Free Agent Signings:
Carlos Santana
Mike Minor
Michael Taylor
Ervin Santana
Top 10 Prospects:
1 Bobby Witt Jr., SS
2 Asa Lacy, LHP
3 Daniel Lynch, LHP
4 Jackson Kowar, RHP
5 Erick Pena, OF
6 Nick Loftin, SS
7 Kyle Isbel, OF
8 Khali Lee, OF
9 Jonathan Bowlan, RHP
10 Carlos Hernedez, RHP [Reply]
Whit might be the best pure hitter in a Royals uniform since Brett, however.
Whit's definitely high up in the convo. I'll get flack for this but my vote would probably be Mike Sweeney. People forget in his prime he put up some great batting averages to go with his power numbers. Also walked about as much as he struck out. He was a truly great hitter when he stayed healthy. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Great Expectations:
Somehow LoCain is the most undervalued Royals player by Royals fans ever.
I'm not sure someone asking if Whit Merrifield is the best player to wear a Royals uniform since Brett automatically means they undervalue Lorenzo Cain. It's a relatively subjective question so most answers outside of someone totally silly (Emil Brown or so) are valid.
I'm not a huge analytics guy, but in "debates" like this, WAR is as close to an unbiased overall tool that there is. So, forgetting all players who played before or with Brett, and excluding pitchers the answer to the "best" Royal since Brett question is Alex Gordon. After him it's Carlos Beltran. Then Lo Cain, but Salvy should pass him pretty soon from a Royals WAR perspective. [Reply]
Originally Posted by tk13:
Whit's definitely high up in the convo. I'll get flack for this but my vote would probably be Mike Sweeney. People forget in his prime he put up some great batting averages to go with his power numbers. Also walked about as much as he struck out. He was a truly great hitter when he stayed healthy.
Sweeney found some sort of "magic elixir" before the 1999 season and became a machine offensively for about 6-7 years. In 2000, he had 29 HRs, 144 RBIs, 71 BBs, .333 Avg and .930 OPS in 159 games.
He also missed a lot of time in those seasons due to injury and couldn't really play defense. [Reply]
Originally Posted by WhawhaWhat:
Sweeney found some sort of "magic elixir" before the 1999 season and became a machine offensively for about 6-7 years. In 2000, he had 29 HRs, 144 RBIs, 71 BBs, .333 Avg and .930 OPS in 159 games.
He also missed a lot of time in those seasons due to injury and couldn't really play defense.
Healthy, prime Sweeney was as good a pure hitter as you’ll ever see. The problem, as you alluded to, is healthy, prime Sweeney was a rare occurrence. And he was totally worthless in any other category outside of hitting. He was an injury prone wealthy man’s Billy Butler. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Deberg_1990:
Why wasn’t Merrifield called up earlier in his career? Imagine if he would have been on the 14-15 a Royals at 2nd instead of Infante....
Because the disappointment of not getting added to the roster in 15 led to him completely changing his body and becoming a different hitter with more power.
Prior to 2014, Merrifield was nothing special as a hitter. He was a versatile, speedy guy who could make contact.
Honestly, his off-season training regiment from 15 to 16 MIGHT HAVE included something that’s not allowed. It wouldn’t surprise me at all.
The jump in performance he made is pretty consistent with an offseason of PED use (fringe major leaguer turns into starter/star). [Reply]
Originally Posted by duncan_idaho:
Because the disappointment of not getting added to the roster in 15 led to him completely changing his body and becoming a different hitter with more power.
Prior to 2014, Merrifield was nothing special as a hitter. He was a versatile, speedy guy who could make contact.
Honestly, his off-season training regiment from 15 to 16 PROBABLY included something that’s not allowed.
The jump in performance he made is pretty consistent with an offseason of PED use (fringe major leaguer turns into starter/star).
So is he continuing to fly under the radar in that respect? Or do you think it was just one offseason of "use" and he's been clean since? [Reply]
You really think Whit has used PEDS??? Dude hasn’t grown at all, he’s stayed there same weight. He’s a contact hitter and last I checked PEDs doesn’t make you make contact better at all [Reply]
Originally Posted by Why Not?:
I'm not a huge analytics guy, but in "debates" like this, WAR is as close to an unbiased overall tool that there is. So, forgetting all players who played before or with Brett, and excluding pitchers the answer to the "best" Royal since Brett question is Alex Gordon. After him it's Carlos Beltran. Then Lo Cain, but Salvy should pass him pretty soon from a Royals WAR perspective.
Is that overall WAR or WAR/season? I'm not the biggest on how WAR works but seems if someone plays for KC for a decade and a half they are going to have a tiny advantage over someone who was here for half that. [Reply]