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You could field an entire team with this list.
22 players currently out, likely 24 by end of day.
Another 8 players have missed time due to injury. pic.twitter.com/


Matt Barrows |
@mattbarrows |


“That way of fixing it is pretty straightforward.
-WHAT A CHANGE AFTER WINS OVER RAMS AND PATS
-TRADE DEADLINE?
-JIMMY G’S FUTURE W 49ERS (25M CAP HIT, DECLINING CAP)
-PRIORITY TEAM FAS FOR 2021
-KWON SAVINGS / DRE BETTER
-NOT TANKING BUT NOT HURRYING GUYS BACK ETHIER - SHERMAN WHY BRING HIM BACK? IS HE DONE HERE?
“I think that’s been the issue with Jimmy, and I think that 25 million dollars and a shrinking salary cap, with this injury, I just don’t know how Jimmy ends up being the quarterback for the 49ers next year.”
D- WRAPPING UP KWON — SEEING 2021 LOWER CAP EFFECT — AND THAT MAY FORCE MORE EVEN THOUGH THEY MAY NOT WANT TO MOVE GUYS —
Obviously, the $6.9 million bill is much smaller than $15.6 million, which would’ve been Alexander’s cap hit next season had the 49ers kept him around.
Thus, 2021 cap savings: $15.6 million (Alexander’s original 2021 cap hit) — $6.9
E- WHICH FAS DO U WANT NOW?
MY LIST:
1- TRENT WILLIAMS
2- JUICE
3- VERRETT
4- K’WAUN
5- DJ JONES
CAN LIVE WITHOUT: SHERMAN, S. THOMAS, TARTT, GOULD, COLEMAN, BOURNE, MCKINNON. BLAIR, BETHARD, HYDER JR.
F- TOO BAD FOR THE INJURIES — 4 FROM NFC WEST WOULD HAVE BEEN REAL—
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The Competition Committee will present a resolution to NFL owners for an expanded postseason if regular-season games are lost to COVID-19.
Chris Mortensen of ESPN reports the league could have a 16-team playoff tournament. Eight teams from each conference would make the postseason, with four division champions and four wild-card teams in each conference.
No team would receive a bye in the first round of the postseason. The first-round playoff pairings would pit 1 vs. 8, 2 vs. 7, 3 vs. 6 and 4 vs. 5 in each conference.
The Competition Committee met on a video call Monday.
The league is concerned about losing games from the pandemic as regular-season bye weeks disappear. It’s possible some teams won’t play a full, 16-game schedule.
The extra postseason games also would offset lost revenue if the league loses regular-season games.
The NFL went to an expanded postseason in 1982 after a 57-day players’ strike. The league played only nine regular-season games but adopted a special 16-team playoff tournament.
In 1982, though, the league ignored division standings for seeding.
E- SNF BATTLE—
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2A: MLB AWARDS FINALISIS - WHO YA GOT??
2B- MLB FA == GO.....
HI END FAS WILL GET MONEY — MIDDLE CLASS NOT SO MUCH — BOWDEN PREDCITS THE NUMBERS...
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https://theathletic.com/2153856/2020/10/29/keith-law-top-40-free-agents-ranking-of-the-mlb-offseason-2020/?source=user_shared_article
16. Kevin Gausman, RHP, age 30
Gausman was so screwed up while he was in Baltimore, including the inexplicable decision by the coaching staff to move him to the extreme third-base side of the rubber, that it seemed likely he’d never justify being the fourth overall pick in the draft back in 2012. He got out of Baltimore and went to a good pitchers’ park in 2020, signing a one-year deal with the Giants that resulted in the best strikeout and walk rates and lowest FIP of his career. I think it’s real and sustainable. He has always had the plus velocity and plus split-change to be an effective big-league pitcher, and this year the Giants largely just let him pitch instead of trying to make him fit some predetermined template. His splitter was filthy, with hitters missing nearly half the time they swung at it, and he threw it more than ever. He could still use a better breaking pitch, as his slider doesn’t miss bats in the zone and he’s really never had much of a slider or curveball. But with those two pitches and the command and control he showed last year, he could be a good fourth starter for almost any club.
BAGGS pick:
17. Ha-Seong Kim, SS, age 25
Kim might be the only major free agent to come to Major League Baseball from either the KBO League or Nippon Professional Baseball this winter, and he gets to come as a true free agent because he turned 25 in October, thus avoiding the restrictions placed on so-called “amateur” international free agents based solely on their ages. He has been one of the better hitters in Korea’s major league for several years now, ranking seventh in OBP and 11th in slugging percentage in 2020 (as of Oct. 18). He has split time between shortstop and third base for Kiwoom the last two years, and scouts think he’s not a lock to be able to stay at short in MLB, possibly moving to third or second or just becoming a utility infielder who moves between all three. At the plate, he has good hand-eye coordination and some power, but he gets long and his front side goes very soft in his swing, so hitting MLB velocity consistently could be a real problem. The possibility of shortstop with some power could get him offers as a regular, but I think a more suitable projection would have him as a super-utility guy who gets 400+ at-bats.
10. Jackie Bradley Jr., OF, age 31
JBJ has always teased with the potential of his bat, but at some point he made the decision to sell out for more power — probably in his breakout 2016 season — and it has made him a worse overall hitter since. If you want a reason for optimism, though, in 2020 he flattened his swing and used the whole field better than he has in any other big-league season, going the other way at the highest rate of his career. That’s who he needs to be, because he doesn’t make the kind of high-quality contact that you usually see on true power hitters. He’s still an elite defender in center, and if he keeps putting the ball in play (he had a career-low strikeout rate in 2020) and worries less about putting it in the seats, he has All-Star, 4-win upside.
If I had to guess, they might look for a left-handed bat in the outfield to platoon with Austin Slater. And yes, if the market allows for a one-year contract, Joc Pederson might make some sense. But I don’t see them handing out any multiyear offers to outfielders, which would rule out George Springer.
Mike Neu (@MikeNeu17) asks: How are the Giants restocking the pitching, especially starters?
They’ll begin by opening dialogue with Gausman and Smyly while reading the market as other possibilities shake loose. I’d imagine they will be just as active as ever when it comes to waiver claims. The real intrigue for me is what the trade market will look like, especially when it comes to moving prospects. Everyone is operating with old or incomplete scouting information. How much do you trust that information when you’re trying to make deals? It’s a really good question for the industry.
Bryan Lee (@blee_10) asks: Do you see the Giants going after Hae Song Kim from Korea?
Ding ding! Google him and spend a little time on YouTube. Guaranteed entertainment. I’m not sure a right-handed infielder is a top need, even as Brandon Crawford comes to the end of his contract. Marco Luciano is on the way and Sean Roby is a third base prospect that will probably make more noise in the near future. Luis Toribio is a player the Giants like a lot, too. I wouldn’t give up on David Villar, either. But when a young impact player becomes available, you do your diligence. I’m sure the Giants have done theirs.
Phil Ruud (@pr_ruud) asks: Since the Giants changed the dimensions of the park will it be easier to attract any free agents?
An interesting question. I’d have to say so. It’s still a pitchers’ park, but it played like much less of an outlier. Zaidi has expressed concern in the past that the ballpark’s reputation was a real and significant disadvantage when it came to competing for free-agent hitters. The Bryce Harper process really opened his eyes to that factor. You’d have to ask free-agent hitters, but players talk to each other a ton and I’d be willing to bet that the way the park played in 2020 will substantially change the way they view it as a potential destination.
Matt (@flacidpidgeons) asks: Do you see the Giants pursuing players like Trevor Bauer, Marcell Ozuna, George Springer, Tommy La Stella? Do you see the Giants trading away big contracts for more prospects?
Start with the easy part: I don’t see the Giants attaching prospects to a player like Evan Longoria or Johnny Cueto in order to move a big contract. I do wonder how the revenue losses will impact their ability to do the opposite: pull another Zack Cozart deal in which they take someone else’s dead money to essentially buy a prospect. We know the Giants had the money at one point to sign Harper or take all of Giancarlo Stanton’s megadeal. They didn’t spend that money. And they’re getting closer to financial flexibility. So if they do have a rainy day fund stashed away, then … well, then they shouldn’t have laid off 50 people last week. Start there. But also, perhaps they might be positioned to take advantage of the current situation as other clubs operate with differing levels of desperation to seek payroll relief. What is it Warren Buffett says? Be greedy when others are fearful? You can only do that if you have the capital, and the Giants are not a poor organization by any stretch.
Reversing back to your first question, let’s see if Trevor Bauer is true to his word about only signing one-year contracts. If that’s the case, then absolutely, there is no better free-agent fit for the Giants. They could even flip him at the deadline if their season goes sideways. Bauer said he’ll let someone shoot him in the man parts with a paintball gun if he signs a multiyear contract. So either way, this will be worth watching.
3- WARRIORS NEW OAKLAND JERSEYS......
OTHER:
-TODAY IS NATIONAL SANDWICH DAY — IF YOU COULD ORDER ANYTHING WHERE YOU OGING?
- FRENCH DIP
-ITALIAN W/ VIGRETTS NOT MAYO
-NY STYLE PASTRAMI AND SWISS W/ DRESSING
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