![]() ![]() Daniel Robertson - I still stan this man, but it’s hard to picture his ceiling really being all that high, to be honest.Yandy Diaz - A common theme to the article to come is: Was 2019 real? With Diaz I just happen to believe the answer is an emphatic Yes.Ji-Man Choi - First base just has so many options that it’s not hard to imagine a few sticking and a few falling by the wayside, so not as big a deal for his ceiling-floor gap.Joey Wendle - The man who prompted this article doesn’t even make the cut for the top six, which is telling in and of itself.With that in mind, let’s highlight the top half dozen of those names that seem like they will have the largest gaps between their possible outcomes in 2020.īefore we begin, however, a brief word on a few honorable mentions: In fact, if anything, it seems like one of the most notable collection of high-variance, make-or-break, star-or-just-plus players in recent memory. The players without any question marks are often priced out of the Rays range, leaving a collection of players with question marks significant enough to make them available to Tampa Bay. This comes with the territory of how the Rays build their roster. Last week, when quizzing y’all on some 2019 Rays statistics, I made a passing reference to Joey Wendle having a similarly vast gap between his overall potential and his worst case scenario. Despite the Tampa Bay Rays overall high floor as a 96-win team with impressive depth, the ceiling-floor gap on many of the Rays 2020 players seems to be vast. ![]()
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