TTO chats with Tom Cunningham - podcast episode cover

TTO chats with Tom Cunningham

Jun 13, 20191 hr 1 min
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Episode description

On this episode, TTO is joined by Tom Cunningham to discuss his preferred methods for building teams (hint: prospects!) and gives a ton of great tips for listeners about what to look for as they endeavor to build a champion squad. We touch on the latest MLB draftees (actually talking about the players this time!) and how they compare to prospects already playing pro ball. We wrap, of course, with some stories about the best things we saw this week.

Transcript

Howdy, Welcome to the Three two Outcomes podcasts, presented by Baseball Perspectives. I'm your host, Ian Lefkowitz, and I am joined as always by Ben Murphy and Jared Wise, who need no introduction despite the fact that I've given them one for about one hundred episodes in a row. But we are pleased as punched to have a special guest with us joining us this week. Tom

Cunningham pros mcmavin. Is it fair to say, I don't know, but I'm a longtime listener, first first time caller, so we have no callers. Yeah, but we are delighted to have you on. We met you throughout a number of leagues and probably most notably I think in the mock draft that we are participated in each off season. So I guess the first off putting question I like to ask all of our guests are, uh is who are you and why are you here? Well? So, UM, I

like playing score sheet. UM. I actually started in a league that UM that I think both Ben and Jared were in. UM it was it was a league I think Keith Woolner has started or something, and I got into it through UM. I got it into it through people at work, and it had a very weird keeper system where, um where it was based off of years of service. So I just started That's how I started getting prospects, is that it was the keeper system was all based off of years of

service. So if you if you you know, started a pipeline of prospects, and you could keep more players and you could have you know, better or better young players than everyone else in the league. What was that league called, tom I think it was like oh o o l out of our league or something. Yeah, yeah, oh my gosh, I remember that. I remember that if only because of like every experience I've ever had with

Keith Wilner was memorable. But I think it's important clarify that wasn't a score sheet league, right, It was like um points league that had like a complicated points formula, I think, Yeah, but I had like a complicated keeper structure, which sort of, like you were saying, laid the foundation for that. Yeah. And it was the only draft that's longer than Murphy

that you know. It was like a twelve hour draft. But uh yeah, but I started with that, and then then I started to get into score sheet I think around the same time that you guys did and m and I started drafting prospects, and I started drafting them earlier than everyone else in my leagues. Um and uh yeah, and that's just how I've been building my teams. So, I mean, I find it's easy if you get prospects, um, they don't they don't cross over a lot. Um.

You know, you get their prime years. Um, you can keep the ones that you want. You can usually they usually retain some trade value so you can trade off the ones that you don't want. Um. So I kind of find it's a great strategy to build from. Yeah. And just to unpack that a little bit, I would say every year, uh, well, we get questions from listeners, and certainly in the mock draft, we kind of get this question pretty consistently, like, um, how many

prospects are too many? And are you drafting prospects too early? And I think you are the perfect person to answer this question. So so I guess you're tolerance, Like people's tolerance is going to be different. But I've in

in it. I've kept about ten prospects, um in my standard score sheet leaks where um, where you know, they start at thirty five and they go down to thirty you know, thirty four each prospect, so, um, you know, I usually try to keep it around ten because like I can usually have four of them, you know, coming in to the you know, coming in in that year, and then maybe three of them the next year, and then three being kind of um, you know, lottery

ticket type lower miners, miners guys, but that would be high upside. Yeah. Yeah, so and like, you know, I guess we've seen each other's teams for now, and like my sense from the outside is that your teams win like thirty games a year, except when they're winning one hundred

ten games a year. Is that a stair assessment? Yeah, well, so I started, Yeah, I started in a league that you guys are in, and um, it was it was like I didn't have the benefit of of one of the drafts coming into the league, you know, one of the just dispersal drafts. Um, and I got. I got. The team makeup was like absolutely the opposite of what I would have done. You know. It was really good pitchers, but really old hitters, and and and like Adam Jones was like the best player, you know, best

hitting player on the team. I think I can't imagine what it's like to follow team. Yeah, so let's be awful. Yeah so I tore the whole thing down and and I think probably in the second part of this year it'll start to get get a lot better. But uh but I don't have a bullpen, so it's not going to get a lot better till next year. But uh yeah, yeah, it pretty much works out that way.

I don't like being in the middle. I find that, like eighty games, winning eighty games a year is kind of the wrong place to be. Um, I don't know. Yeah, And like I mean, you know, I think that's the standard question we get, is like should we go for it or should we bail? And I think what you're saying is like if you're especially if you're in a league where you know it's not the dominant strategy, like you kind of give yourself permission to rebuild, even if you

have a good team. Yeah, I I you know, it's some some leagues have, you know. I think it's you have to feel out the league too, Like, you know, the league that we're in has like a higher tolerance for rebuilders than you know, a lot of leagues might. But um, yeah, I don't I kind of kind of don't think. Yeah, I definitely think you should choose a lane either you know, rebuild, you know, and and and get out of that year, or you

know you're competing hard. Tom, you're talking about Dwayne Murphy, right, Bil Dwayne Murphy. Oh I just talk on NorCal but yeah, yeah, yeah, sorry, I just wanted to clarify. Yeah, go ahead, because because Murphy is um so different than nor Cal and other standard leagues. But yeah, cool, that's what happens when you're in like seven leagues. You don't remember all the leagues that you're in with everybody, because if I had, I'd been like, are you talking about or or? But okay,

I just know Murphy's the one. No, I just know that Murphy's the one where you own Dragson profile. That's why that's the one. That's so this was the word. We we wanted to keep two middle infielders and a catcher, and um my co owner and I we decided, oh yeah, we're gonna go for We're gonna see, you know, we'll find a

young you know, a young middle infield and a young catcher. And we chose Danny Jansen, Um curious and uh and Jerks and pro far and it's this has been a bad decision, so that is ah, yeah, I mean I liked all of those. Well I liked two of those, and that has come up snake guys for sure. Yeah. Um yeah. So you may have heard been on this very podcast once or twice proclaiming his favorite baseball opinion. Um, Jerks and Profile is bad at baseball, which is

looking unfortunately a little likely at this point. So unfortunately let me have a win. I mean, unfortunate for his family and whatever. Okay, yes, but great for you. I mean you deserve it. My mind record on predicting player performance is worse than Jerks and Profile is batting average. I'll see myself out. Um, but top So yeah, I mean Jerkson Profile aside. And you know there is something to this right where I think you are, let's say, not necessarily claiming that, um, the prospect strategy

is the only one or that prospects never bust. Right. Well, yeah, no, there's there's totally you know, there's a there's a ton of ways you could go. But um, I just you know, for me this I see this as a good strategy that I can employ. So yeah, um, like something that I think I have said in the past is um to quote myself. Uh No, that I think when people talk about how risky prospects are, sometimes they fail to evaluate how risky baseball players are.

Yeah, and so that a lot of the concern about like having this prospect laden strategy. You know, you can also drive to Jose Ramirez in the first round and right all of a sudden your mid career superstar is U preferesque. Yeah. Um, so related to that, um, another phrase you hear a lot about, especially amateur or people who are interested in prospects but may not have a scouting background, is not to scout the stat line. Um. I don't love the phrase don't scout the scout stat line.

How do you feel about not scouting the style? I like to stout scout the statine. But like, I think there's certain things that you should look at. Like I think, you know the three things that I like to look at our you know, age, um power. Um, Well, I guess there's four things age power, um, walk rate, and k rate. So I mean those are the you know, whenever I look at a prospect, those are the four things you know that I'm pretty much looking

at. You know exclusively. Um, but I actually came up with I came up with a program that goes through and kind of ranks them for me. Um, there's there's a there's a couple of good ones out there. There's one on Roster Resource that does a pretty good job of, um kind of ranking players you know, on an age basis, but also you know from you know performance, They have like a power rankings thing. Um. But uh, but yeah, I came up with with with something, you

know, because I couldn't find anything out there at the time. UM, So I just did one for myself. And and that's kind of what I what I go off of. UM. One of the things that like in score Sheet, we have these supplemental drafts, and usually the first two or three you get before you know, a mid season update for prospects is out, so you kind of have to go off of chats and you know,

the you know, the stat line. UM. So so like having having something you know, like going off the stats and like you know, trying to figure out for yourself what, uh you know, who's going to be in that that update. You know that I feel I feel like that's helpful because then you can kind of kind of beat the rush. So right, if you see that Tyler Freeman is breaking out in May, right, then all of a sudden, or Wander Franco, who you were on I think

from birth as far as I recall, I think you guys. You guys drafted Wander Javier and and and I got really panicked because I knew I wanted Wander Franco. And when I saw Wander, I was I was really I got. I got all freaked out until I saw the Javier, and I said, I gotta get gotta get Franco in the next picks. Uh, well, you know it's that sixty feet from stardom right there for us.

Um So, Yeah, Like when I think of you and some of our like fellow travelers in the prospect world, I feel like there are a certain there's a certain breed of prospect that UM is maybe rated higher on prospect boards then uh then tend to be rated in our drafts and our rankings. And a certain type of player who is rated UM much higher in our drafts. Uh. Related to that, UM, tell me about all hundred kerk so

so um so Ahndre Kirk he's in. I think he's in. UM advanced a ball now yeah, and he's he's so so I think he's like he might be like a two hundred and thirty pound five foot eight catcher, but the guy never strikes out. He like he he he hits for power, he has a great walk rate and he never strikes out. So it's kind of a guess on you know, whether he stays as a catcher. But but I feel like there's no good scouting report out out there yet on him.

Um, I think fan grafts they comped him to like Chris Farley or something. But uh, but like I went on his I went to I went to search for him on Instagram to see like what a picture of him look like, and he does not look like Chris Farley, you know he he he looks like a baseball player now so uh yeah, yeah, he got moved up to Dunedin before I could watch him, and the Florida State League is like a black hole on m I LB TV. But yeah,

I cannot wait until he escapes. Um. But yeah, like I feel like two hundred and thirty pound eight ball catcher who never strikes out as like uh catnip, and then there are players like um, not to pick on anyone, but like I have like Bubba Thompson in mind as like, um, you know these like tools goofy outfielders. Yeah, they just don't have really performance behind it yet, right yeah. Um and I feel like those

players tend to drop precipitously. Not that they never break out either, but UM, my sense is that you feel like that is a profile that kind of gets overrated, would that be right? I yeah, I don't know Bubba Thompson in particular, but like I'm I'm I'm looking more at like the the youngest player at the level, you know, because that's usually the one that you know, you know, has the has the upside to become a

star. Um and and that's usually all so the player that's not getting get you know, not getting recognized fully until until they hit you know, double A or triple A right like, um, you know, I feel like the patron saints of this were like Mookie Bets and before that, Dustin Pedraya or not even like Juan Soto or you know, yeah, or or like Ronald Ucuna like when he was he was in I think he was nineteen in

Triple A and you know, everyone a lot of people like. I feel like I feel like most of the people drafting knew that this guy was gonna be like one of the you know, like top ten in the next year, but none of the analysts would kind of bite on that, you know, until you know, until the next the next winner. So right, And with Wonder Franco, for instance, I think, uh, they're a

little more eager to jump on the train. But I feel like people are still sleeping in Wonder Franco that he has the lowest k rate of any prospect in above a ball except for Ni Magical. According to who is Nick Magical is like three you know, standard deviations off. But um no, and Froco is actually hitting for power, right he's in five six Yeah, so um yeah. I feel like that is like your ideal player in some level, right yeah yeah, someone with a good good walk rate, like no

k rate um and can hit for power. I feel like that's and is the youngest player at the league. I feel like that's like a that's a really good case for someone who's going to be a star. So all right, well we're gonna have to uh not to our Kings League team for a very long time. A good note to us. Um so um related to that, Just to be a little more specific, I suppose, um, you know, are there players who you have been adding to your teams so

far this year? Um, anyone who has been jumping out to you that you feel you've gotten on all your teams and therefore you don't need to burn them or you could burn them to the public. Kirk is the guy that I've got, I've got on most of my teams now. But uh, but I mean I feel like Dylan Carlston on in the NL is the one that you know, that's the guy that's kind of jumping out, you know. Yeah, and yeah, um, I feel like almost in the last

two to three weeks he has started picking up some big prospect heat. Yeah, and so like Helio Ramos and Nan l too, like he's I think he's you know, and all these guys are pretty much young for a level, you know, and and hitting um, Brennan Davis, he's he's really low. But uh, I think he's probably out there and like, you

know, almost to all those scoresheet leagues right now. Yeah. Yeah, I fess he has been even under my radar because he is a cup and therefore er but um, yeah, so I guess you are often looking in like a ball and even rookie league and yeah, yeah, well because because I'm looking for the guys that are kind of like, you know, the the outliers, and once they get to A plus or double A, you know, those guys are probably drafted already. So yeah, um, so

one thing I noticed is that you haven't mentioned pictures a ton. Yeah. I hardly ever draft pitchers, well pitching prospects that is. I mean, I I'm just kind of playing the percentages there. Um. You know, I feel like you can the hitters. You know, you're gonna get some value out of there out of them, But pictures, it's like, you know, you don't know what you're gonna get. So yeah, that are so. You know, obviously your team has pictures on it as much as

around. Ben Murphy might hate the strategy of ever having a picture we can win games eighteen sixteen. Um, but I feel like you're mischaracterizing my strategy. It's not that it's not that I don't want to have pictures, It's just that I don't want to draft pictures before I've drafted all the hitters. I agree with that, Yeah, so I guess, right, when do you agree with that? Is that? Um, where do you find your pictures? Um? So I for pitching, I kind of go for um.

You know, you're looking for a low walk, high k rate kind of guys. You know maybe maybe like twenty five, twenty six. I you know, the twenty two twenty three year old pitchers. You know they're not past that injury nexus yet. So you know, if if you can find someone that's got like three hundred innings already, then that's that's a great Like like Matt Boyd this year was I kind of felt like he was a

good bet. But uh, but yeah, I feel like also if if you can get a staff together that like is going to put up, you don't have to have all aces to get into the playoffs. You can find put together a staff that's like between three to five and like four to two just for the starters. You know, you can kind of I don't know if it's the lem a plan of score sheet, but like if you have a really good offense, then you can you can get into the playoffs on

on offense and you know, shorthooks. So Tom, I appreciate that now as a result of you invocating this perspective, and we'll give my arguments a little bit more credibility. We always did. Uh huh yeah, Um no, I mean our strategy has usually just draft all the catchers, which we're I think we're coming off a draft where Tom executed that to the letter.

Um. It feels like there's a lot of good prospect catchers that are just you know, popping up like Kirk and this, uh, Sam Huff and uh and uh and and Ruchman. So yeah, so right, so you drafted Adlie Rushman because you had the number one pick. Another, I mean another thing that you know is an ansolary benefit of this of your strategy is that you are very likely to get number one picks a lot when you were

ducating. Yeah, and having the number one pick when you're not competing is just vastly better than having the number three pick when you're not I almost I almost feel like having the supplemental one picks is better than having the you know, the fourteen one. Yeah, I don't know. Um, I mean at least this year it was. Yeah, I agree in our Kings League where we tanked last year, Um, we got Joey Bart and um uh wander Fronco in July and August, and this year we're gonna get Adelie Rushman.

Sorry, Joey Bart and uh, you know, stay tuned for I'm not ready to Bart my August number one pick, but I have somebody in mind already. Um. And yeah, I mean I think being able to get the drop on those kinds of players are really what the engine, like

you said, that generates championships down the line. Yeah. Um, So yeah, I guess, um, maybe maybe this is a good time to pivot to the draft a little bit, because, as we've been saying, you've been uh we were talking about offline that you were watching the draft and you managed to make it one player deep into the draft time around, Um, which, so, yeah, is this a one player draft? I

guess would be an interesting place to start. I don't know what you guys think, but I think I kind of think, you know, this draft was like I think there's you know, for for scoresheet supplementals. I think there's like maybe six or seven guys that that would should be drafted. Um, but past that, I don't know, Like I don't I don't see any I didn't see any pictures that I would draft on my teams, um,

coming out of the draft this year. But uh, but adle Adlee and Vaughan and Wit and um and maybe the center fielder the Corbyn Carroll was his name, yeah, from the Diamondbacks. Yeah, and and then um then the guy that Tigers took too, Riley Green. Yeah. Yeah, those are those are the guys that you know, I kind of thought it might be interesting for score sheet teams, right. So it's so it's interesting that you say that because you know, I've seen the less and less in

our leagues. But I still feel like you go to public leagues, especially public continuing leagues, and you see this where there are owners who will just take like the next name down the drafted players list in order, right, And I feel like a lot of especially like the back half of the first round, gets severely overdrafted year after year. Yeah. Um, I mean, unless you like, maybe someone's seen something. I don't watch anything.

I don't watch any any college baseball. Um. I watch some minor league baseball. Um. But um, but I feel like, you know, in the supplementals, if you can kind of if you can kind of grab onto guys and you know a plus or a that are moving up, and you know, those are the guys maybe in the supplementals that you want to you want to look at, you know, because you're also getting a you

know, a closer ETA as well. Right, sometimes it's like the perfect time to take a prospect, right who is already in a system, I mean, not like a drafted player. And then just um, you know, because with July you've gotten half the date already and maybe some UH boards are refreshing their first round. One thing that I've found, um, you

know, useful just as a like anchoring exercise. UH. You know, Fangrass has updated its board this year, and it has done something that I've wanted to see for a very long time, which is kind of rank amateurs and UH drafted prospects side or affiliated prospects side by side, so that you know, you can say, like, wait a second, this is a forty five player and there are fifties on the board who haven't been drafted in

our league? Like what am I doing here? Right? Like? The great the great thing about that is like you can kind of guess where where Rushman fits in, you know, based on they gave him. Did they give him a sixty? I thought it was a fifty five high, but

I apologize to them if it's not true. Yeah, because you know, it seems like he's kind of like being slotted into their top ten like right away, which you know that it makes it so much easier to value him if you know that, you know, you know, pre draft, and you can kind of if you're in a league where you could get that pick, you know that you can kind of guess what you would what you would give, you know, and that would be a lot, you know. So yeah, and I mean, Jared, I guess you can talk about

the Orioles development process and how rock solid that has been to date. You guys are getting very close to Jink's territories. I'm glad he pulled it back. Av Lee Rushman, best oriole Ever or best player ever. Yes, yeah, so you know, I think you've talked a little bit about you know, I think pictures that you wouldn't draft any from this year, you

know. I like, for me, I've kind of like Alcmanoa just because I can imagine a world where he is a number one starter, but only in certain leagues, I think, right, you know, and somebody like Nicolo dlo I would say appeals to me less even though he's a more complete prospect. Let's say, um, just because you know, I think like you, I think we look for upside and volatility is kind of a plus for us some degree. Um, are there any other uh players later in

the draft. So I guess you mentioned Corbyn Carroll as a player drafted later who kind of did make your board. Yeah, I don't know much like I'm just going off of rankings basically basically, Um, but like from from the profiles I read, it sounded like that's kind of like a profile that would would work in scoresheet, Like a center fielder you know, who can hit low strikeouts, you know, gets on base, um, good speed, you know that. That seems like that's something that could work in scoresheet.

Um, sorry, I agree, it felt like about yeah, um yeah, yeah, Vaughn Is I can't really figure out Fawn. Um I would take him second and an Al I think, um, you know, just based off you know, kind of gambling that like the bat, would you know really really play Um? You know yeah, because with I think you're waiting, you're waiting probably a year or two more, and you know, you don't know what you're going to get, you know, in terms of batting average. You know, you're gonna get some power. And it

sounds like he's gonna stick at short stop. But you know, maybe in that time you could find another like that's you could probably find that profile, I think, you know, somewhere in the minors. But right, you know, especially with I feel like Latin American short stops are kind of your specialty. Uh. And you know, I think a lot of them have

profiles that appeal to you and are probably much less coveted. Yeah, I think they're under rank because I feel like, you know, someone coming out of Latin America, you know, they get some DSL stats, but you know, I don't think anyone really knows how to translate that into into like miners or or or or what that would look like in the majors. So you're kind of going off of maybe one or two analysts that maybe have seen

them, right. Yeah. And and also the bonus, which is kind of like, right, yeah, it's a very strange way of like evaluating a player based on how much money it took to get him on board. But you know, and and and even that's kind of like, you know, like Adrian Ron, don't you know, I think he was paid a lot, you know, in a bonus, but he hasn't done anything,

and um, yeah, we sure had him on a team. But Andrew Vron is really interesting to me because you know, they're is this like dichotomy between real life value and scoresheet value, which is probably different than real life value and fantasy value, which can be like extremely skewed, but you know, in scoresheet, I feel like non elite right right, First baseman is

just not a profile that I love having on our team. And you know, if that is at all a downside of Andrew Vaughn, then that's almost I don't want to say unplayable, but like I kind of feel like, you know, we're the last couple of years. So first baseman who can

hit is actually like an under under appreciated asset. Like hum, I guess there was the year where everyone hit and then that, but like I mean, coming into this year, there was a list where like Evan White was above your Don Alvarez, and like I just that was one that kind of I couldn't understand, Like I don't understand, like like you're Don Alvarez coming through the miners, he was probably one of the best fifth five or six hitters, you know in the miners, you know, coming into this year,

and you know Evan White's, you know, his profile was like he's a really good fielder at first base, right, and we don't know if he'll hit. So I kind of feel like the first baseman that can hit and is going to hit a lot is something that gets undervalued by those lists. So so your feeling is that, like the difference between a first base prospect and Andrew Von might be enough to make him the second best prospect on

the board. Yeah, I think, like, yeah, I could the way that Andrew Von if he if he does turn out, the way that he's going to hit is going to be. It seems like it's gonna be a lot of walks, not a lot of strikeouts, and a lot of

power. Yeah, and that's gonna work great in score sheet. So it reminds me of like the way I missed personally on like Chris Bryant because I thought, like, you know, okay, good college hitter, and I think the position was kind of a question at that point, right, like maybe he's a little overrated, but good college hitter and like amazing college hitter

is a pretty past gap. Yeah. Um, and so I'm curious about you know, so I feel like the draft is also you mentioned Bobby with there CJ Abrahms M. Certainly there were a number of other high school shortstops. Uh that this seems to be a font of like high school shortstops. Um do you do you kind of wait and see on those guys? Yeah? I any like outside of that, like top five, I feel like you can wait and see, um, you know, and you can get

a little better feel of what you're what you're getting. You know, if you kind wait until the last draft, you know, to pick those guys up, because you'll get you can get some rookie league stats. Maybe even like if someone gets placed in you know, low a ball, you can

get some stats there. Um. But it kind of gives you a feel of you know, where they are and maybe maybe even their ETA because like if the if if they get up to low a ball, you know that they're they're moving a little bit faster than normal, right, And I guess that's where you can see a player, you know again, like let's say Tyler Freeman who is starting to like hit the ball at a level that above

his draft status, let's say, right at a young age. And you know, so I think you might be earlier on some of the second rounders. Yeah, I used, Yeah, I kind of would wait until when I I have that sheet that ranks players based on minor league minor league results. So that's kind of what I'm going off of for the last last draft.

You know, who pops out and by then it's usually like who is whoever in the rookie league or in an you know, short season ball is really hitting, you know, ahead of their age, right, I'm imagining um like Jaron Duran, who actually I think he's not hitting particularly basically ahead of his age, but like these kind of pop up guys who are coming

out of the draft and like you see some scales right away. Yeah, well Jared Duran, I I didn't really know what to think until today, when I think Baseball America put out an updated top one hundred and they had him as like a seventy hit, a sixty power and a seventy run like it just like insane stats, you know, insane scouting grades. So yeah, I was kind of someone drafted, uh Jared Duran to have me in the draft that we just did. Yes, yeah, I was. I

was not happy about that one. Yeah, but like, okay, so if you put a couple seventies like that'll play. Yeah, and even the like, you know, the seventy field is a really good sign for score Sheet as well, right, even if in center. I feel like center field in particular takes a little while to adjust to the majors just because of some of the vicissitudes of the way score Sheet measures defense. I don't know, I'm not even sure that he will get to Like that's a that's a

hard outfield to get to center field in you know. Yeah, well that's a hard outfield not to end up on the Royals to be true. Yeah, but yeah, I definitely see what you mean. Like, if he does play, it'll probably be as a fourth outfield or moving around spotting in and those kind of players end up with two point one two two point one three defense no matter how good they are. Yeah, And so I mean that's the thing with center field prospects is that you're not going to get the

high center field rating right away. So like like Christian Pace, you know, you know, he's going to get a great center field rating eventually, so right, I think that's a situation where you just kind of have to sit and wait a little bit for the for the rating to come right where you eat it for a year and then then you get like a two point twenty or something like that that you know is going to blow everyone away.

So right, unless they keep like a Kuonians like you know, sometimes they it takes a couple of years to both the center field or to center field based on political reasons too, So you know, I feel like sometimes that is a little tricky with the prospect. But yeah, like like you said, if it's if the fielding is there, it'll play at a certain point,

right. Um So, I have monopolized time. Any any questions from our team based on what you heard everyone, Uh, nothing to do with any sort of real life example that I can think of, But how do you stay engaged with one of your teams that it's in the taking phase and they're on pace for forty wins or something? Heady stay engaged or that great question? Special team? Um So, I mean, the only way you're

going to get better is through the supplementals. So you know, usually I pay more attention to the supplementals in that league than any other league, you know, if I'm if I'm rebuilding, those are the those are the ones I'm kind of focused, you know, more on, you know, who am I going to get in the supplemental where they where are they going to fit it in? And you know, am I going to be able to

keep these players? You know next year? So I actually, you know, for nor Cal, I think I spent a lot more time trying to figure out, you know what I'm what I'm going to do there than than any of my other leagues. Yeah, and just to feel this one as well, Like I have to say, like we have we're in five leagues this year, and the one team of ours that is uh, I wouldn't say tanking. Obviously the players are performing their harness about their generals commitment to

winning. Uh, tanking, You're such a loaded word. Um, but that team is the one that I check immediately too. Like so much of it is, like like you said, just kind of the anticipation of you know, okay, we have eight really volatile potential top end prospects, like do we keep all of them? You know, how are they going to do? Isn't that also because you want to figure out whether you can give me grief about having the team win games that we don't want them to win.

Is that just Jared? Because I know that's what Jared does. I don't even have to check the email for that King's team. Jared just gives it away to me. Yeah. Well, and guilty has charged. I mean, it's funny. I think it's do you do you guys find that, Like you go into the to the score sheet for that team and like, how did this team win a game? You know? Yeah? Yeah, I mean and there's been games that picture Triple A one that we were

like this, yeah, there's all kinds of absurdies. That team hasn't won very many games, and they were all interesting. Yeah, and then all of a sudden, like there are moments where like, uh, for one of our teams, like we drafted a starting pitcher, and then all of

a sudden, like the team started winning games. Because once every five days, it's like, oh, yeah, because we have a starting pitcher that helps um, But no, I feel like uh, like like you, I would say, um, being able to hit on the supplementals is just a real a real joy, Like I felt like a you know, the

first supplemental we had. Our first pick was Trent Thornton, which was good at the time, and with the last pick, forty eight pick of the first round, I took Nikki Lopez, which was like a Tom Cunningham sort special. Um doesn't have enough power. Wasn't great, but you know, is playing right at the major league level may have trade value if a team

has nobody in the short stop. Um. So you know, I think being able to, like I guess, position your team for the future and perhaps trade away players who are only somewhat valuable is part of the fun. I suppose YEA, So no, go ahead. I was gonna say that's sayways nicely with the question that I wanted to ask Tom, is you know, we've talked a lot about, you know, if you decide that you're

going to rebuild, how do you approach that for this season? But I'd be curious to hear you talk a little bit about how that process evolves into actually contending at some point. You know, Ian made a joke earlier that your teams are sort of either winning thirty games or winning one hundred and ten games, And we've mostly talked about, you know, which prospects you're looking for and all that kind of stuff, And I think that's helpful to people.

But I think the trick that the differentiator really between the people that party that strategy and actual contenders is being able to make that transition and figuring out the right or at least all of the possible feasible ways to do that. So I'd be here. It curious to hear you talk about that a little bit. So I feel like managing the ETAs on the prospects, you know,

you got it, that's something you really actably have to do. Like one of the trades I made this this this soft season, Like I traded Bobichette for Raphael divers Um and that was like purposefully to get another bat so that in twenty twenty I would have someone with a lot of you know, with with experience and who might have made the jump in twenty nineteen, um, rather than Bobishett who like maybe you know he's gonna debut sometime this year,

but you know, I don't know, you know whether he'll be held down again next year, you know, before the deadline. So um, I feel I feel like you gotta kind of you want everyone to arrive at

kind of around the same time. So so if you have some players you know that are kind of lagging behind, you might want to maybe think about trading them for for an asset that's gonna help you, you know now, um yeah, and like relays that, like when do you say, Okay, maybe it's time to cut bait on this player who is still young for level, but you know the performance might not be there yet. I guess during the protection phase is kind of when you have to feel that out.

Um yeah. And and by the time that, you know, by the time protection rolls around, you kind of have a better idea of, um, you know where the prospect right prospect ranks because you've seen all the top one hundreds. You know, usually we have the you know for the mock draft, we we haven't seen the top hundreds. You know, we're kind of guessing there. But um but by the time protection rolls around, you know, um where the prospect ranks, and you kind of also know sometimes

you know where they're gonna be slotted in the minor league system. So um, you know, you would know that they're going to double A or maybe triple A. You know, based on sprint training results. You know,

you could probably guess that. Um so I kind of think cutting bait is you know, is around the protection phase, and that that's when I would try to kind of sell someone, you know, I would try to sell my you know, the extras around then yeah, yeah, and then try and I like try not to keep anybody who you could draft with that same pick that you get up to, yes, which is always tricky because you know, I feel like if you're of this bent, which I certainly am,

you know there is sometimes you follow up with the prospect or you've been nursing Sin's eighteen, right, and you also on the converse of that, like make sure you protect the guy that you you know, and don't spend a higher pick than you know you would have if you like, if you're in a standard score sheet league and you can protect a guy at twenty six, don't you know, don't let him go and then you know two weeks later, Um, you know, the depth charts change and you know he's

he's you know, moving up, you know, and you have to draft him with a twenty two. That's not that's not a movie you want to make either, A right. I have done that, and I feel too horrified whatever that happens. Yeah, like oops, um or any other any other questions I do you want to that was the main one I want to ask. Thanks Tom, I think that's helpful. Um yeah, yeah, darn anything from you. No, okay, I'm good, thank you all

right. UM So we don't ordinarily ask this of guests, but since you are an act actual listener, which again God bless, I'm surprised thatst thing I saw this week best thing I saw this week? Yes, I have one. Okay, so, um my son and I we uh my nine year old um his cub scout pack um slept over in the outfield of McCoy Stadium this this uh, this Saturday night. Um So it just happened that

Williams Sasadio got sent down to the miners on Friday. Um so I got to see williams Astadio um um on Saturday night, and and everything off of his bat was a rocket. He. I don't know why he's in the miners right now. So maybe because everybody on the Twins is slugging six fifty. Yeah, but that's amazing. Uh. McCoy Stadium one of the few not a ton of minor egues names that we haven't been to at this point,

and obviously it is going away at the end of this year. I think, yeah, that's another reason that we wanted to do the sleep over this year because it's they're moving. So yeah, and we've been to Wester and I'll sleep in the docket. Take my chance, is there? Sorry Wester h but no, that sounds amazing and I hope, I hope Williams Sado was everything you hoped for physically, visually and more. He actually, um they do. Do you remember when when Randall Simon punched the I think

it was like a president that was running around the track. I believe it would be one of the racing sausages. Yes, so they had they had racing eyeballs that was like sponsored by like some local optometrist. So there was like a green eyeball, like a green eyeball, blue eyeball, and a brown eyeball that were running around the track and it was a race and Williams Astadio came out and punched one of the one of the eyeballs. All right.

With that story, we become the number one Williams Asadio podcast on the Internet. That is amazing. I just looked up raising eyeballs. Holy count this is frightening. I have a thousand questions right now. Um oh my god. Uh yeah, no, this is what my nightmare looks like every night. It's really really disconcerting and good on. Williams asked, I guess did he connect. I don't think he did, like a full Randall simon to the eyeball, but like he did like the eyeball that he got into

it with definitely lost. Do you think it is because a giant ball was coming at him and he couldn't not swing. So so the one other thing I want to like. I was telling my son that, like, here's this guy. This we want to I want to see this guy. Williams asked the deal because this guy he swings at everything and he never strikes out and he never walks. So I'm in the middle of telling him this and Williams asked, A deal takes two pitches and at his way, Dad,

You're you're raw the moment your son larns about the fallibility of adults. All right, Uh from the home crowd. Any best things you saw this week? Man? Yeah? Do you want me to go next? Sorry? Yeah, am I the home crowd. I don't even Yeah. So the Women's World Cup started recently, and um, I know Jared's the residents soccer buff, but I guess I'm the local women's sports advocate or whatever I know. Um So, there was an interesting game where the US team scored a

bunch of goals against Thailand. I believe it was uh and was face some yeah, face face some criticism for the way that they handled the decision to score those goals, I guess, and also the way that they celebrated when

they scored those goals. And so I guess I'm just sort of here to make sure that people that like sports, are especially soccer fans, are tuning into the Women's World Cup, and also I guess to advocate for letting them play and making sure that you sort of check your assumptions about how you evaluate, you know, celebrations in general, but obviously across different types of people

in terms of their gender or race or anything like that. And there's one thing that I read that really resonated with me about I think as Alex Morgan said that, you know, I think a lot of the criticism that they got was that it was a little bit rude or you know, disrespectful to run the score up, And she was saying basically like it would have been rude to let up on them and not play the best that they could. That would have been like, you know, underestimating or sort of disrespecting the

opponent in a more fundamental way. And I think, at least in terms of like the athletic endeavors that I engage anymore, I think that's exactly how I feel too, And so it was I think compelling to see Alex Morgan present that perspective, and I think that's something that carries over into baseball,

obviously with all the unwritten rules hogwash. Probably number two of my best things would have been the recent Stanley Cup final win for the Not Boston team, But number three would have been the Max Muncy line about Madison Bumgardner going to

get the ball out of the bay. And and I think, like you know, that Max Muncy masson Bumgarner thing is a good example of something that a lot of people have said, where, you know, the picture shouldn't be getting quite so upset about hitters being excited that they hit a home run. First of all, because the picture you know, suffering the you know,

having given up the home run in the first place. But it's also a sign of respect from the hitter that they'd be excited that they hit the home run off of the guy, So you know, take it as sort of a compliment that it's worth getting excited that he hit a home run off of you, and you know, do your best to win next time. Um. You know, I think it's like the baseball carry over there, tinn it back a little bit. Um, yeah, right, I did.

I did appreciate mastert Bumgarner though, taking a stand for like crotchety everywhere. This is who I am. Let me play by like whining about kids today. Um yeah, I think the women's team makes sports more fun and Max Munsey makes baseball more fun. So pro fun Yeah, yeah fun. Um, Jared, I suspect we may have a similar best thing we saw this week, So do you want to go first? Um? Yeah, because I don't have much of a story, so maybe you have a story

from it. So the best thing I saw this week was you and also Austin, Texas, where we were together. So the two of us went to a television festival, which is a thing that cannot be explained. No matter how hard we try, I have failed many times. So I'll just say it is a festival in Austin where a bunch of television is screened. There are a number of panels. I thought it was really interesting and entertaining. I would recommend it to anyone who does not feel weird and out by

that. And I don't know if you have a good story, so I'll let you end because I don't have a story. I will say the highlight or the premier show of the festival was Veronica Mars, which is a show that is returning to Hulu, and as mentioned a couple times, it is something that is it was tremendously important and formative to me in terms of the

way it made me feel culturally. Um, I think the way in which it kind of also, I would say opened up space for uh, the way female ly characters, the way women can behave on television, and um, it was a line that you shared in from the interview. Oh I don't yeah that. Um, you know. The the PG version, which is the one I will I will use, is that she didn't have superpowers

the way like Buffy did. That she couldn't um, you know, kill vampires or she wasn't like a spy and her superpower was that she could have the confidence to tell men to flip off. So yeah, I think that was a real Uh. It was a real wonder and it was great to see a bunch of people who were inspired by that kind of behavior and who like a good mystery story once in a while. So I was delied by that. Jared, do you have any takeaways? I? Yeah, I

have a story. I don't know if you're gonna like it, though, so are you sure you can? I would like to add the podcast here. Um, but first I'll say if if Williams asked to punch an eyeball, he probably just cured of a stigmatism. Um. In response to Ben, Uh, you guys will not be surprised to learn that I am not

winning in my Women's World cup pool at work. And Ben, if you I'm sure you have already, but if you haven't read about it, like the labor issue stuff surrounding the women's team and what they're doing, it's kind of fascinating, so you should beat up on that. Um. But specifically yeah, okay, and like what they did to get their like licensing rights back and what they're doing with is it's cool. Yeah, I'll check it

out. Um. So the best thing that I saw in texts well, along with the panels that we went to a lot of there are a lot of funny people. Those are probably actually the best thing, but um was the destruction of one of Ian's closest friendships over this podcast. What and so getting me in stopped me at any time? If you're comfortable with this, I mean I wasn't before the story started. I just let it ride. Well I think, I mean, there's no details now, so we can

we can stop, but we we UM. We went to Austin with one of Ian's friends, Um, who in her mind was a close friend of Ian. UM, and we were waiting in line before one of the panels UM and she remarked on the fact that it seemed like everyone at this festival had their own podcast except for the three of us US, at which point she turned to me because I just met her a few days ago, and she's like, well, well, Jared, you do you don't have a podcast to you? And so I was like, well, maybe maybe you

talk with you about this. That's great, and so yeah, I watched what it seemed to be a deep and meaningful friendship and plode right in front of me. And yes, the horrid shame of others is harnessed myself, which is not very far, you know it is. I kind of like a church and state relationship with this, you know, I like having a baseball world in a real world. And the more they cross over, the uh, you know, it was strange. I don't want to talk about

my real life on here. So either you're saying it's your fault that your friends don't know you have a podcast because you don't tell them. Yeah, yeah, that would be the big takeaway. And as already fortified, So do you think she's listening to this episode and Jared telling this story right now? I hope no way. She made it an hour into the podcast? Do I have to tell my family now? All right, Well, we'll talk about this later. Until then, Tom, I want to thank you

for especially staying for this part, which God knows why. I know who your next guest has to be. Now, okay, that's a fair button. I appreciate that. Um. The thing is that would probably end up being an all musical podcast, and I have learned we can't do this well yeah, um but Tom, thank you so much. It was a delight having you. Hopefully our listeners found the same. Um, and I guess the best way to follow you is to follow your decision making and then the

mock draft in the off season. Is that fair? Sounds good? Yeah? Okay, so I'll be happy and I'm behalfy Ben Murphy and Jared Wise, I'm in Leftwitz. Thanks again and have a great day.

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