Basketball Jesus wrote:There’s something to the inverted W mechanical issue but I don’t necessarily buy the pathway to inevitable injury that people seem to be painting it out to be. Sure, when an inverted W guy with supposedly flawless mechanics like Prior flames out, it’s a possible red flag but almost every retro-discovered player with the inverted W had other extenuating circumstances that were equally plausible causes for their injuries. Until there’s a definite player whose injury can be attributed to nothing but the W, it’s more mechanical oddity than automatic death.
I wouldn't claim otherwise. However, there is at least some evidence of a correlation, and it has to be figured into the cost-benefit analysis. Strasburg's issues aren't
only the inverted W either; they say his leg kick is slow, his follow-through is poor, he pronates his forearm too much, etc. Here's where I'm getting way out of my depth, so I'll stop. But I will just say, the risk has been identified and needs to be taken into account. If they can get past that, there's no question he's a flat-out stud.
blackery3000 wrote:While his numbers dwarf anything we've ever seen from a college pitching prospect, I don't think Boras can demand a contract worth quadruple what David Price got. If he does that's just gross. Strasburg's scary good but his ceiling isn't four times as high as Price's, especially when you factor in the concerns about his mechanics.
Being perceived as gross has never deterred Boras before...
On the other hand, while we might see $40 million as quadruple what David Price got, another way to look at it is $8 million less than what Carlos Silva got. And, leaving the injury concerns aside for a moment, Strasburg is already a much better pitcher, right now, than Carlos Silva is. With Washburn, Batista, Bedard and Beltre coming off the books after this season, I would think $40 million is a pretty good investment for 6 years of a pitcher who will be in the majors by the end of 2009 and possibly dominating from 2011-2014. If they don't see the mechanics as an issue, then I would say by all means, pull the trigger.
Another thing that bears mentioning is that pitchers taken #1 overall have never, ever lived up to their draft status. I still don't think that should deter anyone from taking Strasburg. You could say guards rarely make good #1 overall picks in the NBA, yet LeBron was a no-brainer in 2003. And there may be some other guys in this draft who are analogous to Melo and Bosh and Wade and, ahem, Darko, but Strasburg is the LeBron of this draft. Again, that's
if they get past the injury issue, and they understand this stuff a lot better than I do.