1 00:00:00,640 --> 00:00:04,440 Speaker 1: Make your next move with American Express Business Platinum earned 2 00:00:04,519 --> 00:00:07,920 Speaker 1: five times membership rewards points on flights and prefet hotels 3 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:11,440 Speaker 1: booked on amextravel dot com and with a welcome offer 4 00:00:11,480 --> 00:00:14,120 Speaker 1: of one hundred and fifty thousand points after you spend 5 00:00:14,200 --> 00:00:16,920 Speaker 1: twenty thousand dollars on purchases on the card within your 6 00:00:16,920 --> 00:00:19,920 Speaker 1: first three months of membership, your business cansoor to New 7 00:00:19,960 --> 00:00:24,279 Speaker 1: Heights term supply. Learn more at AmericanExpress dot com, slash 8 00:00:24,320 --> 00:00:28,360 Speaker 1: Business Dash Platinum MS Business Platinum built for business by 9 00:00:28,400 --> 00:00:29,320 Speaker 1: American Express. 10 00:00:35,360 --> 00:00:38,440 Speaker 2: Hello everybody, Welcome into the Cycle Part two. For this week, 11 00:00:38,479 --> 00:00:41,320 Speaker 2: I am Ryan Warmley, joined by Mike Mayor. I am 12 00:00:41,360 --> 00:00:43,280 Speaker 2: back from my week off. Mayor on I believe it 13 00:00:43,360 --> 00:00:47,200 Speaker 2: was this of the three episodes last week you talked 14 00:00:47,240 --> 00:00:50,320 Speaker 2: about how you were being all nice and polite and friendly, 15 00:00:50,600 --> 00:00:53,000 Speaker 2: not making fun of me for not being here. I 16 00:00:53,040 --> 00:00:55,480 Speaker 2: was traveling for the death of a family member to 17 00:00:55,520 --> 00:00:58,000 Speaker 2: do family function stuff, so I was listening a little 18 00:00:58,000 --> 00:01:00,440 Speaker 2: bit to the episode. I mean I was actually offendive, 19 00:01:00,440 --> 00:01:02,840 Speaker 2: but I was like, really, this is a pretty legit. Like, 20 00:01:02,880 --> 00:01:04,720 Speaker 2: I know, when I leave for football, you want to 21 00:01:04,760 --> 00:01:05,679 Speaker 2: give me a hard time. 22 00:01:06,000 --> 00:01:07,039 Speaker 3: I get it. 23 00:01:07,040 --> 00:01:10,160 Speaker 2: It's you know, partly required of me by the job, 24 00:01:10,200 --> 00:01:12,720 Speaker 2: and partly it's just easier to focus on one sport. 25 00:01:12,760 --> 00:01:15,000 Speaker 3: But I thought this was a fairly legitimate reason. 26 00:01:15,600 --> 00:01:17,160 Speaker 4: It was I wasn't going to say that on air 27 00:01:17,200 --> 00:01:19,039 Speaker 4: while you while you were traveling, and I chose not 28 00:01:19,160 --> 00:01:21,960 Speaker 4: to say anything, and now here I am. 29 00:01:22,000 --> 00:01:24,319 Speaker 3: But but you wanted credit for not saying anything. 30 00:01:24,360 --> 00:01:26,280 Speaker 4: Well, now I'm just gonna get torn apart on YouTube 31 00:01:26,280 --> 00:01:28,280 Speaker 4: comments again because now you're now you're just making me 32 00:01:28,319 --> 00:01:30,520 Speaker 4: feel bad and you're just like that teeing me up. 33 00:01:30,440 --> 00:01:32,959 Speaker 5: For the for the monsters. 34 00:01:32,720 --> 00:01:35,039 Speaker 3: That that was actually like pretty intentional on my part. No, 35 00:01:35,880 --> 00:01:37,520 Speaker 3: I was not actually offended by you. 36 00:01:37,600 --> 00:01:40,679 Speaker 2: It was it was a wonderful trip because he baseball 37 00:01:40,760 --> 00:01:42,280 Speaker 2: is very important. He's really the reason I became a 38 00:01:42,280 --> 00:01:44,800 Speaker 2: baseball fan of my grandfather who passed. So it was 39 00:01:44,840 --> 00:01:46,760 Speaker 2: a few months ago, so kind of that initial shock 40 00:01:46,880 --> 00:01:50,160 Speaker 2: was had, you know, subsided. But we we got together 41 00:01:50,160 --> 00:01:52,200 Speaker 2: for a celebration of life in Baltimore. We got a 42 00:01:52,200 --> 00:01:54,640 Speaker 2: suite at an Orioles game. I've never had a box 43 00:01:54,680 --> 00:01:57,320 Speaker 2: at Camden Yards before. I've been lucky enough to be 44 00:01:57,440 --> 00:01:59,040 Speaker 2: at sweets at a couple other stadiums. 45 00:01:59,120 --> 00:02:00,000 Speaker 3: Actually, not for baseball. 46 00:02:00,000 --> 00:02:01,880 Speaker 2: They're always for different sports, but it was my first 47 00:02:01,880 --> 00:02:04,680 Speaker 2: time at Camden Yards and my nephew was there. We 48 00:02:04,760 --> 00:02:07,280 Speaker 2: got the whole family together, eight crabs played games. It 49 00:02:07,360 --> 00:02:10,760 Speaker 2: was really an awesome tribute, and the Oriol bird came 50 00:02:10,800 --> 00:02:12,960 Speaker 2: by to the suite and my nephew got to take 51 00:02:13,000 --> 00:02:14,919 Speaker 2: pictures with him and it was his first game ever, 52 00:02:15,040 --> 00:02:15,560 Speaker 2: so it. 53 00:02:15,560 --> 00:02:16,440 Speaker 3: Was a really fun time. 54 00:02:17,440 --> 00:02:19,440 Speaker 2: As I mentioned to you on the previous segment of 55 00:02:19,440 --> 00:02:23,000 Speaker 2: the cycle this week, I did not really watch much 56 00:02:23,040 --> 00:02:25,080 Speaker 2: baseball the last week because I was traveling for this 57 00:02:25,400 --> 00:02:28,000 Speaker 2: family stuff. The only baseball I really watched were the 58 00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:31,000 Speaker 2: two games at Camden Yards that I attended while I 59 00:02:31,040 --> 00:02:34,840 Speaker 2: was in Baltimore. So hopefully I'm coming into this episode 60 00:02:34,919 --> 00:02:38,040 Speaker 2: with having done enough research to really catch up and 61 00:02:38,080 --> 00:02:40,320 Speaker 2: give some quality advice here. But I want to throw 62 00:02:40,360 --> 00:02:43,760 Speaker 2: that out there just in case it comes through with 63 00:02:44,080 --> 00:02:45,919 Speaker 2: oh wow, you didn't see this happened to this guy? 64 00:02:45,919 --> 00:02:46,720 Speaker 3: How did you miss that? 65 00:02:47,360 --> 00:02:49,000 Speaker 2: It's because I didn't, you know, really watch for a 66 00:02:49,000 --> 00:02:50,800 Speaker 2: few days because of the stuff I had going on. 67 00:02:50,840 --> 00:02:53,200 Speaker 2: But thank you to you as always for filling in 68 00:02:53,200 --> 00:02:54,000 Speaker 2: in the host chair. 69 00:02:53,840 --> 00:02:54,480 Speaker 3: When I was gone. 70 00:02:54,520 --> 00:02:56,560 Speaker 2: And as I mentioned in the last segment, Thank you 71 00:02:56,600 --> 00:03:00,239 Speaker 2: to Kelly for stepping in as well and talks so 72 00:03:00,280 --> 00:03:02,840 Speaker 2: fantasy baseball. I know you guys gave everybody a lot 73 00:03:02,960 --> 00:03:05,200 Speaker 2: to talk about because you had very long episodes with 74 00:03:05,240 --> 00:03:08,480 Speaker 2: me not here to real us in. Let's dive in 75 00:03:08,520 --> 00:03:11,320 Speaker 2: after that very long intro to our buys and cells 76 00:03:12,080 --> 00:03:13,440 Speaker 2: and because I just talked for a lot, I will 77 00:03:13,520 --> 00:03:14,080 Speaker 2: let you go first. 78 00:03:14,080 --> 00:03:16,280 Speaker 3: Here, who's your favorite by low this week? 79 00:03:16,680 --> 00:03:19,360 Speaker 4: My favorite bilot? First, I'm going to give my a 80 00:03:19,400 --> 00:03:22,880 Speaker 4: hard cell here, a cell high. Is your nephew's first 81 00:03:22,919 --> 00:03:25,320 Speaker 4: game being in a box? Like, how do you go 82 00:03:25,480 --> 00:03:25,800 Speaker 4: from that? 83 00:03:26,160 --> 00:03:26,960 Speaker 5: He's going to like I. 84 00:03:26,960 --> 00:03:27,640 Speaker 3: Actually said that. 85 00:03:27,720 --> 00:03:30,200 Speaker 2: I was like, we're setting the bar way too high 86 00:03:30,240 --> 00:03:32,359 Speaker 2: for his first game. Now we said it quite low. 87 00:03:32,400 --> 00:03:35,000 Speaker 2: For the actual game itself, there was a long rain delay. 88 00:03:35,480 --> 00:03:38,200 Speaker 2: It was gross out and the Orioles got shut out. 89 00:03:38,280 --> 00:03:41,440 Speaker 2: So it can only go up from there for that perspective, 90 00:03:41,560 --> 00:03:44,600 Speaker 2: but pretty brutal. The next time he goes and we're 91 00:03:44,600 --> 00:03:49,720 Speaker 2: sitting like directly in the sun and it's ry nosebleed section, 92 00:03:50,840 --> 00:03:52,000 Speaker 2: we're sweating through our. 93 00:03:51,960 --> 00:03:55,240 Speaker 3: Jerseys, that'll be a different experience for rohim. He had this. 94 00:03:55,480 --> 00:03:57,720 Speaker 2: He is not even five years old. He had a 95 00:03:57,800 --> 00:04:01,480 Speaker 2: jumbo hot dog, two full boxes, a popcorn, and a 96 00:04:01,520 --> 00:04:01,920 Speaker 2: cup gig. 97 00:04:01,960 --> 00:04:03,360 Speaker 3: I couldn't believe he alled it all down. 98 00:04:03,960 --> 00:04:06,560 Speaker 4: Yeah, that sounds like my two year old daughter. We 99 00:04:06,640 --> 00:04:08,240 Speaker 4: have to stop her from eating or she will eat 100 00:04:08,320 --> 00:04:12,800 Speaker 4: until she explodes. My favorite BILO of the week is 101 00:04:12,800 --> 00:04:16,120 Speaker 4: Brian Reynolds, who I wrote up in our article this 102 00:04:16,160 --> 00:04:17,920 Speaker 4: week and then I'm going to pull up here and 103 00:04:17,920 --> 00:04:22,320 Speaker 4: not you know, read it verbatim. But his numbers are 104 00:04:22,320 --> 00:04:23,880 Speaker 4: a little bit down. He's batting just two twenty four 105 00:04:23,880 --> 00:04:27,440 Speaker 4: when I wrote this, including a one sixty seven average 106 00:04:27,480 --> 00:04:29,719 Speaker 4: through the first week of May. So like numbers are down, 107 00:04:29,760 --> 00:04:34,640 Speaker 4: but also like been even worse recently. Counting SATs remained solid. 108 00:04:35,520 --> 00:04:39,080 Speaker 4: But I just think, like a lot of the other 109 00:04:39,320 --> 00:04:42,320 Speaker 4: expected numbers are just like what he always does. 110 00:04:42,440 --> 00:04:43,760 Speaker 5: I think. I just think there's kind of like some 111 00:04:43,839 --> 00:04:44,479 Speaker 5: bad luck here. 112 00:04:45,200 --> 00:04:49,120 Speaker 4: And I think that, especially because of the more recent success, 113 00:04:49,160 --> 00:04:51,719 Speaker 4: that a fantasy manager out there is going to be 114 00:04:51,720 --> 00:04:54,680 Speaker 4: looking to move on from him, or could be more 115 00:04:54,680 --> 00:04:56,840 Speaker 4: open to moving on from him, especially like you know, 116 00:04:56,920 --> 00:04:58,000 Speaker 4: a lot I know a lot of in a lot 117 00:04:58,040 --> 00:05:00,920 Speaker 4: of my leagues, batting average is kind of like down. 118 00:05:01,839 --> 00:05:05,000 Speaker 4: And when I look at a lot of the expected 119 00:05:05,080 --> 00:05:09,440 Speaker 4: numbers his three fifty nine x WEOBA and like wOBA 120 00:05:09,600 --> 00:05:12,440 Speaker 4: is what measures a quality of contract, quality of contact, 121 00:05:12,480 --> 00:05:14,479 Speaker 4: and it's kind of like my preferred metric for looking 122 00:05:14,480 --> 00:05:17,440 Speaker 4: at like you know, how real is this? His ex 123 00:05:17,480 --> 00:05:20,560 Speaker 4: WELBA is three fifty nine against two eighty seven for 124 00:05:20,640 --> 00:05:23,200 Speaker 4: his WILBA. It's one of the biggest differences across baseball 125 00:05:23,200 --> 00:05:24,680 Speaker 4: between WILBA and expected WOLBA. 126 00:05:26,560 --> 00:05:28,600 Speaker 5: And the same thing is true for his slugging percentage. 127 00:05:28,880 --> 00:05:31,960 Speaker 4: His actual slugging is three sixty one, he's expected is 128 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:35,400 Speaker 4: five thirty three, so way higher. And expected batting average 129 00:05:35,440 --> 00:05:37,640 Speaker 4: same thing as actual batting average two twenty four. Expected 130 00:05:37,640 --> 00:05:40,400 Speaker 4: batting average two sixty eight, So all of his expected numbers, 131 00:05:41,080 --> 00:05:42,720 Speaker 4: you know, they're pointing to, as I like to say, 132 00:05:42,760 --> 00:05:46,360 Speaker 4: positive aggression that we're going to say, and I'm looking 133 00:05:46,400 --> 00:05:48,200 Speaker 4: to require him because I think you're going to get 134 00:05:48,200 --> 00:05:51,599 Speaker 4: a high floor player and like solid production pretty much. 135 00:05:51,440 --> 00:05:55,040 Speaker 5: On pace for what he always does. And uh, do 136 00:05:55,080 --> 00:05:55,400 Speaker 5: you want me. 137 00:05:55,400 --> 00:05:57,040 Speaker 4: To toss it back to you there or do you 138 00:05:57,080 --> 00:05:59,120 Speaker 4: want to hear some of the names I'm looking to 139 00:05:59,120 --> 00:05:59,920 Speaker 4: to see if I can. 140 00:06:00,560 --> 00:06:03,440 Speaker 2: Well, I want to quickly just ask because a lot 141 00:06:03,440 --> 00:06:05,919 Speaker 2: of the contact stuff. I think you're spot on, and 142 00:06:05,960 --> 00:06:08,040 Speaker 2: I've all like, Brian Reynolds has been a favorite of 143 00:06:08,080 --> 00:06:10,520 Speaker 2: mine for a while. He was actually the first person 144 00:06:10,520 --> 00:06:12,320 Speaker 2: with my friends not on the show that I started 145 00:06:12,320 --> 00:06:14,520 Speaker 2: the bit of the is this person the best hitter 146 00:06:14,560 --> 00:06:17,960 Speaker 2: in baseball? Like, like, Brian Reynolds has been good for 147 00:06:18,000 --> 00:06:20,279 Speaker 2: a number of years, and like, you know, like I 148 00:06:20,279 --> 00:06:21,920 Speaker 2: forget if you mentioned this or not, but his barrel 149 00:06:22,000 --> 00:06:26,000 Speaker 2: rate is the highest of his career right now. The 150 00:06:26,040 --> 00:06:28,160 Speaker 2: strikeout rate is also the highest. It's twenty two and 151 00:06:28,240 --> 00:06:30,200 Speaker 2: a half percent last year. This year is twenty eight 152 00:06:30,200 --> 00:06:33,280 Speaker 2: point one percent, coupled with the lowest walk rate of 153 00:06:33,279 --> 00:06:37,640 Speaker 2: his career. To what degree is that like concerning to you? Like, 154 00:06:37,760 --> 00:06:40,440 Speaker 2: if you think the contact is still very legitimate, how 155 00:06:40,480 --> 00:06:42,440 Speaker 2: much are you worried about the fact that he is 156 00:06:42,480 --> 00:06:43,719 Speaker 2: not making contact as often? 157 00:06:44,320 --> 00:06:47,600 Speaker 4: I mean, I'm not not concerned. It's still like a 158 00:06:47,640 --> 00:06:50,920 Speaker 4: relatively small sample size. Obviously, you don't want to see 159 00:06:50,920 --> 00:06:53,960 Speaker 4: it trending in that direction. The walk rate is slightly lower, 160 00:06:54,040 --> 00:06:55,880 Speaker 4: you know, seven point eight percent versus eight point two 161 00:06:56,120 --> 00:06:58,240 Speaker 4: you know year before. That's not a huge number. But 162 00:06:58,279 --> 00:07:01,400 Speaker 4: the strikeout rate is obviously, like almost six percent higher, 163 00:07:01,400 --> 00:07:03,960 Speaker 4: So you don't want to see that. I just think 164 00:07:03,960 --> 00:07:06,720 Speaker 4: it's a player going through a cold stretch that you know, 165 00:07:07,000 --> 00:07:09,800 Speaker 4: like we always say with like evaluating these players in 166 00:07:09,840 --> 00:07:13,640 Speaker 4: April early May. If he had this stretch in July, 167 00:07:13,800 --> 00:07:17,160 Speaker 4: no one even notices it. But because at the beginning 168 00:07:17,200 --> 00:07:19,400 Speaker 4: of the year and a lot of other stuff is 169 00:07:20,240 --> 00:07:23,080 Speaker 4: you know, kind of like magnified at that time. When 170 00:07:23,120 --> 00:07:26,560 Speaker 4: I looked at his actual like plate discipline numbers, I 171 00:07:26,560 --> 00:07:30,880 Speaker 4: didn't see a whole lot that was concerning. One thing 172 00:07:30,880 --> 00:07:32,880 Speaker 4: that was interesting is that his out of zone swing 173 00:07:32,920 --> 00:07:36,360 Speaker 4: percentage is actually down, like fairly significantly. So that's interesting 174 00:07:36,400 --> 00:07:37,960 Speaker 4: that if he's not swinging at pitches out of the 175 00:07:38,040 --> 00:07:41,880 Speaker 4: zone but still striking out more in the zone swing 176 00:07:41,960 --> 00:07:46,040 Speaker 4: percentage is pretty similar, down like a little bit, and 177 00:07:46,320 --> 00:07:50,240 Speaker 4: his but his out of the zone contact numbers are 178 00:07:50,280 --> 00:07:53,880 Speaker 4: way down, so he's kind of swinging at fewer pitches 179 00:07:54,440 --> 00:07:56,640 Speaker 4: in and out of the zone. But then also the 180 00:07:56,680 --> 00:07:58,240 Speaker 4: pitches out of the zone that he's swinging at, he's 181 00:07:58,560 --> 00:08:01,320 Speaker 4: he's not hitting them. Fifty two point two percent last 182 00:08:01,360 --> 00:08:03,240 Speaker 4: year this year is forty one point seven percent, so 183 00:08:03,280 --> 00:08:07,600 Speaker 4: it's down significantly. And that's really the only number that's 184 00:08:07,720 --> 00:08:11,280 Speaker 4: down really significantly in a bad way. But I guess 185 00:08:11,280 --> 00:08:13,440 Speaker 4: if you want a number to be down, you know, 186 00:08:13,880 --> 00:08:15,600 Speaker 4: just stop swinging the pitches out of the zone. Maybe 187 00:08:15,640 --> 00:08:16,920 Speaker 4: that'll maybe that do't improve things. 188 00:08:18,720 --> 00:08:21,640 Speaker 3: Who you got for your you know players you're considering 189 00:08:21,680 --> 00:08:22,239 Speaker 3: him against. 190 00:08:22,800 --> 00:08:23,520 Speaker 5: Let's see. 191 00:08:24,000 --> 00:08:27,040 Speaker 4: So I wrote in the article that I'm gonna I 192 00:08:27,120 --> 00:08:29,800 Speaker 4: always do a picture for hitter for these experiments, so 193 00:08:30,760 --> 00:08:33,040 Speaker 4: or at least most of them. So I I tried 194 00:08:33,040 --> 00:08:35,880 Speaker 4: to use our trade value chart to line up pictures 195 00:08:35,920 --> 00:08:40,600 Speaker 4: of similar value that I think I either would trade 196 00:08:40,600 --> 00:08:44,760 Speaker 4: for Brian Reynolds also, but also think I could potentially 197 00:08:44,920 --> 00:08:47,360 Speaker 4: trade for Brian Reynolds. So I'll pose them to you. 198 00:08:48,480 --> 00:08:52,600 Speaker 4: Would you rather Bailey Obert or Brian Reynolds? 199 00:08:54,200 --> 00:08:56,360 Speaker 2: I think Reynolds. I think that's a really good one, 200 00:08:56,400 --> 00:08:57,440 Speaker 2: though I think Reynolds, so. 201 00:08:58,000 --> 00:09:00,120 Speaker 4: Yeah, I included Bailey ober last week is too as 202 00:09:00,120 --> 00:09:01,679 Speaker 4: well too. I think I'm just kind of like selling 203 00:09:01,960 --> 00:09:03,760 Speaker 4: selling High'm Bailey over across the board. 204 00:09:04,400 --> 00:09:06,000 Speaker 3: I think I think that's a trade you could get done. 205 00:09:06,040 --> 00:09:08,760 Speaker 2: I would prefer the rental side if you really needed pitching, 206 00:09:08,920 --> 00:09:10,000 Speaker 2: I could justify. 207 00:09:09,720 --> 00:09:11,520 Speaker 3: I prefer in the overside. I think that's a good one. 208 00:09:11,679 --> 00:09:12,480 Speaker 5: About sunny Gray. 209 00:09:14,480 --> 00:09:20,520 Speaker 2: I think I prefer Gray, but Brian Wu, I prefer 210 00:09:21,520 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 2: I prefer Brian. 211 00:09:23,880 --> 00:09:26,360 Speaker 5: Brian right, both spelled with the y too. 212 00:09:27,520 --> 00:09:31,199 Speaker 4: Yeah, whenever I say Brian will I I just immediately 213 00:09:31,280 --> 00:09:33,080 Speaker 4: go to like the Mighty Ducks, like woo woo woo, 214 00:09:33,160 --> 00:09:36,680 Speaker 4: Kenny Woo. It's hard not to say woo woo woo. Brian, 215 00:09:36,840 --> 00:09:38,200 Speaker 4: have you not seen mighty ducks? Are you looking at 216 00:09:38,240 --> 00:09:39,120 Speaker 4: me like you've not seen money? 217 00:09:39,160 --> 00:09:39,880 Speaker 5: Are you kidding me? 218 00:09:41,000 --> 00:09:42,599 Speaker 2: I wasn't gonna say it out loud. We could have 219 00:09:42,679 --> 00:09:44,560 Speaker 2: just moved fastest and people don't. Now they're gonna yell 220 00:09:44,600 --> 00:09:46,760 Speaker 2: at me in the comments I have not seen Mighty Ducks. 221 00:09:46,920 --> 00:09:48,400 Speaker 5: Oh my god, that's the second one too. 222 00:09:48,440 --> 00:09:51,480 Speaker 4: It's it's D two, The Mighty Ducks the best one. 223 00:09:51,000 --> 00:09:55,600 Speaker 2: I really like sports and I really like movies. I 224 00:09:55,640 --> 00:09:58,080 Speaker 2: don't see a lot of sports movies. I tend to 225 00:09:58,120 --> 00:10:00,240 Speaker 2: prefer like my sports or sports in my MOVI. These 226 00:10:00,240 --> 00:10:02,199 Speaker 2: are movies I don't do. There are some like I 227 00:10:02,480 --> 00:10:04,600 Speaker 2: really have always liked Rudy. I actually have a signed 228 00:10:04,880 --> 00:10:06,520 Speaker 2: he can't see it. I have a signed poster from 229 00:10:06,559 --> 00:10:07,600 Speaker 2: Sean Aston. 230 00:10:07,640 --> 00:10:08,800 Speaker 3: For Rudy over here. 231 00:10:09,440 --> 00:10:11,520 Speaker 2: So like there are I'm not saying it's my all 232 00:10:11,559 --> 00:10:13,360 Speaker 2: time favorite movie, but like, there are sports movies I like, 233 00:10:14,440 --> 00:10:16,120 Speaker 2: but a lot of them I just kind of missed. 234 00:10:16,840 --> 00:10:19,640 Speaker 4: Man, you gotta put Mighty Ducks on your list. That 235 00:10:19,720 --> 00:10:22,480 Speaker 4: one's actually from the second Mighty Ducks movie went to 236 00:10:22,480 --> 00:10:24,520 Speaker 4: the arguably the better Mighty Ducks. 237 00:10:24,800 --> 00:10:27,440 Speaker 3: But I will say I do love I do love him. 238 00:10:27,440 --> 00:10:28,080 Speaker 3: Parks and Rec. 239 00:10:28,200 --> 00:10:32,920 Speaker 2: When it's uh They're doing the Model un episode and 240 00:10:33,040 --> 00:10:36,080 Speaker 2: Chris Pratt's character Andy is like getting assigned whatever country 241 00:10:36,120 --> 00:10:38,880 Speaker 2: and it's like, all right, Andy, do you want to be? 242 00:10:38,920 --> 00:10:41,040 Speaker 2: I think it's Iceland and he goes, the bad guys 243 00:10:41,040 --> 00:10:44,360 Speaker 2: from Mighty Ducks too, no thank you, And he goes, okay, well, 244 00:10:44,400 --> 00:10:45,559 Speaker 2: how about some other country? 245 00:10:45,600 --> 00:10:45,880 Speaker 6: I forgot? 246 00:10:45,880 --> 00:10:49,320 Speaker 2: It was the bad guys from Karate Kid too, even worse, 247 00:10:49,720 --> 00:10:51,040 Speaker 2: and he goes, how about Germany. 248 00:10:51,080 --> 00:10:54,600 Speaker 3: They've never been the bad guys. That's pretty good, Parks 249 00:10:54,600 --> 00:10:56,480 Speaker 3: and Rec. I will get I will get those references 250 00:10:56,480 --> 00:10:56,880 Speaker 3: for sure. 251 00:10:57,640 --> 00:10:59,880 Speaker 4: I always when I was younger, and we'll get back 252 00:10:59,880 --> 00:11:01,760 Speaker 4: to baseball on a second, But when I was younger, 253 00:11:01,960 --> 00:11:03,880 Speaker 4: I used to always use a fantasy team name that 254 00:11:04,000 --> 00:11:06,400 Speaker 4: was the name of the Mighty Ducks before they became 255 00:11:06,440 --> 00:11:08,440 Speaker 4: the Mighty Ducks of just District five, like they didn't 256 00:11:08,440 --> 00:11:10,160 Speaker 4: have a team name that was always take My fantasy 257 00:11:10,200 --> 00:11:11,160 Speaker 4: team name is District five. 258 00:11:12,600 --> 00:11:14,920 Speaker 2: What would you say is your most used fantasy team name? 259 00:11:14,960 --> 00:11:18,000 Speaker 2: It could be football or baseball that you've used in 260 00:11:18,040 --> 00:11:18,600 Speaker 2: your life. 261 00:11:19,280 --> 00:11:21,840 Speaker 4: Most used would be it's been I don't know if 262 00:11:21,880 --> 00:11:24,160 Speaker 4: you would consider it most used, but it's been the 263 00:11:24,240 --> 00:11:26,480 Speaker 4: name of one of my teams for like ten years. 264 00:11:27,760 --> 00:11:29,680 Speaker 4: And it's have you let me see Have you seen 265 00:11:29,720 --> 00:11:30,240 Speaker 4: pulp fiction? 266 00:11:31,200 --> 00:11:35,319 Speaker 2: Yes, I've seen. I loved I love Tarantino movies. I 267 00:11:35,480 --> 00:11:38,520 Speaker 2: I yeah, so the whole Royale with Cheese. 268 00:11:40,360 --> 00:11:40,680 Speaker 5: Scene. 269 00:11:40,679 --> 00:11:42,480 Speaker 4: So my team name in that baseball league is the 270 00:11:42,559 --> 00:11:45,160 Speaker 4: Royals with cheese. The Royales with cheese. 271 00:11:45,080 --> 00:11:46,480 Speaker 3: Okay, I forget Yeah. 272 00:11:46,760 --> 00:11:51,720 Speaker 2: My two one of for baseball it's Worms above Replacement, 273 00:11:52,040 --> 00:11:54,679 Speaker 2: just because I enjoy the analytics and. 274 00:11:55,040 --> 00:11:55,959 Speaker 3: I thought that was a good one. 275 00:11:56,080 --> 00:11:57,839 Speaker 2: And then the other one is if you ever played 276 00:11:57,880 --> 00:12:01,440 Speaker 2: like backyard baseball or whatever, it's the humongous melonheads. I 277 00:12:01,480 --> 00:12:04,959 Speaker 2: have been many times from UH from the Backyard Sports series. 278 00:12:04,960 --> 00:12:06,520 Speaker 3: All right, that's enough of a detour. Let's get back 279 00:12:06,520 --> 00:12:06,800 Speaker 3: to UH. 280 00:12:06,840 --> 00:12:08,920 Speaker 4: I'm in another league with someone who has that exact 281 00:12:08,920 --> 00:12:11,160 Speaker 4: same teammate, the Mungkus mellonheads. 282 00:12:11,280 --> 00:12:13,680 Speaker 2: Yeah, I was gonna say, I'd be funny if there 283 00:12:13,720 --> 00:12:15,800 Speaker 2: if somebody else said worms abuffrom Placeman. 284 00:12:16,040 --> 00:12:19,040 Speaker 4: Now I also use Mayor League Baseball for mine sometimes 285 00:12:19,520 --> 00:12:22,240 Speaker 4: that's cool. Yeah, Okay, what about Robbie Raye back to 286 00:12:22,360 --> 00:12:23,040 Speaker 4: back to business. 287 00:12:24,520 --> 00:12:26,680 Speaker 3: I probably I'd probably prefer Reynolds. 288 00:12:26,400 --> 00:12:30,280 Speaker 5: Mackenzie, Gore Gore, Ryan Peppiot. 289 00:12:34,200 --> 00:12:36,760 Speaker 2: I'll say Reynolds because I really am buying on him 290 00:12:36,760 --> 00:12:37,520 Speaker 2: as as a bilo. 291 00:12:38,120 --> 00:12:38,400 Speaker 5: Uh. 292 00:12:38,640 --> 00:12:41,800 Speaker 4: Nathan Eovaldi, I forget when I wrote up Nathan Yavaldi 293 00:12:41,800 --> 00:12:42,360 Speaker 4: as a cell high? 294 00:12:42,360 --> 00:12:43,360 Speaker 5: Was that last week? Maybe? 295 00:12:43,559 --> 00:12:47,120 Speaker 4: But Nathaniovaldi? Why have is a cell high? 296 00:12:47,240 --> 00:12:51,199 Speaker 2: I think I prefer Evaldi, But I if you ask 297 00:12:51,280 --> 00:12:53,320 Speaker 2: me again in an hour, I might feel differently. 298 00:12:54,000 --> 00:12:56,280 Speaker 4: I think I talked about Ivaldi. I can these all 299 00:12:56,360 --> 00:12:59,240 Speaker 4: episodes all run together. I talked about him last week. 300 00:12:59,240 --> 00:13:00,880 Speaker 4: I think as a South High. And it's because there's 301 00:13:00,880 --> 00:13:03,320 Speaker 4: some pretty concerning things in his profile, like velocity is 302 00:13:03,320 --> 00:13:06,280 Speaker 4: like way down, and he's like ditching his fastball to 303 00:13:06,320 --> 00:13:08,440 Speaker 4: me makes it seem like he knows his velocities down. 304 00:13:09,600 --> 00:13:10,480 Speaker 4: That's concerning to me. 305 00:13:11,800 --> 00:13:13,120 Speaker 3: I could go either way. 306 00:13:13,520 --> 00:13:15,679 Speaker 2: My gut reaction is Vivaldi, But like I said, I 307 00:13:15,760 --> 00:13:16,920 Speaker 2: might feel differently in an hour. 308 00:13:17,440 --> 00:13:22,240 Speaker 5: Yeah, the last one. That's that's all I got, all right, So. 309 00:13:22,280 --> 00:13:24,760 Speaker 2: My favorite BUYE and I didn't really have a good 310 00:13:24,760 --> 00:13:26,520 Speaker 2: by low this week that I felt like, so I 311 00:13:26,520 --> 00:13:30,160 Speaker 2: went with a bye high. It's Michael Garcia. I think 312 00:13:30,200 --> 00:13:33,400 Speaker 2: he's like, I think it's a very legitimate step forward 313 00:13:33,720 --> 00:13:36,439 Speaker 2: with him as a hitter. Like his batting average is 314 00:13:36,480 --> 00:13:38,680 Speaker 2: almost one hundred points higher than it was last year, 315 00:13:38,960 --> 00:13:41,760 Speaker 2: but his expecting batty, his expected batting average is even 316 00:13:41,840 --> 00:13:44,600 Speaker 2: higher than his actual batting averages. He's currently hitting three 317 00:13:44,679 --> 00:13:47,440 Speaker 2: twenty he's expected his three twenty eight, which is ninety 318 00:13:47,480 --> 00:13:51,520 Speaker 2: eighth percentile. His average exsit velocity is over ninety three 319 00:13:51,559 --> 00:13:53,679 Speaker 2: miles per hour. He's ninety second percentile. 320 00:13:53,720 --> 00:13:53,960 Speaker 3: There. 321 00:13:54,280 --> 00:13:56,520 Speaker 2: That was really, you know, intriguing to me. This is 322 00:13:56,520 --> 00:13:58,760 Speaker 2: the guy who hit seven home runs last season, four 323 00:13:58,800 --> 00:14:01,720 Speaker 2: home runs the year before. Over five hundred played appearances 324 00:14:01,720 --> 00:14:04,360 Speaker 2: in both of those years, so full seasons, a total 325 00:14:04,360 --> 00:14:06,600 Speaker 2: of eleven home runs across two seasons. He's already got 326 00:14:06,600 --> 00:14:09,160 Speaker 2: four home runs this year. Again, the average is taking 327 00:14:09,160 --> 00:14:11,400 Speaker 2: a huge step forward. We know the Steelers are gonna 328 00:14:11,400 --> 00:14:13,800 Speaker 2: be He's gonna get thirty stilen bases, assuming he says healthy. 329 00:14:13,840 --> 00:14:16,400 Speaker 2: That is, you know, he's still on pace for that 330 00:14:16,400 --> 00:14:19,200 Speaker 2: that nothing has changed there. He's only twenty five years old. Like, 331 00:14:19,200 --> 00:14:21,280 Speaker 2: I think it's very possible he's taking a step forward, 332 00:14:21,520 --> 00:14:23,840 Speaker 2: especially when the quality of contact looks so much better 333 00:14:24,440 --> 00:14:26,880 Speaker 2: and it has the recent seasons. He's also depending on 334 00:14:26,920 --> 00:14:29,280 Speaker 2: your formatter. Actually, I'm not sure if it's format depending, 335 00:14:29,320 --> 00:14:31,240 Speaker 2: but at least in the game the leagues, I'm playing 336 00:14:31,240 --> 00:14:34,880 Speaker 2: in eligible in multiple positions, second base, third base, outfield, 337 00:14:35,040 --> 00:14:37,200 Speaker 2: Like this is a very helpful. I mean, especially a 338 00:14:37,240 --> 00:14:40,280 Speaker 2: third base really, given how tricky the corners have been 339 00:14:40,400 --> 00:14:42,080 Speaker 2: for a lot of people this year. But I just 340 00:14:42,080 --> 00:14:43,880 Speaker 2: think this is a legitimate step Forward's the lowest strike 341 00:14:43,920 --> 00:14:46,480 Speaker 2: out rate of his career thirteen point nine percent, the 342 00:14:46,560 --> 00:14:49,200 Speaker 2: highest walk rate of his career ten point four percent. 343 00:14:50,080 --> 00:14:53,240 Speaker 2: Those are fairly significant changes from what it was last year. 344 00:14:54,040 --> 00:14:57,640 Speaker 2: And yeah, I just think nothing in this is telling 345 00:14:57,680 --> 00:15:01,880 Speaker 2: me that this is a regression candidate. And I want 346 00:15:01,880 --> 00:15:03,840 Speaker 2: to be in on this. I'm willing to give up 347 00:15:04,200 --> 00:15:07,720 Speaker 2: players of value to get Garcia on my team because 348 00:15:07,720 --> 00:15:09,720 Speaker 2: I think this is very legitimate. I think he's going 349 00:15:09,760 --> 00:15:11,880 Speaker 2: to be like, again, you know, you're getting the thirty 350 00:15:11,880 --> 00:15:14,080 Speaker 2: stolen bases. I think you're gonna get close to a 351 00:15:14,080 --> 00:15:16,600 Speaker 2: three hundred average, maybe even higher if he, you know, 352 00:15:16,640 --> 00:15:19,800 Speaker 2: kind of maintains a hot streak. And I don't know 353 00:15:19,840 --> 00:15:22,160 Speaker 2: what the home runs will end at, but I certainly 354 00:15:22,160 --> 00:15:25,360 Speaker 2: think it'll be double digits and maybe. 355 00:15:25,080 --> 00:15:27,720 Speaker 3: Even getting, you know, close to twenty. 356 00:15:27,880 --> 00:15:29,480 Speaker 2: I don't know that I'm gonna predict that he gets 357 00:15:29,480 --> 00:15:32,400 Speaker 2: over twenty, but if he sits there with I don't know, 358 00:15:32,440 --> 00:15:35,280 Speaker 2: like sixteen or seventeen homers and thirty five stolen bases 359 00:15:35,280 --> 00:15:37,400 Speaker 2: and a near three hundred average, you're gonna be really 360 00:15:37,400 --> 00:15:38,640 Speaker 2: happy you have you have MIKEL. 361 00:15:38,640 --> 00:15:39,840 Speaker 3: Garcia on your team. 362 00:15:40,320 --> 00:15:42,600 Speaker 4: Yeah, it's it's I've always kind of like put my 363 00:15:42,600 --> 00:15:43,320 Speaker 4: nose up at MIKEL. 364 00:15:43,360 --> 00:15:43,800 Speaker 5: Garcia. 365 00:15:44,320 --> 00:15:46,640 Speaker 4: So I knew he was doing very well this year 366 00:15:46,640 --> 00:15:48,800 Speaker 4: because I've seen his name everywhere. But I haven't really 367 00:15:48,880 --> 00:15:54,000 Speaker 4: like dug into thet the names or dug into the 368 00:15:54,080 --> 00:15:55,840 Speaker 4: numbers because I've always just kind of like me, like, 369 00:15:55,840 --> 00:15:57,520 Speaker 4: he's Michael Garcia and I canna see a whole lot. 370 00:15:57,560 --> 00:15:59,960 Speaker 4: So it's interesting to see the power up contends. It's 371 00:16:00,000 --> 00:16:02,320 Speaker 4: rejection seem to have him with about like seven more, 372 00:16:02,320 --> 00:16:04,160 Speaker 4: which will put him at eleven, so double digits like 373 00:16:04,200 --> 00:16:04,840 Speaker 4: you're expecting. 374 00:16:05,240 --> 00:16:05,840 Speaker 5: It's pretty rare. 375 00:16:05,880 --> 00:16:07,560 Speaker 4: You see a guy badding three twenty three with an 376 00:16:07,600 --> 00:16:10,600 Speaker 4: expected average that's higher than three twenty three, So that's 377 00:16:10,640 --> 00:16:13,280 Speaker 4: pretty interesting. It points to it being legit, Like you're saying, 378 00:16:15,120 --> 00:16:17,800 Speaker 4: I wonder if the you know, if the power is 379 00:16:17,840 --> 00:16:19,880 Speaker 4: going to stay. But it's also like, if you're showing 380 00:16:19,920 --> 00:16:22,240 Speaker 4: this kind of power in April, you know, when it's 381 00:16:22,240 --> 00:16:25,400 Speaker 4: like traditionally colder around the country, maybe you see a 382 00:16:25,400 --> 00:16:29,240 Speaker 4: little bit more power in July and August. So not 383 00:16:29,320 --> 00:16:32,480 Speaker 4: a name I was really considering, certainly not a by 384 00:16:32,560 --> 00:16:33,440 Speaker 4: low I would say. 385 00:16:34,840 --> 00:16:37,280 Speaker 3: I put it. I say the bye high, which we are. 386 00:16:37,240 --> 00:16:43,240 Speaker 4: Allowed cheating once again. Yeah, I'm intrigued. Like I said, 387 00:16:43,240 --> 00:16:45,560 Speaker 4: someone I wasn't really considering until you wrote him up. 388 00:16:45,560 --> 00:16:47,000 Speaker 4: But now that I look at it, I can kind 389 00:16:47,000 --> 00:16:48,200 Speaker 4: of see where you're coming from. 390 00:16:48,600 --> 00:16:50,800 Speaker 6: I didn't think the pain from the shingles rash what 391 00:16:50,960 --> 00:16:54,960 Speaker 6: affects simple everyday tasks like bathing, getting dressed, or even 392 00:16:55,040 --> 00:16:59,040 Speaker 6: walking around. I was wrong, Though not everyone at risk 393 00:16:59,080 --> 00:17:01,760 Speaker 6: will develop it. Ninety nine percent of people over the 394 00:17:01,800 --> 00:17:04,720 Speaker 6: age of fifty already had the virus the cause of shinkles, 395 00:17:04,960 --> 00:17:08,160 Speaker 6: and it could reactivate at any time. I developed it 396 00:17:08,240 --> 00:17:11,800 Speaker 6: and the blistering rash lasted for weeks. Don't learn the 397 00:17:11,880 --> 00:17:14,919 Speaker 6: hard way like I did. Talk to your doctor orr 398 00:17:14,960 --> 00:17:17,960 Speaker 6: pharmacist today sponsored by GSK. 399 00:17:19,119 --> 00:17:22,840 Speaker 2: He's pulling the ball more, you know, particularly in the air, 400 00:17:23,040 --> 00:17:25,960 Speaker 2: which you know that kind of makes sense in terms 401 00:17:25,960 --> 00:17:28,880 Speaker 2: of increased power. It's interesting looking at how he's doing 402 00:17:28,920 --> 00:17:33,480 Speaker 2: against certain pitches. Last year he was worse against fastballs, 403 00:17:33,480 --> 00:17:35,800 Speaker 2: which is what he saw most often, of course, batting 404 00:17:35,840 --> 00:17:40,600 Speaker 2: two fifteen. This year he's second best against fastballs, batting 405 00:17:40,640 --> 00:17:43,800 Speaker 2: three twenty eight, so that's been a real turnaround for him. 406 00:17:44,119 --> 00:17:47,200 Speaker 2: He's also better against breaking balls than he was last year, 407 00:17:47,520 --> 00:17:49,720 Speaker 2: and he's worse against auspeedan last year. Is like everything 408 00:17:49,760 --> 00:17:51,479 Speaker 2: is flipped from what he was doing last year very 409 00:17:51,480 --> 00:17:54,960 Speaker 2: well to what he's doing this year very well. But again, 410 00:17:55,200 --> 00:17:57,720 Speaker 2: I just I want to listen because I think it'll 411 00:17:57,760 --> 00:17:59,080 Speaker 2: be very easy to look at what he'd done in 412 00:17:59,119 --> 00:18:02,280 Speaker 2: previous seasons and say, oh, it's a nice hot streak. 413 00:18:02,359 --> 00:18:04,840 Speaker 3: Should I be selling high on him? I'm saying no. 414 00:18:05,080 --> 00:18:08,040 Speaker 2: Take the other side by high on him where you 415 00:18:08,280 --> 00:18:10,359 Speaker 2: where you're able to, because I think he's going to 416 00:18:10,359 --> 00:18:12,679 Speaker 2: be a very very valuable fantasy asset the rest of 417 00:18:12,680 --> 00:18:13,160 Speaker 2: the way. 418 00:18:14,560 --> 00:18:16,040 Speaker 3: Right, Who is your favorite cell high? 419 00:18:16,440 --> 00:18:18,280 Speaker 4: My favorite cell high that I wrote up this week 420 00:18:18,440 --> 00:18:23,000 Speaker 4: is Paul Goldschmidt, who, at age thirty seven, looks like 421 00:18:23,040 --> 00:18:24,600 Speaker 4: a player he's never been in his entire life. It 422 00:18:24,600 --> 00:18:29,080 Speaker 4: looks just like a completely different player. He's batting three 423 00:18:29,160 --> 00:18:33,280 Speaker 4: forty one, which I don't think is sustainable. Granted expect 424 00:18:33,280 --> 00:18:35,400 Speaker 4: the batting average two ninety three, so still very very 425 00:18:35,400 --> 00:18:38,120 Speaker 4: good babbit. When I wrote it up it was four 426 00:18:38,119 --> 00:18:39,560 Speaker 4: to fifteen. It is down down to four or four, 427 00:18:39,600 --> 00:18:41,400 Speaker 4: but also unsustainable, not going to be there. 428 00:18:42,760 --> 00:18:43,880 Speaker 5: And then he's. 429 00:18:44,160 --> 00:18:47,480 Speaker 4: Really really st you know, cut down on his strikeouts. 430 00:18:47,680 --> 00:18:51,080 Speaker 4: In a previous segment, we were talking about a player who, 431 00:18:51,840 --> 00:18:54,399 Speaker 4: you know, we had seen them cut down on their 432 00:18:54,400 --> 00:19:00,320 Speaker 4: strikeout rate without really you know, sacrificing anything else. We 433 00:19:00,359 --> 00:19:05,080 Speaker 4: are seeing Paul Goltimate sacrifice other things by cutting down 434 00:19:05,119 --> 00:19:07,400 Speaker 4: on his strikeouts. His hard hit rate is twenty three 435 00:19:07,400 --> 00:19:09,720 Speaker 4: point two percent. Last season, which is not even a 436 00:19:09,760 --> 00:19:12,360 Speaker 4: great season for him, is forty percent, and so that's 437 00:19:12,359 --> 00:19:15,080 Speaker 4: a drastic change, and that points to a complete change 438 00:19:15,080 --> 00:19:18,400 Speaker 4: and approach. I think it's a player who just realizes, 439 00:19:18,480 --> 00:19:21,200 Speaker 4: like I'm thirty seven, I can't you know, if I 440 00:19:21,240 --> 00:19:22,720 Speaker 4: want to stick around and play baseball, I'm gonna have 441 00:19:22,760 --> 00:19:24,000 Speaker 4: to be a different player. And so I think he's 442 00:19:24,040 --> 00:19:26,880 Speaker 4: really cut down on his swing. He's focusing on making contact. 443 00:19:27,440 --> 00:19:30,680 Speaker 4: He's walking the same amount but not striking out as much, 444 00:19:31,280 --> 00:19:32,480 Speaker 4: but making weaker contact. 445 00:19:32,720 --> 00:19:34,760 Speaker 5: And he only has three home runs. He also has 446 00:19:34,760 --> 00:19:35,640 Speaker 5: two solent bases. 447 00:19:37,280 --> 00:19:39,520 Speaker 4: I think he's to sell high because of the early numbers, 448 00:19:39,880 --> 00:19:42,760 Speaker 4: because the batting average is fantastic, only three home runs. 449 00:19:42,760 --> 00:19:45,520 Speaker 4: But I think what you're gonna see if you start 450 00:19:45,520 --> 00:19:48,720 Speaker 4: talking about like trading him. I think other fantasy managers 451 00:19:48,760 --> 00:19:50,479 Speaker 4: are going to look at him and say, all right, 452 00:19:50,520 --> 00:19:52,240 Speaker 4: like really good average, like not a ton of power yet, 453 00:19:52,240 --> 00:19:53,800 Speaker 4: but like this is Paul Golchiman, Like the power is 454 00:19:53,840 --> 00:19:55,080 Speaker 4: going to be there. I'm going to get twenty paus 455 00:19:55,080 --> 00:19:57,560 Speaker 4: home runs. I don't think you are. I don't think 456 00:19:57,560 --> 00:19:59,639 Speaker 4: those home runs are coming back. It's kind of the 457 00:19:59,640 --> 00:20:02,119 Speaker 4: opposite mikeel Garcia, where you know, four home runs, like, hey, 458 00:20:02,160 --> 00:20:05,000 Speaker 4: it was pretty good for mikel Garcia. Paul Goltrans has 459 00:20:05,040 --> 00:20:08,600 Speaker 4: three and despite being in that teen tiny ballpark, I 460 00:20:08,640 --> 00:20:10,160 Speaker 4: don't think we're going to see. 461 00:20:10,440 --> 00:20:12,000 Speaker 5: Twenty home runs for him anymore, you know. 462 00:20:12,040 --> 00:20:13,440 Speaker 4: I think he might end up with like a dozen 463 00:20:13,520 --> 00:20:14,920 Speaker 4: or in the teens, or maybe even less than that, 464 00:20:15,000 --> 00:20:17,800 Speaker 4: depending on how it goes in the summer. And so 465 00:20:17,880 --> 00:20:21,119 Speaker 4: I think now is the peak time to trade him 466 00:20:21,160 --> 00:20:22,960 Speaker 4: because he has a really high average. I think people 467 00:20:22,960 --> 00:20:25,000 Speaker 4: are still going to project out that power, and so 468 00:20:25,040 --> 00:20:26,440 Speaker 4: if you sell him now, I think you can get 469 00:20:26,440 --> 00:20:27,040 Speaker 4: your best return. 470 00:20:28,480 --> 00:20:30,200 Speaker 3: I think this is a great call. Let me ask 471 00:20:30,200 --> 00:20:30,480 Speaker 3: you this. 472 00:20:30,680 --> 00:20:34,879 Speaker 2: If he finishes let's say fourteen home runs and seven 473 00:20:35,040 --> 00:20:39,920 Speaker 2: stolen bases an average I don't know, two ninety, Let's say, 474 00:20:40,920 --> 00:20:43,080 Speaker 2: where does that fall for you amongst the type of 475 00:20:43,080 --> 00:20:44,800 Speaker 2: first basemen you'd like to have the rest of the way, 476 00:20:44,800 --> 00:20:47,480 Speaker 2: because it is not a particularly I mean, it's gotten 477 00:20:47,520 --> 00:20:51,040 Speaker 2: stronger this season with you know, like you know, Nick 478 00:20:51,080 --> 00:20:52,920 Speaker 2: Kurtz having his really hot start and then getting called 479 00:20:53,000 --> 00:20:54,760 Speaker 2: up and like got you know, somebody like Soda Show 480 00:20:54,800 --> 00:20:56,480 Speaker 2: who's maybe cooled off a bit, but like hot start. 481 00:20:56,520 --> 00:20:58,359 Speaker 2: So the position looks stronger than maybe it did at 482 00:20:58,359 --> 00:21:02,280 Speaker 2: the beginning of April. But still there's you know, it's 483 00:21:02,600 --> 00:21:05,960 Speaker 2: a it's a not very sturdy position. 484 00:21:06,160 --> 00:21:06,520 Speaker 3: I think. 485 00:21:06,560 --> 00:21:09,119 Speaker 2: So what I just described, if that is the player 486 00:21:09,240 --> 00:21:11,720 Speaker 2: Paul goldschmid ad, how likely are you to want a 487 00:21:11,720 --> 00:21:14,040 Speaker 2: player like that starting for you in let's say your 488 00:21:14,080 --> 00:21:15,160 Speaker 2: corner infield spot. 489 00:21:15,720 --> 00:21:17,399 Speaker 5: I mean, the average is what helps. 490 00:21:18,800 --> 00:21:21,399 Speaker 4: It also helps that he has been betting lead off 491 00:21:21,760 --> 00:21:23,840 Speaker 4: in a good Yankees lineup, or it looks like he's 492 00:21:23,920 --> 00:21:26,240 Speaker 4: moved to clean up more recently. But he had been 493 00:21:26,359 --> 00:21:27,760 Speaker 4: betting lead off for a while, but now I guess 494 00:21:27,760 --> 00:21:32,000 Speaker 4: he's betting clean up. Maybe it's just lead off against lefties. 495 00:21:32,040 --> 00:21:33,639 Speaker 4: Now it looks like the last start against a lefty 496 00:21:33,800 --> 00:21:34,320 Speaker 4: was winning. 497 00:21:34,320 --> 00:21:35,000 Speaker 5: Batted leadoff. 498 00:21:35,080 --> 00:21:37,760 Speaker 4: But either way, lead off against for the Yankees or 499 00:21:37,960 --> 00:21:40,520 Speaker 4: clean up for the Yankees both good spots to be. 500 00:21:41,480 --> 00:21:45,000 Speaker 4: But uh, I just feel like maybe it's me just 501 00:21:45,080 --> 00:21:47,360 Speaker 4: being like an old old man. But like I see 502 00:21:47,560 --> 00:21:50,080 Speaker 4: like first base and I want more power. I want 503 00:21:50,119 --> 00:21:52,680 Speaker 4: more power out of that spot. Like if I wanted 504 00:21:52,720 --> 00:21:54,600 Speaker 4: that production, I would have just drafted Louis. 505 00:21:54,359 --> 00:21:57,119 Speaker 3: Urryt's are you older than Paul gold Schmidt? 506 00:21:57,760 --> 00:21:59,080 Speaker 5: I am older than Paul Goldchmith. 507 00:22:00,080 --> 00:22:03,000 Speaker 3: Wow, how does that feel? We're talking about this guy 508 00:22:03,119 --> 00:22:04,160 Speaker 3: like he's he's done? 509 00:22:04,840 --> 00:22:05,040 Speaker 5: I know. 510 00:22:05,680 --> 00:22:07,840 Speaker 4: I mean, I'm very close to the same age as 511 00:22:07,840 --> 00:22:11,159 Speaker 4: Paul Golchmate and I can't play Major League baseball although 512 00:22:11,600 --> 00:22:13,520 Speaker 4: you know we had the same shoulder surgery. I just 513 00:22:13,600 --> 00:22:16,000 Speaker 4: threw a ball yesterday for the first time since before 514 00:22:16,040 --> 00:22:16,439 Speaker 4: my surgery. 515 00:22:16,920 --> 00:22:17,200 Speaker 5: Rats. 516 00:22:17,320 --> 00:22:19,359 Speaker 3: Yeah, yeah that PT. 517 00:22:19,760 --> 00:22:21,800 Speaker 2: I was at PT yesterday and they were talking about 518 00:22:21,840 --> 00:22:25,520 Speaker 2: we're we're very close to the point in the recovery 519 00:22:25,520 --> 00:22:28,840 Speaker 2: where I'm allowed to start doing strength stuff as opposed 520 00:22:28,840 --> 00:22:33,240 Speaker 2: to basically just like assisted stretching. So we'll we'll see 521 00:22:33,280 --> 00:22:33,880 Speaker 2: how that goes. 522 00:22:34,000 --> 00:22:36,040 Speaker 3: This is I just want to be out there, like 523 00:22:36,080 --> 00:22:38,359 Speaker 3: playing softball. Hitt and Dinger is like I hate I 524 00:22:38,440 --> 00:22:39,439 Speaker 3: hate being on the shelf. 525 00:22:39,880 --> 00:22:43,360 Speaker 4: Yeah yeah, even being around the house with an arm 526 00:22:43,400 --> 00:22:45,200 Speaker 4: that barely works, like it's a card to lift my kids. 527 00:22:45,200 --> 00:22:46,760 Speaker 5: So I'm looking forward to getting my strength pas. 528 00:22:47,480 --> 00:22:49,760 Speaker 2: I really struggle to walk my dog because he's very 529 00:22:49,840 --> 00:22:53,000 Speaker 2: reactive to their dogs now like shockingly, you know, after 530 00:22:53,640 --> 00:22:56,280 Speaker 2: well cause all this, but like it is very hard 531 00:22:56,320 --> 00:22:56,720 Speaker 2: to only have. 532 00:22:56,760 --> 00:22:58,680 Speaker 3: One arm holding onto him, I will say. 533 00:22:58,680 --> 00:23:00,879 Speaker 2: And I can't even imagine with like kids who are 534 00:23:01,080 --> 00:23:03,639 Speaker 2: like making their own demands and you know, having to 535 00:23:03,920 --> 00:23:07,480 Speaker 2: take care of them. So uh yeah, I don't. I 536 00:23:07,520 --> 00:23:10,359 Speaker 2: don't envy up really either of us recovering from short surgery. 537 00:23:10,440 --> 00:23:11,880 Speaker 5: It sucks. Do you want to hear the names? 538 00:23:11,880 --> 00:23:16,560 Speaker 4: I would, yeah, aim to swap for or send him for, 539 00:23:16,840 --> 00:23:19,000 Speaker 4: Send Paul Golchman away to receive these pitchers in return. 540 00:23:19,800 --> 00:23:21,320 Speaker 5: Yeah, Freddie peralta. 541 00:23:22,640 --> 00:23:23,080 Speaker 3: Peralta. 542 00:23:24,200 --> 00:23:25,480 Speaker 4: Do you think you can make that trade though? Do 543 00:23:25,520 --> 00:23:27,960 Speaker 4: you think golt Schmid would get your par aalta? Or 544 00:23:28,040 --> 00:23:28,840 Speaker 4: is that aiming too high? 545 00:23:28,880 --> 00:23:30,200 Speaker 5: I aimed kind of high on some of these. 546 00:23:31,760 --> 00:23:34,680 Speaker 2: I think it might be aiming too high, but I 547 00:23:34,760 --> 00:23:37,960 Speaker 2: don't think it's like a disrespectful thing if that person 548 00:23:38,040 --> 00:23:42,440 Speaker 2: has a real need at first base and or if 549 00:23:42,480 --> 00:23:44,240 Speaker 2: you yeah, if they have a real need at first 550 00:23:44,280 --> 00:23:46,800 Speaker 2: base and depth of pitching, I don't think it's a 551 00:23:46,840 --> 00:23:48,800 Speaker 2: disrespectful offer. I think it might be aiming too high 552 00:23:48,800 --> 00:23:50,920 Speaker 2: and it might just get quickly rejected. But I don't 553 00:23:50,920 --> 00:23:53,120 Speaker 2: think it's like, seriously, dude, like you're insulted. I don't 554 00:23:53,160 --> 00:23:56,480 Speaker 2: think it's that. That's kind of the in which case 555 00:23:56,520 --> 00:23:58,320 Speaker 2: I think it's worth sending. Like you never know, so 556 00:23:58,400 --> 00:24:00,520 Speaker 2: they might they might, really they might look it and say, 557 00:24:00,640 --> 00:24:03,160 Speaker 2: Paul gold Schimith is hitting three forty yeah, I'll take 558 00:24:03,280 --> 00:24:03,760 Speaker 2: sign me up. 559 00:24:03,880 --> 00:24:05,520 Speaker 3: So yeah, it's worth standing. 560 00:24:05,840 --> 00:24:07,960 Speaker 4: Yeah, And that's that's that's a good point where like 561 00:24:08,240 --> 00:24:10,800 Speaker 4: depth of pitching and need this position. That's that's the 562 00:24:10,840 --> 00:24:13,000 Speaker 4: assumption I'm making when I when I put these offers together, 563 00:24:13,040 --> 00:24:14,720 Speaker 4: It's like I see a lot of trade offers like 564 00:24:14,720 --> 00:24:16,320 Speaker 4: would you trade this picture for this picture? 565 00:24:16,359 --> 00:24:18,960 Speaker 5: And I'm like, like, I don't. I don't. That's not 566 00:24:19,000 --> 00:24:20,560 Speaker 5: really how I trade, I think. 567 00:24:20,760 --> 00:24:21,919 Speaker 3: And I've said this before. 568 00:24:22,320 --> 00:24:23,679 Speaker 2: It might have been on the Football Show, it might 569 00:24:23,720 --> 00:24:27,360 Speaker 2: not have been on this show, but I think too 570 00:24:27,520 --> 00:24:32,440 Speaker 2: many people are like their value pilled. All people care 571 00:24:32,480 --> 00:24:34,840 Speaker 2: about is what is the value this play in? 572 00:24:34,840 --> 00:24:35,160 Speaker 5: The value? 573 00:24:35,160 --> 00:24:39,159 Speaker 2: Am I winning the trade as opposed to sometimes losing 574 00:24:39,240 --> 00:24:44,000 Speaker 2: a trade in strictly talking about value makes your team better, 575 00:24:44,160 --> 00:24:47,680 Speaker 2: and the point is winning. Like the example I like 576 00:24:47,760 --> 00:24:50,480 Speaker 2: to say is like, you know, if a team is 577 00:24:50,600 --> 00:24:53,760 Speaker 2: getting and this is think of professional teams, not fantasy teams, 578 00:24:53,800 --> 00:24:56,600 Speaker 2: but if a team is getting two hundred million dollars 579 00:24:56,640 --> 00:24:59,160 Speaker 2: of value of their players and they spent three hundred 580 00:24:59,160 --> 00:25:01,840 Speaker 2: million to get it, But then your team is getting 581 00:25:01,920 --> 00:25:04,040 Speaker 2: one hundred and fifty million value of players and you 582 00:25:04,080 --> 00:25:06,760 Speaker 2: spent one hundred million to get it. That second team 583 00:25:06,840 --> 00:25:08,920 Speaker 2: is not doing a better job just because they're actually 584 00:25:08,960 --> 00:25:11,480 Speaker 2: getting more bang for their buck. The other team is 585 00:25:11,480 --> 00:25:14,199 Speaker 2: still fifty million in value better in terms of their players, 586 00:25:14,520 --> 00:25:18,040 Speaker 2: Like make don't be worried too much about that within reason, 587 00:25:18,160 --> 00:25:20,640 Speaker 2: of course, Like just because you might need a first 588 00:25:20,680 --> 00:25:23,399 Speaker 2: baseman if you have a couple extra outfielders, you know, 589 00:25:23,680 --> 00:25:25,960 Speaker 2: don't trade air and Judge for Paul Goldschmith, right, Like, 590 00:25:26,040 --> 00:25:29,399 Speaker 2: obviously we have to be reasonable about this to a degree. 591 00:25:29,760 --> 00:25:35,160 Speaker 2: But in general, if you have eight really good starting pitchers, 592 00:25:35,160 --> 00:25:36,760 Speaker 2: because you hit on a couple guys late, you picked 593 00:25:36,840 --> 00:25:41,320 Speaker 2: up Max Meyer, you're feeling great, and you have nobody 594 00:25:41,440 --> 00:25:45,040 Speaker 2: at first base, you are starting like somebody terrible because 595 00:25:45,080 --> 00:25:47,640 Speaker 2: your guy got hurt or whatever it is, be willing 596 00:25:47,720 --> 00:25:49,560 Speaker 2: to move one of those guys, even if it's a 597 00:25:49,600 --> 00:25:52,119 Speaker 2: little worse on a trade value chart. And it's a 598 00:25:52,200 --> 00:25:55,639 Speaker 2: very helpful tool for a baseline here, but I just 599 00:25:55,640 --> 00:25:58,240 Speaker 2: feel really passionate about that. It really drives me nuts 600 00:25:58,280 --> 00:25:59,960 Speaker 2: when I come up with it. I think, as a 601 00:26:00,240 --> 00:26:03,200 Speaker 2: is a trade offer where I'm not caring about value. 602 00:26:03,240 --> 00:26:05,720 Speaker 2: I'm caring about are we making both of our teams 603 00:26:05,760 --> 00:26:08,080 Speaker 2: better here? And people say oh well, no, this guy 604 00:26:08,160 --> 00:26:11,159 Speaker 2: is ranked higher, so that's an auto reject. I'm like, 605 00:26:11,200 --> 00:26:13,680 Speaker 2: but you're not starting him and you never will, right like. 606 00:26:14,240 --> 00:26:17,080 Speaker 2: So that would just be my plea to everybody when 607 00:26:17,160 --> 00:26:19,520 Speaker 2: making trades and when thinking about accepting trades. You know, 608 00:26:19,680 --> 00:26:21,919 Speaker 2: offers people make to you, what does it make your 609 00:26:21,960 --> 00:26:22,360 Speaker 2: team better? 610 00:26:22,480 --> 00:26:22,600 Speaker 5: Yes? 611 00:26:22,720 --> 00:26:25,639 Speaker 2: Or no? And maybe there's different considerations in a dynasty format, 612 00:26:25,680 --> 00:26:26,840 Speaker 2: But does it make your team better? 613 00:26:27,320 --> 00:26:31,600 Speaker 3: Yes or no? If it's yes, don't overthink value. 614 00:26:31,920 --> 00:26:32,160 Speaker 5: Yeah. 615 00:26:32,280 --> 00:26:35,119 Speaker 4: And in this exact scenario, I traded Freddi Perulta for 616 00:26:35,200 --> 00:26:38,040 Speaker 4: Tyler Suderstrom recently because I had extra pitching and I 617 00:26:38,160 --> 00:26:41,280 Speaker 4: really really really needed hitting, especially power, And so in 618 00:26:41,320 --> 00:26:43,560 Speaker 4: that situation, I knew and I offered the trade. 619 00:26:43,600 --> 00:26:44,159 Speaker 5: I knew I was. 620 00:26:44,200 --> 00:26:47,600 Speaker 4: Offering more than what Tylers Strodan is probably worth. But 621 00:26:47,720 --> 00:26:49,560 Speaker 4: I needed the bat more than I needed Freddy Prolt. 622 00:26:50,560 --> 00:26:53,080 Speaker 2: And I think in baseball too, And this is a 623 00:26:53,200 --> 00:26:55,280 Speaker 2: key difference in in baseball and football. I think I 624 00:26:55,320 --> 00:26:58,240 Speaker 2: think in football, at least in my experience with leagues, 625 00:26:58,520 --> 00:27:01,280 Speaker 2: if I, let's say, I and like, you know what, 626 00:27:01,320 --> 00:27:03,440 Speaker 2: I need to rebuild, and I don't want to have 627 00:27:03,480 --> 00:27:05,360 Speaker 2: this running back on my team, I think you can 628 00:27:05,440 --> 00:27:08,640 Speaker 2: send out a kind of message to the league and say, 629 00:27:09,080 --> 00:27:10,840 Speaker 2: you know, this guy's on the block, give me your 630 00:27:10,880 --> 00:27:14,120 Speaker 2: best offer, and you will get some responses. In baseball, 631 00:27:14,320 --> 00:27:16,720 Speaker 2: I don't Again, in my experience, I haven't seen it 632 00:27:16,760 --> 00:27:19,440 Speaker 2: necessarily work as well like that. I think you need 633 00:27:19,560 --> 00:27:22,560 Speaker 2: to be actually actively making offers and looking around and 634 00:27:22,800 --> 00:27:26,320 Speaker 2: trying to identify which teams could use the first basement, 635 00:27:26,400 --> 00:27:27,800 Speaker 2: because I don't think a lot of people like I 636 00:27:27,840 --> 00:27:29,879 Speaker 2: don't think people are as likely to say, like to 637 00:27:30,000 --> 00:27:32,480 Speaker 2: do the effort for you. I would say, so if 638 00:27:32,520 --> 00:27:34,160 Speaker 2: you go through and find somebody and make the offer, 639 00:27:34,240 --> 00:27:36,000 Speaker 2: don't feel like, oh man, if I put him on 640 00:27:36,040 --> 00:27:39,280 Speaker 2: the block, you know you're not lowering your ceiling by 641 00:27:39,400 --> 00:27:42,240 Speaker 2: not putting it out to everybody and let the offers 642 00:27:42,280 --> 00:27:43,720 Speaker 2: come rolling in. I don't think it works that way 643 00:27:43,760 --> 00:27:44,240 Speaker 2: in baseball. 644 00:27:44,800 --> 00:27:47,680 Speaker 5: We really struck a nerve there with you, didn't we Well, 645 00:27:47,960 --> 00:27:48,879 Speaker 5: I just you know. 646 00:27:49,320 --> 00:27:51,679 Speaker 2: I am passionate about it, and it was a it's 647 00:27:51,720 --> 00:27:54,600 Speaker 2: a topic that I don't often, you know, get a 648 00:27:54,720 --> 00:27:57,080 Speaker 2: chance to take sixty seconds and go in on. 649 00:27:57,320 --> 00:27:59,760 Speaker 3: So you know, I was happy for the kind of 650 00:28:00,080 --> 00:28:02,040 Speaker 3: tiss to mention. 651 00:28:01,960 --> 00:28:05,320 Speaker 2: That it's It's not like It's a frustration of mine 652 00:28:05,359 --> 00:28:07,720 Speaker 2: when people are like, I'm like, I'm like, this makes 653 00:28:07,800 --> 00:28:10,719 Speaker 2: both of our teams better, and they agree, but oh, 654 00:28:10,760 --> 00:28:12,920 Speaker 2: I'm not winning. The people care so much about winning 655 00:28:12,920 --> 00:28:15,359 Speaker 2: the trade and not enough about winning their league. 656 00:28:16,680 --> 00:28:18,160 Speaker 5: You should put that on a shirt or something. 657 00:28:19,200 --> 00:28:22,639 Speaker 2: Yeah, well, it's I also feel that way about Michael Lias, 658 00:28:22,760 --> 00:28:24,960 Speaker 2: so maybe that's extra White strikes a nerve with me. 659 00:28:25,880 --> 00:28:27,000 Speaker 5: What about George Kirby. 660 00:28:29,760 --> 00:28:33,040 Speaker 2: I'd rather have Kirby, but I I mean, given obviously, 661 00:28:34,000 --> 00:28:35,800 Speaker 2: you know, the injury stuff to start the year, I 662 00:28:36,080 --> 00:28:39,320 Speaker 2: think that's a more maybe doable trade. Maybe, but I'd 663 00:28:39,400 --> 00:28:41,240 Speaker 2: rather have Kirby and that swing for you upside the 664 00:28:41,280 --> 00:28:49,720 Speaker 2: rest of the way. Ryan, I'd probably go Ryan's. 665 00:28:47,920 --> 00:28:49,400 Speaker 3: Right, Yeah, Yeah, I would go Ryan. Not probably, I 666 00:28:49,400 --> 00:28:49,840 Speaker 3: would go Ryan. 667 00:28:49,880 --> 00:28:51,280 Speaker 4: I think that might be another one where I'm aiming 668 00:28:51,280 --> 00:28:53,040 Speaker 4: a little high. I think this one's realistic, though. What 669 00:28:53,040 --> 00:28:53,760 Speaker 4: about Zach Allen. 670 00:28:57,280 --> 00:28:58,920 Speaker 2: I think if I had a real need at first base, 671 00:28:59,120 --> 00:29:01,800 Speaker 2: I might take Goldman on that one, But in a vacuum, 672 00:29:01,960 --> 00:29:02,920 Speaker 2: I'd rather have Gallon. 673 00:29:03,320 --> 00:29:03,520 Speaker 5: Yeah. 674 00:29:03,600 --> 00:29:05,760 Speaker 4: I think his start has been inconsistent enough with some 675 00:29:05,880 --> 00:29:10,240 Speaker 4: concerning things that it's a realistic trade. Kevin Gosman. 676 00:29:11,800 --> 00:29:14,520 Speaker 3: I would rather have Gossman. I know it's been it's 677 00:29:14,560 --> 00:29:15,160 Speaker 3: been up or down. 678 00:29:15,200 --> 00:29:19,080 Speaker 2: He's had some really nice starts, though, and that's enough 679 00:29:19,160 --> 00:29:21,320 Speaker 2: for me to prefer him to somebody that I think 680 00:29:21,400 --> 00:29:22,239 Speaker 2: is going to regress a lot. 681 00:29:22,480 --> 00:29:26,480 Speaker 5: And the last one is hey, Sucil LIZARDO, Oh. 682 00:29:28,760 --> 00:29:29,800 Speaker 3: What do you think about this one? 683 00:29:30,520 --> 00:29:32,360 Speaker 5: I'm a big hay Suscil Zardo guy, so. 684 00:29:32,600 --> 00:29:33,200 Speaker 6: I know you are. 685 00:29:33,440 --> 00:29:36,320 Speaker 3: So I'm wondering if you think this is like wildly blopsided. 686 00:29:36,440 --> 00:29:38,640 Speaker 4: No, I don't think it's wildly lopsided. I know I 687 00:29:38,760 --> 00:29:41,080 Speaker 4: overvalue Cucilszardo because I like him a lot. I think 688 00:29:41,120 --> 00:29:43,000 Speaker 4: this is a very realistic trade, especially if you're not 689 00:29:43,040 --> 00:29:44,440 Speaker 4: necessarily buying the start he set. 690 00:29:44,800 --> 00:29:48,240 Speaker 3: My gut reaction is gold Schmidt. But I know you 691 00:29:48,400 --> 00:29:49,360 Speaker 3: are a Lozardo guy. 692 00:29:50,000 --> 00:29:51,520 Speaker 5: I think it's a fair a fair deal though. I 693 00:29:51,520 --> 00:29:52,320 Speaker 5: think it's pretty close. 694 00:29:52,440 --> 00:29:55,520 Speaker 2: Yeah, right, I'll get to my cell high because we 695 00:29:55,640 --> 00:30:00,160 Speaker 2: went very long on yours haave baias, which, just in 696 00:30:00,240 --> 00:30:02,360 Speaker 2: case anybody's not paying attention, has been like on an 697 00:30:02,360 --> 00:30:06,320 Speaker 2: absolute heater as of late, I had it pulled up 698 00:30:06,360 --> 00:30:08,640 Speaker 2: and then I refreshed my page to now I'm trying 699 00:30:08,640 --> 00:30:11,160 Speaker 2: to pull it up a Yeah, since since April twenty sixth, 700 00:30:11,880 --> 00:30:15,320 Speaker 2: he's batting four twenty four. His OPS is over twelve hundred. 701 00:30:15,640 --> 00:30:18,320 Speaker 2: He has three home runs in that timeframe. And you 702 00:30:18,400 --> 00:30:21,280 Speaker 2: can go back further, you know, not just this kind 703 00:30:21,280 --> 00:30:23,440 Speaker 2: of recent hot streak, but he's batting three forty five 704 00:30:23,560 --> 00:30:26,040 Speaker 2: if you go back to April sixteenth, if you go 705 00:30:26,160 --> 00:30:29,000 Speaker 2: back to like even the sixth, so like, basically after 706 00:30:29,080 --> 00:30:31,400 Speaker 2: the first week of the season, he's batting three twenty 707 00:30:31,520 --> 00:30:34,200 Speaker 2: nine in ops almost nine hundred. 708 00:30:34,320 --> 00:30:34,360 Speaker 5: Like. 709 00:30:34,440 --> 00:30:38,120 Speaker 3: He has been good in terms of the actual statue. 710 00:30:38,200 --> 00:30:40,760 Speaker 2: Looking at particularly the batting average coming off of a 711 00:30:40,800 --> 00:30:42,960 Speaker 2: year last year where he hit one eighty four, you know, 712 00:30:43,000 --> 00:30:46,200 Speaker 2: the year before two twenty two. His stack gass plate 713 00:30:46,320 --> 00:30:48,360 Speaker 2: page is as blue as it gets. I don't think 714 00:30:48,400 --> 00:30:50,800 Speaker 2: this is a new and improved haave Baiaz. His chase 715 00:30:50,920 --> 00:30:53,200 Speaker 2: rate is third percentile, it's over forty percent. 716 00:30:53,920 --> 00:30:54,840 Speaker 3: The strikeout rate. 717 00:30:54,880 --> 00:30:57,320 Speaker 2: Isn't that much lower than it has been, you know, 718 00:30:57,400 --> 00:30:59,840 Speaker 2: the last few years. It's basically right in line with 719 00:31:00,080 --> 00:31:02,480 Speaker 2: the last few years. So it's not like I think 720 00:31:02,480 --> 00:31:04,800 Speaker 2: he's doing anything different in terms of his approach. The 721 00:31:04,880 --> 00:31:07,240 Speaker 2: walk rate is actually lower. It it's a career low 722 00:31:07,320 --> 00:31:11,080 Speaker 2: for him. It's just all all the contact data is 723 00:31:11,160 --> 00:31:14,600 Speaker 2: basically the same. Like his expected wOBA last year to 724 00:31:14,760 --> 00:31:18,480 Speaker 2: sixty four. This year it's two eighty eight. His wOBA 725 00:31:18,600 --> 00:31:21,160 Speaker 2: last year was two twenty four. This year it's three 726 00:31:21,360 --> 00:31:23,720 Speaker 2: sixty four. So last year was a little low. This 727 00:31:23,880 --> 00:31:27,320 Speaker 2: year it's way high relative to the expected data. And 728 00:31:27,440 --> 00:31:29,520 Speaker 2: that's like fairly true across the board for most of 729 00:31:29,560 --> 00:31:32,760 Speaker 2: his stats. Like his expected batting average is two forty, 730 00:31:32,880 --> 00:31:35,160 Speaker 2: it's current average on the season is three thirteen. 731 00:31:36,480 --> 00:31:38,880 Speaker 3: Again, playing third base, a position that people might have 732 00:31:39,000 --> 00:31:39,320 Speaker 3: a need. 733 00:31:40,160 --> 00:31:42,440 Speaker 2: I'm not this is not one of those cell highs 734 00:31:42,440 --> 00:31:46,040 Speaker 2: where you're gonna get like multiple studs in return, right, 735 00:31:46,480 --> 00:31:49,240 Speaker 2: But I think you could. If somebody has a need, 736 00:31:49,280 --> 00:31:51,840 Speaker 2: you can point to this hot start say this is 737 00:31:51,880 --> 00:31:54,760 Speaker 2: a new and improved hobby Bias at age thirty two, 738 00:31:55,480 --> 00:31:59,640 Speaker 2: and try and sell them. And quite frankly, I would 739 00:31:59,640 --> 00:32:01,520 Speaker 2: sell him for anything you can get a value. I 740 00:32:01,560 --> 00:32:03,800 Speaker 2: wouldn't hold out for the highest offer. I wouldn't say 741 00:32:03,800 --> 00:32:07,040 Speaker 2: something for peanuts, but anything you can get for, you know, 742 00:32:07,200 --> 00:32:10,360 Speaker 2: any reasonable offer. I think Bias is an easy sell. 743 00:32:10,640 --> 00:32:12,360 Speaker 5: I would sell him for peanuts. I would sell him 744 00:32:12,360 --> 00:32:13,800 Speaker 5: for any offer that came through the door. 745 00:32:14,320 --> 00:32:23,560 Speaker 2: I mean, if it was literally like a nothing nothing offer, Well, 746 00:32:23,640 --> 00:32:25,960 Speaker 2: here's what I would say, whatever you're getting back you're 747 00:32:26,000 --> 00:32:29,240 Speaker 2: weighing against would I'd rather have this or maybe ride 748 00:32:29,280 --> 00:32:30,920 Speaker 2: another week and a half of this hot streak and 749 00:32:31,040 --> 00:32:34,040 Speaker 2: then be done with him anyway, Like there are sub 750 00:32:34,080 --> 00:32:36,120 Speaker 2: offers that I would rather just say, like, listen, let 751 00:32:36,200 --> 00:32:37,520 Speaker 2: me see if I can get another week or two 752 00:32:37,560 --> 00:32:40,840 Speaker 2: out of him. But yes, I would take a load number. 753 00:32:41,560 --> 00:32:43,760 Speaker 2: But do you do you not think he's sellable? I mean, 754 00:32:43,800 --> 00:32:46,880 Speaker 2: I I think I think there are leagues, maybe not 755 00:32:46,960 --> 00:32:48,720 Speaker 2: with hardcore guys, but I think there are leagues where 756 00:32:48,720 --> 00:32:52,360 Speaker 2: you can sell hobby bias. And and when I say hi, hi, 757 00:32:52,480 --> 00:32:55,280 Speaker 2: does it necessarily mean again like you're getting, you know, 758 00:32:55,640 --> 00:32:59,959 Speaker 2: a king's ransom? It just means high relative to his value. 759 00:33:00,120 --> 00:33:01,680 Speaker 2: And I think this is a peak of his value, 760 00:33:01,680 --> 00:33:03,280 Speaker 2: and I would be selling. Is that maybe the better 761 00:33:03,280 --> 00:33:03,880 Speaker 2: way to phrase it. 762 00:33:04,360 --> 00:33:07,080 Speaker 4: Yeah, I don't think you're gonna get a lot for him. 763 00:33:07,080 --> 00:33:08,960 Speaker 4: I think you can trade him, especially you know, with 764 00:33:09,040 --> 00:33:13,680 Speaker 4: the with the average. But you know, if any any 765 00:33:13,800 --> 00:33:16,560 Speaker 4: and if if anyone looks under the hood of what 766 00:33:16,680 --> 00:33:18,880 Speaker 4: have your bias is going to do or has been doing, 767 00:33:18,920 --> 00:33:20,120 Speaker 4: and then you're not going to be able to sell him. 768 00:33:20,400 --> 00:33:23,080 Speaker 4: The hard contact alone is like plummeted for you know, 769 00:33:23,520 --> 00:33:25,920 Speaker 4: he still like strikes out a good amount of time. 770 00:33:25,960 --> 00:33:29,360 Speaker 4: It doesn't really walk. I tried pulling up the trade 771 00:33:29,400 --> 00:33:30,960 Speaker 4: value chart to see where he was, and he didn't 772 00:33:30,960 --> 00:33:32,800 Speaker 4: even make the chart. He didn't qualify for the chart. 773 00:33:34,200 --> 00:33:36,280 Speaker 4: But uh, I think you like I'm looking at like 774 00:33:36,320 --> 00:33:39,200 Speaker 4: the bottom of like the pictures. Maybe you can get 775 00:33:39,320 --> 00:33:42,880 Speaker 4: like a Tobias Myers for him, maybe a Porter Hoigh. Yeah, 776 00:33:42,880 --> 00:33:44,719 Speaker 4: I we're gonna speculate on that closing situation. 777 00:33:45,560 --> 00:33:47,480 Speaker 2: I want to because I know sometimes people in the 778 00:33:47,520 --> 00:33:49,240 Speaker 2: comments giving me a hard time but like oh that's 779 00:33:49,320 --> 00:33:52,720 Speaker 2: not really a bye low or whatever. Again it I 780 00:33:52,800 --> 00:33:55,760 Speaker 2: want to really emphasize, like I'm saying, sell high relative 781 00:33:55,800 --> 00:33:59,640 Speaker 2: to the value of Bias. So get something while you can't, 782 00:33:59,640 --> 00:34:02,280 Speaker 2: because you'll probably be dropping him soon. He's right, and 783 00:34:02,960 --> 00:34:05,800 Speaker 2: third base is a position where people have need big time. 784 00:34:06,000 --> 00:34:07,000 Speaker 5: Here's an interesting one for you. 785 00:34:08,239 --> 00:34:11,960 Speaker 4: Would you trade Hoper Bias for I mean, I technically 786 00:34:12,000 --> 00:34:15,640 Speaker 4: this is like for the rights to the player, but 787 00:34:15,680 --> 00:34:19,000 Speaker 4: would you trade it for Grayson Marianz for the off 788 00:34:19,080 --> 00:34:20,000 Speaker 4: chance that he comes back. 789 00:34:22,160 --> 00:34:25,080 Speaker 2: That I really liked that question because I've been pretty 790 00:34:25,120 --> 00:34:28,200 Speaker 2: pessimistic on his timeline for returning. 791 00:34:31,160 --> 00:34:32,440 Speaker 3: Yes, I would. I would trade it for. 792 00:34:35,239 --> 00:34:35,760 Speaker 5: That suggestion. 793 00:34:37,480 --> 00:34:38,440 Speaker 3: I really like that suggestion. 794 00:34:38,520 --> 00:34:41,920 Speaker 2: Again, I think there's like a non zero chance Grayson 795 00:34:42,000 --> 00:34:43,319 Speaker 2: doesn't pitch this year. 796 00:34:43,719 --> 00:34:48,520 Speaker 3: That's why you're talking right now for him. Yeah, I 797 00:34:48,640 --> 00:34:49,960 Speaker 3: really like that one. That's a good suggestion. 798 00:34:50,080 --> 00:34:50,239 Speaker 6: Yeah. 799 00:34:50,280 --> 00:34:51,880 Speaker 3: So again, don't come after me in the comments. 800 00:34:51,880 --> 00:34:53,560 Speaker 2: I'm not saying bias is great and that you're gonna 801 00:34:53,560 --> 00:34:56,520 Speaker 2: get You're gonna swindle somebody out of some elite player 802 00:34:56,640 --> 00:34:59,880 Speaker 2: for him. This is really just to highlight the point that, like, 803 00:35:00,480 --> 00:35:04,600 Speaker 2: for whatever good you think he's doing this year, trade him. 804 00:35:04,600 --> 00:35:05,360 Speaker 3: It's not legitimate. 805 00:35:07,400 --> 00:35:09,120 Speaker 2: And like I said, you're what you're weighing it against 806 00:35:09,200 --> 00:35:11,040 Speaker 2: is do I want to ride this hot streak another? 807 00:35:11,320 --> 00:35:16,200 Speaker 2: Maybe Fortnite? All right, one player who is very good 808 00:35:16,440 --> 00:35:19,120 Speaker 2: is Jose Ramirez, and we are now giving away a 809 00:35:19,239 --> 00:35:23,000 Speaker 2: Jose Ramirez signed Guardians jersey courtesy of our friends at 810 00:35:23,080 --> 00:35:25,719 Speaker 2: Pristineauction dot com. All you have to do to enter 811 00:35:25,840 --> 00:35:29,880 Speaker 2: is subscribe to the Fantasy pros MLB YouTube channel right now, drop. 812 00:35:29,719 --> 00:35:31,920 Speaker 3: A comment below on any video and that is it. 813 00:35:32,040 --> 00:35:34,000 Speaker 2: We will be announcing one lucky winner right here on 814 00:35:34,080 --> 00:35:36,400 Speaker 2: the channel, so make sure to turn on those notifications 815 00:35:36,440 --> 00:35:38,320 Speaker 2: so you can know when new videos are up and 816 00:35:38,440 --> 00:35:39,960 Speaker 2: to claim your prize. 817 00:35:40,320 --> 00:35:41,560 Speaker 3: Mayor. We went very long on. 818 00:35:41,640 --> 00:35:44,359 Speaker 2: The buys and sells this week, so let's speed through 819 00:35:44,440 --> 00:35:47,200 Speaker 2: a little faster on the waivers side. I'll go first 820 00:35:47,239 --> 00:35:49,160 Speaker 2: here and I'll make it very quick. I put down 821 00:35:49,200 --> 00:35:51,800 Speaker 2: Trent Grisham, who we already talked about in our Rounding 822 00:35:51,800 --> 00:35:53,600 Speaker 2: the Basis segment. If you miss out on YouTube or 823 00:35:53,680 --> 00:35:56,480 Speaker 2: on audio, please go listen to that segment as well. 824 00:35:57,400 --> 00:35:59,560 Speaker 2: The numbers are just too good for him to be 825 00:35:59,680 --> 00:36:01,320 Speaker 2: roster where he's at. I'll mention it again because I 826 00:36:01,360 --> 00:36:04,200 Speaker 2: mentioned it in the last segment. Fifty roster on CBS, 827 00:36:04,480 --> 00:36:07,439 Speaker 2: under thirty percent on ESPN and Yahoo. I'm not saying 828 00:36:07,520 --> 00:36:08,520 Speaker 2: he is the best hitter. 829 00:36:08,400 --> 00:36:11,719 Speaker 3: In baseball, but those need to be roster higher. 830 00:36:11,760 --> 00:36:14,440 Speaker 2: Considering his ten home runs an average near three hundred, 831 00:36:14,800 --> 00:36:18,320 Speaker 2: the stackcast data is really impressive. He's the anti hobby 832 00:36:18,400 --> 00:36:21,239 Speaker 2: buyas in that regard. Those numbers are just two lop, 833 00:36:21,280 --> 00:36:23,080 Speaker 2: so go pick him up wherever he's available. 834 00:36:23,800 --> 00:36:24,680 Speaker 5: Yeah, I'm down with it. 835 00:36:26,760 --> 00:36:28,319 Speaker 4: We don't know if this hot street is gonna last forever, 836 00:36:28,360 --> 00:36:29,960 Speaker 4: but it's hot right it's hot right now, and he's 837 00:36:30,000 --> 00:36:32,680 Speaker 4: playing in a good lineup in the best ballpark for 838 00:36:32,719 --> 00:36:35,879 Speaker 4: a lefty hitter, so you know, ride him always hot. 839 00:36:36,040 --> 00:36:39,399 Speaker 4: The name I'm going with is TJ. Friedel player I've 840 00:36:39,400 --> 00:36:41,759 Speaker 4: always liked, a player I was really high on going 841 00:36:41,800 --> 00:36:43,279 Speaker 4: into last season, but he dealt with a bunch of 842 00:36:43,320 --> 00:36:45,239 Speaker 4: injuries and missed a bunch of the year. But when 843 00:36:45,239 --> 00:36:47,359 Speaker 4: he's healthy and when he's on, he's going to give 844 00:36:47,360 --> 00:36:49,919 Speaker 4: you double juit to home runs, twenty plus dolen bases. 845 00:36:49,920 --> 00:36:51,920 Speaker 4: And right now he's batting two seventy three. He just 846 00:36:52,040 --> 00:36:53,600 Speaker 4: hit two home runs the other night, so it's up 847 00:36:53,600 --> 00:36:56,759 Speaker 4: to three home runs. So if you're weekly waivers and 848 00:36:56,840 --> 00:36:58,840 Speaker 4: he isn't rostered yet, he's going to be probably a 849 00:36:58,920 --> 00:37:02,279 Speaker 4: popular waiver wire target this week. Eight stolen bases, he's 850 00:37:02,280 --> 00:37:04,040 Speaker 4: sitting at the top of that lineup. Again, a player 851 00:37:04,120 --> 00:37:06,720 Speaker 4: in a good ballpark, and he's the kind of player 852 00:37:06,760 --> 00:37:10,800 Speaker 4: who if he stays healthy, you're going to get fifteen 853 00:37:10,840 --> 00:37:14,839 Speaker 4: home runs maybe more, and twenty plus maybe twenty five 854 00:37:14,880 --> 00:37:18,640 Speaker 4: plus stolen bases and hopefully with like a two sixty 855 00:37:18,680 --> 00:37:22,520 Speaker 4: two seventy five average, And that's a really valuable player 856 00:37:22,560 --> 00:37:24,600 Speaker 4: who is available on waivers right now. And he's someone 857 00:37:24,680 --> 00:37:26,200 Speaker 4: that sometimes we talk about like this is a short 858 00:37:26,280 --> 00:37:28,399 Speaker 4: term pick up, like see what's going to happen. He's 859 00:37:28,400 --> 00:37:31,920 Speaker 4: a player who if he stays healthy, I think we 860 00:37:32,080 --> 00:37:33,279 Speaker 4: you know, you can have a really good year. If 861 00:37:33,320 --> 00:37:35,000 Speaker 4: you look at last year he doubled a bunch of injuries. 862 00:37:35,040 --> 00:37:37,880 Speaker 4: But just two years ago in twenty twenty three, one 863 00:37:37,960 --> 00:37:40,560 Speaker 4: hundred and thirty eight games, eighteen home runs, twenty seven 864 00:37:40,560 --> 00:37:42,239 Speaker 4: stolen bases in a bad two seventy nine, Like, that's 865 00:37:42,239 --> 00:37:43,959 Speaker 4: an awesome season and it's not even a false season 866 00:37:44,000 --> 00:37:48,120 Speaker 4: from him. And I included one bonus. It sounds like 867 00:37:48,160 --> 00:37:49,960 Speaker 4: Austin Hayes is going to come back. So if you 868 00:37:50,000 --> 00:37:51,760 Speaker 4: know he was really hot and was picked up everywhere 869 00:37:51,760 --> 00:37:53,640 Speaker 4: if he got dropped when he got hurt, it sounds 870 00:37:53,680 --> 00:37:55,640 Speaker 4: like he could be back as soon as Friday without. 871 00:37:55,440 --> 00:37:57,680 Speaker 5: A rehab assignment. So also pick up Austin Hayes on 872 00:37:57,800 --> 00:37:58,319 Speaker 5: the same team. 873 00:37:59,640 --> 00:38:02,240 Speaker 2: Yeah, I can also be quick on the pitcher because 874 00:38:02,880 --> 00:38:05,960 Speaker 2: the guy I picked hasn't pitched yet. Eurie Perez, I 875 00:38:06,080 --> 00:38:07,680 Speaker 2: just I kind of bring him up to say don't 876 00:38:07,760 --> 00:38:11,080 Speaker 2: be late picking him up once rehab starts are done. 877 00:38:11,120 --> 00:38:14,400 Speaker 2: In like a month, he has started the rehab again. Obviously, 878 00:38:14,480 --> 00:38:17,800 Speaker 2: this was, you know, an elite, elite, elite pitching prospect 879 00:38:17,840 --> 00:38:20,920 Speaker 2: before the injury prior to last season. I just kind 880 00:38:20,960 --> 00:38:22,640 Speaker 2: of highlight him because there weren't a ton I actually 881 00:38:22,640 --> 00:38:24,600 Speaker 2: almost considered the name you put down. There weren't a 882 00:38:24,600 --> 00:38:27,840 Speaker 2: ton of names that I really liked. Has been the 883 00:38:27,920 --> 00:38:31,320 Speaker 2: case most weeks for our favorite pitcher. But I just 884 00:38:31,360 --> 00:38:33,400 Speaker 2: wanted to highlight him as there will be kind of 885 00:38:33,440 --> 00:38:36,320 Speaker 2: a rush to grab him at some point when it 886 00:38:36,360 --> 00:38:38,480 Speaker 2: gets closer coming back, and especially once he is back. 887 00:38:38,520 --> 00:38:40,640 Speaker 2: He's already rostered in some places, but but he's definitely 888 00:38:40,640 --> 00:38:41,840 Speaker 2: available in a lot of places. 889 00:38:42,160 --> 00:38:43,759 Speaker 3: Don't be late to the ball. 890 00:38:43,880 --> 00:38:45,200 Speaker 2: Pick him up if you have the room at all, 891 00:38:45,239 --> 00:38:48,080 Speaker 2: which I think you probably do, and be willing to 892 00:38:48,120 --> 00:38:49,680 Speaker 2: stash him for a couple of weeks, maybe longer than 893 00:38:49,680 --> 00:38:51,600 Speaker 2: you would have preferred an ideal scenario, to. 894 00:38:51,680 --> 00:38:53,080 Speaker 3: Make sure that you are taking the swing. 895 00:38:53,200 --> 00:38:55,319 Speaker 2: And maybe he's not good and doesn't go deep enough 896 00:38:55,320 --> 00:38:57,279 Speaker 2: into games cleaning back and isn't worth it, but I 897 00:38:57,320 --> 00:39:00,399 Speaker 2: think the upside is worth being early rather and laid 898 00:39:00,440 --> 00:39:00,719 Speaker 2: on him. 899 00:39:01,400 --> 00:39:05,160 Speaker 4: Yeah, mine is a different kind of waiver target, so 900 00:39:05,280 --> 00:39:07,799 Speaker 4: yours is more long term thing. Mine's extremely short term. 901 00:39:08,360 --> 00:39:11,360 Speaker 4: I went with Colin Reya. I don't think this is 902 00:39:12,000 --> 00:39:13,399 Speaker 4: you know, like right now he has a two point 903 00:39:13,440 --> 00:39:15,000 Speaker 4: four through ear Ray. I don't think this is any 904 00:39:15,120 --> 00:39:17,279 Speaker 4: kind of Colin ray A breakout that we're about to see. 905 00:39:17,320 --> 00:39:19,040 Speaker 4: But there's a very clear reason why he's my waiver 906 00:39:19,080 --> 00:39:21,600 Speaker 4: target for this week. He's a two star pitcher who 907 00:39:21,680 --> 00:39:23,879 Speaker 4: pitches at home against the Marlins and then at home 908 00:39:23,920 --> 00:39:27,040 Speaker 4: against the White Sox. And if you could, you know, 909 00:39:27,360 --> 00:39:29,560 Speaker 4: draw up a perfect situation for a two star pitcher, 910 00:39:29,600 --> 00:39:31,279 Speaker 4: those are the two matchups you would want. Maybe also 911 00:39:31,360 --> 00:39:33,560 Speaker 4: the Rockies on the road, but you know those are true. 912 00:39:33,640 --> 00:39:36,480 Speaker 2: I briefly considered him for my two star pitcher competition, 913 00:39:36,600 --> 00:39:39,600 Speaker 2: I will say, because it's kind of a tricky week. 914 00:39:39,680 --> 00:39:42,640 Speaker 3: But yes, I'm fully on board with this. 915 00:39:42,880 --> 00:39:45,440 Speaker 4: Yeah, and that's the main reason. And I'll hit some 916 00:39:45,520 --> 00:39:48,840 Speaker 4: deep league targets real quick. To Dane Myers and Jake Myers, 917 00:39:48,880 --> 00:39:49,600 Speaker 4: the Myers brothers. 918 00:39:49,640 --> 00:39:51,160 Speaker 5: No idea if they're actually related. Probably not. 919 00:39:52,120 --> 00:39:55,000 Speaker 4: Hayden Wesnski, also a two star pitcher. He gets the 920 00:39:55,160 --> 00:39:58,879 Speaker 4: Royals and the Rangers Matthew Libertor, who we talked about 921 00:39:59,000 --> 00:40:02,359 Speaker 4: on our first video, Rounding the Bases, So go back, 922 00:40:02,440 --> 00:40:04,480 Speaker 4: as Worm said, and watch that one. Same thing for 923 00:40:04,520 --> 00:40:07,840 Speaker 4: Ajsmith Shaver. They're two kind of waiver wire targets for me. 924 00:40:08,920 --> 00:40:10,799 Speaker 4: And then also Max Kepler, who kind of got off 925 00:40:10,800 --> 00:40:13,200 Speaker 4: to a weird start but seems to be doing pretty 926 00:40:13,239 --> 00:40:16,200 Speaker 4: solid right now, and especially if you're in like a 927 00:40:16,280 --> 00:40:19,319 Speaker 4: deep league with like five outfielders, Max Kepler is definitely 928 00:40:19,320 --> 00:40:20,279 Speaker 4: someone you can use right now. 929 00:40:21,760 --> 00:40:22,879 Speaker 3: All right, we'll wrap up there. 930 00:40:23,000 --> 00:40:25,040 Speaker 2: I know we went longer on the trade section the waivers, 931 00:40:25,080 --> 00:40:27,600 Speaker 2: but hopefully some good options there for everybody. 932 00:40:27,960 --> 00:40:29,360 Speaker 3: For Mayor, I'm Ryan Warley. 933 00:40:29,360 --> 00:40:31,200 Speaker 2: Thanks everybody for tuning and be sure to check out 934 00:40:31,239 --> 00:40:32,600 Speaker 2: Rounding the Bases if you miss it. Be sure to 935 00:40:32,640 --> 00:40:34,680 Speaker 2: also keep an eye out for our third video of 936 00:40:34,760 --> 00:40:37,239 Speaker 2: the cycle this week or on audio episode as well, 937 00:40:37,440 --> 00:40:39,359 Speaker 2: where we talk through some streaming pictures and our two 938 00:40:39,400 --> 00:40:40,320 Speaker 2: start picture competition. 939 00:40:40,960 --> 00:40:43,000 Speaker 3: For Mayor, I'm Ryan. Thanks for tuning in. We'll see 940 00:40:43,000 --> 00:40:43,399 Speaker 3: you next time. 941 00:40:43,719 --> 00:40:46,880 Speaker 2: Thanks for listening to the Fantasy Pros Fantasy Baseball podcast. 942 00:40:47,160 --> 00:40:49,520 Speaker 2: If you love the show, the best freeway to support 943 00:40:49,600 --> 00:40:52,480 Speaker 2: us is by leaving a positive review on Apple Podcasts 944 00:40:52,600 --> 00:40:56,239 Speaker 2: or Spotify. Follow us on x, Instagram, and TikTok at 945 00:40:56,320 --> 00:40:59,240 Speaker 2: Fantasy Pros, and subscribe to our YouTube channel at YouTube 946 00:40:59,280 --> 00:41:01,440 Speaker 2: dot com Slash Fantasy Pros MLB