Kuroyume said:You're laughing at our bullpen? :lol The ****ing gall man... the **** gall... :lol
siamesedreamer said:Its worthy of mocking because he invited it upon himself by not taking the necessary precautions to prevent an injury in an automobile. His own stupidity has seriously jeopardized the Mets' chances for winning the World Series. I can hear the bitching now "if we only had D-I-RRRRRR-T-Y in that situation.....blah blah blah".
Injuries on the field are entirely different situations.
As far as it inviting bad karma - pfft......there is absolutely nothing I do or say that has any effect what-so-ever on people I don't know and are never around.
Mifune said:I don't know if you've been in a cab lately, but not many of them have seatbelts that are easily accessible, function properly, or even exist.
If he was driving or riding in a normal car and didn't have his seatbelt on, then by all means, mock away. But come on, the dude could have been wearing his seatbelt and you would be laughing at him.
siamesedreamer said:meh......probably so since the same thing happened to the ultimate traitor two years ago. Think the Mets are gonna hire a private transportation service now?
Eminem said:If you have MLB.tv, make sure to turn in to the White Sox game right now to watch us lose in the bottom of the 9th to the ****ing Royals
rc213 said:BIGGER NEWS: Jose Cruz Jr. DFA'd! 3 Cheers!
If Steve Avery and Charlie Leibrandt came back he's welcome them. Hell, rumors are that Scheurholtz was ready to join the Atlanta staff.Mifune said:It's the curse of the taxi cab or something. Bizarre shit.
Anyway, would you welcome the great traitor back if he returned to Atllanta?
Meier said:Bummer, just to make room for Lugo.. was hoping it was to call up Matt Kemp. He's hitting over .400 since going back down to Vegas. Kemp, Ethier, Repko = the future!
Eminem said:White Sox struggle to beat the worst team in baseball, but hey, I'll take it.
I don't like to say I enjoy players getting injured, so I won't say anything at all except:
Liriano is missing his next start with an inflamed left elbow.
Mifune said:Anyway, would you welcome the great traitor back if he returned to Atllanta?
Joe said:so in september the yanks might look like
1. damon
2. jeter
3. giambi
4. arod
5. abreu
6. sheffield
7. matsui
8. posada
9. cano
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Fifty said:Andy!
Godfather pitching out of his mind.
Angelus said:Jesus Christ. If the Yanks get any pitching at all from the back end of their rotation (speechless)...just wow.
Eminem said:What's nice for the White Sox is that if we get into the postseason, we'll get to take on a division rival in the Tigers(barring some ridiculous collapse). No matter how good their record is, I'm much more comfortable having to play the Tigers over the Yankees if they get in.
Desperado said:Are you talking about the first round? Because teams in the same division can't face each other in a Division Series.
rc213 said:I think they want to see him hit Lefty's better aswell not be completely overpowered against anything but the fast ball. He'll probably be ready for next year barring any injuries to another outfielder.
siamesedreamer said::lol :lol :lol :lol :lol
SINCE
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CANT EVEN DO THAT
+
AN UNRELIABLE
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=
BETTER CALL BLOWBERTO!!
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Forgetting about the AL West is a common occurence.Eminem said:Well I was but obviously I'm retarded and completely forgot there was an AL West, and so I don't know how that worked in my head.
datruth29 said:Forgetting about the AL West is a common occurence.
Fifty said:You're so very kind for putting Colon at the top of that list. He's at most their 4th best pitcher right now. Anyway, I like the Angels...I hope they do well. They've got a good young team and I really hope they beat out the A's in that division.
Since when was insulting the Braves pen "personal"? And lets review:evil solrac v3.0 said:mets fan have a collective rod stuck up where the sun dont shine or something? siamese cant even make a little joke without making it personal...
8/2 Daily News said:It does not get much worse than having your closer give up a come-from-behind game-winning homer. Billy Wagner now has five blown saves this year. It's a lot for a top closer. Brad Lidge only has four, and there was talk of getting rid of him at the trade deadline. If Duaner Sanchez had not gotten hurt, there would probably be talk today of making him the closer. But after looking at some numbers, I find myself coming to Wagner's defense. Wagner has no losses in games besides some of the ones in which he blew the save. If you add blown saves to losses in other games, his numbers are more in line with other top closers:
Blown saves
Turnbow- 8
Isringhausen- 7
Street- 7
Wagner- 5
Lidge- 4
Ryan- 4
Hoffman- 4
Papelbon- 3
F. Rodriguez- 3
Gordon- 3
T. Jones- 3
Rivera- 2
Jenks- 2
Nathan- 1
Blown saves + losses in other games
Turnbow- 10
Isringhausen- 9
Street- 8
Gordon- 6
Wagner- 5
Rivera- 5
Hoffman- 5
F. Rodriguez- 5
Lidge- 5
T. Jones- 5
Papelbon- 4
Ryan- 4
Jenks- 3
Nathan- 1
Before anyone writes in, I am not using this numbers to argue that Wagner is equivalent to Mariano. He's not. But going into the season, Wagner was considered one of the Top Five closers, along with Mariano, Lidge, Nathan and Francisco Rodriguez, and I'd argue that he still belongs in the top group, with Lidge coming out and Papelbon coming in (Jenks has a 3.88 ERA).
It's probably not a coincidence that the best closers come from some of the best teams in the American League - Yankees, Red Sox, Angels, Twins. Meanwhile, the Mets are five games ahead ahead of the Cardinals for best NL record, and one could argue that the difference is in their closers.
Wagner makes me nervous, but there aren't many closers I'd rather have.
FireJoeMorgan said:The Reds' FSN Midwest backup play-by-play guy (Jeff Piecoro?), in the bottom of the ninth:
Edwin Encarnacion is one of the hardest workers on the team ... Let's see if that helps him here against one of the top closers in the National League, Derrick Turnbow! (empahsis mine)
Turnbow on the year:
5.88 ERA
1.52 WHIP
Turnbow, July 2006:
22.24 ERA
3.35 WHIP
.388 (!) BAA
That's right. In the month of July, hitters are batting .388 against Derrick Turnbow. That's all hitters.
Later, after Turnbow walked Encarnacion:
If you're Ned Yost, what do you do here? Do you stick with your All-Star closer? (emphasis mine)
Yost immediately inserted Francisco Cordero.
Jonathan Leshanski said:This afternoon when I was at lunch with a few friends, we heard guys at the next table talking about what a terrible closer the New York Mets have in Braden Looper. It led to a conversation (at our table) as to what defines a “Good” closer and just how many really good closers there are. Since the gentlemen that I was sitting with are both big Mets (and avid fantasy baseball) fans, I asked them who they thought was the best closer in the division. Both agreed that it had to be Chad Cordero of the Washington Nationals. I then asked what exactly defined a good closer.
They defined a good closer as one that successfully gets a save 80% of the time and a great closer is someone that succeeds 85% of the time (current active saves leader Trevor Hoffman is 424 for 474 for 89.5%). If we accept that as a criteria then the good closers include the aforementioned Braden Looper, who has been successful in 83% of his save chances this year (25 of 30 chances). That number shook their belief a little bit so they amended the definition to say that a good closer doesn’t give up many earned runs in the games they get saves in. Well, a quick look at my computer showed that Looper gave up earned runs in a game where he also recorded a save only once this season - the lowest total in the NL East (Cordero has 5 saves where he gave up earned run(s), Billy Wagner has 3 saves under similar circumstances, and Todd Jones also has 1, and I’ll skip the ugliness of the Braves’ bullpen).
Given this information the definition shifted again. We decided that when defining a good closer you must take into consideration how many runs scored, either earned or unearned, in their blown saves. Looper gave up 10 runs in 5 blown saves or 2 per blown save, while Todd Jones and Chad Cordero yielded 1.5 per blown save, Billy Wagner yielded 1 per blown save. Clearly we seemed to be onto something here.
Next we considered the team’s winning percentage in games where the closer blew the save.
Washington .500 (2-2)
Philadelphia .500 (1-1)
Florida .500 (1-1)
New York .400 (2-3)
Not enough of a difference between Cordero and Looper to draw any conclusions though it’s suggestive. Then we moved on and attempted to spot the biggest differences. At this point we expanded the talk to include all closers in the major leagues. We looked around the majors for closers with an equal number or more blown saves to Looper’s 5. We found nine current closers that had five or more blown saves (Danys Baez and Chris Reitsman - 7 each, Francisco Cordero, Miguel Batista - 6 each, B.J. Ryan, Francisco Cordero, Bob Wickman , Tyler Walker and Braden Looper - 5 each) and 14 who have had 4 or more. So, total blown saves didn’t appear to differentiate Looper from the pack. So what, I asked, made them think that Braden Looper was so bad? After much discussion they agreed that it was the fact that they had no confidence in the man. They feel that he allows too many base runners, and leaves their hearts pounding with uncertainly every time he enters a game. While I didn’t attempt to quantify their heart rates, it just took a peek at the stats to quantify the number of base runners, by looking at WHIP. Of the 23 closers who have notched 20 or more saves so far this season only 4 players allowed more hits & walks per inning (WHIP) than Looper (1.4), and one of those four has lost the closer role. Six of those 23 had worse had worse ERA’s (3.42).
A slightly closer look shows that of 19 earned runs that Looper surrendered, 8 came on the six home runs that Looper has surrendered so far this season. Those six home runs were bunched into just 4 games (2 games with 2 each, 2 games with one). Subtract the six pitches that wound up in the seats and Looper’s ERA would have been a miniscule 1.98, he would have had one fewer blown save and he would be ranking up there with the elite closers.
But he did throw those six pitches and in the big leagues six pitches can make you a “bad closer” in the eyes of local fans.
siamesedreamer said:If anything it shows that throwing $40 million+ over 4 years at 32 year old post Tommy John surgery relievers is beyond stupid.