SoxProspects News
|
|
|
|
Legal
Forum Ground Rules
The views expressed by the members of this Forum do not necessarily reflect the views of SoxProspects, LLC.
© 2003-2024 SoxProspects, LLC
|
|
|
|
|
Forum Home | Search | My Profile | Messages | Members | Help |
Welcome Guest. Please Login or Register.
What are the best/worst case scenarios for 2024?
|
Post by soxfaninnj on Feb 22, 2024 1:05:49 GMT -5
By definition only Best case 162 wins Worst case 0 wins
Lol
Ok seriously
Best case I would say 93 wins and make some noise in the playoffs.
Worst case 72 wins and Red Sox nation is in full meltdown mode
|
|
|
Post by cmax on Feb 22, 2024 6:18:53 GMT -5
Best case: Duran takes another big step forward on defense while performing a bit better than he did last year until he got hit in the toe by Charlie Morton last July 25 when the Sox took two games from the Braves and all was right in Sox Nation (he got hurt several weeks later but I remember cringing when he got hit in the toe and fouled a couple of his same foot too). He was hitting .316 with an .878 ops at the time and turning anything hit into the outfield into doubles. This all takes a step forward.
Yoshida is the monster he was in the WBS and first half of last year until Boston started traveling back and forth from the east to west coast to torture him before playing essentially every day in August and wearing him out completely in his first year stateside. He more fully becomes an Ichiro-esque genius at the plate and thrives playing more games at DH while also being just fine in LF. Yoshida is a star.
Refaela is a revelation in center, changing the team's defense entirely, while getting hot at the plate and emerging as some sort of Nomar/Mookie hybrid on offense - unique, dynamic, exciting.
Casas is the force he was for the back 2/3 of the season without the putrid 1/3. The Sox extend him on below market terms and he is super grateful for $100mm for the rest of his career, and rewards the team with league average defense and consistently remarkable plate appearances that terrorize opposing pitchers. Sun bathing in the outfield all summer has never been better.
Devers steps up at 3B showing the benefit of Story's glove beside him for the full year, and at the plate, it is like he is always facing Gerrit Cole. HR, HR, Double, BB. Game after game. Joyful smiles. On a different plane. Entertaining. 50 HR. Silly RBI #s. Zany antics at the plate. Laughter. Winning. He is the game changer we need him to be and healthy all year.
Dalbec puts it together and simply mashes, while providing DH balance and back up 3B and 1B against tough lefties. He hits lots of bombs and his trade market becomes red hot. (This is not needed but would be really fun and satisfying to see him thrive and put it all together.)
Story is excellent with the glove all year, and shows the form he did at the plate (what was it May 2022 when he was last healthy and in rhythm?) when Sox were the best team in baseball. The Sox are the best team in baseball in 2024... Meantime on the farm Marcelo is back looking better than ever as a can't miss top 5 prospect in MLB while Romero and Zanetello make some sort of teenage mutant ninja turtle band of HS short stop prospects that can smartly become more elite pitching pipeline anytime it makes sense for Breslow to make a move.
Grissom is immediately wonderful at 2B making Breslow look like a genius. He only hits 18 home runs but hits .312 and has the frame to grow into a perennial all star with more pop to come and he solidifies the keystone. (He clearly has a better 2024 than fellow 2B Bogaerts.)
The O'Neil / Abreu platoon is best case scenario with Refsnyder causing pain to lefties whenever they step on the rubber. Anthony takes another giant step forward and Keith Law can't stop gushing about how his lefty stroke is the best swing in the minors and the best he has ever seen. It is the best lefty swing anyone can remember here except our treasured elders who watched Ted Williams. He is above Mayer in the top 5 prospects in MLB and makes it impossible for the Red Sox to keep him in the minors...
Connor Wong takes another step forward at the plate, and McGuire is solid for the 1H while Teel's helium joins the team by September and gives a big, Adley-like lift for the Sox who thrive off his performance. The emerging core really emerges and just wins. Winning plays. Winning games. Winning over New England.
Ah the pitching staff.
Bello is a beast. Best homegrown pitcher since... anyone can remember. Pedro sprinkles more Pedro magic on an emerging ace. Pivetta does what he did since being demoted to the bullpen last year but with lots and lots of innings as a starter and he gets a team friendly 4 year extension early on when Bailey knows what he can unlock. Cy Young vote-worthy pitching. Giolito puts the divorce behind him and is a super beneficiary of the new pitching infrastructure while being the workhorse he consistently has been. Not quite 2019-21 form but close and rock solid setting himself up for a larger pay day though he loves it here so much he signs a three year extension at current rate. Kutter Crawford is just a joy to behold consistently flashing quality starts throughout the year like clockwork. Winck steps up and is the secret sauce the rotation needs. He emerges as a fine starting pitcher. Houck and Whitlock are true weapons in the pen (either of them could also step up and switch with Winck as the breakout starter) and the bullpen is filthy with Martin, Jansen, Campbell, Houck, Whitlock all elite at the backend shortening games, and Hendricks returns to form at the Trade Deadline.
Cora can't make a wrong move and starts having a lot of fun again.
David Hamilton steals 100 bases in triple A while taking another step forward with the bat and he either becomes a weapon off the bench in the playoffs or trade bait for a stud controllable pitching prospect. The pitching development system generates ongoing flashes of excitement while the abundance in the farm (Yorke etc) gets turned into elite pitching prospects balancing out the harvest from what Bloom planted... They win the Al East despite a stiff challenge from the Yankees, where Verdugo adds new fuel to the rivalry. The Red Sox are a step above the Orioles and Rays in 2024 and the farm system takes another step forward. I have used up all my wishful thinking so it is hard to predict the playoffs, but best case scenario has to involve winning the 5th world series in the 21st century. Henry gets a long standing ovation at next year's winter meeting after swimming behind the duck boats with some AI powered flippers in a parade that brings joy to Red Sox Nation and shuts up any last twitter haters. Fenway is sold out always and rocking...
Worst case scenario none of the above happens. The pitching is a mess. Devers whines all year about ownership, doesn't play defense and the long term pact feels scary bad already. Story is hurt again so we get more of the SS play from last year. Mayer is rushed up, not ready and his confidence is ruined. Grissom is frustrating from day one. The pitching is low mediocre through and through while the defense remains worst in the league. Back in last place again. 70 wins and the year is not even fun to watch while Drohan emerges as a great starting pitcher at the MLB level and Verdugo has more WAR than anyone on our team.
|
|
rkarp
New Member
Posts: 4
|
Post by rkarp on Feb 22, 2024 6:29:34 GMT -5
best case: -Bello, Pivetta, Gio, Monty all win 15+ games -Whitlock remains healthy and shows his 2022 form -Mata starts to realize his potential out of the pen
-Casas builds on year 1 -Grissom plays 150 games like he played 40 games in 2022 -Story is 85% of what he was for the Rockies -Devers is in great shape and healthy -Massa plays a full season like he did the first half os the 2023 season -Duran is healthy for 150 games and plays like he did over 100 games in 2023 -Cedanne plays gg CF -Mayer, Teel, Anthony all stay healthy and all get some time in Boston this season -the front office does not spend foolishly and is primed to have the ability to spend big once the young players are ready to take off
pie in the sky?
|
|
jimoh
Veteran
Posts: 3,980
|
Post by jimoh on Feb 22, 2024 7:10:19 GMT -5
best case: -Bello, Pivetta, Gio, Monty all win 15+ games -Whitlock remains healthy and shows his 2022 form -Mata starts to realize his potential out of the pen -Casas builds on year 1 -Grissom plays 150 games like he played 40 games in 2022 -Story is 85% of what he was for the Rockies -Devers is in great shape and healthy -Massa plays a full season like he did the first half os the 2023 season -Duran is healthy for 150 games and plays like he did over 100 games in 2023 -Cedanne plays gg CF -Mayer, Teel, Anthony all stay healthy and all get some time in Boston this season -the front office does not spend foolishly and is primed to have the ability to spend big once the young players are ready to take off pie in the sky? Your pie is even missing a piece: "O'Neill is healthy and flexible and hits, hits for power, and play GG defense."
|
|
|
Post by 0ap0 on Feb 22, 2024 7:18:03 GMT -5
Some of these "best case" scenarios crack me up since they're basically saying best case they hover around .500 the whole season. TBH, the "worst case" scenarios that have them around .500 are the ones that crack me up. I think we're one important injury and a bad mindset away from seeing what a negative feedback loop can really do to a team. On the other end, while I certainly agree that there's potentially a lot of talent on this team, I think the upside opportunities are significantly curtailed by the quality of the division. I see the good, reasonably lucky team that would win 90+ games in other seasons or other divisions will still end up in the mid-low 80s in the here-and-now. They'll have played some really good, fun baseball to get there, though.
|
|
|
Post by jdb on Feb 22, 2024 7:55:59 GMT -5
Best case is we get to 90ish and sneak into the WC round with arrows pointing up for our younger guys in the lineup and some young pitchers show promise. Worst case for me is we are completely average, stuck in no man’s land at the deadline and can’t even capitalize on some expiring deals.
|
|
|
Post by alexcorahomevideo on Feb 22, 2024 8:17:13 GMT -5
Best case is we get to 90ish and sneak into the WC round with arrows pointing up for our younger guys in the lineup and some young pitchers show promise. Worst case for me is we are completely average, stuck in no man’s land at the deadline and can’t even capitalize on some expiring deals. This is where I'm at as well. I'm interested in some of these that have a best case scenario at 110 wins and worst case 56. The ceiling isn't high enough to get to 110 and this team isn't 56 wins bad. They're a dead average-ish team. In this league that is the worst possible place for you to be in. I could see them falling to 72-74 wins and I could also see them winning 81-83 games. Kind of depends how April goes.
|
|
|
Post by ematz1423 on Feb 22, 2024 8:35:29 GMT -5
Best case is we get to 90ish and sneak into the WC round with arrows pointing up for our younger guys in the lineup and some young pitchers show promise. Worst case for me is we are completely average, stuck in no man’s land at the deadline and can’t even capitalize on some expiring deals. For the future of the organization this could be the worst case scenario, just a middling 75-84 win team that never really threatens the wild card and yet never falls far enough behind to trade away anyone not bolted down at the deadline. You could make the case if they're going to miss the playoffs again at this point it's better to miss it spectacularly than just barely. Get a better draft pick(s) for 2025 and hopefully a handful of intriguing players at the deadline for anyone not bolted down. Then again chances are if they fail spectacularly this season a good chunk of it will have to do with Giolito and/or Pivetta being ineffective, ONeill not coming close to replicating his 2021 and that Martin and/or Jansen are ineffective. If some how all of that happens then they aren't going to get squat at the deadline for those guys. Not to mention the absolute worst case scenario for the future, Grissom proves he can't field at 2nd, Casas proves he can't field at 1st and just overall the young guys are stuck in neutral and don't take a step forward or even regress.
|
|
|
Post by costpet on Feb 22, 2024 8:37:10 GMT -5
Every time they win a game, people are surprised. I put them at 62 wins. Down by 5 in the 4th inning, no chance to recover.
|
|
|
Post by Guidas on Feb 22, 2024 23:05:44 GMT -5
[quote author=" James Dunne" source="[post/673081/thread" timestamp="1708535454"]Best: Devers re-emerges as a possible MVP-level contributor and Rafaela is ready enough with the bat, solidifying the outfield defense. Boosted by one of the best infields in baseball and a deep, flexible pitching staff, they are in contention. A trade for pending free agent Shane Bieber at the deadline gives the team the frontline starter it needed to overtake a young Orioles team and a Yankee squad that doesn't have enough depth in order win the division and to make a run through through the playoffs. Worst: Stagnation by the guys who emerged in 2023 (Bello, Casas, Duran, and Wongand a pitching staff where Whitlock and Houck continue to struggle with consistency is full of swingmen and tweeners, leaving them with the sort of mediocre core that is stuck in the 73-79 win range. [/quote] Not really worst case, but I am concerned about some regression withCasas and Bello, and Wong just getting even more worn out this year. A little more upbeat about Duran (as long as he doesn’t re-injure in the same spot) and Yoshida, who will now understand the true grindiness of the grind.
|
|
|
Post by juanpena on Feb 23, 2024 14:46:49 GMT -5
I think the best-case scenario would be about 88 wins, which could get them a wild card and make it a really fun year to be a fan. For the lowest wins total, I could see this team being the first Red Sox team since 1965 to win fewer than 70 games in a non-shortened season. The way that would happen is them being on a 76-80-win pace at the deadline, and Breslow wisely deciding to sell off guys in their last year, leading to lower win totals in August wins total.
But lowest wins total is not necessarily worst-case scenario. As others have stated, they could be treading water at the deadline on the fringes of contention, make no moves and not get in. That would be the worst-case scenario.
The best-case scenario development-wise is that their new pitching program is making guys get better, both with the current major-leaguers and guys like Gonzalez, Perales, Fitts and Sandlin. But a 2024 development that would be really welcome would be Grissom and Abreu showing they are legitimate, everyday players--or Abreu's case, at least the the long half of a platoon--in the major leagues. At some point, the Sox will have to pay big in money or prospects to get a top-of-the-rotation guy, and if they know they'll have cost-controlled guys in second base and right field, they can budget their resources (cash and prospect capital) accordingly.
|
|
|
Post by redsox04071318champs on Feb 23, 2024 18:13:59 GMT -5
I think the best-case scenario would be about 88 wins, which could get them a wild card and make it a really fun year to be a fan. For the lowest wins total, I could see this team being the first Red Sox team since 1965 to win fewer than 70 games in a non-shortened season. The way that would happen is them being on a 76-80-win pace at the deadline, and Breslow wisely deciding to sell off guys in their last year, leading to lower win totals in August wins total. But lowest wins total is not necessarily worst-case scenario. As others have stated, they could be treading water at the deadline on the fringes of contention, make no moves and not get in. That would be the worst-case scenario. The best-case scenario development-wise is that their new pitching program is making guys get better, both with the current major-leaguers and guys like Gonzalez, Perales, Fitts and Sandlin. But a 2024 development that would be really welcome would be Grissom and Abreu showing they are legitimate, everyday players--or Abreu's case, at least the the long half of a platoon--in the major leagues. At some point, the Sox will have to pay big in money or prospects to get a top-of-the-rotation guy, and if they know they'll have cost-controlled guys in second base and right field, they can budget their resources (cash and prospect capital) accordingly. The 2012 Red Sox finished under 70 wins. They went 69-93.
|
|
|
Post by redsoxfan2 on Feb 23, 2024 18:23:20 GMT -5
I think the best-case scenario would be about 88 wins, which could get them a wild card and make it a really fun year to be a fan. For the lowest wins total, I could see this team being the first Red Sox team since 1965 to win fewer than 70 games in a non-shortened season. The way that would happen is them being on a 76-80-win pace at the deadline, and Breslow wisely deciding to sell off guys in their last year, leading to lower win totals in August wins total. But lowest wins total is not necessarily worst-case scenario. As others have stated, they could be treading water at the deadline on the fringes of contention, make no moves and not get in. That would be the worst-case scenario. The best-case scenario development-wise is that their new pitching program is making guys get better, both with the current major-leaguers and guys like Gonzalez, Perales, Fitts and Sandlin. But a 2024 development that would be really welcome would be Grissom and Abreu showing they are legitimate, everyday players--or Abreu's case, at least the the long half of a platoon--in the major leagues. At some point, the Sox will have to pay big in money or prospects to get a top-of-the-rotation guy, and if they know they'll have cost-controlled guys in second base and right field, they can budget their resources (cash and prospect capital) accordingly. The 2012 Red Sox finished under 70 wins. They went 69-93. That's my realistic expectation for this season. 65 if everything goes wrong, 75 if everything goes right. Predicting 69 overall.
|
|
|
Post by juanpena on Feb 23, 2024 20:40:45 GMT -5
Damn, I guess I really DID try to block out the Bobby Valentine experience.
|
|
|
Post by redsox04071318champs on Feb 23, 2024 22:04:14 GMT -5
The 2012 Red Sox finished under 70 wins. They went 69-93. That's my realistic expectation for this season. 65 if everything goes wrong, 75 if everything goes right. Predicting 69 overall. They're not THAT bad.
|
|
|
Post by redsoxfan2 on Feb 24, 2024 14:42:31 GMT -5
That's my realistic expectation for this season. 65 if everything goes wrong, 75 if everything goes right. Predicting 69 overall. They're not THAT bad. Strong division and I think the offense and rotation take a step back this year.
|
|
|
Post by ematz1423 on Feb 24, 2024 14:47:51 GMT -5
Strong division and I think the offense and rotation take a step back this year. Maybe so but if 75 is your best case scenario then worst case scenario has to be like 50 wins. They have enough players who have been productive and still young enough that it's really not that farfetched they could win 95+ games and make a WS run. That would take almost all their players hitting their top percentile but I really don't think it's out of the realm.
|
|
|
Post by bosoxnation on Feb 24, 2024 14:56:02 GMT -5
Best case we get Monty. Worse case we dont. I just looked at Free Agents after the year. Looks like a weak class. Maybe steal Soto from MFY
|
|
|
Post by ematz1423 on Feb 24, 2024 14:59:49 GMT -5
Best case we get Monty. Worse case we dont. I just looked at Free Agents after the year. Looks like a weak class. Maybe steal Soto from MFY I disagree that next years FA looks weak. At least in terms of pitching as of right now I'd say there's at least 3-4 different pitchers better than Montgomery and that I could understand saving the money for next year.
|
|
|
Post by redsox04071318champs on Feb 24, 2024 15:06:41 GMT -5
Strong division and I think the offense and rotation take a step back this year. That could happen - perhaps in a most likeliest scenario, but not in a best case scenario. In a best case scenario they'd finish over. 500 to say the least. With or without Montgomery, they're not expansion team level talent. And on the off chance they got Montgomery, the rotation may not be that bad as they'd have 4 guys capable of pitching 160 plus innings and between Crawford, Whitlock, Houck, and Winckowski they can figure out a 5th starter/depth. The infield should be pretty good offensively and the outfield has some talent if they can figure out the right combo. They're lacking a huge RH bat, but maybe O'Neill and Story can make up for that and Grissom could help as well. And fortunately for them they play a balanced schedule this season so they don't have to play Balt, NY, TB and Tor 74 times - I think it's more like 50 times, which should help. I'm not really pushing back against the idea that they could be a mediocre team that goes south. I'm just pushing back on the idea that if things break really right with this team the best they can do is win 75. They'd do far better than that if enough things go right, but that would have to be a lot of things, but if a decent amount goes right versus goes wrong, then I don't see why they shouldn't finish above .500 in a 65% to 100% things break right scenario (90 plus wins with the higher end of the scale).
|
|
|
Post by strike23 on Feb 24, 2024 15:41:54 GMT -5
Best case we get Monty. Worse case we dont. I just looked at Free Agents after the year. Looks like a weak class. Maybe steal Soto from MFY I disagree that next years FA looks weak. At least in terms of pitching as of right now I'd say there's at least 3-4 different pitchers better than Montgomery and that I could understand saving the money for next year. Yeah, in the same tier or better than Montgomery you have Burnes, Bieber, Fried, and Buehler definitely going to FA, Wheeler or Scherzer are older but higher upside and really attractive on something shorter term, then Verlander, Cole, and Eovaldi potentially also in the mix pending option vesting/decisions. Then there's some tier below guys that could easily have a great platform year and potentially jump up to that tier in Means, Montas, and Severino. Lastly theres our own FA guys in Pivetta and Giolitto who fit in the platform year category. If Bailey/Breslow think Pivetta's second half breakout is legitimate I'm hoping they extend him during spring training, Giolitto walks with a QO attached and is replaced by Fried, and that one or two of Whitlock/Houck/Winck show they belong in the rotation or are otherwise replaced by an older (but still effective) guy on a short term deal to hopefully bridge us to one of Perales/Gonzalez/Sandlin/Fitts etc. For position players Soto, Bregman, Goldschmidt, and Alonso sound like a much stronger top of the class than Bellinger/Chapman though none are a great roster fit for us.
|
|
|
Post by alexcorahomevideo on Feb 24, 2024 17:08:48 GMT -5
I disagree that next years FA looks weak. At least in terms of pitching as of right now I'd say there's at least 3-4 different pitchers better than Montgomery and that I could understand saving the money for next year. Yeah, in the same tier or better than Montgomery you have Burnes, Bieber, Fried, and Buehler definitely going to FA, Wheeler or Scherzer are older but higher upside and really attractive on something shorter term, then Verlander, Cole, and Eovaldi potentially also in the mix pending option vesting/decisions. Then there's some tier below guys that could easily have a great platform year and potentially jump up to that tier in Means, Montas, and Severino. Lastly theres our own FA guys in Pivetta and Giolitto who fit in the platform year category. If Bailey/Breslow think Pivetta's second half breakout is legitimate I'm hoping they extend him during spring training, Giolitto walks with a QO attached and is replaced by Fried, and that one or two of Whitlock/Houck/Winck show they belong in the rotation or are otherwise replaced by an older (but still effective) guy on a short term deal to hopefully bridge us to one of Perales/Gonzalez/Sandlin/Fitts etc. For position players Soto, Bregman, Goldschmidt, and Alonso sound like a much stronger top of the class than Bellinger/Chapman though none are a great roster fit for us. Problem is outside of Eovaldi, Means, Montas and Severino they can't afford/won't pay those top end options. If Gerritt Cole has an excellent year there is zero chance the Sox outbid the Yankees. They aren't outbidding the Dodgers on Buehler or the field on Bieber.
|
|
|
Post by yuchangclan on Feb 24, 2024 17:31:02 GMT -5
I think the best-case scenario would be about 88 wins, which could get them a wild card and make it a really fun year to be a fan. For the lowest wins total, I could see this team being the first Red Sox team since 1965 to win fewer than 70 games in a non-shortened season. The way that would happen is them being on a 76-80-win pace at the deadline, and Breslow wisely deciding to sell off guys in their last year, leading to lower win totals in August wins total. But lowest wins total is not necessarily worst-case scenario. As others have stated, they could be treading water at the deadline on the fringes of contention, make no moves and not get in. That would be the worst-case scenario. The best-case scenario development-wise is that their new pitching program is making guys get better, both with the current major-leaguers and guys like Gonzalez, Perales, Fitts and Sandlin. But a 2024 development that would be really welcome would be Grissom and Abreu showing they are legitimate, everyday players--or Abreu's case, at least the the long half of a platoon--in the major leagues. At some point, the Sox will have to pay big in money or prospects to get a top-of-the-rotation guy, and if they know they'll have cost-controlled guys in second base and right field, they can budget their resources (cash and prospect capital) accordingly. The 2012 Red Sox finished under 70 wins. They went 69-93. It’s funny. That 2012 team was pretty loaded(on paper, anyway) and we know they made some tweaks and won it all the next season. Beckett, Lester, Buchholz, Dice-K & Doubront in the rotation. Bard, Melancon, Tazawa, Atchison, Rich Hill, Breslow, Bailey, Albers and Andrew Miller in the bullpen. They still had Adrian Gonzalez, Pedroia, Papi, Youkilis, Crawford, Cody Ross & Ellsbury in the lineup. We know this team was a disaster, and I’ll blame Bobby V for a lot of that, but do they have this much talent on the 2024 roster?
|
|
|
Post by notstarboard on Feb 24, 2024 17:34:48 GMT -5
Yeah, in the same tier or better than Montgomery you have Burnes, Bieber, Fried, and Buehler definitely going to FA, Wheeler or Scherzer are older but higher upside and really attractive on something shorter term, then Verlander, Cole, and Eovaldi potentially also in the mix pending option vesting/decisions. Then there's some tier below guys that could easily have a great platform year and potentially jump up to that tier in Means, Montas, and Severino. Lastly theres our own FA guys in Pivetta and Giolitto who fit in the platform year category. If Bailey/Breslow think Pivetta's second half breakout is legitimate I'm hoping they extend him during spring training, Giolitto walks with a QO attached and is replaced by Fried, and that one or two of Whitlock/Houck/Winck show they belong in the rotation or are otherwise replaced by an older (but still effective) guy on a short term deal to hopefully bridge us to one of Perales/Gonzalez/Sandlin/Fitts etc. For position players Soto, Bregman, Goldschmidt, and Alonso sound like a much stronger top of the class than Bellinger/Chapman though none are a great roster fit for us. Problem is outside of Eovaldi, Means, Montas and Severino they can't afford/won't pay those top end options. If Gerritt Cole has an excellent year there is zero chance the Sox outbid the Yankees. They aren't outbidding the Dodgers on Buehler or the field on Bieber. I don't see why they wouldn't be in on a top SP next year. They don't need bullpen help and will likely have a full or nearly full group of position players. They'll also have a *lot* of cash to spend. What are they going to do, sit at a $150 million luxury tax payroll right as the window is really opening? They are on track to spend ~$20 million less than last year with a month plus until opening day and people seem to be extrapolating that to "they will never again sign a top free agent and will forevermore run a middling payroll".
|
|
|
Post by thegoodthebadthesox on Feb 24, 2024 20:16:15 GMT -5
Strong division and I think the offense and rotation take a step back this year. The division was strong last year, most things broke wrong (certainly towards the end), and they still won 78 games.
|
|
|