RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (Full Version)

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SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 1:54:05 PM)

Love it when tiny animals can make grown men act like little girls .....
http://www.csnphilly.com/blog/700-level/squirrel-interrupts-phillies-cardinals-game-jumps-chase-utley




djskillz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 1:54:50 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: djskillz

Just my theory, but I think they're focused much too much on strength vs. core/flexibility, etc.

And also, the season is just too long. Some of the stuff these guys do to their bodies to stay on the field (and have been doing since the 40's and 50's) shouldn't have to be done. The season is a grind.

Once again ...
One featured game a night on Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday. Ala the early days of MNF.
Then, everyone plays a four-game series every Thursday/Friday/Saturday/Sunday.
Much better intensity. Much better injury management. Much better focus and stronger staff arms and bullpens.
Packed stadiums every night, instead of half-full ones for most of the week.
National TV games on the feature nights, gets the nation to know the teams and players better.
The SMF Plan. Been trying to push it for decades. No progress.


SMF for commish!




djskillz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 3:30:17 PM)

This guy's a douchebag if you ask me. It's a freaking baseball. Wonder how many kids he's stolen balls from along the way:

http://espn.go.com/new-york/mlb/story/_/id/13117149/fan-caught-alex-rodriguez-3000th-hit-not-planning-return-new-york-yankees-player




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 3:32:32 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: djskillz

This guy's a douchebag if you ask me. It's a freaking baseball. Wonder how many kids he's stolen balls from along the way:

http://espn.go.com/new-york/mlb/story/_/id/13117149/fan-caught-alex-rodriguez-3000th-hit-not-planning-return-new-york-yankees-player

Didn't want to be the first to say it.
Exactly.
DOUCHE
BAG
"I catch balls at ball games"




djskillz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 4:27:01 PM)

If catching over 8,000 baseballs at stadiums (and not wanting to give one back) doesn't make you re-evaluate your life, I don't know what does.




djskillz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 5:57:51 PM)

I guess that Scherzer fellow is pretty solid. 18 innings, 1 hit, 26 K's the last 2 games. [:-]

The pitching in the sport is just unbelievable right now.




JT2 -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:11:25 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: djskillz

This guy's a douchebag if you ask me. It's a freaking baseball. Wonder how many kids he's stolen balls from along the way:

http://espn.go.com/new-york/mlb/story/_/id/13117149/fan-caught-alex-rodriguez-3000th-hit-not-planning-return-new-york-yankees-player



Another reason why Doubles are better than Home Runs.[;)]




djskillz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:16:02 PM)

[&:][&:] Exactly. Well played, Pete.

How do you feel about the ARod march into the record books? Curious to get the NY perspective.




Black 47 -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:21:13 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: djskillz

If catching over 8,000 baseballs at stadiums (and not wanting to give one back) doesn't make you re-evaluate your life, I don't know what does.

The most pathetic thing is how many balls do you think he's stolen from kids? I don't mean literally taking it out of their hands, but the jackass is running all over the place undoubtedly to rows no where close to his seat, catching balls meant for the people sitting in the rows where the ball was hit!




Lynn G. -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:23:07 PM)

Was what Tabata did in that 9th inning at bat against Scherzer as punk-like as I feel it is? He leaned into a pitch to take it on his padded elbow to ruin the perfect game.




JT2 -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:24:32 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: djskillz

[&:][&:] Exactly. Well played, Pete.

How do you feel about the ARod march into the record books? Curious to get the NY perspective.



I just can't pay that much attention to who cheated and who didn't. It's really more a matter of who got caught. Lots of luck involved with that one, and a measure of stupidity.

Never was a big fan of ARod, the person. He's a lot like Bonds to me. Unbelieveable baseball talents, no matter how you slice it.

I do like him much better now that he is going a little more low profile, and at least faking being humble.




djskillz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:27:01 PM)

Gotcha. That's almost exactly how I feel. Was just curious how all this was being perceived by the Yankee fans.




djskillz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:27:36 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Black 47

quote:

ORIGINAL: djskillz

If catching over 8,000 baseballs at stadiums (and not wanting to give one back) doesn't make you re-evaluate your life, I don't know what does.

The most pathetic thing is how many balls do you think he's stolen from kids? I don't mean literally taking it out of their hands, but the jackass is running all over the place undoubtedly to rows no where close to his seat, catching balls meant for the people sitting in the rows where the ball was hit!


Exactly. I've encountered a lot of fans like that in my former time on the venue side. It was all I could do to not kick them out of the park.




Black 47 -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:28:29 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lynn G.

Was what Tabata did in that 9th inning at bat against Scherzer as punk-like as I feel it is? He leaned into a pitch to take it on his padded elbow to ruin the perfect game.

Just wow. I didnt know that. He deserves one in the ribs tomorrow. Gutless umpire shouldn't have allowed it.




JT2 -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 6:39:23 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: djskillz

Gotcha. That's almost exactly how I feel. Was just curious how all this was being perceived by the Yankee fans.



I think Yankee fans were always tough on ARod. Prior to 2009, he had some struggles in the postseason, and often times booed at home.

This season (although I haven't been to a home game yet) seems more like a second chance, redemtption thing. Almost like he is the underdog.




Black 47 -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/20/2015 7:55:22 PM)

I still remember it. I was at Kaufman Stadium for a Twins Royals game in 2001. Don't know if any of you remember it was the game Ortiz broke his wrist on the play at the plate, and later David freaking McCarty got the game winning hit off Latroy. Around the 7th inning a foul ball hit our direction, and some jackass grown man Twins fan obliterated a 7 year old to get the ball. Never been so embarrassed in my life. I always felt a little guilty I didn't stand up and get in the guys face and give him a piece of my mind.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 7:37:32 AM)

Helluva day in MLB yesterday
Expected to come in and read about it. .... nope.

Scherzer is on another planet right now. Retired 54 of the last 57 he's faced. One hit in his past two outings. Wow.
Yanks pound the Tigers 14-3.
Ortiz ejected as the Royales come back to beat the Red Sox.
Giants and Dodgers renew a great rivalry, Giants can just never be counted out.
Astros are getting exposed at the same time we are, lots of up-and-down play, no one's running away from anyone.
Harper returns to the Nats, with, of course ... another homer. Some of these young bucks make power look so easy. Its not.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 11:45:25 AM)

A disastrous season in Philly

Buster Olney: "We all thought the Phillies were going to be in for a tough year ... but it has absolutely spiraled in a really terrible way here in the last four weeks -- they [have] lost 23 of their last 28 games."





SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 12:06:51 PM)

Bruce Bochy: Giants Manager Left Behind by Team Bus After Friday's Game Against Dodgers


"The bus left me," Bochy told reporters before Saturday's game. "I thought it was like, 'Leave no troops behind.'" He eventually took a cab back to the team's hotel




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 12:41:06 PM)

Some Olney Insider stuff on Scherzer.

LOS ANGELES -- A longtime general manager once challenged some of the numbers presented to him by a statistical analyst in his front office. “Don’t tell me what happened, because I can figure that part out,” he told him. “Tell me what’s going to happen, because if you can do that, then we’re really onto something.”

But the GM said this knowing that he was asking for the impossible, because despite all of the formulas that have helped to improve baseball analysis since the days Bill James started publishing his handbooks, none of them can account for change -- the adjustments that players make mentally and physically, season to season, game to game, at-bat to at-bat, pitch to pitch.

Somebody finds a new pitch, a new angle, a more comfortable hitting position, a new methodology at the plate, and a lot of the numbers that a given player has accumulated up until that moment become obsolete.

Max Scherzer had a great arm at the University of Missouri, but his mechanics -- including a violent jerk of his head as he released the pitch -- scared some teams away, and may have even been a factor in the decision by the team that drafted him in 2006, the Diamondbacks, to deal him to Detroit. After his first four seasons in the big leagues, Scherzer was still something of a mystery; he would follow great starts with poor outings.

But Scherzer was devoted to making himself better. He changed his delivery, and learned to use statistical analysis in his game preparation, and in a bullpen session in the summer of 2012, he tried a curveball. As it turned out, this was like unlocking his key to dominance, because with a full repertoire -- including a curveball that he would use for a change of pace, and to get ahead in the count -- he went from promising to almost perfect, as he demonstrated in Saturday's no-hitter against the Pirates. He came so close, James Wagner writes.

Change is not restricted to players who want to go from good to great. Buster Posey has been an All-Star catcher and an MVP for a team that has won three championships in the past five years. But this year, he has made a notable alteration, which has seemingly put him in position to put the ball in play more often.

Three years ago, Posey was among the more patient hitters in the game, going deep into the count consistently. But that has changed.



A less patient Posey

Buster Posey's pitches per plate appearance


Year

Pitches


2012 4.26
2013 4.04
2014 3.84
2015 3.58

It appears Posey -- like Matt Carpenter and Mike Trout -- is hunting fastballs more often this year, and his contact rate has increased. His strikeout rate of 8.8 percent is the lowest of his career, far lower than any of the projection systems pegged him.

When Tim Lincecum signed a two-year, $35 million deal with the Giants after the 2013 season, folks with other teams were shocked at San Francisco’s level of investment because he had been trending in the wrong direction for several years, his fastball velocity sliding backward at an alarming rate.

The Giants’ offer to Lincecum was based partly on his history with the team and his popularity, but as it has turned out, Lincecum has been better than expected, because even in the face of an almost unprecedented drop in velocity, he has been able to adapt. Lincecum -- whose Giants look to close out a weekend series sweep against the Dodgers on Sunday Night Baseball -- is working with a fastball that averages 87.6 mph, much slower than the 94 mph he averaged in 2008.

But through the use of a changeup, which he throws more often than all but nine pitchers in the game, he has managed to remain effective. After finishing 2014 poorly, Lincecum is 7-3 with a 3.31 ERA in 13 starts this season, numbers that are much better than the ugliness that was predicted for him.

We can guess, but we’ll never know for sure what will come next, because we will never been able to account for all that drives each player, what makes them think, what makes them change.

From ESPN Stats and Information, how Scherzer threw his no-hitter against Pittsburgh:

A. He was a control freak. He threw a strike on 77.4 percent of his pitches, the second-highest rate in any start in his career (and highest since 2009). He threw 22 first-pitch strikes, tied for third most this season; batters were 0-for-17 with no hard-hit balls and six strikeouts after falling behind 0-1 (they were 0-for-4 on first pitches; the HBP in the ninth started with an 0-1 count as well).

B. He threw a season-high 53.8 percent of his pitches in the upper half of the zone or higher (the Pirates entered the game with the fourth-highest batting average in the NL vs. pitches in the upper half).

C. His slider was unhittable. In his past two starts, opponents are 0-for-21 with 13 K's vs. Scherzer's slider. He had 14 K's with his slider in his previous seven starts this year.

From ESPN Stats and Information: Scherzer posted a game score of 97 in his no-hitter after putting up a 100 in his previous start.

He's the only pitcher in the live ball era (since 1920) with a game score of at least 97 in back-to-back starts.



Scherzer's near-perfect no-no

No-hitters in which one batter reached base -- via HBP


Year

Pitcher

Team


2015 Max Scherzer Nationals
1997 Kevin Brown Marlins
1960 Lew Burdette Braves
1908 Hooks Wiltse Giants

Scherzer is the fourth pitcher in major league history to throw a no-hitter in which the only batter to reach base was hit by a pitch.

Scherzer made history, writes Thom Loverro. Scherzer’s parents were on hand to watch the game.

Jose Tabata was just trying to get a good pitch to hit, he explained after the game.

The notion that Tabata had some mad, diabolical plan to end Scherzer’s perfection by sticking his elbow into the path of the ball could not be more ridiculous. He could not have possibly planned this; it’s a reflex, a physical response to a pitch that was close to his body, and yes, he appeared to lean into the pitch. But that’s in keeping with his devotion to finding a way to get on base.

From James Wagner’s story:

The errant slider to Tabata made Scherzer the first pitcher to lose a perfect game with a hit-by-pitch with two outs in the ninth inning since Hooks Wiltse in 1908. The Nationals did not argue the call. Manager Matt Williams said he didn’t consider stepping out of the dugout to talk to home plate umpire Mike Muchlinski because he didn’t want to mess with Scherzer’s rhythm. “That’d be a crying shame,” he said.

[Nationals catcher Wilson] Ramos said Tabata’s elbow was in the strike zone. Watching from right field, [Bryce] Harper crouched down into a squat: “I wanted to cry,” he said.

“It got me in the elbow, the protector elbow,” Tabata said. “He try to throw me like a slider something inside, but the slider no breaking, so it stay in, right there, he got me.”

Scherzer blamed no one but himself for the pitch. He had Tabata backed into a corner with two strikes, but Tabata fouled off five pitches in the at-bat.

“Just didn’t finish the pitch,” Scherzer said. “Backed up on me and clipped him. It’s just one of those things that happened. Just focus on what you can do next.”

Tabata battled, Scherzer said.

The Internet is now mad at Tabata because of what happened. You need to appreciate the performance, says Pirates manager Clint Hurdle.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 12:45:52 PM)

Orioles pounding on the Jays this weekend.
Up 7-0 early today already.
They're going to be a tough beat again this Fall
Still think they should have beaten the Royales last year.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 1:02:31 PM)

And ... right on cue ... Harper with ANOTHER homer.
Makes it look sooooo easy.
Hamstring, schmamstring




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 1:17:53 PM)

Jays answer right back ... 7-6




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 2:36:59 PM)

Boston pounding the Royals today 7-0 in the fifth.




Stacey King -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (6/21/2015 3:45:00 PM)

Mookie Betts is red hot the last 3 or 4 games. He is finally hitting now like he did ALL of spring training.

Rick Porcello (Saturday night again) not so much. He's been consistently not hot. That contract extension they gave him in ST is getting more and more interesting.

16:$20M,
17:$20M,
18:$21M,
19:$21M




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