of the players for prospects before they entered free agency. Is he fleecing poor Latin players with below market long-term contracts like most teams? No. He's great because he told you he was really smart. That greatness hasn't led to a World Series appearance or win. He probably would get the same results if he was with the Dodgers money printing outfit.
Kenny Williams likely provided you with one of your top 5 happiest days in your life. You probably cried tears of joy. He did it with a lot of clearance aisle players. Have some respect!
I think this is a trolling post, but I will state that I give Kenny full credit for 2005 although his performance before and since suggest it was an anomaly wherein he got lucky.
In any case, a person would have to be insane to believe Kenny is better at the job than Beane.
And it really doesn't matter how the successful team is assembled. There isn't extra credit for having homegrown players.
No, I don't think Beane sucks, but I'm not willing to believe that you're a genius if you never win a championship. Especially when others have been able to win with similar constraints.
My frustration as a fan comes from our continued desire to wish we did things like everyone else. Player development appears to be an essential ingredient for sustained regular season success. However, there's no perfect formula for winning a championship in baseball. The Dodgers print money, have a great minor league system, and have an all star team, but all they have to show for it is a covid championship.
I am not impressed by other teams losing in the playoffs more often than we do. Maybe I'm spoiled as a Chicago fan. We may not make the playoffs a lot, but when we make it to the championship, we almost always win. The 90's Hawks and the Bears are the only teams in my lifetime to lose a championship.