1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Monday “NFL-LOST WEEKEND”

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“FOOTBALL-WHAT I SAW”
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Thank goodness  there is still another game on this NFL schedule.  Hopefully Monday Night Football, Chargers-Cowboys will be better than anything we saw on Sunday.

Collectively this might have been the worst full schedule of games we have seen in 1-weekend in a long time.  Dreadful matchups, teams playing poorly, injuries, tons of penalties.  Kind of looked like my Dad’s old NFL dating back to the 60s.

RAMS-CARDINALS…Not much offense from either team.  Rams struggled to keep people off QB-Matthew Stafford.  Arizona’s 3rd string QB-Josh Dobbs, not offering much offense either.  The Rams young skill players, led by Kyran Williams-the running back,  are better than the Cardinals, but not much of a game to watch. Boring.

49ers-BROWNS…Upset alert.  The SF winning streak over.  Brock Purdy’s winning streak snapped.  San Francisco’s unbeaten  season over.   The Browns won with a 3rd string QB, XFL-refugee PJ Walker in a game marred by 25-penalties…and a bunch of injuries to the Niners best players.  It was not must watch TV.

RAVENS-TITANS..Yes Lamar Jackson can do it all and he has too, because there is not much healthy talent around him.  But the highlite of the day, Justin Tucker’s 6-field goals in that Baltimore win.  Awful to watch and Tennessee looks impotent on offense.

 

WASHINGTON-ATLANTA..Not much in the way of this QB battle, Sam Howell-vs-Desmond Ridder.  The only thing watching, how many more times Howell gets sacked.  Five yesterday, bringing his total to 34-on the season.  Gruesome.

SAINTS-TEXANS..Supposed to be a walkover game.  Derek Carr threw for (353) and lost.  Rookie CJ Stroud continues to surprise with a solid (199P-2TD) day and another Texans win.  This was a real surprise.

MIAMI-CAROLINA…We all know about Tua-and-Tyreek.  You wonder if Carolina will win a game this year.  Bryce Young is going thru a real shocker of a learning curve in his first NFL season…(0-6) and suffering.

BENGALS-SEATTLE..Joe Burrow doesn’t look right yet even if he says his calf is better.  Geno Smith didn’t look that good and the Seahawks lost.

VIKINGS-BEARS…Justin Fields back to normal, poor passing day and a hand injury.  Minnesota sure is not what it was last season.  Not much around Kirk Cousins and maybe he’s not what he used to be.

PATRIOTS-RAIDERS…Jim Garoppolo is (42-19) as a starter and Jimmy G is hurt again.  Hallelujah, the Patriots  finally scored a TD with Mac Jones at QB.  They had gone 47-possessions in a row without a TD before he got them into the end zone.  Both these head coaches appear to be in trouble.

LIONS-BUCS…Nothing sexy about defense, sacks, pass breakups and penalties.  Only cool thing was Tampa wearing their Orange Creamsicle uniforms from the Doug Williams-Steve Young days.

EAGLES-JETS…I cannot gauge how much progress is being made by young QB-Zach Wilson but at least the Jets were not getting blown out…and then they somehow picked off 3-passes from Jalen Hurts and pulled off an upset.

BILLS-GIANTS…Maybe it had something to do with the weekend eclipse…the Bills played so poorly against the injury ravaged Giants during  a chunk of that game..What a nitemare downstate in New York.  The battering QB-Daniel Jones is taking; the constant injuries to RB-Saquon Barkley and no one knows whether the Giants rebuild is working because they have so many hurt players…  They had the quick start last fall and haven’t done anything since midseason last year then they show up and play Buffalo so tough.

So it felt like a lost weekend for sure.

Maybe the Chargers-Cowboys on Monday night will give us some sizzle because most of the Sunday games stunk to watch.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Friday “GULLS HOCKEY-BOUNCEBACK SEASON”

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“GULLS HOCKEY-A BOUNCE BACK YEAR”

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Hockey fans will sign this memo…’Last season was awful’.
Hockey fans in Anaheim, watching a disastrous Ducks season.
Ditto in San Diego, where the Gulls suffered thru a miserable 20-win season.

The NHL club, and their AHL affliliate, both made coaching changes.
More imporrtantly are the roster changes and the ability to stay healthy.
The Ducks imported veteran free agents.
The Gulls appear ready to open the season with a plethora of young, high draft picks.

Greg Cronin takes over as the Ducks head coach, replacing Dallas Eakins.
The Gulls welcome European coach Matt McIlvane.
Both seem cut from the same cloth, smart, younger, strong philosophically.

But injuries are an issue already.  The Ducks having lost hi-price free agent Alex Killorn with a fractured hand, having already lost center Issac Lundestrom for the year with a torn achilles.  The Gulls won’t have captain Chase DeLeo, out 8-weeks with a sprained knee after a hit in a preseason game with the Kings.

The Ducks look a long way off.  The Gulls could bounce back quickly with all the young draft picks they will put on the ice as they open the AHL season.  The San Diego roster is complimented by as many as 6-to-8-NHL-AHL veterans, added on to the young draft picks

Longtime Gulls GM-Bob Ferguson has helped run the Ducks top AHL affiliate for years.  He has seen John Gibson, Troy Terry, Trevor Zegras, Jamie Drysdale, Simon Benoit, Nick Ritchie, Luka Dostal go from Gulls colors to wearing the Ducks crest over the successful run his AHL teams have had in San Diego.  Prior to that he ran the Ducks AHL clubs in Syracuse, Portland and Norfolk.  He knows the role of the AHL and what he sees on the ice now.

The Gulls play Friday and Sunday in Ontario..then open the home schedule a week from Friday starting a 72-game schedule in the AHL.  A year of losing in the rear-view mirror.  They believe winninng starts this weekend:
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GM-Bob Ferguson

Last Year…Season started..thought we were contender
Losing Chase DeLeo opening night started a seige of injured players-we would not recover from
Not an excuse-just an explantion
Bringing in players from PTO by end of 2nd week made for an impossible situation
Lost players on waivers
Anything that could go wrong-did go wrong last year
This year is a new piece of paper

AHL-this has to be one of youngest rosters ever had here
We have 7-or-8 first year players on our roster
Will be playing in our first AHL games this weekend with really young roster
Players have to learn level of play in AHL
This league is quick and talented..this is not easy
Don’t respect the level of play in the AHL you will learn quickly how tough this league is now.

Learning process…that is the whole group thing..build develop
Make the Ducks a contender..starts at our level in San Diego

From rookie tournament in Las Vegas..very impressive group of young players
Our kids played impressively
Good look at what the Ducks will be in the future
Skill level and speed encouraging

Leo Carlsson..exceptional vision of ice..play making..smooth skating with 2nd gear…bigger body style of Trevor Zegras..skates..shoots well..leaves people standing still…Drafted 2nd overall-expect to see skill level-his skill screams out

Nathan Gaucher..big body..not a power forward..but skilled forward with power….first man in corner…last man standing in corner..bit of old school..Ryan Kessler type player

Ben King..started slow-as camp got on..gotten better and better…knack for finidng scoring area..must learn to adjust to pace to play at pro level..learned that AHL this is faster-physical…

Nikita Nestorenko…Honest worker..notice his two way game…speed to beat defenders…willing to go to tough area of rinks…Needs to finish…gets to scoring areas…

Sasha Pastjov….Late start in camp..is trying to catch up…has to learn this pace…this is not junior hockey…playing against 18-years old players…Need to be patient with him

Pavol Regenda….Made big team and played with Ducks a bit…very consistent here with Gulls..wore down as year went on….takes a toll on you by way he plays..came from European schedule…AHL schedule was tough…Trained to learn how to play with 85-game schedule…Could put up good numbers in AHL way he plays..Plays tough infront…pay price get his points.

Pavel Mintyukov….Still with Ducks…big body..lots offensie to his style..worry about his defensive play in zone…Smart player…Not out of position…Tough for 19-year old to learn in the NHL…think he is ready..play in his own end has improved.

Jackson Lacombe..College star…we won’t see him down here…bit older because he is college star..poised..best defenseman…thinks game well..very confident..career at Minnesota…Strong in his own zone on defense…Shutdown blueliner

Olin Zellweger…Lefthanded Jamie Drysdale..he so skilled because he has skills to be a winger…such a threat from back end…can cheat game on offense but such a good skater does not get beat coming back…will run power play..we won’t be 32-out of-32 on power play in future…something for a 20-year old…great prospect

Tyson Hinds….Big body..smart…makes quick decisions..can be physical…now needs do it at most consistent basis..going to be an NHL defenseman…Add some ‘dirt’ to his game…Refine his tools…Poster boy of what AHL is all about

Gage Alexander…goalie…sent to Tulsa…play more consistent…make 5-great saves…allowed cheap goals..great size..very young

Callie Clang…Good preseason…very calm in nets…from Sweden….plays like Luca Dostal…does not give up rebounds…plays with great fundamentals..will help cut down on shots allowed…eliminates chaos infront of net…came from Sweden with style……came from Penguins in trade…22-years old

Veterans…6-to-8 AHL-NHL veterans who drive the room…attitude, approach, on ice abilities…guys like Trevor Carrick-solid leader..adds sandpaper at back end…Anthony Agozziono good leader-plays much bigger than his size…gives us snarl to the game…Colton White-Robert Hagg will be mentors to the young players and will be ready to return to Ducks when needed….Hagg been in NHL-10 years with Detroit…White was with Devils…expect veterans to be on Anaheim shuttle…They will settle our kids down…There are some young veterans that need to produce this year.

Chase DeLeo…second straight year of major injuries…Lost him day one last year…now hurt on cheap shot in camp…He rehabs hard…he does not cheat on working out…he will be back

Matt McIlvane….coach prepared for every situation to be AHL-coach…great communicator..having been player and coached at this level…Creative thinker…reminds me alot of what Dallas Eakins was….Have talked about to him about constant roster changes…he is prepared….Biggest positive step Ducks made getting McIlvane in here from Europe….He realizes there is a culture we have developed…Need to get our swagger back..find a way to correct our mistakes…Excited at this opportunity.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday “PADRES–DECISION DAY”

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“PADRES DECISION DAY COMING”

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The Padres are like you and me, watching the playoffs on TV.
That’s not acceptable.
Neither is their public stance that they have solved the chemistry clubhouse problems.
I have met few people recently who buy what AJ Preller is selling.
And fewer people who believer Preller can work the Padres out of the financial quagmire and roster issues he created.

An interesting month ahead, and here is a unique look at Padres baseball, the problems they have, the solutions they are seeking.

This courtesty of MLB-Trade Rumors baseball website:
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The Padres are on the shortlist for the league’s most disappointing team in 2023. They came up shy of the postseason despite a star-studded roster that entered the year with championship aspirations. They’ll make another run at competing next season, albeit with newfound payroll questions that suggest they’ll probably lose the presumptive NL Cy Young winner and their elite closer to free agency.

Guaranteed Contracts

Manny Machado, 3B: $337MM through 2033 (including $10MM signing bonus due by Dec. 1)
Fernando Tatis Jr., RF: $317MM through 2034
Xander Bogaerts, SS: $250MM through 2033
Joe Musgrove, RHP: $80MM through 2027
Yu Darvish, RHP: $78MM through 2028
Jake Cronenworth, 1B: $78MM through 2030
Robert Suarez, RHP: $36MM through 2027 (includes opt-out after ’25)
Ha-Seong Kim, 2B: $10MM through 2024 (including buyout of ’25 mutual option)
Seth Lugo, RHP: $7.5MM player option
Matt Carpenter, DH: $5.5MM player option
Option Decisions

Team holds two-year, $32MM option on RHP Nick Martinez; if club declines, Martinez holds two-year, $16MM player option
Team holds two-year, $32MM option on RHP Michael Wacha; if club declines, Wacha has respective $6.5MM, $6MM and $6MM player options through 2026
RHP Seth Lugo holds $7.5MM player option
DH Matt Carpenter holds $5.5MM player option
Other Financial Commitments

Owe $24.5MM to Red Sox through 2025 as condition of Eric Hosmer trade
2024 financial commitments (assuming Wacha/Lugo opt out, Carpenter/Martinez opt in): $134.76MM
Total future commitments (assuming Wacha/Lugo opt out, Carpenter/Martinez opt in): $1.232 billion

Arbitration-Eligible Players (projected salaries via MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz)

Juan Soto (5.134): $33MM
Tim Hill (5.112): $2.4MM
Scott Barlow (5.030): $7.1MM
Trent Grisham (4.060): $4.9MM
Austin Nola (4.045): $2.35MM
Adrian Morejón (3.140): $900K
Non-tender candidates: Hill, Nola, Morejón

Free Agents

Blake Snell, Josh Hader, Seth Lugo (assuming opt-out), Gary Sánchez, Garrett Cooper, Ji Man Choi, Rich Hill, Luis García, Jurickson Profar, Drew Pomeranz
A late-September tear against mostly bad teams nudged the Padres past .500. That’s no consolation for a club that entered the year as co-favorites in the NL West alongside the Dodgers and a trendy World Series pick. San Diego had bolstered last year’s NLCS squad with another massive contract, signing Xander Bogaerts for 11 years and $280MM. With Fernando Tatis Jr. returning from last year’s wrist surgery/PED suspension, everything was supposed to come together in 2023.

If the team ever really clicked, it didn’t happen until they were buried in the standings. As was the case two years ago, the Padres’ disappointing finish came with reports of internal strife. In 2021, clubhouse discord contributed to San Diego’s decision to dismiss manager Jayce Tingler. This year, reports from The Athletic and the San Diego Union-Tribune cast renewed questions about the locker room — with a reported rift between president of baseball operations A.J. Preller and second-year manager Bob Melvin drawing the most attention.

As the season wound down, there was some question about whether the Preller – Melvin relationship had become untenable. Ownership clearly doesn’t believe that to be the case. After an end-of-season meeting between Preller, Melvin and chairman Peter Seidler, the parties agreed to keep the leadership structure in place. Seidler released a statement expressing his “full support” for that duo; Preller confirmed two days later that Melvin is “going to be (the) manager going forward.”

There could be far more turnover with the roster itself. Kevin Acee of the Union-Tribune reported last month that the Friars were shooting for a player payroll in the $200MM range for next season, pointing to a need to comply with MLB’s debt service ratio. That’d likely keep them in the upper third of the league but represents a notable cut. According to Cot’s Baseball Contracts, the Friars finished this season with a payroll just under $250MM and had an estimated luxury tax number near the $293MM final penalization threshold.

That’ll make things difficult for Preller and his front office as they try to more effectively balance the roster. San Diego’s player spending is a little more manageable than fans might expect given their repeated top-of-the-market strikes. Machado ($13MM) and Tatis ($11MM) are playing on relatively light salaries as part of backloaded extensions. (Machado is also owed a $10MM signing bonus this December 1, although it’s not clear if the Padres consider that part of their approximate $200MM calculus for next season.) The Friars’ 11-year commitment to Bogaerts meant his annual salary is a fairly palatable $25MM.

San Diego’s payroll opening the offseason will be defined by a handful of upcoming options decisions. Matt Carpenter is going to exercise a $5.5MM player provision; Seth Lugo will decline a $7.5MM option in search of a multi-year deal.

The Friars have matching two-year options at $16MM annually on Michael Wacha and Nick Martinez. Given their reported payroll situation, it seems likely they’ll decline their end of both provisions. It’s not an unreasonable amount for Wacha in isolation, but it’d be harder to justify if San Diego has somewhat limited spending room. Wacha would subsequently decline the first of three player options valued in the $6-6.5MM range; Martinez would have a two-year option at $8MM annually that’ll be an interesting call.

If Carpenter and Martinez opt in while Wacha and Lugo test free agency, the Padres’ 2024 salary commitments would check in around $135MM (not counting Machado’s bonus but including the $12+MM they’re sending to the Red Sox on the Eric Hosmer deal). That doesn’t account for a massive arbitration class. MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projects a record-setting $33MM salary for Juan Soto in his final season of eligibility. Scott Barlow and Trent Grisham are projected at a combined $12MM. That puts the organization at roughly $180MM before considering outside additions. Unless plans of payroll cuts are dramatically overstated, they’re not likely to make a legitimate run at Shohei Ohtani, Cody Bellinger or Yoshinobu Yamamoto the way they might have in previous offseasons.

Given that financial picture, it’s natural that opposing fanbases have speculated about the possibility of a second blockbuster Soto trade in as many years. San Diego doesn’t have to move him. It’s possible to accommodate a $200MM payroll with their existing commitments and Soto’s projected salary. Doing so would require an austere offseason, though, potentially paired with a trade of another notable but less impactful player or two. San Diego hasn’t suggested any plans to shop Soto but hasn’t taken a trade off the table either.

With one season of remaining control, Soto’s trade value is markedly lower than it was at the 2022 deadline. The Padres wouldn’t get near the level of talent — five young players headlined by MacKenzie Gore, James Wood and CJ Abrams — which they sent to the Nationals to acquire him.

The Mookie Betts deal is the most obvious precedent for a superstar traded before his final arbitration season. The Red Sox received five years of club control on a solid regular (Alex Verdugo), a borderline Top 100 prospect (Jeter Downs) and a mid-level prospect (Connor Wong) while also offloading around $48MM on the David Price contract. The deal didn’t work out for Boston. Verdugo never developed into more than a solid player, while Downs barely reached the majors. Yet it’s a general benchmark for the Padres if they were to consider moving Soto. They presumably wouldn’t also attach an underwater contract, so topping a package headlined by two highly-regarded but not elite controllable talents should be viable.

It’s arguable whether that’s preferable to simply keeping Soto for his final arbitration season. The Padres would get one more year in which he anchors the lineup. They could deal him at the deadline if they’re again underperforming, while he’d clearly receive the qualifying offer next offseason if they kept him on the roster. Even if they don’t anticipate re-signing him — Preller unsurprisingly suggested they’ll reengage with Soto’s reps at the Boras Corporation this winter — a trade isn’t inevitable.

Keeping Soto would limit their flexibility elsewhere on the roster. San Diego has arguably the best group of impending free agents of any team. Blake Snell is likely to be named NL Cy Young a couple days before hitting the market. Josh Hader has a good chance of topping the $102MM contract record for relievers which Edwin Díaz established last winter.

Even with their payroll questions, the Padres will obviously make a qualifying offer to each of Snell and Hader. There’s no chance either player accepts a one-year deal, which would entitle San Diego to modest compensation in next year’s draft. As a luxury tax payor, the Friars would receive a pick between the fourth and fifth round for each player if they sign elsewhere.

Watching both depart appears likely. The Padres seemed to preemptively prepare for Hader’s departure last offseason with a stunning five-year, $46MM commitment to Robert Suarez. Between the hard-throwing righty and the trade deadline acquisition of Barlow, they’ll have options for the ninth inning. While losing Hader would be a huge blow to any bullpen, the Padres should have other priorities.

None is bigger than the rotation. San Diego’s starting staff somewhat quietly led the majors in ERA and finished fifth in strikeout rate. That’s in large part thanks to their impending free agents, who were arguably their three top starters. Snell was utterly dominant from June onwards. Wacha (3.22) and Lugo (3.57) each turned in sub-4.00 ERA showings over 130+ frames. Lugo would be a realistic qualifying offer candidate if the Padres were operating at their typical spending capacity. Given the expected constraints, the chance he accepts a one-year offer worth around $20.5MM and the mid-round pick they’d receive if he walks, they’ll probably opt not to make the offer.

Those possible departures leave the Friars with only two locks for the starting staff. Joe Musgrove and Yu Darvish ended this season on the injured list. They’re expected to be ready for Spring Training. If Martinez returns, he could have a clearer rotation opportunity than he’s had in the last two years, when he has spent most of his time as a multi-inning reliever. The Padres have the option to retain Wacha, although a $16MM salary is probably too much of a commitment to lock in before free agency even gets underway. Neither Pedro Avila nor Matt Waldron pitched well enough to secure a spot in the Opening Day five.

The Padres need to bring in two or three starters. Options toward the lower tiers of free agency include Michael Lorenzen, Lance Lynn, Kyle Gibson, James Paxton, Martín Pérez and Hyun Jin Ryu. Luis Severino is a candidate for a one-year pillow contract. Swingman Jakob Junis could market himself as a starter in search of a two-year deal in the range of what the Friars offered Lugo last winter. The Padres have been aggressive in targeting players from Asian professional leagues. Perhaps they’ll inquire on former Nationals righty Erick Fedde, who turned in a 2.13 ERA over 28 starts in his first season in South Korea.

They’ll likely bring in at least one arm via trade. Paul Blackburn, Spencer Turnbull, Adrian Houser and Cal Quantrill are among affordable arbitration-eligible hurlers who could be attainable. None of those pitchers would cost an immense prospect return. San Diego still has a few names at the top of the farm system (e.g. Ethan Salas, Jackson Merrill, Robby Snelling) whom they could ostensibly dangle if an impact starter with multiple seasons of club control (perhaps Logan Gilbert or Dylan Cease) came available.

San Diego could also deal off the big league team to find more balance on the roster. Barlow’s $7.1MM projected salary makes him a possible candidate, although it’d leave the Padres with very little in the way of setup options to pave the way to Suarez. Grisham is projected at just under $5MM and down to two seasons of control. He’s an excellent defensive center fielder but a .191/.300/.347 hitter since the start of 2022.

Given how well Tatis acclimated to right field defensively, the Friars could consider moving him to center and shopping Grisham. They’d have to bring in another corner bat opposite Soto at that point. It’s not a robust free agent class for hitters. Ramón Laureano, Harold Ramírez and Dylan Carlson are among the trade possibilities if the Padres wanted to search for more offensive upside than Grisham provides without taking on notable salary. Were the Padres to move Soto, they’d have to take a bigger swing in the outfield — whether a trade candidate like Anthony Santander or a free agent pursuit of KBO star Jung Hoo Lee.

Their last pursuit of a hitter from South Korea worked out excellently. Ha-Seong Kim is headed into the final season of a four-year, $28MM free agent deal. He’s a plus defender who can move around the infield and has hit .256/.338/.391 over the last two years. Kim would be an in-demand trade candidate if San Diego made him available. Between his affordability and a dreadful free agent class for middle infielders, Kim would be the Padres’ most desirable realistic trade candidate aside from Soto.

Dealing Kim would open up second base for Jake Cronenworth, who is miscast at first. Yet it’d also subtract one of the Padres’ best position players without clearing a huge chunk of payroll space. While Preller and his staff probably won’t foreclose the possibility entirely, the price would be high.

If they hold Kim, he’d likely return to the keystone. Machado and Bogaerts are the presumptive left side infield. Machado could be delayed early in the season as he recovers from elbow surgery, but he’s expected back early enough in the season the Padres don’t have to worry about the hot corner. Bogaerts recent conceded he might not be much longer for shortstop (link via Kevin Acee of the Union-Tribune). That raises the possibility of a position swap for Bogaerts and Kim but doesn’t materially change the infield construction.

The Padres should bring in some more offensive punch for the first base/DH mix. Last winter’s signings of Carpenter and Nelson Cruz didn’t pan out, nor did deadline acquisitions of Ji Man Choi and Garrett Cooper. With the latter two headed for free agency, the Padres should take another swing at first base. Brandon Belt could be a free agent target, while Rowdy Tellez is a non-tender possibility. Adding a bat-first player would deepen the bench while freeing Cronenworth for a multi-position role.
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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday “PADRES-DECISIONS COMING”

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(1-Man’s Opinion on Sports)

 

“PADRES-DECISIONS COMING”

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The Padres are like you and me, watching the playoffs on TV.
That’s not acceptable.
Neither is their public stance that they have solved the chemistry clubhouse problems.
I have met few people recently who buy what AJ Preller is selling.
And fewer people who believer Preller can work the Padres out of the financial quagmire and roster issues he created.

An interesting month ahead, and here is a unique look at Padres baseball, the problems they have, the solutions they are seeking.

This courtesty of MLB-Trade Rumors baseball website:
==================

The Padres are on the shortlist for the league’s most disappointing team in 2023. They came up shy of the postseason despite a star-studded roster that entered the year with championship aspirations. They’ll make another run at competing next season, albeit with newfound payroll questions that suggest they’ll probably lose the presumptive NL Cy Young winner and their elite closer to free agency.

Guaranteed Contracts

Manny Machado, 3B: $337MM through 2033 (including $10MM signing bonus due by Dec. 1)
Fernando Tatis Jr., RF: $317MM through 2034
Xander Bogaerts, SS: $250MM through 2033
Joe Musgrove, RHP: $80MM through 2027
Yu Darvish, RHP: $78MM through 2028
Jake Cronenworth, 1B: $78MM through 2030
Robert Suarez, RHP: $36MM through 2027 (includes opt-out after ’25)
Ha-Seong Kim, 2B: $10MM through 2024 (including buyout of ’25 mutual option)
Seth Lugo, RHP: $7.5MM player option
Matt Carpenter, DH: $5.5MM player option
Option Decisions

Team holds two-year, $32MM option on RHP Nick Martinez; if club declines, Martinez holds two-year, $16MM player option
Team holds two-year, $32MM option on RHP Michael Wacha; if club declines, Wacha has respective $6.5MM, $6MM and $6MM player options through 2026
RHP Seth Lugo holds $7.5MM player option
DH Matt Carpenter holds $5.5MM player option
Other Financial Commitments

Owe $24.5MM to Red Sox through 2025 as condition of Eric Hosmer trade
2024 financial commitments (assuming Wacha/Lugo opt out, Carpenter/Martinez opt in): $134.76MM
Total future commitments (assuming Wacha/Lugo opt out, Carpenter/Martinez opt in): $1.232 billion

Arbitration-Eligible Players (projected salaries via MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz)

Juan Soto (5.134): $33MM
Tim Hill (5.112): $2.4MM
Scott Barlow (5.030): $7.1MM
Trent Grisham (4.060): $4.9MM
Austin Nola (4.045): $2.35MM
Adrian Morejón (3.140): $900K
Non-tender candidates: Hill, Nola, Morejón

Free Agents

Blake Snell, Josh Hader, Seth Lugo (assuming opt-out), Gary Sánchez, Garrett Cooper, Ji Man Choi, Rich Hill, Luis García, Jurickson Profar, Drew Pomeranz
A late-September tear against mostly bad teams nudged the Padres past .500. That’s no consolation for a club that entered the year as co-favorites in the NL West alongside the Dodgers and a trendy World Series pick. San Diego had bolstered last year’s NLCS squad with another massive contract, signing Xander Bogaerts for 11 years and $280MM. With Fernando Tatis Jr. returning from last year’s wrist surgery/PED suspension, everything was supposed to come together in 2023.

If the team ever really clicked, it didn’t happen until they were buried in the standings. As was the case two years ago, the Padres’ disappointing finish came with reports of internal strife. In 2021, clubhouse discord contributed to San Diego’s decision to dismiss manager Jayce Tingler. This year, reports from The Athletic and the San Diego Union-Tribune cast renewed questions about the locker room — with a reported rift between president of baseball operations A.J. Preller and second-year manager Bob Melvin drawing the most attention.

As the season wound down, there was some question about whether the Preller – Melvin relationship had become untenable. Ownership clearly doesn’t believe that to be the case. After an end-of-season meeting between Preller, Melvin and chairman Peter Seidler, the parties agreed to keep the leadership structure in place. Seidler released a statement expressing his “full support” for that duo; Preller confirmed two days later that Melvin is “going to be (the) manager going forward.”

There could be far more turnover with the roster itself. Kevin Acee of the Union-Tribune reported last month that the Friars were shooting for a player payroll in the $200MM range for next season, pointing to a need to comply with MLB’s debt service ratio. That’d likely keep them in the upper third of the league but represents a notable cut. According to Cot’s Baseball Contracts, the Friars finished this season with a payroll just under $250MM and had an estimated luxury tax number near the $293MM final penalization threshold.

That’ll make things difficult for Preller and his front office as they try to more effectively balance the roster. San Diego’s player spending is a little more manageable than fans might expect given their repeated top-of-the-market strikes. Machado ($13MM) and Tatis ($11MM) are playing on relatively light salaries as part of backloaded extensions. (Machado is also owed a $10MM signing bonus this December 1, although it’s not clear if the Padres consider that part of their approximate $200MM calculus for next season.) The Friars’ 11-year commitment to Bogaerts meant his annual salary is a fairly palatable $25MM.

San Diego’s payroll opening the offseason will be defined by a handful of upcoming options decisions. Matt Carpenter is going to exercise a $5.5MM player provision; Seth Lugo will decline a $7.5MM option in search of a multi-year deal.

The Friars have matching two-year options at $16MM annually on Michael Wacha and Nick Martinez. Given their reported payroll situation, it seems likely they’ll decline their end of both provisions. It’s not an unreasonable amount for Wacha in isolation, but it’d be harder to justify if San Diego has somewhat limited spending room. Wacha would subsequently decline the first of three player options valued in the $6-6.5MM range; Martinez would have a two-year option at $8MM annually that’ll be an interesting call.

If Carpenter and Martinez opt in while Wacha and Lugo test free agency, the Padres’ 2024 salary commitments would check in around $135MM (not counting Machado’s bonus but including the $12+MM they’re sending to the Red Sox on the Eric Hosmer deal). That doesn’t account for a massive arbitration class. MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projects a record-setting $33MM salary for Juan Soto in his final season of eligibility. Scott Barlow and Trent Grisham are projected at a combined $12MM. That puts the organization at roughly $180MM before considering outside additions. Unless plans of payroll cuts are dramatically overstated, they’re not likely to make a legitimate run at Shohei Ohtani, Cody Bellinger or Yoshinobu Yamamoto the way they might have in previous offseasons.

Given that financial picture, it’s natural that opposing fanbases have speculated about the possibility of a second blockbuster Soto trade in as many years. San Diego doesn’t have to move him. It’s possible to accommodate a $200MM payroll with their existing commitments and Soto’s projected salary. Doing so would require an austere offseason, though, potentially paired with a trade of another notable but less impactful player or two. San Diego hasn’t suggested any plans to shop Soto but hasn’t taken a trade off the table either.

With one season of remaining control, Soto’s trade value is markedly lower than it was at the 2022 deadline. The Padres wouldn’t get near the level of talent — five young players headlined by MacKenzie Gore, James Wood and CJ Abrams — which they sent to the Nationals to acquire him.

The Mookie Betts deal is the most obvious precedent for a superstar traded before his final arbitration season. The Red Sox received five years of club control on a solid regular (Alex Verdugo), a borderline Top 100 prospect (Jeter Downs) and a mid-level prospect (Connor Wong) while also offloading around $48MM on the David Price contract. The deal didn’t work out for Boston. Verdugo never developed into more than a solid player, while Downs barely reached the majors. Yet it’s a general benchmark for the Padres if they were to consider moving Soto. They presumably wouldn’t also attach an underwater contract, so topping a package headlined by two highly-regarded but not elite controllable talents should be viable.

It’s arguable whether that’s preferable to simply keeping Soto for his final arbitration season. The Padres would get one more year in which he anchors the lineup. They could deal him at the deadline if they’re again underperforming, while he’d clearly receive the qualifying offer next offseason if they kept him on the roster. Even if they don’t anticipate re-signing him — Preller unsurprisingly suggested they’ll reengage with Soto’s reps at the Boras Corporation this winter — a trade isn’t inevitable.

Keeping Soto would limit their flexibility elsewhere on the roster. San Diego has arguably the best group of impending free agents of any team. Blake Snell is likely to be named NL Cy Young a couple days before hitting the market. Josh Hader has a good chance of topping the $102MM contract record for relievers which Edwin Díaz established last winter.

Even with their payroll questions, the Padres will obviously make a qualifying offer to each of Snell and Hader. There’s no chance either player accepts a one-year deal, which would entitle San Diego to modest compensation in next year’s draft. As a luxury tax payor, the Friars would receive a pick between the fourth and fifth round for each player if they sign elsewhere.

Watching both depart appears likely. The Padres seemed to preemptively prepare for Hader’s departure last offseason with a stunning five-year, $46MM commitment to Robert Suarez. Between the hard-throwing righty and the trade deadline acquisition of Barlow, they’ll have options for the ninth inning. While losing Hader would be a huge blow to any bullpen, the Padres should have other priorities.

None is bigger than the rotation. San Diego’s starting staff somewhat quietly led the majors in ERA and finished fifth in strikeout rate. That’s in large part thanks to their impending free agents, who were arguably their three top starters. Snell was utterly dominant from June onwards. Wacha (3.22) and Lugo (3.57) each turned in sub-4.00 ERA showings over 130+ frames. Lugo would be a realistic qualifying offer candidate if the Padres were operating at their typical spending capacity. Given the expected constraints, the chance he accepts a one-year offer worth around $20.5MM and the mid-round pick they’d receive if he walks, they’ll probably opt not to make the offer.

Those possible departures leave the Friars with only two locks for the starting staff. Joe Musgrove and Yu Darvish ended this season on the injured list. They’re expected to be ready for Spring Training. If Martinez returns, he could have a clearer rotation opportunity than he’s had in the last two years, when he has spent most of his time as a multi-inning reliever. The Padres have the option to retain Wacha, although a $16MM salary is probably too much of a commitment to lock in before free agency even gets underway. Neither Pedro Avila nor Matt Waldron pitched well enough to secure a spot in the Opening Day five.

The Padres need to bring in two or three starters. Options toward the lower tiers of free agency include Michael Lorenzen, Lance Lynn, Kyle Gibson, James Paxton, Martín Pérez and Hyun Jin Ryu. Luis Severino is a candidate for a one-year pillow contract. Swingman Jakob Junis could market himself as a starter in search of a two-year deal in the range of what the Friars offered Lugo last winter. The Padres have been aggressive in targeting players from Asian professional leagues. Perhaps they’ll inquire on former Nationals righty Erick Fedde, who turned in a 2.13 ERA over 28 starts in his first season in South Korea.

They’ll likely bring in at least one arm via trade. Paul Blackburn, Spencer Turnbull, Adrian Houser and Cal Quantrill are among affordable arbitration-eligible hurlers who could be attainable. None of those pitchers would cost an immense prospect return. San Diego still has a few names at the top of the farm system (e.g. Ethan Salas, Jackson Merrill, Robby Snelling) whom they could ostensibly dangle if an impact starter with multiple seasons of club control (perhaps Logan Gilbert or Dylan Cease) came available.

San Diego could also deal off the big league team to find more balance on the roster. Barlow’s $7.1MM projected salary makes him a possible candidate, although it’d leave the Padres with very little in the way of setup options to pave the way to Suarez. Grisham is projected at just under $5MM and down to two seasons of control. He’s an excellent defensive center fielder but a .191/.300/.347 hitter since the start of 2022.

Given how well Tatis acclimated to right field defensively, the Friars could consider moving him to center and shopping Grisham. They’d have to bring in another corner bat opposite Soto at that point. It’s not a robust free agent class for hitters. Ramón Laureano, Harold Ramírez and Dylan Carlson are among the trade possibilities if the Padres wanted to search for more offensive upside than Grisham provides without taking on notable salary. Were the Padres to move Soto, they’d have to take a bigger swing in the outfield — whether a trade candidate like Anthony Santander or a free agent pursuit of KBO star Jung Hoo Lee.

Their last pursuit of a hitter from South Korea worked out excellently. Ha-Seong Kim is headed into the final season of a four-year, $28MM free agent deal. He’s a plus defender who can move around the infield and has hit .256/.338/.391 over the last two years. Kim would be an in-demand trade candidate if San Diego made him available. Between his affordability and a dreadful free agent class for middle infielders, Kim would be the Padres’ most desirable realistic trade candidate aside from Soto.

Dealing Kim would open up second base for Jake Cronenworth, who is miscast at first. Yet it’d also subtract one of the Padres’ best position players without clearing a huge chunk of payroll space. While Preller and his staff probably won’t foreclose the possibility entirely, the price would be high.

If they hold Kim, he’d likely return to the keystone. Machado and Bogaerts are the presumptive left side infield. Machado could be delayed early in the season as he recovers from elbow surgery, but he’s expected back early enough in the season the Padres don’t have to worry about the hot corner. Bogaerts recent conceded he might not be much longer for shortstop (link via Kevin Acee of the Union-Tribune). That raises the possibility of a position swap for Bogaerts and Kim but doesn’t materially change the infield construction.

The Padres should bring in some more offensive punch for the first base/DH mix. Last winter’s signings of Carpenter and Nelson Cruz didn’t pan out, nor did deadline acquisitions of Ji Man Choi and Garrett Cooper. With the latter two headed for free agency, the Padres should take another swing at first base. Brandon Belt could be a free agent target, while Rowdy Tellez is a non-tender possibility. Adding a bat-first player would deepen the bench while freeing Cronenworth for a multi-position role.
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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Wednesday “AZTECS FOOTBALL-IN NEED OF A WIN”

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“AZTECS-NOT A NORMAL SEASON”
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This is not what we expected at San Diego State.
This is not vintage SDSU football.
This is not the defense we have known to be their calling card.

Brady Hoke’s team has a 4-game losing streak, something not seen around here since the error-filled-era of Chuck Long.

SDSU has a (9-10) record over the last year and half, something not seen in a long time.

Look at these stats, and it explains it all, the program’s ability to win with its defense does not exist this year.  Which of these stats floors you:

SDSU defense allowing (439YPG)
Run Defense allowing (184YPG)
Pass Defense allowing (255YPG)
3rd down conversion rate (46%)
Quarterback sacks (8)
Defense only 23-tackles for losses

Off course the problems are just not on the defense. The offense is scuffling too.

SDSU offense (326YPG)..ranked 120th
3rd down conversion rate 35%
Allowed 13-sacks
Allowed 36-tackles for losses
35-penalties in 6-games so far

Too many tough games in a row?  Maybe the UCLA-Oregon State-Boise-Air Force gauntlet was too much.

A methodical offense in an era of warp speed passing pakages.  A drop off in defensive performance too.  It’s a bad combo.

Look at the standings.  SDSU and San Jose State tied for last place in the MWC, and a combined (3-9) record.  Hard to believe what we see.

Lucky for the Aztecs, Hawaii-San Jose State, faltering Colorado State and winless Nevada are on the schedule.

Unlucky for Brady Hoke, fan support has erorded at Snapdragon Stadium, and a bowl berth seems far out now.

The coach stood on the firing line at his weekly press briefing coming off this bye week.

Brady Hoke:
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We have to be resilient to get out of this
Bye week..sometimes good-sometimes bad
Bad taste in our mouth from Air Force game
Both us-Hawaii coming off a bye week
Each game 1-at a time..6-games left
Self inflicted adversity…not finishing on things
We have mental toughness

We played 3-of top 5-defenses in country
We need to correct performance and behavior
Self scouted ourselves during bye week

Chunk plays given up on defense
We have to tackle better-we have not
We have to get off blocks compared to our years past

We did not cover anyone in Air Force game
No patience vs Air Force triple option
We got aggressive and let receivers go by them

Hawaii QB-Brayden Schraeger is good player..
UH has 2-quick wide receivers..they get ball out quickly
Schraeger is a pocket run and shoot QB-pro style QB
Their defense can create negative plays

We need to run the football at Hawaii…we must get turnovers
Next 6-games are important…it’s what you want as a coach
I am disappointed in some guys who have left our program
Got games to play-let’s go win

We recruit Hawaii and have had good kids in our program
We sent our recruiting coaches go to Hawaii early to recruit
Recruiting has changed
Lost a couple of recruits when Pac 12-decisions happened
Guys make decisions on different things-we lost two in recent weeks

This team is locked in-we have to do it on the field
We have not played a complete game..defense-offense-kicking game

Hawaii a unique place to play
17-hours road trip

Transfer portal changes this week will help
Not sure guard rails in NIL have been
I am frustrated with the word ‘committment’..kids changing mind
If I could talk to congress…we need academic guidance
We have lost the ethic ‘kids going to college’
Bet in two years we won’t have APR rules  because of transfer portal
Transfer portal has hurt high school kids
We spend alot of time trying to get into transfer portal-get immediate help
The JUCO system will get more high school kids
Players have more freedom but only so far can you go with that
Early signing date-might sign 14-to-16 players

Never had two bye weeks in a college schedule..really different
It helps our guys rest
The 2nd bye week will be different

College football in trouble..wider gap-haves and have nots
NCAA has to solve this
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Cooper McDonald-Martin Blake

We made so many mistakes
Zac Larrier-Air Force-very slick-speed QB
Hawaii QB is top five in nation in passing yardage
We need to get the ball back on defense
Aztecs defensive stats shocking..we need to make plays
To see Martin Blake-he can ball..vocal leader..scholarship well deserved
We have a tight knit group as a whole team..bye week important to ‘reset’
We can go (8-4) this year
Hawaii plays hard-especially at home
Pac 12-pretty cool to see this year with all the QB
Don’t agree with Pac 12-breaking up but it’s about money

Martin Blake getting scholarships..moment of a lifetime
I was surprised but I worked so hard..it’s gonna come
Just keep working hard-it will come
Walking onto SDSU…I had to prove myself-let people know who I am
Coach Pumphrey sold me alot on the program
Part of RB-rotation-be ready at anytime
We have so many running backs who can play..I like the rotation
I am always prepared for my role
It’s ‘us-vs-us’…we know we can be good…be that team
Playing Hawaii Bowl..it has a different feel
Can’t pay attention to social media..just go play football
Social media..he don’t know what it’s like to play
Everyone has an opinion…they don’t know what is going on
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