Originally posted by flamarlin21
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Gaby Sanchez 2011: There's No Place Like Home
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Originally posted by Stimpson J Cat View PostHe was supposedly a butcher defensively in college. Plus, you'd have to think if he could handle it, we'd have shifted him...no? We wanted 1B to be LoMo's, Gaby just couldn't play anywhere else - we tried him at 3B, C, and I think LF in the minors with poor results.
So I think he could do it.
He never played OF.
Originally posted by Claudio Vernight View PostI think it's off the table if it wasn't considered during this past offseason. Dominguez was a stretch and LoMo in left last season was a huge liability.
Personally, I would keep him at 1B. You get the positional offensive upgrade, but you are going to do it at the expense of defense. Gaby makes his share of dumb errors at 1B and I think moving him would just make the problem worse. He's going to be 28, if we're talking long term, his range will start to regress in a few years anyway.
If the FO goes out and buys a 1b/OF this offseason, you could package Gaby for a middle of the rotation guy. Assuming payroll will expand considerably starting next season, Gaby is the regular that fits least into our plans.
Good point about his age.
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I'll be the first to say it. I hated Gaby coming up. I thought he was going to be a tremendous disappointment. He has exceeded all expectations. If he moves to 3B, he's a legit keeper.
HOWEVER
Doing the switch now makes little sense. Bonifacio as an everyday player is not a fun thought. Cousins and Petersen aren't every day guys either. I don't see the benefit doing it now; unless we have a reason to think we can get someone like Rick Ankiel for a guy like Sanabia. Any LF that makes us "holy cow" good probably costs Gaby, so it's a moot point then anyway.
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Originally posted by Mainge View PostYeah he was, including being terrible at first. But those articles about him really working on his defense came out when he was in AA and he ended up winning Baseball America's best defensive firstbaseman award. Total zone shows him being better at 3rd than 1st over 2008 and 2009.
So I think he could do it.
He never played OF.
Does he make dumb errors? Not saying you're wrong, I truly don't recall any.
Good point about his age.
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This season has been so weird for Gaby.
The BB and K rates are right about what I'd expect, but his BABIP is pretty high. However, he also only has like one double in the last 25 games or something, so his avg is going to go down, but he'll probably get some more doubles as it evens out and he may be able to maintain like an .840 OPS.poop
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Because of how much the offense is "sputtering" and because I recall reading a run-expectancy piece on how, really, your best hitter should hit second (not all that surprising since the run expectancy with 2 out and none on is <<<<< than 1 out 1 on), maybe the tweak we need is to move Gaby to the 2-hole.
Bonifacio
Gaby
Hanley
Stanton
Dobbs
Buck
Coghlan
Infante
OR
Coghlan
Gaby
Hanley
Stanton
Dobbs
Buck
Bonifacio
Infante
I think I like #2 better.
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http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?...s_mlb&c_id=mlb
After hitting his first career grand slam and leading the National League in hits and RBIs this week, Marlins first baseman Gaby Sanchez was named the NL Player of the Week, Major League Baseball announced Monday.
Sanchez's 13 hits and 10 RBIs were tops in the league, as were his 22 total bases. He also finished second with a .464 batting average (13-for-28) and .531 on-base percentage. The 27-year-old also added two home runs and three doubles on the way to a .786 slugging percentage.
Sanchez started the week with a bang, slugging his first career grand slam on May 2 to lead the Marlins to a 6-5 win over the Cardinals. The following day, Sanchez had a four-hit game, matching a career best. In the third game of a four-game series against the Cardinals, Sanchez had his third consecutive multihit game, going 2-for-4.
Sanchez, who finished fourth in the 2010 NL Rookie of the Year Award balloting, has reached base safely in 30 of Florida's 33 games this season. He entered Monday with the sixth-highest on-base percentage (.414) and ninth-highest batting average (.328) in the NL. His 41 hits lead all NL first basemen.
This is Sanchez's first career weekly award.Last edited by Ralph; 05-09-2011, 06:22 PM."You owe it to yourself to find your own unorthodox way of succeeding, or sometimes, just surviving."
- Michael Johnson
J.T. Realmuto .282/.351/.412
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