Keeping An Eye on Relief and the IFL

One thing that I have come to realize is that when AF and the other Dodger baseball FO personnel determine that there is a weakness in their organization, they address it head on. Most everyone has come to realize that the current Dodgers have a significant weakness in their bullpen, and they went full on in last year’s draft.  I know DC is working his way through the recently drafted and signed relief pitchers, but let’s revisit what the Dodgers did in 2019 Rule 4 Amateur draft last June.  Potential relievers who were drafted as relievers (mostly):

Aaron Ochsenbein (6th round) – Great Lakes

Nick Robertson (7th round) – Ogden

Alec Gamboa (9th round) – AZL

Mitchell Tyranski (12th round) – Ogden

Jacob Cantleberry (13th round) – Ogden

Sean Mellen (14th round) – AZL

Jeff Belge (15th round) – Great Lakes

Cyrillo Watson (23rd round) – AZL

Mark Mixon (26th round) – Ogden

Every one of those pitchers had an outstanding 1st professional season with the Dodgers, with the exception of Sean Mellen who only pitched all of 1.1 innings.

This does not include two highly thought of pitchers who are currently considered starters, but are probably more projectable as high leverage relievers; Jack Little and Ryan Pepiot.  Both Little and Pepiot pitched for full season Great Lakes and did very well.  DC just published a tremendous column on Ryan Pepiot.  I am very much looking forward to DC’s column on Jack Little (Stanford) who was one of the top two D-1 relievers for 2018.

The 2nd top reliever in 2018 was Braidyn Fink (15th round) – Oklahoma,  who was held out all of 2019 due to recovery from TJ surgery.  He should be good to go at ST, but the player development guys are going to take it slow for him as they did for Michael Grove (still another relief candidate). 

The other 2019 drafted pitcher who figures to land in the pen but did not pitch in 2019 is Logan Boyer (11th round) – San Diego State.  He was ranked as a top 5-6 round pitcher, the Dodgers got in the 11th.  He is injury prone, but when healthy he has a legit plus fastball and decent curve as a secondary pitch. He has a legit late inning high leverage relief ceiling.   DC wrote an excellent column on Logan.

The Dodgers have a bevy of potentially top shelf relievers in their system; including Brett de Geus, Gerardo Carrillo, and Marshall Kasowski.  But the two biggest names that should get a good long look this summer will be Dennis Santana and Mitchell White, both considered legit late inning relievers.  I am not ready to give up on Jordan Sheffield who has an electric fastball that he just cannot command…YET.

Others that should still be watched this year to see how far they can develop are:

Other Ogden

Elio Serrano – 21 – RHP

Other Great Lakes

Justin Bruihl – 23 – RHP

Edward Cuello – 21 – RHP

Justin Hagenman 23 – RHP

Yeison Cespedes – 22- RHP

Zach Willeman – 24 – RHP – Grade 70 fastball and two above average secondary pitches, with a 4th being average.  Something will click.

Other Rancho

Melvin Jimenez – 20 – RHP (just too young to give up on)

Austin Drury – 22 – LHP (very much under the radar)

Andre Jackson – 24 – RHP – Top 30 (Still starting but many believe he has a future in relief).

Other Tulsa

Leo Crawford – 23 – LHP (Still starting but should consider relief)

Logan Salow – 25 – LHP – a DC favorite

Ryan Moseley – 25 – RHP – a DBM favorite

INTERNATIONAL FREE AGENTS (IFL)

AF has caught a lot of flak about poor international signings, but the last two years the Dodgers may have done extremely well.  Everyone knows about the young Venezuelan catcher, Diego Cartaya, who has rocketed up the Dodgers prospect list.  As a 17 year old who was promoted to play in the USA at AZL, he hit .281/.343/.432/.775.  He has not shown much power, but at 6’ 2” and 190, I figure he will continue to fill out and develop that power.  He has high grades for his ability to call games, and has got a lot of accolades for his ability to receive and work with pitchers. While he did allow too many passed ball, he did throw out 32% of potential base stealers.  I fully expect to see Diego start to get mentioned in top catcher prospect lists.  The only reason he has a 50 grade from MLB Pipeline is because he is slower than slow. 

Cartaya was not the lone international free agent signed in 2018 to make his USA debut at 17.  Middle infielder Alex De Jesus joined Cartaya in the AZL last summer.  He was originally signed to be a 3B, but played primarily SS last summer, and is now listed as a 2B.  De Jesus is also 6’2”, but 170 pounds.  Alex hit .281/.340/.392/.732 last summer.  Alex does not turn 18 until March, so he might be held back in Arizona to play in the rookie leagues (AZL or Ogden) again this summer. 

The third player in that 2018 international class is a very young 17 year old RHP, Jerming Rosario.  He did not just pitch well in the DSL, he dominated.  So much so that he was named DSL Pitcher of the Year.  In 45 IP, Jerming had a miniscule 0.79 ERA and 0.95 WHIP.  He had 43 strikeouts against 15 walks.  He allowed ZERO HR’s. 

Jerming Rosario was Baseball America’s #11 in the 2019 Summer DSL Top 20 prospects.  Not only was he the highest rated pitcher, he was the only pitcher on the list.  Here is what Baseball America says about Jerming:

The Dodgers’ 2018 class included catcher Diego Cartaya ($2.5 million) and infielder Alex De Jesus ($500,000), both of whom debuted last year in the DSL but were promoted in season and finished as top 20 prospects in the Rookie-level Arizona League. That 2018 class also included Rosario, who signed for $650,000 and spent the full season in the DSL. Rosario didn’t pitch enough innings to qualify for the league leaders, but he posted a sparkling 0.79 ERA in his pro debut. When Rosario signed, he was throwing 88-91 mph with a projectable body and a loose, fast arm, indicators that he would throw harder once he filled out. By the end of 2018, he reached 93 mph and his velocity continued to climb in 2019, reaching 95 mph. Rosario has the attributes to project as a starter as an athletic pitcher who repeats his delivery, fills the strike zone and shows feel for two secondary pitches. His best offspeed pitch is his changeup, which has plus potential and consistently fooled DSL hitters. Rosario sells that pitch well by maintaining his arm speed and throwing it in the low-to-mid 80s to get good separation off his fastball. That’s his primary strikeout weapon, though his upper-70s curveball has good depth and shape as well, although he can get around the ball at times.

Another 17 year old DSL pitching prospect to keep an eye on is RHP Heisell Baro.  He was selected to the all DSL team, and pitched to a 1.22 ERA, 0.88 WHIP, 47 strikeouts against 16 walks, and allowed 3 HR’s in 44 IP. 

This past summer, the Dodgers signed 16 year old CF prospect, Luis Rodriguez.  He is currently the Dodgers #24 prospect, and MLB Pipeline’s #4 International prospect.  Here is what MLB Pipeline says about young Luis:

Scouting grades: Hit: 50 | Power: 50 | Run: 50 | Arm: 60 | Field: 60

Rodriguez is the best overall player from Venezuela in the class of 2019. He’s a pure hitter and natural athlete with solid baseball instincts across the board. He is also known for his physically projectable body and easy actions on defense and at the plate.

Rodriguez has sound approach in the batter’s box and has shown the ability to use all fields with consistent and hard contact. There’s a nice rhythm and balance to his swing and although he’s primarily a line drive hitter now, there have been flashes of power and it could increase as he develops. He has impressed scouts by performing well against pitchers throwing 93 mph to 95 mph during workouts and showcases.

Rodriguez is a quality defender in center field now and he makes all of the plays, but it’s uncertain if that’s where he will stay because he’s not a plus runner. He developed his game in the youth leagues of Venezuela and has a high baseball IQ.

Ben Badler, Baseball American, perhaps the best international analyst in all of the baseball publications, had this to say:

“Rodriguez is one of the most complete players in the 2019 class, with a good combination of size (6-foot-2, 180 pounds), athleticism and hitting ability from the right side. When I saw him face live pitching in the Dominican Republic, he homered to right-center field off a pitcher who was throwing up to 92 mph, then narrowly missed another homer that hit the fence to the same part of the park. Rodriguez has good plate discipline, hits well in games against older pitchers and has a natural ability to lift the ball for power. He runs the 60-yard dash in around 6.7 to 6.8 seconds, so if he can retain that speed, he could stick in center field, too.

So while the Dodgers whiffed on most of their early International Free Agent signings in the AF era, they seemingly have turned it around.  I know that I will continue to follow Diego Cartaya, Alex De Jesus, Jerming Rosario, and Heisell Baro, and look forward to seeing the debut of Luis Rodriguez who should get a US promotion as a 17 year old as did Cartaya and De Jesus in 2019.  LAD has another top level Venezuelan SS that they will likely sign next July.

The picture includes four of the Great Lake Loons pitchers: Jack Little (#46), Zach Willeman (#52), Justin Bruihl (#28), and Ryan Pepiot (#37)

This article has 71 Comments

  1. Rancho Cucamonga LH starter John Rooney could be added to possible bullpen options. Although a starter for all 28 games as a professional, the 2018 third round pick may be a better relief pitcher with a 93 mph fastball and above average slider (according to Baseball America scouting report). Also at RC last season was LH reliever Connor Mitchell with a 2.49 ERA; 2.8 walks; 11.8 K’s – albeit only 22 games / 29 IP. Hopefully Victor Gonzalez steps up, and Salow will improve his command. I think Fink will move quickly through the minor league system once he is 100% recovered from TJ surgery.

    1. I like John Rooney, but I still see him as a back of the rotation type starting pitcher. His fastball does not play for late inning high leverage relief. He could become a middle reliever, but I am holding out hope that he can continue to start. We should see him at Tulsa this year, and if he does succeed as a starter at Tulsa, he will put teams on notice. Leo Crawford, another lefty, is younger, started at Tulsa and did well. That should be the standard that Rooney should point towards. this year.

      1. I too like Rooney, but in the short term he could be a good add for the bullpen. I am not thrilled with Alexander, or the lefty specialist Kolarek; hopefully Ferguson gets back to his 2018 performance.

  2. Great blog, Jeff.

    AF made some bad International acquisitions in the beginning and found out he could not trust his International Team, so they got the ax. He learned from it, changed course and is now re-building the International Talent Pool. There were no catchers in the system when Friedman arrived. Since then he has acquired Baranes, Grandal, Smith, Ruiz, Wong, Cartya and a few other lesser-known ones.

    AF disdains big contracts to relievers for reasons that are obvious, so now he is stockpiling bullpen arms. I think Santana, White, and de Geus all have a shot at the Show this year… probably not outta’ the gate, but Bellinger was ready a year ahead of what most people expected. I think Seager was ready too and AF’s mistake was getting Jimmy Rollins which held Seager back.

    Some morons think that I believe AF can do no wrong and YES, you are a moron if you think that. He’s not perfect, but overall he’s among the best in the game… if not the best. Some people just have their bottom-line opinion of Friedman based upon things I will not discuss here, so anything he does is bad in the beginning.

    Watford posted a link that AF is interested in Danny Salazar and of course, the AF bashers will have a heyday with that. Kelly, Treinan, Nelson, and maybe Salazar = not much downside in cost, but possibly four huge arms in the pen. Some of you are good with checkers – AF is playing chess. 😉

    You can’t always get what you want – Cole, for example, but when you get lemons (no Cole), you better start making lemonade (Treinan, Nelson, Salazar, et al). Sometimes the lemonade is pretty good.

  3. MLB Lists:
    CENTER FIELDERS
    1) Mike Trout, LAA (Last year: 1)
    2) Cody Bellinger, LAD (2)
    3) George Springer, HOU (5)
    4) Ramón Laureano, OAK (unranked)
    5) Whit Merrifield, KC (3, at 2B)
    6) Starling Marte, PIT (8)
    7) Lorenzo Cain, MIL (3)
    8) Aaron Hicks, NYY (4)
    9) Brandon Nimmo, NYM (6, at RF)
    10) Brett Gardner, NYY (unranked)

    LEFT FIELDERS
    1) Juan Soto, WSH (6)
    2) Michael Brantley, HOU (unranked)
    3) Bryan Reynolds, PIT (unranked)
    4) Tommy Pham, SD (4)
    5) Mark Canha, OAK (unranked)
    6) Austin Meadows, TB (unranked)
    7) Joc Pederson, LAD (unranked)
    8) Kyle Schwarber, CHC (unranked)
    9) David Peralta, ARI (10)
    10) Giancarlo Stanton, NYY (2)

  4. I can’t help but see a RH Juan Soto when I see Rodriguez. This kid could be really special. Odds are he may see some time at GL or RC later this year.

  5. Wow, AC, my list just got a lot longer for all the young men to root for. I hope I can keep track of them all. Thanks for the mention of Ryan Moseley. I wondered how he was doing. I am becoming a huge Ryan Pepiot fan also. The picture of the four boys, Jack Little, Zach Willeman, Justin Bruihl, and Ryan Pepiot, was awesome as was your write-up.r

  6. Excellent update, AC. Dodgers are definitely more focused in the international market and doing a much better job of scouting.

  7. Regarding sign stealing and video, it would seem fairly easy to simply shut off replays and current game video in the team’s video room. They can ask for a review based on what they see or think they see. Eliminating all this should speed up the game. They can still use replays on the stadium video board and for TV. They really don’t need a live feed for the teams. Heavy penalties on cheaters wouldn’t hurt. If Houston is found guilty and it certainly seems likely, MLB should pretty much lay waste to the organization (fines, loss of draft choices, reduced international funds, bans etc.).

  8. Good post AC! How would you rate these pitchers from 1 – 20? Also, which of these young men do you believe have the greater likelihood of pitching for the Dodgers this year or next?

    My long-shot candidate is Justin Bruihl. He’s a little older, but seems to be a strike throwing machine.

    1. 2d2 – Here is a primer on Bruihl. He did not pitch after being signed in 2017. He came of age in 2019 with the Loons and as you say threw strikes. 42K/8BB in 34 innings

      Left-hander Justin Bruihl was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Dodgers on July 15. Born in Petaluma, California, Bruihl attended Casa Grande High school in his home town where he hit .302 as a senior. On the mound in seven appearances with the Gauchos he did not allow an earned run in 17.1 innings.

      Following graduation from high school, he checked out California State University, Northridge and the University of California before deciding on California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. At Cal Poly, the 6’2”/215-pound Bruihl posted a 4.88 ERA in 31.1 innings pitched while striking out 27 and walking 10. His season with the Broncos might not have been enough to catch the eyes of MLB scouts but his summer league play may well have done just that for a Dodger scout.

      With the Walla Walla Sweets of the West Coast Summer League in 12 appearances over 15 innings he produced pretty much a clean slate. He gave up no earned runs, struck out 21 and issued only two walks while posting a 0.67 WHIP.

      Bruihl, who turned 20 in June, was assigned to the Arizona League Dodgers on July 19 and now awaits his professional debut. However, his real odyssey started just over three years ago in March, 2014.

      As a junior in high school the unthinkable happened to Justin Bruihl. What started out as a twinge in his left arm soon became a full-fledged pain with accompanying weakness and he quickly went under the knife for TJ surgery and the reconstruction of the ulnar collateral ligament in his pitching arm. Fifteen months of rehab followed the surgery.

      One can only imagine the surprise and disappointment for the young pitcher who in his own mind was invincible. That would not be unusual as no doubt most young players also feel they are invincible and perhaps do not tend to their body’s needs as well as they should.

      Bruihl admits that, “I did feel invincible.” and that he did not take care of his arm as he could have and should have but that has definitely changed.

      “I should have taken better care of my arm,” Bruihl said. “Then I was pitching 10-11 months a year. I wasn’t big on icing my arm. I am very cautious right now.”

    2. I think Dennis Santana and Mitchell White will see some time in LA this year. I also believe that Jordan Sheffield has a shot for this year, IF (Big If) he can command that fastball. It is just toooooo good of a pitch. Brett de Geus is a long-shot for this year, but I think he makes the team in 2021 out of ST. Gerardo Carrillo as a reliever has the ability to move fast and should be in position to make the roster in 2021 at some point. I am not as high on Marshall Kasowski as many are because I just do not believe you can find long term success at the ML level with one pitch. He may be able to dominate the lower levels, but ML hitters will figure out his delivery and time his fastball, unless he can come up with a slider or change out of the same slot as his fastball.

      As far long-shots, I have a couple. I am still not giving up on Melvin Jimenez. He was very good so early. He was fairly successful at Rancho last year, but was very good in the Pioneer League (Ogden). I also think that Leo Crawford is a long-shot candidate. He was successful at Tulsa at 22. He is still going to start, but I am hoping he gets some relief work to see if he can perform in high leverage situations.

      Justin Bruihl is another candidate. He is older but he dominated at Great Lakes so much that he needs to get pushed to see if he is legit. He will start out at Rancho which is a big hitters league, so he will get tagged on occasion and then we can tell how he recovers from that. If he shows full confidence, he should get pushed to Tulsa to determine if he is legit. He is absolutely someone to watch.

      My long-shot of long-shots is Austin Drury. And as SoCalBum mentioned Connor Mitchell. He does have late bloomer written all over him.

      Last year’s draft picks should be the top relievers to follow this year. It should be fun to see Braidyn Fink pitch this year. DC is going to be discussing him a lot as he should start out at Great Lakes. DC loves to follow the Loons. But if everything goes right, he should be in Rancho before too long.

  9. As I remember the arbitration panel has to select either the team’s offer or the player’s request and nothing in between, more, or less. The team makes their case for the lower amount by identifying a player’s flaws and weaknesses including work ethic, attitude, baseball knowledge, clubhouse demeanor, and ability to implement the game plan.

    Age, length of MLB service, stats and player comparisons are the easy part and doesn’t hurt feelings. Apparently these hearings are not fun for player or team.

    So it is harder to understand why a team and player can’t agree on a middle number when the two numbers are close than when the numbers are wide. In Joc’s case the two numbers are wide. What could be he thinking?

    If Joc thinks he will be traded and could land in a city he and his wife don’t want to live in or to a team that plays in empty stadiums and doesn’t have a chance to reach the playoffs, I would guess he would try to at least get a higher salary or get a salary that would make it harder for the Dodgers to trade him to one of those teams.

    Here are the players going to arbirtation as presented by MLB Rumors:

    We’ve gathered the highest-stakes arbitration situations remaining in this post, but you can find them all in the tracker. We’ll update this list as the figures are reported:

    George Springer, Astros: $22.5MM versus $17.5MM (Jeff Passan of ESPN.com, via Twitter)
    J.T. Realmuto, Phillies: $12.4MM versus $10MM (Jim Salisbury of NBC Sports Philly, via Twitter)
    Trevor Story, Rockies: $11.5MM versus $10.75MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Joc Pederson, Dodgers: $9.5MM versus $7.75MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Eduardo Rodriguez, Red Sox: $8.975MM versus $8.3MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Nick Ahmed, Diamondbacks: $6.95MM versus $6.6MM (Mark Feinsand of MLB.com, via Twitter)
    Shane Greene, Braves: $6.75MM versus $6.25MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Josh Hader, Brewers: $6.4MM versus $4.1MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Chris Taylor, Dodgers: $5.8MM versus $5.25MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Hector Neris, Phillies: $5.2MM versus $4.25MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Max Muncy, Dodgers: $4.675MM versus $4MM (Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times, via Twitter)
    Jose Berrios, Twins: $4.4MM versus $4.025MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Andrew Benintendi, Red Sox: $4.15MM versus $3.4MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Archie Bradley, Diamondbacks: $4.1MM versus $3.625MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)
    Pedro Baez, Dodgers: $4.0MM versus $3.5MM (Jon Heyman of MLB Network, via Twitter)

    1. You are correct. The arbitration panel has to select either the team’s offer or the player’s. I cannot see the Dodgers fussing over the small difference for CT3, Max, or Baez. But Joc is another story. I am sure Joc is thinking his 36 HRs deserve the higher number, and I am sure that the Dodgers view Joc as a platoon player. I would hope that the two sides would compromise somewhere in the middle.

      I know there are some bloggers who are castigating Joc for not accepting the “more than fair” offer by the Dodgers. Arbitration is model based and not emotionaly based. MLBTR estimated that Joc should get $8.5MM which is closer to the Dodgers number. Give Joc $8.625 and call it square. I cannot see how Joc wins with $9.5MM. I am no expert on arbitration, but I do not remember MLBTR being off by $1MM for this level of a salary before. There is going to be some hurt feelings if this goes to arbitration.

      1. If Friedman settles, it will mean he will have deviated from his model, which is “file and trial.” I have no opinion either way, but can see advantages and disadvantages. To date, he has never been beat, but he could win… and lose (the player) in the process.

        If it were me, I would go to each player and offer to split the difference, but my wife would take it to trial. There is no right or wrong.

      2. I have no idea what Joc’s salary should be but I could guess that if the Dodgers wouldn’t budge from their offer to Muncy, CT3, and Baez where they were not that far apart then they probably weren’t budging off their offer to Joc. So, Joc has that in his back pocket and by going to arbitration he has nothing to lose unless he were to ask for less and have a better chance of getting that lesser amount.

        Major Joc will be more successful than Cole was in getting more money than Friedman was willing to offer/pay.

  10. Excellent summary AC. I am a Logan Salow fan and l have watched Austin Drury and Bryan Warzak with interest. This is Logan’s make or break year. As you say, Austin is flying under the radar. I don’t understand how Bryan went from a K/BB ratio of 38/5 in 2018 to 53/49 with the Quakes in 2019. Location is an issue he must solve this year as he is soon to be 23. He was a 6th round selection while Austin was a 34th rounder.

  11. If missing out on Cole is the lemon then Treinan, Nelson and Salazar is more like snake wine than lemonade

      1. As everybody knows or who googled the answer, Snake wine is an alcoholic beverage produced by infusing whole snakes in rice wine or grain alcohol. The drink was first recorded to have been consumed in China during the Western Zhou dynasty and considered an important curative and believed to reinvigorate a person according to Traditional Chinese medicine. It can be found in China, Goa, Vietnam, and throughout Southeast Asia.Wikipedia

  12. To me, for Alex Wood to come back to the Dodgers speaks volumes about the organization.

    1. It also speaks volumes about the kind of offers Wood must have gotten. I’m sure he would much rather start than relieve yet he comes back here where he’s probably about 7th or 8th on the depth chart.
      And I don’t even see Stripling on your list above Mark.

    2. Yes, they seem to value the walking wounded, ala Rich Hill, Kazmir, McCarthy, et al. Speaks volumes.

  13. I hear Andrew has already worked out a trade to send Wood to Cincinnati for their 3 best prospects at the July deadline. 🙂

  14. Great! Now we have both Kersh and Wood to bring out of the bullpen in the playoffs if we need to give up a homer

    1. You could also say he’s stacking the roster with starters who can also work out of the pen:
      Maeda, Stripling, Wood, Nelson, Urias, May, Gonsolin

    2. It’s because there are so many questionable starters on the roster. Weakness begets weakness. You will be cheering any move that this FO makes no matter how much they fail to bring aboard top tier help. You think numbers are going to make the big difference? Not these numbers.

  15. Speaks volumes to what? To me this just shows nothing but another broken down pitcher. Wow to me would be a true 1 or 2 starter or lockdown closer not a pitcher who will be lucky to pitch 50 innings!!!

    1. He was only $322 Million less than a #1.

      Do the math!

      5 out of 4 people struggle with it.

      Is it Zeke or Paul… no it’s Harry tonight!

      1. Well Mr. Whoopie or know everything there are a few people in this house who read this blog and comment from this ip address!

        1. OK, I’ll take you at your word.

          Software flags stuff like that.

          I like the name Mr. Whoopie. I may change mine.

  16. I liked Alex Wood.

    I am sure he was not promised a starting job, but the fact he was willing to come back means that he wants to win.

    He has a score to settle. I like those kind of guys.

  17. Most of you don’t understand this stuff.

    2Demeter2 will educate you tomorrow.

    I can’t fix it!

    He’s smarter than me…

    1. Yes, no one can match your incredible knowledge and insight, Mark. Every year it’s the same thing from you. I guess if you keep repeating this kind of stuff long enough, you’re bound to hit the jackpot, a WS win.

  18. Maybe Wood realizes the Dodgers team is not a bad place to be. He also knows he could be a starter or a bullpen piece. If urias, May, Gonsolin can be a playoff starter at this level it will save all of them innings to be sharp when most needed. I sure hope the Dodgers plan to use urias in the rotation to see what he can do. I am not sure May has enough pitches to be in the rotation but he definitely has the velocity. AC should be excited. Maybe wood can teach kershaw the change up.

    1. Right now I am sweating bullets watching my Packers, but yes I can pull my Wood jersey out again.

      1. My CFO, who is a HUGE Packer fan (of course, he says he would fire me) is super excited!

  19. Urias and May are very likely to go, each one, 140-150 IP, so someone else has to throw the 100-120 IP is then when the signatures of Nelson and Alex make a lot of sense.

  20. I remember Wood had lost some velocity in his last stay here. Maybe he was hurt. Anyone know his current situation? I liked Alex Wood when he was healthy. Is his pop back?

    1. He has been working at driveline with weighted balls and the Dodgers new pitching coordinator

  21. I just read that Alex Wood has been working out with Rob Hill at Driveline. Rob Hill is a new Dodgers pitching coordinator. If he has the same impact on our pitching that RVS, Brant Brown and Alan Bates had on our hitters, that could be good news for the Dodgers.

    Like AC, I have been an Alex Wood fan. Happy to have him back.

  22. The first half of 17 he was throwing 94ish and out Kershawing Kershaw. Then he blew a tire. If he can get any of that velocity back then AF has found another gem. A lotta question marks. Gonna be fun to see how everyone works out. He seems like a good guy so go Alex

  23. Wood is another lottery ticket.

    He injured his back during spring training and reinjured it in August. He wasn’t the same after the 1st half of 2017 – he had a mediocre 2018.

    Jimmy Nelson tore his labrum and his rotator cuff in 2017 and then injured his elbow in 2019.

    Blake Treinen injured his rotator cuff in 2019 (a “strain” and then came back but injured his back.

    Any of these guys might come back – thus they are lottery tickets.

    Wood was horrible in 2019 – he was 1 – 3, 5.80 with 10 HR allowed.

    Nelson missed part of 2017, all of 2018 and most of 2019. He was 0 – 2, 6.95 in 2019.

    Treinen was 6 – 5, 4.91, and blew 5 saves in 21 tries.

    I wouldn’t bank on any of them.

    Nelson and Wood won’t cost much, but I don’t get paying Treinen $10 MM.

    I know it’s apples and oranges, but they won’t pay their own players – thus 4 guys are going to arb and they are all big contributers.

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