sf2fanatic
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*powerbomb's Mark4Life through a table*Our Orioles did it! Been a lifelong fan since 9/5/17.
*powerbomb's Mark4Life through a table*Our Orioles did it! Been a lifelong fan since 9/5/17.
Dellin cut his walk rate in half from 8 bb/9 in the first half to 4 bb/9 in the second half. Now 4 bb/9 isn't great but it's a massive improvement from his first half.
Our best reliever has been Chad Green and he should continue to be used as he has been; as a fireman.
Our Orioles did it! Been a lifelong fan since 9/5/17.
His walk rate in the second half is right in line with his career walk rate. He hung a breaking ball. It happens.I like Girardi but I really think its time someone re-evaluates how he uses the bullpen, especially in 1 run games.
As someone who watches the games, I agree with evil. Guy is a complete crapshoot if he is going to be wild or not and more often than not, he is all over the place against batters and gets some lucky bailouts.
*sigh* this is a bad one tonight, should have had this one.... thanks Toronto you sucky bastards.
His walk rate in the second half is right in line with his career walk rate. He hung a breaking ball. It happens.
And I've been watching the games too.
Willie Mays Hayeslmao who tags up from 1st to 2nd on a fly ball to CF?
Some of it is just bad luck. We're the opposite of the rangers from last year and the O's a few years ago.but bottom line is that it's another blown save. too many of those this year.
that seems strangely convenient.... >_>
After this loss and the red sox coming back? Probably not, but there's still three more weeks of the regular season left and we've seen the sox blow larger leads before.lol, Yankees fans seriously think they can win the division?
I'm joking when I say the O's can win it.
I'm sorry but the Yankees deserve it. Can this be the game to KO them? I don't know. But the division now slips further away and will they get off the mat tomorrow strong? I am very skeptical. Outside of DRob, there is no one I feel confident as pitching in the 9th inning in a close game.
I would be very careful with trusting stats at face value. According to them, the Yankees have one of the best bullpens in baseball.
Why would this game be the KO?
OUR RED SOX DID IT!!
Fuck yeah, Ken Giles striking out the side.
5-0 since the trade. Verlander's great!
*Double Reppukens Lee and sf2
Fuck yeah, Ken Giles striking out the side.
5-0 since the trade. Verlander's great!
*Double Reppukens Lee and sf2
The Yankees need to get as much momentum as possible if they want to make a true run to the playoffs. They had that going for then thus far this month. A loss is a loss but losses like tonight are killer. That momentum has hit a brick wall and the team hasn't exactly recovered well in the past few months.
Glad it's not OctoberYup, that sums up September Dodgers
Best and worst game ever. Devil Pirates child gives me nightmares.LETS GO PIRATES!!
https://www.talkingchop.com/2017/9/6/16261968/ronald-acuna-named-usa-today-milb-player-of-the-yearRonald Acuña was named USA Today Minor League Player of the Year. The award, which is voted upon by both writers and then subjected to a fan vote, was dominated by Acuña who beat out Zack Littel, Rafael Devers, Rhys Hoskins, and Jack Flaherty. Zack Littel won the fan vote, worth one point, but was out scored 5-2 by Acuña.
Acuña started the year started the year with the Florida Fire Frogs (A), but after putting up a 135 wRC+ while hitting .287/.336/.478 with 14 stolen bases he was quickly promoted to Mississippi (AA). Facing stiffer competition in AA, Acuña saw an uptick in production hitting .326/.374/.520 with 19 stolen bases and 9 homers - good enough for a 159 wRC+. His K% dropped significantly from 31.7% to 23% and the Braves saw enough out of the 19 year old to aggressively promote him to AAA Gwinnett. In 54 games in AAA, Acuña hit .344/.393/.548 with 9 homers and 11 stolen bases and saw his K-rate drop down again to 19.8%.
On the year, Acuña hit .325/.374/.522 with 21 homers and 44 stolen bases - a feat that hasn't been done in the Braves minor league system since Andruw Jones hit 34 homers and stole 30 bases in 1996...while being promoted twice. After a short offseason, Acuña will report to the AFL where he will be showcased against some of the top talent in all of the minors.
Ronald Acuña (Atlanta Braves) named USA Today MiLB Player of the Year:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/spor...-ronald-acuna-improves-every-level/633376001/
https://www.talkingchop.com/2017/9/6/16261968/ronald-acuna-named-usa-today-milb-player-of-the-year
*folds arms and smiles*
Hopefully Acuna can be as good as previous award winners like Rocco Baldelli and Ron Kittle.
The following 10 players were most similar to Acuna at the same stage of their careers, based on the volume of each player's excellence at Double-A and/or Triple-A.
1. Alex Rodriguez, SS, Mariners (1995)
A-Rod entered the 1995 season ranked as the game's No. 1 overall prospect after playing at three minor league levels, plus Seattle for 17 games, the preceding year. He delivered on that promise by hitting .360/.411/.654 (172 OPS+) with 15 home runs in 54 games at Triple-A Tacoma interrupted by two callups to the majors.
2. Gary Sheffield, SS/3B, Brewers (1988)
Sheffield shredded pitchers at both Double-A El Paso and Triple-A Denver on his way to a 24-game September callup. In the minors that season he hit .327/.395/.579 (174 OPS+) with 28 home runs in 134 games—though adjusting for those hitter-friendly ballparks would take some air out of his final line.
3. Andruw Jones, OF, Braves (1996)
The No. 1 prospect in baseball entering the 1996 season, Jones soared from high Class A Durham to Double-A Greenville to Triple-A Richmond to Atlanta that season. In the minors he batted .339/.421/.652 (188 OPS+) with 34 home runs and 30 stolen bases in 116 games, earning a mid-August callup.
4. Gregg Jefferies, SS/3B, Mets (1987)
A two-time Minor League POY in 1986 and 1987, Jefferies in the latter season hit .367/.423/.598 (165 OPS+) with 20 home runs and 48 doubles in 134 games at Double-A Jackson. While his defensive limitations forced a move to first base in the majors, he enjoyed a pair of all-star seasons with the 1993 and 1994 Cardinals.
5. Jason Heyward, OF, Braves (2009)
Though he hasn't made good on his $184 million deal with the Cubs, Heyward enjoyed six productive seasons at the start of his big league career. He entered 2010 as the No. 1 prospect in the game after he hit .323/.408/.555 (169 OPS+) with 17 home runs in 99 games the year before at high Class A Myrtle Beach, Double-A Mississippi and Triple-A Gwinnett.
6. Mike Trout, OF, Angels (2011)
Trout won the Minor League POY award in 2011 for batting .326/.414/.544 (156 OPS+) with 11 home runs and 33 stolen bases in 91 games at Double-A Arkansas, a performance that earned him a pair of callups to the Angels. What it didn't earn him was the No. 1 spot on the Top 100 Prospects list in 2012. That went to Bryce Harper.
7. Melvin Upton, SS, Rays (2004)
While Upton has been only sporadically excellent in a 12-year big league career, the No. 2 overall pick in 2002 excelled at Double-A Montgomery and Triple-A Durham in 2004, batting .315/.410/.505 (143 OPS+) with 14 home runs in 98 games. Tampa Bay called him up on Aug. 2 and he appeared in 45 big league games as a teenager. A switch from shortstop to center field followed in 2007.
8. Justin Upton, OF, Diamondbacks (2007)
Upton's remarkable 2007 season concluded with 43 games in Arizona for the playoff-bound D-backs, but it began at high Class A Visalia and continued at Double-A Mobile prior to his Aug. 2 callup. In the minors that season he hit .319/.410/.551 (158 OPS+) with 18 home runs in 103 games.
9. Adrian Beltre, 3B, Dodgers (1998)
An 18-year-old Beltre nearly won the Florida State League triple crown in 1997, and he entered 1998 ranked No. 3 on the Top 100 Prospects behind only Ben Grieve and Paul Konerko. He then batted .321/.411/.581 (151 OPS+) with 13 home runs and 20 stolen bases in 64 games at Double-A San Antonio in 1998, prompting a second-half callup to the Dodgers.
10. Delmon Young, OF, Rays (2005)
Young could do no wrong early in his pro career, and he aced his first test of the high minors in 2005. That season he batted .315/.354/.527 with 26 home runs and 32 stolen bases in 136 games at Double-A Montgomery and Triple-A Durham to win Minor League POY honors. That performance made Young the No. 1 prospect in baseball heading into 2006, when his career showed the first signs of unraveling. That season he earned a 50-game suspension for throwing a bat at a minor league umpire.
Read more at http://www.baseballamerica.com/mino...batters-class-since-1987/#FIsIo2UkXCvR2qBB.99
in the continuing saga of Bob Nutting saved enough to buy lunch, the Cards picked up Juan Nicasio from the Phillies.
For Eliezer Alvarez, a perfectly OK 2B prospect who had a down year with injuries.
Probably an overpay for something like 10 innings of Nicasio, but whatever. Alvarez might've been DFA'd in the offseason to clear a spot on the 40man anyway.
Sounds like it wasn't the Cardinals who first claimed him from the Pirates, though. Might've been Brewers.
Good pickup, but come postseason he can't pitch.in the continuing saga of Bob Nutting saved enough to buy lunch, the Cards picked up Juan Nicasio from the Phillies.
What in the actual fuck was that inning lol.
Taylor and Lobaton on first and second with no outs. Gio up to bunt. Taylor caught stealing at third. Gio strikes out. Loby picked off at second.