ChiefsPlanet

ChiefsPlanet (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/index.php)
-   Nzoner's Game Room (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/forumdisplay.php?f=1)
-   -   Royals 2013 Kansas City Royals Repository Thread (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=267564)

AndChiefs 02-25-2013 04:01 PM

14-4?

alnorth 02-25-2013 04:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AndChiefs (Post 9437271)
14-4?

Wow. The Royals are flat-out destroying Arizona. I wonder how much of it was real or was it mostly B-teamers trying to make the club? All of our runs were scored in 5 innings, so that is an encouraging sign that it was probably the regulars.

CaliforniaChief 02-25-2013 04:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alnorth (Post 9437408)
Wow. The Royals are flat-out destroying Arizona. I wonder how much of it was real or was it mostly B-teamers trying to make the club? All of our runs were scored in 5 innings, so that is an encouraging sign that it was probably the regulars.

Billy was 2-3 with 3 RBI.
Getz was 2-3
Hosmer was 1-3.
Moose was 2-3 with 2 RBI.
Frenchy was 2-3.

Max Ramirez hit a grand slam.

Dwyer didn't seem to look too good.

CaliforniaChief 02-25-2013 04:53 PM

I just noticed that Mark Teahen is up to bat for AZ. LOL

16-4 K.C. now.

CaliforniaChief 02-25-2013 04:55 PM

And Teahen just struck out on 4 pitches.

Archie F. Swin 02-25-2013 06:09 PM

Lets hope the law of averages redeems Frenchy this season. Perhaps he'll be slightly less of a panty waste

ImAWalkingCorpse 02-26-2013 10:31 AM

Uggghh I just heard Richard Justice on the radio saying that "Wil Myers has a real chance to make the Rays a championship team."

Demonpenz 02-26-2013 12:14 PM

Will Meyers is Mark Quinn

ImAWalkingCorpse 02-26-2013 12:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Demonpenz (Post 9441032)
Will Meyers is Mark Quinn

We better hope so.

duncan_idaho 02-26-2013 12:47 PM

Baseball Prospectus released its top 101 prospect list yesterday.

Zimmer, Starling, Ventura and Mondesi all make the cut.

Zimmer is at 41, Starling at 49, Mondesi at 58, Ventura at 62. Bonifacio narrowly missed.

Jason Parks, the BP guy, is REALLY high on Mondesi. Loves him.

Odorizzi down to 83. Has Myers at 7 (behind Taveras, who's at 3).

Three7s 02-26-2013 01:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alnorth (Post 9437408)
Wow. The Royals are flat-out destroying Arizona. I wonder how much of it was real or was it mostly B-teamers trying to make the club? All of our runs were scored in 5 innings, so that is an encouraging sign that it was probably the regulars.

I remember this one time when the Royals destroyed spring training and won the Cactus League. Then the regular season began and they lost 100 games.

Great Expectations 02-26-2013 02:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by duncan_idaho (Post 9441184)
Baseball Prospectus released its top 101 prospect list yesterday.

Zimmer, Starling, Ventura and Mondesi all make the cut.

Zimmer is at 41, Starling at 49, Mondesi at 58, Ventura at 62. Bonifacio narrowly missed.

Jason Parks, the BP guy, is REALLY high on Mondesi. Loves him.

Odorizzi down to 83. Has Myers at 7 (behind Taveras, who's at 3).

Crazy how high Mondesi is rated. Is he the youngest player to crack the top 100?

duncan_idaho 02-26-2013 02:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Great Expectations (Post 9441598)
Crazy how high Mondesi is rated. Is he the youngest player to crack the top 100?

I think so.

He could jump into the top 25 with a good campaign at full-season ball. He's going to be 18 for most of the season... if he continues to flash the defensive skills and instincts that those who have seen him have raved about, and holds his own offensively, he's going to skyrocket.

Here's the BP scouting report on him:

Strengths: Instincts are off-the-chart; tremendous feel for the game; 6 defensive profile at shortstop; plus arm; plus range; slick actions; soft hands; fluid swing from both sides of the plate; can drive the ball into the gaps despite limited (present) strength; easy feel for good contact; hit tool projects to plus; good baserunner; shows legit baseball skills at very young age.

Weaknesses: Lots of developmental unknowns; athletic body/frame, but needs to add strength; see ball, hit ball mentality in the box; susceptible to off-speed offerings; more bat speed from the right-side; lacks power potential.

Explanation of Risk: Extreme risk; despite game skills and precocious talent, wide gap between present and future; only 17 years old

The Year Ahead: Mondesi has the potential to be a special talent, but his statistical output in the next few years might not accurately reflect the scouting reports. Despite being an advanced talent for his age—with instincts that one source dubbed “Jeter like,” and possessing major league bloodlines—Mondesi is still only 17-years-old and will be playing against much older competition if he jumps to the full-season level. His lack of strength could limit his offensive function for a few years, but his glove work will continue to draw praise, as will his overall approach to the game, which mirrors a major-league veteran more than a player that would be entering his senior year in high school.

Shogun 02-26-2013 03:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ImAWalkingCorpse (Post 9440580)
Uggghh I just heard Richard Justice on the radio saying that "Wil Myers has a real chance to make the Rays a championship team."

Ignore it, Opinions are like assholes

Al Bundy 02-26-2013 03:32 PM

http://espn.go.com/blog/spring-train...rs-very-strong

PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. -- The Wil Myers question people seem to keep asking in the camp of those Tampa Bay Rays is this:

Is there any chance he starts the season on their big league roster?

But in reality, there’s about as much chance of that as there is of Rocco Baldelli starting the season on their big league roster. So the Wil Myers question we should really be asking is probably this:

What are the chances this guy makes an impact in the big leagues this season?

That, however, is a prediction the Rays aren't ready to make. But let’s just say this: Betting against it isn't a real good idea.

“We’re very sensitive to putting big expectations on young players,” the Rays’ executive vice president of baseball operations, Andrew Friedman, said Tuesday before his team’s Grapefruit League game against the Astros. “He’s certainly capable of helping us win games in 2013. And I’m confident he WILL help us win games in 2013. But we’re still very early on in the process of getting to know him, being around him, watching the way he works, observing the way he goes about the process of getting better in every facet of the game.

Expectations are high for 22-year-old Rays outfielder Wil Myers.
“To this point, everything’s been very positive,” Friedman went on. “The first impression has been very strong. So we’re anxious to spend the next four or five weeks around him and continue his development.”

Even with players they drafted and developed on their own, the Rays have long been cautious about rushing their future stars to the big leagues, for both baseball and economic reasons. But in a case like this, where almost no one in their camp had even laid eyes on Myers before the past two weeks, it’s safe to assume they’ll be even more cautious.

“We've obviously read a lot of scouting reports, watched a lot of video, talked to a lot of guys who have seen him play,” Friedman said. “And that’s great. That’s obviously a very important part of the process of acquiring players. But I think you end up knowing more about a guy after you've been around him for a week or two than you do from watching a guy play for three games. So we’re anxious to learn all of the different things about him and how he goes about his work, etc., that you can’t possibly know without being around him.”

Myers’ offensive talents have pretty much jumped off the field at his new team in a short time. (For what it’s worth, he’s 3-for-7 this spring, with a walk and a double, in three games.) But because the Rays were well aware he started his career as a catcher and has played only 93 minor league games in right field, they have devoted as much extra time and effort as possible to accelerating his progress as an outfielder.

“He hasn't played the position for that long,” Friedman said. “So just [to help him with] the nuances of the position, [coaches] George Hendrick and Dave Martinez have been working with him a lot out there. And that’s an attempt just to expedite that learning curve. It’s not like this guy has played the outfield all his life. So we’re spending a lot of time with him on that aspect.”

You can bet the mortgage to the beach house that work will continue in exotic Durham, N.C., for a couple of months this season. But at some point, this man is coming to a St. Petersburg dome near you. And that’s when the Wil Myers questions will really get fun.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 06:26 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.