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Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Thu Mar 31, 2022 1:24 am
by seagull
You like to see guys throw pitches with what looks like minimum effort. The knock on Clevinger was every pitch looked like maximum effort. Sure enough, injuries happen.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2022 9:28 pm
by joez
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22 bold predictions for 2022 MLB season: Big trades, 30/30 for Ohtani, Pujols history, a surprise champ, more

The 2022 season begins Thursday, and we're here to tell you what will happen


By Mike Axisa CBS Sports

The 2022 Major League Baseball season is upon us. The owner's lockout delayed Opening Day one week, but we'll have 162 games and a brand new 12-team postseason format this year. To stick with the "22s" theme, here are 22 bold predictions for the 2022 baseball season ahead of Thursday's Opening Day. Come with me, won't you?

1. Byron Buxton stays healthy, wins AL MVP

Byron Buxton
BA .306 R 50 HR 19 RBI 32 SB 9

What we have seen from Buxton the last three seasons has been incredible. We just haven't seen enough of it. Injuries have limited Buxton to only 187 of 384 possible regular season games the last three seasons, or 49 percent. But in those 187 games, he's been incredible: .277/.321/.576 with 42 homers, 25 steals, and 9.6 WAR. Here is the WAR per 162 games leaderboard from 2019-21:

1 Mike Trout: 8.35
2 Byron Buxton: 8.32
4 Aaron Judge: 7.46
5 Mookie Betts: 7.43

Buxton is right behind Trout and quite a bit ahead of Tatis. When healthy, he's a difference-maker on both sides of the ball, and for my first bold prediction, I'm saying Buxton will stay healthy this season. And because he stays healthy, he'll win AL MVP. He is that good and that talented, and at age 28, Buxton is right smack in his prime. A full, healthy season of Buxton could include 40 homers, 30 steals, and the best center field defense in the sport. He's a 10-WAR season waiting to happen.

2. Cody Bellinger will be named NL Comeback Player of the Year

Cody Bellinger
BA .165 R 39 HR 10 RBI 36 SB 3

I admit, this bold prediction sounded better in my head a few weeks ago, before Bellinger struck out 14 times in his first 19 spring at-bats. He's been tinkering with his swing all spring, and while spring training stats usually don't matter a whole lot, Bellinger having 18 strikeouts and one walk in 31 plate appearances going into Monday's game kinda feels like it matters? Given what he went through last year, it's worrisome.

That only makes this bold prediction more bold, however. I like to bet on talent and Bellinger has elite talent on both sides of the ball. There was nothing fluky about that NL MVP win a few years ago. Bellinger is only 26 and he's about to enter what should be his peak years. I'm predicting Bellinger figures it out soon and has a strong, bounce-back season that earns him the NL Comeback Player of the Year award. (Just don't look at his spring stats.)

3. Shohei Ohtani will go 30/30

Shohei Ohtani
BA .257 R 103 HR 46 RBI 100 SB 26

Fun fact: Ohtani led baseball with eight triples last season. In addition to being a 40-homer slugger and ace-caliber pitcher, he's also a great baserunner. Ohtani stole 26 bases a year ago (he also led baseball with 10 caught stealings) and he was comfortably above average in FanGraphs' catch-all baserunning metric, which includes going first-to-third, advancing on fly balls, etc.

With that in mind, I'm boldly predicting Ohtani will join the 30/30 club this season, all while being a great starting pitcher. There's a decent chance Ohtani will never repeat 2021, that might be a once-in-a-lifetime kinda season, but even with a little regression, he can be among the game's best players, and a 30/30 season is within reach -- 30 homers and 30 steals. Do I hear 30 starts too? That might be too much to ask given the need to manage his workload.

4. Juan Soto trade rumors will begin

Juan Soto
BA .313 R 111 HR 29 RBI 95 SB 9

I'm not saying the Nationals will trade Soto. I think that would be crazy. But I am predicting we will begin to see sincere "teams have called the Nationals about Soto" trade rumors this summer. Soto rejected a 13-year, $350 million extension prior to the lockout, and indicated he will go year-to-year through the arbitration process. As a top Scott Boras client, that's a safe bet.

Furthermore, the Nationals figure to be very bad this season. Possibly north of 100 losses. And I'm not sure a quick turnaround can happen in a division with the defending World Series champion Braves, the Steve Cohen-led Mets, and the up-and-coming Marlins. Soto has three years of control remaining. Is a crazy to think Washington won't contend in the next three years? I don't think so.

Opposing clubs will smell the blood in the water and pester the Nationals with trade offers. I honestly couldn't tell you what it would take to pry Soto loose (maybe the Rays would put Wander Franco on the table?), but it never hurts to ask. I think the Nationals will keep Soto and keep trying to hammer away at an extension, but I predict the trade rumors arrive in 2022.

5. José Ramírez gets traded to the Blue Jays

Jose Ramirez
BA .266 R 111 HR 36 RBI 103 SB 27

I've been beating this drum since December and it makes too much sense. Ramírez's recent extension talks with the Guardians went nowhere, making it likely he will be traded at some point before becoming a free agent after next season. The Blue Jays are very much in it to win it, and Ramírez would slot in nicely at second base, a position he has played previously. His contract (both dollars and years) fits into their payroll structure wonderfully. Dream with me:

1 CF George Springer
2 2B Jose Ramírez
3 1B Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
4 RF Teoscar Hernández
5 SS Bo Bichette
6 3B Matt Chapman
7 LF Lourdes Gurriel Jr.
8 DH Alejandro Kirk
9 C Danny Jansen

Trade Ramírez at the deadline and the acquiring team gets him for two postseason runs, thus jacking up the price. The Guardians waited a little too long to trade Francisco Lindor and didn't get that monster package in return. Trade Ramírez this summer and the return would be significant. The kind of haul that can get Cleveland back into contention fairly soon.

I think a package featuring infield prospect Jordan Groshans and a young catcher like Kirk or especially Gabriel Moreno would get Cleveland's attention. Regardless of the package, Ramírez to the Blue Jays makes a ton of sense and I am boldly predicting it will happen sometime before the trade deadline.


6. Frankie Montas gets traded to Braves

Frankie Montas
ERA 3.37 WHIP 1.18 IP 187 BB 57 K 207

It is a matter of when, not if, the Athletics will trade Montas. They've already traded Chris Bassitt, Matt Chapman, Sean Manaea, and Matt Olson, and they're not going to keep Montas, who will be a free agent after 2023. He's going, and I bet he goes sooner rather than later. The longer the A's hold onto him, the more they risk seeing Montas' trade value plummet (through injury or poor performance).

The defending World Series champion Braves are looking to repeat and there is enough uncertainty with the back of their rotation (Tucker Davidson, Kyle Muller, Kyle Wright, Huascar Ynoa, etc.) and with Mike Soroka's health that I could see them being in the market for another starter at some point. These two teams recently hooked up for the Olson trade, so the A's have done background work on Atlanta's farm system. Things could come together quickly. I like the fit and see a match.

7. Tyler Mahle gets traded to the Rangers

Tyler Mahle
ERA 3.75 WHIP 1.23 IP 180 BB 64 K 210

The Reds aggressively cut costs over the winter and it feels like only a matter of time until Luis Castillo and Mahle are dealt. Texas needs pitching and they have several near-MLB-ready middle infield prospects who are suddenly blocked by Corey Seager and Marcus Semien (Ezequiel Duran, Justin Foscue, Josh Smith, etc.). They can put together a real nice package.

Mahle was quite good last season and the measurables (velocity, spin rate, etc.) suggest there's still another level in there. The Rangers always seem to need more pitching and Mahle is under team control through 2023. He's also the kind of pitcher Texas could look to sign long-term. Either way, Mahle to the Rangers for a package built around young infielders is a match made in bold trade prediction heaven.

8. Albert Pujols reaches 700 home runs

Albert Pujols
BA .236 R 29 HR 17 RBI 50 SB 2

Will it be easy? No, definitely not. Will it happen? Yes. I am boldly predicting it. Pujols is fifth on the all-time home run list and he is 21 away from becoming the fourth member of the 700 homers club. Here's the career home run leaderboard:

1 Barry Bonds: 762
2 Hank Aaron: 755
3 Babe Ruth: 714
4 Alex Rodriguez: 696
5 Albert Pujols: 679

Last season Pujols hit 17 home runs in only 296 plate appearances. That's a pretty good rate! A similar pace this year would require 366 plate appearances to get to 700 homers, though there are indications the league home run rate is about to skyrocket, which will work to his advantage. The Cardinals say they plan to use Pujols as a righty platoon bat, but if he's nearing 700 homers late in the season, you can bet he'll start getting at-bats against righties. Welcome to the 700 homer club, Mr. Pujols.

9. Camden Yards will be a bottom 15 home run park

Or it could be top 15, depending on your perspective. Camden Yards in Baltimore has historically been one of the most homer-happy ballparks in the baseball, and that has been especially true given some of the pitching staffs the Orioles have run out there during their tank job rebuild. Here are the total home runs hit at Camden Yards the last few seasons:

1 2021: 277 (most in MLB by 27!)
2 2020: 89 (10th most during 60-game season)
3 2019: 289 (second most)
4 2018: 223 (sixth most)
5 2017: 262 (most)

Camden Yards is a great dinger park and I am boldly predicting that will change this year. Rather than rank at or near the top in home runs allowed, Camden Yards will rank in the bottom half of the league. Not because the O's pitching will be better, though they do have a few young arms who could pop (Grayson Rodriguez, most notably), but because they moved the left field wall back:

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"While Oriole Park will remain a hitter's ballpark, it will no longer be an outlier among the parks," the Orioles said in a statement.

They're pushing the left field wall back as much as 30 feet (!) in some spots, and they've increased the wall height as well. All those almost rob-able home runs that plop into the first or second row will now stay in play. Also, the universal DH will boost home run totals at National League parks going forward, moving them up the leaderboard. That works in my favor too.

10. Oneil Cruz will win the Home Run Derby

Oneil Cruz
BA .333 R 2 HR 1 RBI 3 SB 0

Predictably, the Pirates sent Cruz, their top prospect, to the minors last week in a move that screams service-time manipulation. It is true Cruz has played only six games at Triple-A. It is also true that Cruz wrecked Double-A last year and was called up to the big leagues late in the season, and showed his freakish power. Look at this:

Nothing about that is normal. That's a 6-foot-7 shortstop reaching down and flicking his wrists to hit golf shot home runs. Cruz is a freak of nature and I mean that in the nicest way possible.

The 23-year-old Cruz had nine big-league plate appearances last year and in one of them he hit a ball 118.2 mph. Only six others managed to do that in 2021: Pete Alonso, Franchy Cordero, Aaron Judge, Manny Machado, Shohei Ohtani, and Giancarlo Stanton. Maybe Cruz proves to be the next Cordero rather than the next Judge. I guess we'll find out when the Pirates let us.

Anyway, this bold prediction calls for Cruz to be called up in time to show off that prodigious power, and earn an invite to the Home Run Derby, which he will then win. The Home Run Derby is nothing more than a showcase, a spectacle with the game's top power hitters, and Cruz is made for that event. He'll get invited and deny Alonso a three-peat.

11. Seiya Suzuki will have a top-five season by a Japanese hitter

The Cubs won the bidding war for Suzuki over the winter (or, technically, this spring) and signed him to a five-year, $85 million contract. Last season Suzuki, who will play most of this year at age 27, authored a .317/.433/.636 batting line with 38 home runs for the Hiroshima Carp in Japan. Both ZiPS and PECOTA project Suzuki as an impact hitter right away.

We've been fortunate enough to watch some great Japanese players the last few decades, including an all-time legend in Ichiro and the unicorn that is Shohei Ohtani, and this bold prediction calls for Suzuki to produce just as much as those guys. Here are the five best offensive seasons by a Japanese player in MLB by adjusted-OPS, where 100 is average and the higher the number, the better:

1 Shohei Ohtani, 2021 Angels: 158
2 Hideki Matsui, 2004 Yankees: 137
4 3 Ichiro Suzuki, 2004 Mariners: 130
5 Hideki Matsui, 2005 Yankees: 130
6 Ichiro Suzuki, 2009 Mariners: 129

Suzuki needs a 130 OPS+ to jump into the top five and, for reference, hitters with an OPS+ in the 130 range last season include Nelson Cruz (130), Yuli Gurriel (131), and Austin Riley (132). There's going to be an adjustment period, that's inevitable (we've already seen it a bit this spring), but once Suzuki gets his bearings, he'll take off and be among the game's most productive hitters.

12. Bobby Witt Jr. will hit 30 home runs

On the surface, this doesn't seem so bold. Witt is arguably the best prospect in baseball and last season he hit .290/.361/.576 with 35 doubles and 33 home runs in 124 games split between Double-A and Triple-A. But did you know only four non-first base rookie infielders have ever hit 30 homers in a season? Here's the list:

1 2B Al Rosen, 1950 Cleveland: 37
2 3B Ryan Braun, 2007 Brewers: 34
3 3B Jim Ray Hart, 1964 Giants: 31
4 SS Nomar Garciaparra, 1997 Red Sox: 30

Several rookie first basemen have done it, most recently Pete Alonso during his record-breaking rookie season, but only four guys at the "skill" infield positions (for lack of a better term) have done it. It's unclear whether Witt will play shortstop or third base for the Royals this season, but he will play for them, and he will join that exclusive club with 30 homers. I'm boldly predicting it.

13. Julio Rodríguez will win AL Rookie of the Year

Witt Jr. may sock 30 homers, but Rodríguez will take home the league Rookie of the Year award. The Mariners' charismatic outfield prospect has been a one-man highlight reel this spring. He's launched titanic dingers, legged out an inside-the-park homer, made a leaping catch, and bat flipped a walk after falling behind in the count 0-2. Rodríguez, who is on Seattle's Opening Day roster, is an absolute joy.

The bold prediction here is Rodríguez, who ZiPS already projects as Seattle's best player, will have a comparable season to Witt and edge him out in the closest Rookie of the Year vote since Carlos Correa finished 15 points ahead of Francisco Lindor in 2015 (124 to 109). I hope Witt and Rodríguez give us a Rookie of the Year race (and go on to have careers) like those two.

14. Francisco Álvarez will take over as the No. 1 prospect in baseball

The Mets have a gem in Álvarez, a power-hitting catcher who slashed .272/.388/.554 with 24 homers in 99 games split between two Single-A levels in 2021. He did that while being roughly three years younger than the average player in the league and while being a catcher. That is mammoth production and it earned him a premium spot on R.J. Anderson's top 50 prospects list:

1 C Adley Rutschman, Orioles
2 SS Bobby Witt Jr., Royals
3 OF Julio Rodríguez, Mariners
4 RHP Shane Baz, Rays
5 RHP Grayson Rodriguez, Orioles
6 OF Riley Greene, Tigers
7 C Francisco Álvarez, Mets
8 1B Spencer Torkelson, Tigers
9 C Gabriel Moreno, Blue Jays
10 SS CJ Abrams, Padres

Rutschman, Witt, Rodríguez (Julio, not Grayson), Baz, Greene, and Torkelson are all expected to graduate to the big leagues this year. Rodriguez (Grayson, not Julio) and Moreno could join them. Maybe even Abrams too. That creates a pretty clear path to the No. 1 spot for Álvarez, a 20-year-old catcher who figures to split the season between High-A and Double-A.

Jumping from No. 7 to No. 1 isn't exactly bold, but the jump from High-A to Double-A is the biggest in the minors. That's where the prospects separate themselves form the suspects, plus being a young catcher is just hard. If Álvarez stumbles a bit in 2022, it would be understandable. That said, I expect big things, and I have him taking over as the game's No. 1 prospect later this year.

15. Ha-seong Kim will be a top-five shortstop in the National League

Ha-seong Kim
BA .202 R 27 HR 8 RBI 34 SB 6

The Fernando Tatis Jr. injury is bad for the Padres and terrible for baseball overall. Tatis is an exciting, energetic player with a "you can't take your eyes off him" quality few players have. His broken wrist is a big loss for the game and fans in general. This sport needs more players like Tatis.

The injury is good news for Kim though. Kim doesn't want Tatis to be hurt, obviously, but the injury opens the shortstop position and clears a path for a full-time job. Kim really struggled last year, though he was a monster in Korea in 2020 (.306/.397/.523 with 30 homers), and his top-end exit velocities were strong last season. When he connected, Kim really drove the ball.

That great free-agent class we spent the last few months talking about? Those guys all signed in the American League. Marcus Semien and Carlos Correa stayed in the Junior Circuit while Javier Báez, Corey Seager, and Trevor Story all made the jump from the National League. Here are the top NL shortstops by ZiPS projected 2022 WAR:

1 Fernando Tatis Jr., Padres: 7.5 (pre-injury projection)
2 Trea Turner, Dodgers: 5.6
3 Francisco Lindor, Mets: 4.7
4 Willy Adames, Brewers: 3.0

Brandon Crawford, Giants and Dansby Swanson, Braves: 2.6
The bar Kim has to clear to crack the top five isn't that high, especially with Tatis now hurt. Good shortstop defense and a league average-ish bat is a path to 3 WAR, and if Kim plays well enough, San Diego will find a way to keep him in the lineup even after Tatis returns. Our loss (Tatis' injury) is Kim's gain (this is his big chance).

16. Daulton Varsho will start 30 games at catcher and in center field

Daulton Varsho
BA .246 R 41 HR 11 RBI 38 SB 6

Daulton is the son of former big leaguer Gary Varsho and he is one of my favorite players in the game today. He's a unicorn as a guy with the defensive chops and athleticism to both catch and play center field. Last season he started 21 games in center and 30 games at catcher. This season I have Varsho jumping into the 30/30 club -- 30 starts at catcher and 30 starts in center. Only three players have done it, and only one remotely recently:

1 Craig Biggio, 1990 Astros: 101 starts at catcher and 34 in center
2 Wally Schang, 1920 Red Sox: 69 starts at catcher and 35 in center
3 Roger Bresnahan, 1906 Giants: 81 starts at catcher and 37 in center

Varsho began to break out offensively late last year (.290/.349/.530 in the second half) and the center field job is all his this season. Carson Kelly is entrenched behind the plate, though injuries happen, and I'm guessing there will be 30 starts behind the plate available. It's not like Arizona has a veteran backup catcher lined up (with all due apologies to Jose Herrera). Welcome to the unconventional 30/30 club, Daulton.

17. Jazz Chisholm will hit for the cycle

Jazz Chisholm
BA .248 R 70 HR 18 RBI 53 SB 23

Did you know the Marlins have never had a cycle in their history? They're the only franchise without one. They aren't that recent an expansion team. You'd think they'd have one (or several) by now. For this bold prediction, I'm going to say Chisholm will record the first cycle in franchise history. He has the power, speed, and all-around awesomeness I associate with cycles. To be specific, I'll say Chisholm does the deed at home against the Mets on Monday, June 20. It has been foretold.

18. Hunter Greene will be the hardest-throwing starter ever

Pitch tracking data only goes back to 2008, though it's safe to assume the hardest-throwing seasons ever have taken place in the last 14 years. The sport is obsessed with velocity and the radar gun readings only continue to trend up. Here are the hardest average fastballs on record (min. 100 innings):

1 Noah Syndergaard, 2016 Mets: 98.9 mph
2 Sandy Alcantara: 2021 Marlins: 98.1 mph
3 Yordano Ventura, 2014 Royals: 98.0 mph
4 Noah Syndergaard, 2019 Mets: 97.9 mph
5 Gerrit Cole, 2021 Yankees: 97.8 mph

In 2022, Greene will jump to the top of the list. The Reds righty has made the team and is Cincinnati's No. 2 prospect. He's also one of the hardest-throwing humans on the planet. Greene routinely tops 100 mph, and he reportedly threw a 105-mph pitch in Triple-A last year.

Greene's fastball has been more hittable than the radar gun would lead you to believe, though we're not worried about results for this bold prediction. We're focused on raw velocity, and this season Greene will supplant Syndergaard on that list and take over as the hardest-throwing starting pitcher on record.

19. Logan Webb will have a record ground ball rate

Webb made the jump from "hey this guy is pretty good and flying under the radar" last regular season to "this guy is a star" in the postseason, when he dominated the Dodgers twice in the NLDS. The Giants lost the series, but Webb is now a household name, and soon his ground ball ability will be as well. He used his sinker to produce a stellar 60.9 percent ground ball rate in 2021.

This bold prediction calls for Webb to improve on that number this season and post the highest ground ball rate on record. Batted-ball data dates back to 2002. Here are the highest ground ball rates among qualified pitchers since then:

1 Derek Lowe, 2002 Red Sox: 67.0%
2 Derek Lowe, 2006 Dodgers: 67.0%
3 Brandon Webb, 2006 Diamondbacks: 66.3%
4 Brett Anderson, 2015 Dodgers: 66.3%
5 Derek Lowe, 2003 Red Sox: 65.9%

Lowe also has the 7th, 14th, and 18th best ground ball seasons on that list. His sinker was a bowling ball. So is Webb's. Brandon's and Logan's. It's too bad Brandon got hurt. He was nasty. Logan is nasty as well, and his ground ball ability improved during last year too: 58.7 percent in the first half and 62.2 percent in the second half.

The Giants have a thing for maxing out their players' strengths and Webb's ground ball ability is his strength. The jump from 60.9 percent to 67.0 percent is pretty big, but I'm betting on Webb's sinker being that damn good.

20. Four AL East teams will reach postseason

Last season the AL East became the first division in the divisional play era with four 90-win teams and only the second division ever, joining the seven-team AL East in 1978. This year it will become the first division to send four teams to the postseason (sorry Orioles, not you). The new 12-team postseason format makes that possible. Look at the FanGraphs postseason odds:

1 Blue Jays: 89.0%
2 Astros: 85.9%
3 Yankees: 83.1%
4 White Sox: 71.5%
5 Red Sox: 62.6%
6 Rays: 58.4%
7 Angels: 43.7%
8 Twins: 41.6%

FanGraphs says the four non-O's teams in the division have four of the six highest postseason odds in the league, so the objective computers agree with me. So it shall be. Four AL East teams are heading to October thanks to the 12-team postseason format.

21. The White Sox will reach the ALCS

Four AL East teams will reach the postseason, but the White Sox are going to the ALCS. This is notable because a) the White Sox have not won a postseason series since the 2005 World Series, and b) an AL Central team has not won a postseason series since Cleveland won the 2016 ALCS. AL Central teams are 4-23 in the postseason since Cleveland took a 3-1 lead in the 2016 World Series. 4-23! The tide begins to turn this season. The South Siders will advance to the ALCS.

22. The Brewers will beat the Astros in the World Series

Do I love Milwaukee's offense? No. Hunter Renfroe is a big offensive upgrade over Jackie Bradley Jr. without being a big defensive downgrade, and surely Christian Yelich will get his slugging percentage back over .400, right? Even then, it feels like the offense's ceiling is pretty good rather than great, and offenses like that can get exposed (like in the NLDS last year).

That said, the pitching is great, and the offense only needs to be great for a few weeks in October. Who saw Eddie Rosario having the best month of his career last postseason, or Jorge Soler socking clutch homer after clutch homer? Weird things happen in October. Get in and you can win. The Braves showed that last year and this year I'm boldly predicting the Brewers do the same.

As for the Astros, letting Carlos Correa leave is a significant loss -- Jeremy Peña could have a Rookie of the Year season and still be a multi-win downgrade because Correa is that good -- though they're still very good and I would not want to face them in a short postseason series. They still have six great hitters plus a (hopefully healthy) Justin Verlander and Lance McCullers Jr.

For my final bold prediction, I have the Brewers winning the first World Series championship in franchise history, and the Astros losing the World Series for the second straight year and the third time in the last four years. This sport can be cruel. As for a World Series MVP pick, how about Rowdy Tellez? When in doubt, pick the dude named Rowdy.

Baseball has not had a repeat champion since the Yankees won three straight from 1998-2000. With all due respect to the Braves, I don't see that streak ending this year. Milwaukee will be title town come October.

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Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2022 9:59 pm
by joez
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The players we can't wait to watch in 2022, ranked

3:45 PM CDT MLB

Who are the “must-see” players across the Majors in 2022?

That was the question we posed to seven MLB.com contributors, and it’s not an easy one to answer. Different people have different definitions of that term, after all. But one thing’s for sure: To be “must-see,” you have to bring something special to the table.

This isn’t just about having talent and putting up numbers. “Must-see” is about players with presence and swag, who command attention, spark joy and defy belief. When they’re due up at bat, you postpone your trip to the concession stand, put down your remote or maximize your MLB.TV window. When they’re running the bases or going after a ball in the field, you look up from your phone. When they’re on the mound, you key in on every pitch -- then check Twitter for a slo-mo breakdown.

Below, our contributors made some tough decisions to pick just 21 of the players they are most excited to watch this year, using a traditional snake draft format. There was only one rule: in order to make sure MLB’s wide talent base was equally represented, each drafter had to select one player apiece from each of the three divisional regions (East, Central and West).

Here are the results:

ROUND 1

1) Shohei Ohtani, SP/DH, Angels

If you're picking the one player to watch in baseball today -- and I am -- it has to be Ohtani. Every time he takes the field he might do something you've never seen before. He might do something the entire baseball world has never seen before. He does things Major League Baseball hasn't seen since Babe Ruth, and he does them better than Babe Ruth. There was nothing like witnessing Ohtani throw 100 mph fastballs as a pitcher and hit a 450-foot home run in the same game last season. There's no one like Ohtani, period.
-- David Adler

2) Ronald Acuña Jr., OF, Braves

There’s nothing on a baseball field that Ronald Acuña Jr. can’t do. He’s got all the swagger in the world and the game to back it up. Acuña is likely the most legitimate five-tool player in baseball right now. Before his knee injury last year, he was looking like the favorite for NL MVP, and in his last full season (2019), he finished just three stolen bases short of MLB’s first 40-40 season since 2006 (Alfonso Soriano). The reigning champs expect the 24-year-old outfielder back in early May, which is great for baseball fans and terrifying for opposing pitchers.
-- Brett Blueweiss

3) Vladimir Guerrero Jr., 1B, Blue Jays

Guerrero dramatically increased his average launch angle to 9.4 degrees last year, up from 4.6 in ’20 and 6.7 in ’19. The result was the breakthrough we were hoping for: The former No. 1 prospect clobbered an MLB-high-tying 48 home runs while compiling 6.8 WAR in 2021, per Baseball-Reference. He would have been the AL MVP had it not been for the historic exploits of that Ohtani fellow. Guerrero is in great shape, and after Toronto narrowly missed the playoffs last year, he’s on a mission. In his own words, “last year was the trailer. Now, you guys are going to see the movie.” With Guerrero mashing in the heart of the lineup, it’ll be must-see cinema.
-- Nathalie Alonso

4) Juan Soto, RF, Nationals

Soto is up there among the absolute must-see plate appearances right now. No matter the score or situation, it’s always a good time to watch the master at work. He’s the best hitter in baseball, and every trip to the plate is a treat: whether he’s working a walk and testing the pitcher or blasting an extra-base hit, it’s all a joy to behold. In 2021, he had the lowest swing rate and chase rate in MLB, but he made teams pay when he swung, with 23.9% of his swings resulting in hard contact, the highest such rate in the sport. Good luck to opposing pitchers, and lucky us for getting to watch. And it isn’t just the master class: Soto has fun at the dish with his signature shuffle, radiating excitement for the game.
-- Sarah Langs


5) Bryce Harper, RF, Phillies

It’s hard to find another player in recent history who’s endeared himself to a new city so quickly. Harper is already being stacked side-by-side with Philadelphia baseball royalty; he’s had some epic, game-winning home runs; he’s made sure to pay respect to the city’s biggest, greenest star. It feels like Harper has been on the Phillies forever (it’s only been three seasons). He’s gotta be nearing the end of his career pretty soon, right? (he’s only 29). Yes, after winning his second NL MVP last season, MLB’s chosen one might be somehow just entering his prime. And with a new roster of big bats, Harper might have the protection and pop needed to lead the Phillies to their first postseason appearance in 11 years. There might not be a better time to watch him.
-- Matt Monagan

6) Byron Buxton, CF, Twins

Thus far, Buxton’s career has mostly left us craving more. The No. 2 overall Draft pick (2012) was once the No. 1 overall prospect in the sport and has flashed jaw-dropping tools and stretches of MVP-caliber play in between frequent injuries (see his 1.005 OPS and 4.5 WAR in just 61 games last season). The only missing ingredient? Good health. If Buxton finds that, the sky's the limit. Even if not, the fun factor when he does play still justifies this draft slot. How many other guys can hit 450-foot bombs, run the bases like a gazelle AND glide around the outfield robbing hits?
-- Andrew Simon

7) Fernando Tatis Jr., SS, Padres

When you feel the level of disappointment we all experienced when we learned that Tatis would miss the first two months of the season due to a broken wrist, you know you’re dealing with a must-see player. One of the most electric players in baseball, Tatis has dealt with injury a lot so far in his young career, and as a result has only played in 273 Major League games. Still, in that time, he’s been a superstar, hitting .292/.369/.596 with 81 home runs and 52 steals. Even after missing significant time in 2022, he could reach the 100-homer milestone before the season is over. Whether it’s at the plate, on the bases or in the field at shortstop, Tatis is appointment television whenever he’s on the diamond.
-- Manny Randhawa

ROUND 2

8) Wander Franco, SS, Rays

Franco has had “must-see” written all over him for years now, and we’re just getting the chance to see what he can do at the Major League level. The No. 1 prospect in baseball when he made his big league debut last year, Franco reached base in 43 straight games, tying Hall of Famer Frank Robinson for the longest on-base streak for anyone age 20 or younger in AL/NL history. And that’s just the beginning for this guy – after finishing third in AL Rookie of the Year Award voting last year despite only playing in 70 games, even the sky isn’t the limit for this phenom.
-- Manny Randhawa

9) Mike Trout, CF, Angels

Yes, he missed most of last season and is now into his 30s. But I couldn’t let him fall any further. A Trout plate appearance is still a master class in savage efficiency. Few command the strike zone better or have a quicker, more powerful swing. It’s a joy to watch. Even if the recent injuries have cooled Trout’s historic career pace a bit, tracking his progress up the career leaderboards remains part of the fun. The 350-homer mark is within reach for Trout, who also has a decent shot to pass 10 more Hall of Fame position players in WAR. That includes none other than Ken Griffey Jr. (7.7 WAR away).
-- Andrew Simon

10) Albert Pujols, DH, Cardinals

As a noted UK band once sang, “Oh, take me back to the start.” The 42-year-old Pujols is back in St. Louis for his final season. Back to where it all began 21 years ago. There will be standing ovations, there will be clutch pinch-hits and there will surely be tears for one of the greatest players to ever walk onto a baseball diamond. The three-time MVP also has a shot at hitting some impressive milestones: He’s 18 homers away from passing A-Rod for 4th on the all-time HR list and 21 from the vaunted 700 mark. He should also pass Eddie Collins and Paul Molitor to become 10th on the all-time hit list. Oh, and, in limited attempts, he also hasn’t been caught stealing a base since 2016. Let’s hope he swipes at least one bag in 2022.
-- Matt Monagan

11) Luis Robert, CF, White Sox

This was so easy. We should all be watching Robert play baseball as often as is humanly possible. A five-tool player with a very high ceiling, he will certainly be a popular MVP pick entering ‘22. He runs fast, which also helps him patrol center field expertly, and he crushes baseballs. He has fun in the outfield with teammate Eloy Jiménez, often catching fly balls for the left fielder. Lest we forget, Robert hammered a 487-ft homer in the playoffs as a rookie in 2020, the second-longest postseason home run tracked by Statcast (since 2015). Plus, whenever you tune in to watch Robert, you get the chance to listen to Jason Benetti and Steve Stone on NBC Sports Chicago, which is bonus, must-see fun.
-- Sarah Langs

12) Carlos Correa, SS, Twins

In an offseason of unlikely unions, none was more stunning than Correa to the Twins. The former No. 1 overall Draft pick (2012) can opt out of his three-year, $105.3-million deal after the first or second year, meaning he could hit the free-agent market again this winter. Correa is betting on himself, which is why I expect to see lots of what he’s known for: hard contact and dazzling defense (if he stays healthy, of course.) As our Twins beat writer Do-Hyung Park noted, the All-Star shortstop has a career 1.205 OPS at Target Field, his highest at any ballpark where he's had 20+ plate appearances. High stakes, elite talent and an unexpected setting? I’ll be watching.
-- Nathalie Alonso

13) Bobby Witt Jr., SS/3B, Royals

At just 21 years old, MLB’s top prospect Bobby Witt Jr. makes the game look easy. His lightning-quick bat speed has already drawn comparisons to Mike Trout (and I hear he’s pretty good). Before being drafted second overall in 2019, Witt hit .500 his senior year in high school, while also lighting up the radar gun with mid-90s heat on the mound. In the Minors, he’s shown off all five tools and has real 30-30 potential. This could be a rookie season for the ages for the Royals phenom.
-- Brett Blueweiss

14) Seiya Suzuki, RF, Cubs

No one knows what Suzuki will do in the Major Leagues, and that's what makes him a must-watch player. It's the possibility of what he could be: the next star slugger to arrive from overseas. What we do know is this guy mashed in Japan. He hit 38 home runs in 2021. He’s batted .317 and averaged 30 homers a year over his six full seasons in Nippon Professional Baseball. But he hasn't played an MLB game yet, so Suzuki is still a mystery. And who can resist a mystery?
-- David Adler

ROUND 3

15) Aaron Judge, RF, Yankees

You have to tune in any time Judge is up because he could launch a 500-foot home run in any given at-bat. There are very few humans in the world who can hit a baseball as far as No. 99. Twice in his career, Judge has literally cleared the Yankee Stadium bleachers. Those homers traveled 495 feet and 496 feet. The ball is just different coming off his bat. Whenever Judge is at the plate, you might see a record-setting home run -- the longest or hardest since we started keeping track of such things. He has true top-of-the-scale power.
-- David Adler

16) Walker Buehler, SP, Dodgers

For the first time, Buehler will be getting the nod on Opening Day for the Dodgers. Clayton Kershaw has done so nine times in his career, but now the torch has been passed, and Buehler is ready to run with it. With his fastball in the upper 90s and a slider tighter than his pants, he’s the unquestioned ace on the team that is the odds-on favorite to win the title this year. If the Dodgers are going to compete for that ultimate goal, expect Buehler to be one of the biggest reasons why.
-- Brett Blueweiss

17) Mookie Betts, RF, Dodgers

On a must-see Dodgers team loaded with must-see players, Betts is still the guy I want up in a big spot and the guy I want the ball hit to. (A year later, I’m still thinking about his breathtaking, game-ending catch against the Padres.) Even in a “down” year in 2021 in which he was hampered by hip issues, the 2018 AL MVP smacked 23 home runs and finished with a 128 OPS+. And his performance in Game 5 of the 2021 NLDS against the Giants (four hits, a stolen base and a run scored in a 2-1 L.A. win) was a reminder of Betts’ ability to change the course of a game, sometimes single-handedly. Am I betting on Betts in 2022? You … bet.
-- Nathalie Alonso

18) Julio Rodríguez, OF, Mariners

Julio Rodríguez is the No. 3 prospect in baseball -- but not for long, because he will be crushing it on a Major League field this week. The now-21-year-old hit .347 with a 1.001 OPS across two levels of the Minors in 2021 at age 20, with great plate discipline, power and the ability to hit the ball to all fields. He’s also worked on speed and is an electrifying baserunner. Seriously, check out this inside-the-parker from Spring Training. Rodríguez exudes excitement on the field, with palpable joy coming through. He has an active and engaging social media presence, and recently took some time to engage with Mariners fans around Peoria, Ariz.
-- Sarah Langs

19) Kris Bryant, LF, Rockies

Once upon a time, before he even was promoted to the Cubs, Bryant was compared to the fictional character Sylvester Coddmeyer III from Matt Christopher’s “The Kid Who Only Hit Homers.” Those were, of course, tough expectations to live up to in the big leagues, but the 2016 NL MVP has compiled 167 homers over seven seasons – about 31 per year. And now, he’s in the very hitter-friendly Coors Field … where maybe he can actually hit a dinger every at-bat? (Or at least 40-50 in a season). Either way, it’ll be fun to watch Bryant in the purple and black after seeing him as the quintessential Cub for several glorious years. And who knows, with the additions of Bryant and Randal Grichuk alongside Colorado mainstay Charlie Blackmon and up-and-coming stars like Ryan McMahon and Brendan Rodgers, maybe Colorado can make some noise in the tough NL West?
-- Matt Monagan

20) Max Scherzer, SP, Mets

It was tough to leave Giancarlo Stanton on the table for my East region pick, because nobody hits the ball quite like Big G. With that said, a Scherzer start is some of the best theater around (and now only slightly off-Broadway!). The stuff still sizzles. The numbers still amaze. But there’s also a third ingredient here: intensity. Mad Max radiates scowling, snarling competitive fire and will to win. That mound presence is not fun for opponents, but for us? It’s a blast to observe from the safety of the couch.
-- Andrew Simon

21) Javier Báez, SS, Tigers

Báez has always been a must-see player – the daring baserunning, the incredible tags and the defensive gems have given us unforgettable moments from when he was with the Cubs. Now, following a short stint with the Mets, Báez is joining an up-and-coming Tigers squad with its sights set on moving from a rebuilding phase into a contending phase. Put all of that together and you’ve got a team in Detroit that will be fun to watch in 2022, with one of the most exciting players in the game joining a roster that could soon feature two of the best prospects in the game, Spencer Torkelson and Riley Greene.
-- Manny Randhawa

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Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Wed Apr 06, 2022 3:44 pm
by Uncle Dennis
Saaay, the didn't mention Bradley Zimmer!

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Wed Apr 06, 2022 5:03 pm
by civ ollilavad
Prediction No 5 is a loser already. Sorry
Charlie
Maybe he’ll get them all wrong

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Thu Apr 14, 2022 7:49 pm
by civ ollilavad
Zimmer finally appeared in a game, one of the Blue Jay OF got hurt and Zimmer moved into the lineup and got an at bat and did not strike out. Maybe they've salvaged his career

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Mon Apr 18, 2022 11:03 am
by rusty2
got doubled up to end the game.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Tue Apr 19, 2022 7:08 am
by civ ollilavad
I couldn't find that.... but I do see Brad is 0-8 with 3 strikeouts. Very likely he and Castro will both be sent away went rosters drop to 26.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 3:18 pm
by civ ollilavad
Kluber had been doing well, but not yesterday 3 11 8 8 0 2 2 home runs

Clevinger second start fair to middling 4 1/3 6 3 2 2 6 1 homer run

Carrasco has had 5 good to excellent starts and one stinker, yesterday: 6 2/3 7 2 2 0 6
excluding the one bad outing his cumulative numbers are outstanding: 33 innings 22 hits 5 earned runs 4 walks 30 strikeouts.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Sat May 14, 2022 9:16 am
by TFIR
Ben Gamel
Hits third homer
OFPittsburgh Pirates
May 13, 2022
Gamel went 2-for-4 with a solo homer and a pair of runs scored in Friday's loss to the Reds.
ANALYSIS
Gamel scored all the Pirates' runs in the 8-2 loss. He hit a leadoff shot to open the scoring in the bottom of the first and later singled and scored on a Ke'Bryan Hayes double in the third inning to tie the score at three, but the Reds would eventually pull away. Gamel is now hitting a strong .307/.381/.475 through 32 games.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Sat May 14, 2022 1:23 pm
by civ ollilavad
Congratulations Ben!

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Tue May 17, 2022 3:38 pm
by TFIR
The Orioles designated Logan Allen for assignment Tuesday.

After being claimed off waivers from the Guardians on May 5, Allen's stint in Baltimore lasted just under two weeks before he was moved off the 40-man roster for another lefty reliever in Nick Vespi, whose contract was selected from Triple-A Norfolk in a corresponding move.

During his time with the Orioles, the 24-year-old made three appearances out of the bullpen and gave up two earned runs on three hits and two walks over 1.2 innings. If he goes unclaimed off waivers this time around, Allen will stick in the Baltimore organization and report to Norfolk.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Tue May 17, 2022 5:38 pm
by civ ollilavad
that was a pretty lousy little series of appearances.
Scott Moss, the other lefty we got in the bauer deal, also was let go by the team that claimed him after Cleveland cut him to fill the roster with younger kids in November. Phillies DFA'd him; then signed him to AAA deal and he's been hurt all year.

Meanwhile lefty Kyle Nelson, also let go in November, has been doing OK, or maybe I should say dong really well. College teammate of Bieber, he's a mainstay of Diamondbacks' bullpen. 1.29 ERA, 5 holds, WHIP of 0.71 and 15/2 K/BB in 14 innings of work.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2022 4:02 pm
by civ ollilavad
While we have a starting pitcher, starting catcher, starting 1st baseman, and starting 2nd baseman; plus a top IF prospect in AAA; and a solid LHP in AA,

the Padres have Mike Clevinger, returning to the mound tomorrow after brief stint on the DL after missing all 2021 and a month of 2022 with TJ surgery. Mike has pitched 14 innings so far this season for the Padres. 0 in 2021. 19 in 2020 after being traded.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2022 4:06 pm
by civ ollilavad
Corey Kluber 50 2/3 innings, 3.73 ERA, looking good for Tampa

Carlos Carrasco is 6-1 with a 3,65 ERA for the Mets in 57 innings.

Two good guys doing good work again.