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Wren Q&A Part II

 

Wren Q and A Part II: Talking McCann, Prado, Bourn and more

Braves general manager Frank Wren sat down with selected members of the media following the end of the Braves season, discussing topics ranging from the September collapse to roster projections. In Part II of that interview, Wren talks about Brian McCann’s late-season troubles, the prospects of signing Michael Bourn long-term and Freddie Freeman’s breakout season, among other things.

Here are excerpts from the remainder of that interview. (Part I is available at ajc.com/braves)

Q. How much did injuries play a role, like in the case of Brian McCann?

A. It’s clear Brian was not the same hitter after the injury. It’s something we’ve never seen with Brian in five years, so it’s hard for me to say. I do know you’re talking about a guy that works hard and cares more than anyone on this team and is as responsible as anyone on this team, and he couldn’t pull himself out of the struggles, and we couldn’t help him pull out of the struggles. He took more extra batting practice and spent more time watching video and comparing good swings to bad swings than anyone you could imagine and just couldn’t reverse. I think when the pressure mounts as it did in September that can be debilitating, and I think we saw that with a lot of hitters.

Q. Did you see swings that looked like he was trying to protect his oblique?

A. I think Brian took a lot of swings that looked normal and he took some swings that didn’t look so normal to me. But I don’t know that that was based on the oblique or whether he was protecting it. But I think it was very tough for him to get his timing back after that.

Q. Do you look at Martin Prado’s season as an aberration?

A. This was a tough year for him, and I think it’s hard to really evaluate what that staph infection meant to him. In a lot of ways to me it’s similar to what happened with McCann after the oblique. They were not quite the same…I’m not a doctor so I don’t know physiologically what exactly (the staph infection) means but we saw a different Martin.

Q. Do you think moving to left field had a negative effect on him at the plate?

A. It shouldn’t affect him. Let’s put it that way.

Q. Will he be back in left field?

A. I think the likelihood (is good). We’re still a couple weeks away from having our real planning meeting where we look exactly what we think the club will look like.

Q. Would you hesitate to move him to a third position in three years?

A. We’re not there. We’re not to the point where we’ve had any discussions like that.

Q. Do you go into next season in a similar position with Chipper Jones, knowing he’s your third baseman but you can’t play him every day?

A. It’s probably exacerbated a little more because we know with his knee situation it’s going to be hard for him to play seven days in a row. That’s just the reality. We’ve got to take care of him to keep him healthy for the long haul. We also saw that when we got a roll this year, he was a pretty dynamic player. It’s probably unrealistic for us to expect that all the time, but he gave us a lot of good games at third base and a lot of big hits throughout the season.

Q. How much of the September collapse was a result of the ripple effect of losing Jair Jurrjens and Tommy Hanson to injuries?

A. It’s hard for me to pin it on the pitching because we had 17 games in September when we gave up four runs or less. So that doesn’t indicate to me that the pitching was a problem.

Q. How concerned are you about Hanson’s shoulder?

A. Based on the information we have right now, not very. It’s just going to take some time. None of the doctors have come back with any structural damage, and so it’s one of those things where we were trying to ramp him up and see if we could get him ready to pitch at some point in the postseason if we made the postseason, and he couldn’t get going that quickly.

Q. Do you go into the winter looking to improve bullpen depth?

A. Not really because I felt like Cristhian Martinez was a guy that really came on. I thought Anthony Varvaro really did well…So we feel like we have some internal choices, and it also depends on what happens with Kris Medlen and what role he’s in because he really can do a variety of things and be very valuable.

Q. What do you tell Medlen about his role heading into the winter?

A. He could do so many things. The great thing was getting him back and getting him into major league games and competing again, because it sends him off with the confidence that he knows he’s back, and we know he’s back. And whether he’s a starter or a reliever – I don’t know the answer to that right now – but he can do either.

Q. Do you try to sign Michael Bourn to a contract extension this offseason?

A. I don’t know the answer to that. He’s an arbitration eligible player that we’ll go through the process. If those discussions come up during that process , we’ll explore it. We like Michael a lot. We like what he brings to the team. We like the infusion of speed.

Q. Nice to get what you did out of Freddie Freeman?

A. He had just a terrific breakout year. He laid a great foundation in Triple-A a year ago and showed what kind of hitter he could be and he carried it through. He has a great approach. He has a good swing, I think he uses the whole feel very well and that makes him a dangerous hitter. For a lot of people the knock was would he have enough power. I don’t think anybody is going to question that any more. As he grows and learns, he has plenty of power.

Q. Now you have to hope he doesn’t endure the sophomore slump?

A. No one is immune to it, that’s for sure, but I think his swing is one that allows for pretty consistent play.



This FanPost does not express the views or opinions of Talking Chop.

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looks like FW’s thinking is LF is in flux. Prado might get moved back to backup utility role, or traded altogether.

Braves.
Falcons.
Gamecocks.

by walknbalk on Oct 3, 2011 6:45 PM EDT reply actions  

I’d be all for utility role depending on how much he wants his raise to be. If he wants a crazy raise I say we just trade him.

In baseball, you're supposed to sit on your ass, spit tobacco, and nod at stupid things. Perfect life might I add.

by HeywardFTW! on Oct 3, 2011 7:50 PM EDT up reply actions  

He’s Arb-2 eligible, so we may not get a say in that. I believe they awarded him a shade over $3M for 2011.

He went from .307/.350/.459 in 2010 to .260/.302/.385 in 2011 and a bunch of games missed. I don’t know if the raises are tiered in any way, but he is due for a minor raise considering his production. If he performs to his pre-2011 numbers, that would be a bargain no matter where you played him.

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 8:06 PM EDT up reply actions  

That would be ideal for this team.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 8:04 PM EDT up reply actions  

depends on the return...

we really need someone like him, and if he was on the bench, that’d be even better. Even if he started the year as a 10th man so to speak, someone’s getting hurt. Chipper misses at least a month. Uggla, Heyward, Freeman, the LF replacement, someone is missing more time. You give them another combined 20+ games off throughout the year, so Prado is getting at least 300 at bats, and we need someone in that role. With Chipper’s health, we have to have someone in that role.

Personally, I want to keep Prado. Not so much because of how great he is, but because of that versatility. Now if he can be the Infante in another Uggla deal, that’d be awesome. I just don’t see how we get lucky twice in that regard. I don’t see anyone giving us equal or greater value or a deal where he’d be the centerpiece.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 8:39 PM EDT up reply actions  

100%.

I don’t like keeping him as a full-time LFer. I think he becomes very average to below average in that role.

However, as a super utility guy, he is one of the best in the game – when he has a good BABIP and can take a walk.

Here’s an interesting though – would you be willing to play Constanza fulltime in LF or possibly bring McLouth back at a much smaller rate, in order to allow Prado to play the super-U guy?

I’m not sure I would if those were the options.

Here are the other possible F/As on the market:

Left fielders
Travis Buck (28)
Pat Burrell (35)
Johnny Damon (37)
Mark DeRosa (37)
Jay Gibbons (35)
Jonny Gomes (31)
Carlos Guillen (36)
Scott Hairston (32)
Bill Hall (32) – $4MM mutual option with a $250K buyout
Willie Harris (34)
Eric Hinske (34) – $1.5MM club option with a $100K buyout
Raul Ibanez (40)
Conor Jackson (30)
Reed Johnson (35)
Ryan Ludwick (33)
Jason Michaels (36)
Laynce Nix (31)
Felix Pie (27)
Juan Pierre (34)
Scott Podsednik (36)
Juan Rivera (33)
Marcus Thames (35)
Josh Willingham (33)

Center fielders
Rick Ankiel (32)
Carlos Beltran (35)
Willie Bloomquist (34) – $1.1MM mutual option with a $150K buyout
Mike Cameron (39)
Coco Crisp (32)
David DeJesus (32)
Scott Hairston (32)
Andruw Jones (35)
Nate McLouth (30) – $10.65MM club option with a $1.25MM buyout
Corey Patterson (32)
Cody Ross (31)
Grady Sizemore (29) – $8.5MM club option with a $500K buyout

Right fielders
Willie Bloomquist (34) – $1.1MM mutual option with a $150K buyout
Milton Bradley (34)
Michael Cuddyer (33)
David DeJesus (32)
J.D. Drew (36)
Kosuke Fukudome (35)
Willie Harris (34)
Brad Hawpe (33)
Jason Kubel (29)
Ryan Ludwick (33)
Xavier Nady (33)
Magglio Ordonez (38)
Cody Ross (31)
Nick Swisher (31) – $10.25MM club option with a $1MM buyout
Josh Willingham (33)

Cody Ross, Nady, Beltran, Andruw, Sizemore, Cuddyer, Drew – all of them are good options for LF for next season, IMO.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 9:06 PM EDT up reply actions  

Wow, what a list of names ;)

and

would you be willing to play Constanza fulltime in LF or possibly bring McLouth back at a much smaller rate, in order to allow Prado to play the super-U guy?

No. Prado is better than both imo, so why sit the better player? I think I like you, would like one of a handful of players (Willingham, Drew, Beltran, Cuddyer, or maybe a high salary unwanted for Lowe) but I’m not sure Wren would fit it in the budget. I think whatever we get is equal in cost to Lowe’s savings. So if we save $5m, what’s the best option there for $5m? But I’m not expecting much.because again, what’s Wren got to spend? But give us Yankee money, yeah, ideal we’d add a quality 4 hole hitter for LF and let Prado stick around as a well paid utility man. But in our budget, I’m not sure you can afford a) a massive upgrade on Prado to justify sending him to the bench, or b) paying Prado’s $4-5m for a bench player.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 9:18 PM EDT up reply actions  

I don’t want to start another Rosterbation thread, but I think the $15MM-$20MM we’ll hopefully clear off the books from KK, McLouth, and Lowe will mostly be used for offense. I know we’ll have Diaz on the roster, but there’s probably $5MM-$10MM left to spend after raises on a single player.

Or, we bring in someone at a small enough price to compete for the LF spot and keep him breathing down Prado’s neck…

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 9:30 PM EDT up reply actions  

you also have to account for raises to...

McCann, O’Flaherty, and several others. If we clear $20m including Lowe, I’d think we did real well.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 10:23 PM EDT up reply actions  

Yup, I didn’t assume that JJ’s $3MM will likely be off the books too, but Hanson will be due at least that in his Arb hearing (unless we extend him).

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 10:29 PM EDT up reply actions  

Ideally...

Hudson, Hanson, Beachy, Teheran, Minor is a starting rotation for just over $10m, considering 4 of the 5 can be on minimum deals. So are Kimbrel, Venters, Medlen, Martinez, Varvaro, among other bullpen candidates, that without Lowe is well under $30m.

Freeman, Heyward, Pastornicky, Conrad are also minimum guys. Hinske and Ross are cheap. That’s about 1/2 your position players for $5-7m. We can fill a lot of spots very cheap.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 10:40 PM EDT up reply actions  

A pitching staff that without Lowe is well under $30m

add the 6 position players, and you’ve got 6 or 7 players for $40+m. But then, Chipper, McCann, Bourn and Prado eat up about $35m of that 40+.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 10:46 PM EDT up reply actions  

Bourn at Arb-2 price, or at extension price? I’m all for extending Bourn and using what we would have paid Chipper in 2013+

To fill out a Bench which already includes Ross and Hinske, I’m speculating that Tyler Pastornicky will win the backup middle IF spot. That leaves 2 spots, and they will likely both be OF positions. I think we can get better production than Matt Diaz for the $2MM he’s due in 2012, and I wonder if they’ll hold onto Georgie…

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 10:51 PM EDT up reply actions  

With or without Diaz, do we have to pay him?

How much cash did the Pirates send?

you’ve got…
http://mlbcontracts.blogspot.com/2005/01/atlanta-braves_15.html
Chipper at 13
Uggla at 13
Hudson at 9
McCann at 8.5
Bourn will be at least 6.
So 50 out of 80-90m. Add O’Flaherty, Ross and Hinske for 5 max combined, plus Hanson, Beachy, Minor, Teheran/Delgado, Kimbrel, Venters, Medlen, Martinez, Heyward, Pastornicky, Freeman, and Conrad, for around $6m combined since they can all be forced on to minimum deals to get you just over 60. That still leaves LF (Prado around 5-6?), a SS or a bench spot if Pastornicky is the SS, another bench spot, a couple bullpen spots, maybe Jurrjens, plus whatever you have to pay of Lowe’s $15m, and you really don’t have much left.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 11:11 PM EDT up reply actions  

Isn’t Hanson into his Arb-1 year?

I don’t think there’s anyway that JJ is on the team in 2012, with a rotation of Huddy-Hanson-Beachy-Minor-Teheran. Even barring the catastrophic ST injury to the rotation, you’ll have Delgado and Vizcaino waiting in the wings in AAA who are certainly better options than any veteran you could bring in externally.

Also, I doubt we extend Moylan another year with the major shoulder injury. The couple bullpen spots could be easily filled by Varvaro, Gearrin, and most likely a different LOOGY. But God forbid Wren…can it with this “veteran presence” bullshit.

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 11:23 PM EDT up reply actions  

They haven’t released Super 2 status folks. Hanson could be one, but otherwise is not yet arb-eligible.

-C

It’s rough to sit through these games and not have someone that can’t hit a Ball?

by cthabeerman on Oct 4, 2011 12:46 AM EDT up reply actions  

What C said on Hanson, maybe maybe not

same with Medlen, although I think he’s more of a sure thing since he was up a month before Hanson.

And Moylan, I wouldn’t be surprised to see him still around, but after declined arb, waiting out the mandatory time, and then resigning him to rehab until he’s healthy hoping he can be a late season addition to the pen when he is back to 100%.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 4, 2011 7:59 AM EDT up reply actions  

It’s so awesome to think that all that money that is basically getting no value can be used productively. Numnumnum

Sgt.: Pointed stick? Oh, oh, oh. We want to learn how to defend ourselves against pointed sticks, do we? Getting all high and mighty, eh? Fresh fruit not good enough for you eh? Well I'll tell you something my lad. When you're walking home tonight and some great homicidal maniac comes after you with a bunch of loganberries, don't come crying to me! Now, the passion fruit.

by GumpBrave on Oct 4, 2011 1:44 AM EDT up reply actions  

Copy/Paste from mlbtraderumors, my friend. Those are all of the potential 2012 FA OFers.

It’s a fairly sad list of names, save for just a few.

Do you really think Prado is a better LFer than McLouth?

I’m expecting a bounce-back from McLouth after so much time off. Clearly, he needs to do something if he wants to stay in the Majors.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 9:55 PM EDT up reply actions  

I do, if you consider Prado is due for a bounce back himself…

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 10:09 PM EDT up reply actions  

Prado’s bounce back would include a similar OBP as Nate with a higher average.

Nate’s bounce back would include about 20 HRs and more walks.

When you factor in that Nate is the far superior defensive OFer, I think it’s a close call. Since Prado can be a Super U guy, and Nate cannot, I think I would go that route.

Of course, all of that assumes that Nate is even on the roster, which quite frankly, I don’t see happening.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 10:14 PM EDT up reply actions  

The thing is that McLouth’s OBP has remained consistent between PIT and ATL. His SLG, however, has dropped a full 100 points while he’s been in ATL. I haven’t seen the ballpark data for PNC, but something is definitely different and either you keep the guy who’s been at .700 OPS for the entirety of his 3 years in ATL…or the keep the guy who’s shown you one year of .700 OPS (otherwise averaging .775 OPS) and can play 4 positions in the field…

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 10:27 PM EDT up reply actions  

I think we can keep both – which is what this whole discussion assumes.

BTW, Prado was below .700 OPS this season.

The fact that he plays 4 positions is why he is more valuable as a Super U, playing 4-5 times per week in LF, 2B, 1B, 3B, etc.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 10:30 PM EDT up reply actions  

Under not by much. You can’t keep Costanza AND McLouth once we get back to 25 man rosters. Three LF OFers makes no sense.

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 10:31 PM EDT up reply actions  

I think Prado is going to bounce back.

He’s too good a hitter not to. (famous last words, i know.)

But seriously, he has a decent enough sample size being a high average, line drive hitter who is a tough out. he just lost his way a bit this year.

Nate batting 8th is a good Nate. he can’t be depended on batting anywhere else in the order though, imo. So, if we remove Prado from the equation we have ourselves a better defensive LFer in Nate but a gaping hole in the 2nd spot.

Braves.
Falcons.
Gamecocks.

by walknbalk on Oct 3, 2011 10:38 PM EDT up reply actions  

Which might be filled by a different SS if we can trade for one…

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 10:42 PM EDT up reply actions  

Nate had just as long a track record of even better production, so it wouldn’t be unheard of for Prado to not bounce back right away.

Just food for though. I’m not saying that we SHOULD resign Nate for LF.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 11:42 PM EDT up reply actions  

Reading comprehension wasn't your best score on the SAT was it?

Did you really ask…

Do you really think Prado is a better LFer than McLouth?

To a comment that included…
would you be willing to play Constanza fulltime in LF or possibly bring McLouth back at a much smaller rate, in order to allow Prado to play the super-U guy?…No. Prado is better than both imo, so why sit the better player?

Are you serious?

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 10:28 PM EDT up reply actions  

Good lord. You can’t even try to have a civil discussion can you?

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 10:31 PM EDT up reply actions  

He’s a UGA fan, so of course not ;)

by TBuzz on Oct 3, 2011 10:32 PM EDT up reply actions  

Just wondering why you'd ask me a question I just answered...

did you think I’d say something different?
Yes, I think Prado is better than McLouth. He has been the entire time McLouth has been a Brave, which is no small sample.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 3, 2011 10:51 PM EDT up reply actions  

Good Prado is better than Bad Nate. No doubt about it.

I think, if both perform to their capabilities (obviously, no guarantee) Nate is a better choice, especially when you factor in his better D in LF.

That gives us maximum value in LF as well as maximum value out of Prado, whom we both agree is more valuable as a Super U.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 11:45 PM EDT up reply actions  

By what metric has Nate been better than Martin in LF??

-C

It’s rough to sit through these games and not have someone that can’t hit a Ball?

by cthabeerman on Oct 4, 2011 12:53 AM EDT up reply actions  

Nate hasn’t played enough LF to have any metric say anything, but the fact that he can play CF, albeit not very well, shows that he can play LF.

Besides, the few games where he WAS in LF, he was very good.

Prado was surprisingly bad in LF.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 4, 2011 4:16 AM EDT up reply actions  

Every defensive metric says Prado was above average – UZR, DRS, you name it. Although it takes a three-year sample to show a defender’s likely true talent level, he was still better than most of the league this year.

I suppose if you want to summarily reject statistical findings, then you may have an argument somewhere…unfortunately, you’ll only have people who think pitcher wins, ERA, AVG, and DINGERZ will agree with it.

-C

-C

It’s rough to sit through these games and not have someone that can’t hit a Ball?

by cthabeerman on Oct 4, 2011 9:25 AM EDT up reply actions  

Using UZR after just one season is just as ignorant as citing ERA, pitcher Ws, etc.

Did you actually SEE Prado in LF this year? He was terrible.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 4, 2011 11:14 AM EDT up reply actions  

Funny cause that's the same as citing WAR

which uses a one year sample of UZR.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 4, 2011 11:27 AM EDT up reply actions  

No. It’s not like citing WAR at all.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 4, 2011 3:05 PM EDT up reply actions  

Massive? Hardly.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 4, 2011 8:20 PM EDT up reply actions  

As I've heard it described

Using UZR after just one season is only ignorant if you’re trying to gauge how good a person is at playing a position. If you’re trying to determine how well they did in any particular year, it’s not a bad metric (but it’s also not perfect).

Most people use statistics the way a drunk would use a lamppost—for support, and not for illumination.
www.duwanis.com

by duwanis on Oct 4, 2011 12:04 PM EDT up reply actions  

This.

There’s a difference between true talent level and determining how someone did.

UZR still has its faults, but citing a one-year sample can be done correctly. In this case, I offered other supporting evidence from an alternate metric.

Bear in mind, also, that both systems are peer-based and there are plenty of left fielders that have no business being in the outfield at all…Ibanez, Morrison (he’s a 1B), Morse, Willingham, Braun, Carlos Lee, et al. Hell, the Nats threw Dunn out there in years past, although that has no effect upon this season.

-C

It’s rough to sit through these games and not have someone that can’t hit a Ball?

by cthabeerman on Oct 4, 2011 8:50 PM EDT up reply actions  

I got it. I’m sorry. I misunderstood what you were saying.

You were saying “This is what Prado did” vs “This is hwo good Prado is”.

Even still, just watching him out there at times was brutal. Bad routes, misjudged balls, not covering a lot of ground, etc. – and those weren’t rare occurrances.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 4, 2011 9:33 PM EDT up reply actions  

I don;'t see Nate getting to the point where he's a quality LF

maybe 5 years ago, sure, but not going forward. He’s been down for so long. Possible, yeah. Expected, not by me.

http://sportsandgrits.com/

by Mr. Sanchez on Oct 4, 2011 8:00 AM EDT up reply actions  

I like the idea of plugging Prado into SS when a non GB dominant pitcher throws.

Sgt.: Pointed stick? Oh, oh, oh. We want to learn how to defend ourselves against pointed sticks, do we? Getting all high and mighty, eh? Fresh fruit not good enough for you eh? Well I'll tell you something my lad. When you're walking home tonight and some great homicidal maniac comes after you with a bunch of loganberries, don't come crying to me! Now, the passion fruit.

by GumpBrave on Oct 4, 2011 1:42 AM EDT up reply actions  

Would Chipper, Prado, Uggla, Freeman be the worst defensive range infield ever?

by ATLtruth on Oct 5, 2011 9:04 PM EDT up reply actions  

yes.

Braves.
Falcons.
Gamecocks.

by walknbalk on Oct 5, 2011 9:13 PM EDT up reply actions  

I <3 FW.

My dad taught me how to make meat for sloppy joes and my mom let me turn over hot dogs on the grill.

by ChopMaster on Jun 25, 2011 7:25 PM CDT

by justincredubil02 on Oct 3, 2011 8:04 PM EDT reply actions  

The Pitchers on Free Agents Lists are Omitted by above post.

              The Pitchers on Free Agents List was omitted by above post.
One listing on an internet site repoted These Free Agents
 Mark Buehle 29th in Wins in MLB with 13-9 record 32nd in mlb IP 205.1 Bruce
Chen 12-8 no.43in wins Aaron Harang 26wins 14-7 45th in era
The Top 50 era s were 2.28 to 3.69 in mlb.com stats.Javier Vasquez 49th era 3.69, 162 strikeouts 40th. C.J. Wilson 16-7 14th wins 11th so 206 strikeouts. Those were some of best stars on list.

by Jeff Gibson on Oct 10, 2011 3:35 PM EDT reply actions  

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Time to bench Heyward or move him down the lineup?
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What to do with a Piece of The Great American Cracker Box?
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Is Pastornicky an historically bad defensive SS?
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McCann as LF/1B?
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Rev Wins!!!!!!!
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Speed in the 7 hole?

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