Monthly Archive 2025年3月8日

Byadmin

what does that mean for top prospect Drake Baldwin?

Atlanta Braves catcher Sean Murphy has suffered a fractured left rib that will sideline him for at least the next month, according to MLB.com. Murphy, in turn, will be unavailable when the Braves open their schedule on March 27 against the San Diego Padres.

Murphy, 30, is a former All-Star and Gold Glove Award winner coming off a dismal showing in 2024. He hit .193/.284/.352 (76 OPS+) with 10 home runs in 72 games, establishing new career lows in each of the triple-slash categories along the way. The Braves nevertheless parted ways with backup catcher Travis d’Arnaud (who subsequently signed with the Los Angeles Angels) to begin the offseason, paving the way for Chadwick Tromp to slide in as Murphy’s caddy — at least until top prospect Drake Baldwin was deemed ready for a more substantive role. Now, Baldwin seems poised to compete for the starting job.

Baldwin, CBS Sports’ No. 32 prospect, hit 276/.370/.423 with 16 home runs last season between Double- and Triple-A. Last week, we wrote about how Baldwin could crack Atlanta’s Opening Day roster:

As with Chandler, I think Baldwin’s chances of making the Opening Day roster hinge on the health of the players above him on the depth chart — or, specifically, starting catcher Sean Murphy. Were Murphy to go down at some point this spring, I would have to imagine Baldwin would take over behind the dish on a most-days basis until Murphy is ready to return from the shelf. I don’t believe the same dynamic would be true if the Braves lost backup Chadwick Tromp to the IL; rather, I assume Atlanta would turn to a veteran non-roster invitee like Curt Casali or Sandy León. All that to say: I think Baldwin’s debut will probably come later this season.

The Braves are also slated to enter the year without outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. and ace Spencer Strider, both working their way back from major injuries. Veteran reliever Joe Jiménez is expected to miss most of, if not the entire year as well.

Byadmin

Why nothing has changed about hits leader’s baseball gambling

Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred is reportedly reviewing a petition to reinstate Pete Rose. Hopefully that review doesn’t take very long and ends in a definitive “no,” because the league absolutely does not need to reinstate Rose, nor should it.

Rose died Sept. 30, 2024, which means there’s only one reason to reinstate him: To put him in the Baseball Hall of Fame. There is no other reason for reinstatement. And, no, he doesn’t need to be in the Hall of Fame.

First, let’s review. The facts of the case are these, and they are indisputable:

MLB Rule 21(d) states: “(2) Any player, umpire, or Club or League official or employee, who shall bet any sum whatsoever upon any baseball game in connection with which the bettor has a duty to perform, shall be declared permanently ineligible.”
That rule was instituted in 1921 and was posted in every clubhouse for decades.
Pete Rose willingly violated the rule both as a player and a manager.
In 1989, Rose was found to have violated the rule and was punished accordingly.
In 1991, the Baseball Hall of Fame decided that players ruled permanently ineligible by Major League Baseball would also be ineligible for the Hall of Fame.
In 2004, Rose — after years of lying about it — admitted that he did indeed bet on baseball.
He willingly did something that carried the punishment of a permanent ban and was punished with a permanent ban. And yet so many people are outraged on his behalf. He did the crime and will continue to do the proverbial time.

The rule has colloquially been said to carry a “lifetime ban,” but take note that this isn’t true. The rule says permanently ineligible.

The institution of Rule 21 was necessary because of the Black Sox scandal, when eight Chicago players were found to have thrown the 1919 World Series. Any personnel taking part in the game itself who also gamble on the game became, correctly, the cardinal sin of baseball. If there’s any hint that a game’s outcome has been fixed or compromised in any way, the sport is tainted. It simply cannot be tolerated, which is why the punishment was so steep when the rule came about and why that punishment remains just as steep.

Rose chose to violate the rule again and again. The punishment for the crime was a permanent ban from baseball. Of course, he lived the rest of his life around baseball. He was on the field and introduced as a member of the All-Century Team at the 1999 World Series. There’s a street in Cincinnati named Pete Rose Way and there’s a statue of Rose outside Great American Ball Park. He was honored in Cincinnati multiple times.

This is to say that he hasn’t exactly been erased from the memory of baseball fans or from the history of the sport. In fact, he’s probably the single most talked-about former player. Putting him in the Hall of Fame wouldn’t change anything there.

Every argument that’s made in Rose’s favor is a deflection.

Players did steroids! Not the same thing and it doesn’t change that Rose violated the rule that carries a permanent ban.

The sign-stealing scandal! Again, it’s not the same thing and changes nothing about what Rose did to violate the sanctity of the game.

Fans can gamble on baseball and MLB has deals with gambling companies! And team personnel are still forbidden from gambling on diamond sports. This, again, changes absolutely nothing.

You aren’t perfect! Nope. I’m not. This has nothing to do with telling it like it is regarding Rose.

The biggest, overarching argument regarding Rose is that a full account of the greatest players in history is incomplete unless Rose is in there. That’s true. He was one of the best players in MLB history. He absolutely was not the greatest hitter ever — as many people like to say — nor was he a top-tier all-time great like Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Babe Ruth. He was, obviously, though, a great enough player to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer based on his playing career.

He also violated the rule that carried a permanent ban from baseball.

You can’t tell the story of baseball without mentioning Rose and his hits record in addition to winning an MVP and three World Series titles? There’s an entire exhibit in Cooperstown on his hits record! It’s there! In the Hall of Fame! He’ll never be forgotten. He’s an immortal baseball talking point.

So, let’s be very clear about what reinstatement would mean: a posthumous honor. That’s it. An induction into the Hall of Fame would change nothing except there would be a ceremony where he would be recognized.

Does he really deserve that?

We’re talking about the guy who stained the game by gambling on it. He lied about it for well over a decade and then decided to come clean when he thought it would get him reinstated. And yet, he still justified his actions by explaining that he only bet on his team to win. Of course, there’s a wrinkle in there that needs our focus.

Rose didn’t bet on his team every single game as far as we know. If you only pick and choose which games upon which to bet, it’s easy to assume those are the ones he thinks his team is going to win. Maybe he just liked the odds better or thought some opponents were weaker than others. Maybe he tried harder some nights.

Is it really so necessary to honor him with a Hall of Fame ceremony?

Let’s also keep in mind that he was accused of statutory rape for an alleged relationship with a minor younger than 16 in the 1970s. When he was asked about it in 2022 in Philadelphia, his first response to a woman reporter was, “it was 55 years ago, babe.” Later, he said, “who cares what happened 50 years ago?”

So, again, I ask: Is this a man who really needs to be honored?

No, he doesn’t. If Manfred gets this right, he’ll keep Rose on the permanent ban list and ensure he doesn’t get into the Hall of Fame. He stained the game and doesn’t deserve it, even posthumously.

Byadmin

Brewers land pitching depth with José Quintana, per report

.Free-agent lefty José Quintana is signing a one-year deal with the Milwaukee Brewers, according to Robert Murray of FanSided.

Quintana, 35, compiled a 3.75 ERA (105 ERA+) in 170 ⅓ innings last season with the New York Mets. His contributions were worth an estimated 2.5 Wins Above Replacement. Perhaps concerning was the large jump in home runs allowed, as he coughed up 22, the most he’s yielded since 2018. His walk rate also increased. Still, there were some good runs in there. From May 16 to July 9, he had a 10-start stretch with a 2.77 ERA. He also had a 0.74 ERA in his last six regular-season starts before allowing only one unearned run in 11 innings in his first two playoff starts. That streak ended when he got shelled in Game 4 of the NLCS.

CBS Sports ranked Quintana as the No. 33 free agent available entering the offseason. Here’s what we wrote of him at the time:

Quintana has pitched in the majors for parts of 13 years now. Just once, back in 2021, has he finished a season with an ERA+ below the starting pitcher average (usually 93). He doesn’t have high-octane stuff, to put it kindly, but he locates well and uses his four-pitch arsenal to good enough effect. There’s always crater risk with these kinds of pitchers regardless of their age (he’s nearing his 36th birthday). Still, a team could do worse than counting on Quintana to be their No. 4 starter.

Quintana figures to compete for a spot in a Brewers rotation that already includes Freddy Peralta, Tobias Myers, Nestor Cortes, and Aaron Civale.