RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (Full Version)

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sixthwi -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 11:03:25 AM)

Braves fire manager Fredi Gonzalez.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 11:04:05 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

Braves fire manager Fredi Gonzalez.



Who's next?

Ausmus?

Molitor?

Houston/Arizona guys?




CPAMAN -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 11:04:50 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

Braves fire manager Fredi Gonzalez.


That seems a bit unfair. Aren't the Braves totally rebuilding from straw and mud?




sixthwi -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 12:17:01 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

quote:

ORIGINAL: sixthwi

Braves fire manager Fredi Gonzalez.



Who's next?

Ausmus?

Molitor?

Houston/Arizona guys?


Molitor? No way. Hasn't had his four straight years of suck yet. [:'(]




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 1:15:15 PM)

12:57pm: The Cubs have reached agreement on a contract with veteran reliever Joe Nathan, according to Gordon Wittenmyer of the Chicago Sun-Times (via Twitter).

1:03pm: It’s a major league deal, per a team announcement. Nathan will immediately go onto the 60-day DL, meaning he won’t cost the club a 40-man spot.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 1:15:48 PM)

Houston also announced that outfielder Carlos Gomez will hit the 15-day DL; he has a bruised left rib cage, per Brian McTaggart of MLB.com




twinsfan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 1:17:30 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

12:57pm: The Cubs have reached agreement on a contract with veteran reliever Joe Nathan, according to Gordon Wittenmyer of the Chicago Sun-Times (via Twitter).

1:03pm: It’s a major league deal, per a team announcement. Nathan will immediately go onto the 60-day DL, meaning he won’t cost the club a 40-man spot.


That should be an illegal move.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 1:32:44 PM)

The average time of a nine-inning baseball game is up nearly seven minutes compared with this point last season, and MLB commissioner Rob Manfred isn't happy about it.

"We think the single biggest thing we had going for us early in the year [last season] was player focus on the topic," Manfred told ESPN. "And we feel like we've lost a little focus. So we're doing a variety of things to try to get that focus back."

Through Monday, the average time of a nine-inning game this season was 3 hours, 26 seconds. At the same stage of last season, about six weeks after MLB implemented much-ballyhooed new pace-of-game rules, the average game time was 2:53:33. That pace did slow, however, and the average time by season's end wound up at 2:56:14.

Manfred said officials in the commissioner's office have reached out to the Major League Baseball Players Association to let the union know that they're "concerned" about this trend. And players identified as repeated violators of pace-of-game rules have actually received personal phone calls reminding them to adhere to the rules, sources say.

MLB officials believe the prolonged stretch of cold weather in the Midwest and Northeast is one factor, because "when it's cold," Manfred said, "the games do go longer."

Another factor, MLB has concluded, is a steep spike in pitches per game, which have risen to their highest level (289.25 per nine-inning game) in seven years. However, Manfred absolved baseball's replay system of blame, saying he looks at the 35 percent increase in replay reviews, compared with last year, as more of a pace-of-game issue than a time-of-game issue.

Even with the increase in total number of replays, baseball still averages less than one replay per game. So the rise in replays and the rise in game time don't appear to be related. Nevertheless, Manfred said, baseball is studying various aspects of replay this season and will look at potential tweaks to the system after this year.

"You can rest assured," the commissioner said, "that we are watching this year, and we will be analyzing during the offseason, both the number of replays and particularly the longer reviews. The 4-minute-and-50-second reviews don't make me that happy."

Manfred said he is actually gratified that the expanded replay system has worked so well over its first three seasons that MLB has "only tinkered at the edges with the system." Nevertheless, he said, the 35 percent rise in total replays and the trend toward longer reviews are issues "that merit analysis."

"Meriting analysis doesn't mean there ought to be a change," he said. "Just, they merit analysis."

The commissioner said he thinks baseball needs to look at "creative ways" to improve both time and pace of game. He promised that this will be a major topic this summer in negotiations over the next labor deal, which would take effect after this season. Baseball continues to experiment with pitch clocks in minor league games, but Manfred declined to say whether MLB would push for pitch clocks in the major leagues next season.

"We're going to put a package of issues on the table with the union," he said. "Speculating about which ones I like and don't like is counterproductive to that process at this point. I think the best I can do for you at this point is to say I'm prepared to think about additional rule changes that are relevant to the issue of pace of play."



Cut back on the situation pitching stuff, where you have multiple innings of pitching changes.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 1:33:10 PM)

And the instant replays should NEVER be that long on such basic plays.




CPAMAN -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 1:58:27 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

And the instant replays should NEVER be that long on such basic plays.


But they always are. I would say the average length of delay is a solid five minutes.




twinsfan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/17/2016 2:11:24 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

The average time of a nine-inning baseball game is up nearly seven minutes compared with this point last season, and MLB commissioner Rob Manfred isn't happy about it.

"We think the single biggest thing we had going for us early in the year [last season] was player focus on the topic," Manfred told ESPN. "And we feel like we've lost a little focus. So we're doing a variety of things to try to get that focus back."

Through Monday, the average time of a nine-inning game this season was 3 hours, 26 seconds. At the same stage of last season, about six weeks after MLB implemented much-ballyhooed new pace-of-game rules, the average game time was 2:53:33. That pace did slow, however, and the average time by season's end wound up at 2:56:14.

Manfred said officials in the commissioner's office have reached out to the Major League Baseball Players Association to let the union know that they're "concerned" about this trend. And players identified as repeated violators of pace-of-game rules have actually received personal phone calls reminding them to adhere to the rules, sources say.

MLB officials believe the prolonged stretch of cold weather in the Midwest and Northeast is one factor, because "when it's cold," Manfred said, "the games do go longer."

Another factor, MLB has concluded, is a steep spike in pitches per game, which have risen to their highest level (289.25 per nine-inning game) in seven years. However, Manfred absolved baseball's replay system of blame, saying he looks at the 35 percent increase in replay reviews, compared with last year, as more of a pace-of-game issue than a time-of-game issue.

Even with the increase in total number of replays, baseball still averages less than one replay per game. So the rise in replays and the rise in game time don't appear to be related. Nevertheless, Manfred said, baseball is studying various aspects of replay this season and will look at potential tweaks to the system after this year.

"You can rest assured," the commissioner said, "that we are watching this year, and we will be analyzing during the offseason, both the number of replays and particularly the longer reviews. The 4-minute-and-50-second reviews don't make me that happy."

Manfred said he is actually gratified that the expanded replay system has worked so well over its first three seasons that MLB has "only tinkered at the edges with the system." Nevertheless, he said, the 35 percent rise in total replays and the trend toward longer reviews are issues "that merit analysis."

"Meriting analysis doesn't mean there ought to be a change," he said. "Just, they merit analysis."

The commissioner said he thinks baseball needs to look at "creative ways" to improve both time and pace of game. He promised that this will be a major topic this summer in negotiations over the next labor deal, which would take effect after this season. Baseball continues to experiment with pitch clocks in minor league games, but Manfred declined to say whether MLB would push for pitch clocks in the major leagues next season.

"We're going to put a package of issues on the table with the union," he said. "Speculating about which ones I like and don't like is counterproductive to that process at this point. I think the best I can do for you at this point is to say I'm prepared to think about additional rule changes that are relevant to the issue of pace of play."



Cut back on the situation pitching stuff, where you have multiple innings of pitching changes.

One forgotten reason is that road teams are winning more games this season. A full 9-inning game takes longer than an 8.5-inning game, and there have been more full 9-inning games this season.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/20/2016 7:17:57 AM)

TX to already replace their current ballpark within the next 10 years

The Rangers and the City of Arlington are set to announce plans for a new ballpark, Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News reports. According to the report, a retractable roof facility is expected to replace what’s currently known as Globe Life Park in Arlington before the lease on that stadium is set to expire after the 2023 campaign
.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/20/2016 7:19:55 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

TX to already replace their current ballpark within the next 10 years

The Rangers and the City of Arlington are set to announce plans for a new ballpark, Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News reports. According to the report, a retractable roof facility is expected to replace what’s currently known as Globe Life Park in Arlington before the lease on that stadium is set to expire after the 2023 campaign
.

Been telling everyone ... you wait ... the X will soon (very soon) ... not be good enough for the Wild.
Hell, the Twins will even start bitching about their Taj Mahal.
When teams get these beautiful new places, they start pining for what everyone else just got.
Horrific cycle.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/20/2016 7:22:42 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

The average time of a nine-inning baseball game is up nearly seven minutes compared with this point last season, and MLB commissioner Rob Manfred isn't happy about it.

"We think the single biggest thing we had going for us early in the year [last season] was player focus on the topic," Manfred told ESPN. "And we feel like we've lost a little focus. So we're doing a variety of things to try to get that focus back."

Through Monday, the average time of a nine-inning game this season was 3 hours, 26 seconds. At the same stage of last season, about six weeks after MLB implemented much-ballyhooed new pace-of-game rules, the average game time was 2:53:33. That pace did slow, however, and the average time by season's end wound up at 2:56:14.

Manfred said officials in the commissioner's office have reached out to the Major League Baseball Players Association to let the union know that they're "concerned" about this trend. And players identified as repeated violators of pace-of-game rules have actually received personal phone calls reminding them to adhere to the rules, sources say.

MLB officials believe the prolonged stretch of cold weather in the Midwest and Northeast is one factor, because "when it's cold," Manfred said, "the games do go longer."

Another factor, MLB has concluded, is a steep spike in pitches per game, which have risen to their highest level (289.25 per nine-inning game) in seven years. However, Manfred absolved baseball's replay system of blame, saying he looks at the 35 percent increase in replay reviews, compared with last year, as more of a pace-of-game issue than a time-of-game issue.

Even with the increase in total number of replays, baseball still averages less than one replay per game. So the rise in replays and the rise in game time don't appear to be related. Nevertheless, Manfred said, baseball is studying various aspects of replay this season and will look at potential tweaks to the system after this year.

"You can rest assured," the commissioner said, "that we are watching this year, and we will be analyzing during the offseason, both the number of replays and particularly the longer reviews. The 4-minute-and-50-second reviews don't make me that happy."

Manfred said he is actually gratified that the expanded replay system has worked so well over its first three seasons that MLB has "only tinkered at the edges with the system." Nevertheless, he said, the 35 percent rise in total replays and the trend toward longer reviews are issues "that merit analysis."

"Meriting analysis doesn't mean there ought to be a change," he said. "Just, they merit analysis."

The commissioner said he thinks baseball needs to look at "creative ways" to improve both time and pace of game. He promised that this will be a major topic this summer in negotiations over the next labor deal, which would take effect after this season. Baseball continues to experiment with pitch clocks in minor league games, but Manfred declined to say whether MLB would push for pitch clocks in the major leagues next season.

"We're going to put a package of issues on the table with the union," he said. "Speculating about which ones I like and don't like is counterproductive to that process at this point. I think the best I can do for you at this point is to say I'm prepared to think about additional rule changes that are relevant to the issue of pace of play."



Cut back on the situation pitching stuff, where you have multiple innings of pitching changes.

One forgotten reason is that road teams are winning more games this season. A full 9-inning game takes longer than an 8.5-inning game, and there have been more full 9-inning games this season.

The Twins, on the other hand, are doing their best to help shorten things.
Rarely require the bottom half of the ninth when we are on the road, and our offensive halves are usually completed in record time.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/20/2016 7:22:49 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

TX to already replace their current ballpark within the next 10 years

The Rangers and the City of Arlington are set to announce plans for a new ballpark, Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News reports. According to the report, a retractable roof facility is expected to replace what’s currently known as Globe Life Park in Arlington before the lease on that stadium is set to expire after the 2023 campaign
.

Been telling everyone ... you wait ... the X will soon (very soon) ... not be good enough for the Wild.
Hell, the Twins will even start bitching about their Taj Mahal.
When teams get these beautiful new places, they start pining for what everyone else just got.
Horrific cycle.


and there are plenty of fools willing to for the money over to pay for them.




Trekgeekscott -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/20/2016 8:03:35 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

TX to already replace their current ballpark within the next 10 years

The Rangers and the City of Arlington are set to announce plans for a new ballpark, Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News reports. According to the report, a retractable roof facility is expected to replace what’s currently known as Globe Life Park in Arlington before the lease on that stadium is set to expire after the 2023 campaign
.

Been telling everyone ... you wait ... the X will soon (very soon) ... not be good enough for the Wild.
Hell, the Twins will even start bitching about their Taj Mahal.
When teams get these beautiful new places, they start pining for what everyone else just got.
Horrific cycle.



We have some of the finest facilities in sports in the X, Target Field and soon the New Vikings Stadium. Target Center could use some upgrading and my understanding is that they are working on that,(but then it's basketball so I really don't care.

If any owner bitches in the next few years, they may just get a visit from Sweeney's dog.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/20/2016 2:32:09 PM)

The Yankees announced that they’ve signed left-handed reliever Neal Cotts to a minor league contract. The Pro Star Sports Management client will report to the club’s Triple-A affiliate, according to the team.


Former National League Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum is staying in California, but he’s changing leagues and donning a new uniform. The Angels announced on Friday that they’ve signed Lincecum to a one-year, Major League contract for the remainder of the 2016 season. Lincecum, a client of the Beverly Hills Sports Council, will reportedly earn a $2.5MM pro-rated base salary for his time in the Majors.

Athletics outfielder Josh Reddick left tonight’s game with what has been diagnosed as a fractured left thumb, MLB.com’s Jane Lee reports (Twitter links). That represents a major blow for an A’s club that has already been hit hard by injuries.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 8:35:19 AM)

MadBum ... amazing performance last night. Quiets Cubs.

Don't sleep on the Giants.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 9:08:03 AM)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- When they were brash and unstoppable, Kansas City Royals skipper Ned Yost went 178 games and did not call a single team meeting. He did pull pitcher Danny Duffy aside once last year, but even that seemed like something Yost didn't want to do. It was back when the Royals were getting into bench-clearing skirmishes, full of badass energy, and Duffy had yelled something that led to a dugout warning that led to Yost getting tossed.

"That's why you've gotta stay quiet!" Yost said to Duffy, who immediately said he was sorry.

"I'm sorry, too," Yost told him. "I love ya, man."

But then a month into the 2016 season, things were not going so well. The reigning world champs were in a slump that would lead them to 11 losses in 14 games, and Yost walked into the clubhouse after a particularly depressing defeat in New York and asked everyone to slide their chairs together and pull in close. It was already the second team meeting of the season.

Yost told them he was proud of them and confident that things were about to turn around. He talked for maybe two minutes, asked if there were any questions, and adjourned.

"All right," Yost said as he clapped his hands. "Here we go."


HE IS UNFAILINGLY optimistic and trusting -- and it drives fans nuts. Yost was Bobby Cox's right-hand man during the Atlanta Braves' glory years in the 1990s, and Cox taught him a thing or two about rash decisions. He used to have this policy: If he was convinced a guy needed to be demoted or benched, he'd wait a week before he'd do anything. By then, oftentimes the player had broken out of his slump, and if he hadn't, at least Cox didn't have any regrets.

"Patience is big," said Yost, who practices the same policy. "These guys know if we keep playing hard, we'll be fine."

Yost said this last week, as the Royals neared the quarter-point of the season hovering around .500 with a city on edge. All around him, there was talk about World Series hangovers, closing windows, and a list of players who needed a one-way ticket to Class AAA Omaha. The Washington Post practically wrote an obit on the Royals this past week, with a headline that read, "The Naysayers Were Right About the Royals."

What they didn't know is that Let-It-Ride Ned already had made one of the biggest moves of the season. He didn't do a darn thing.

On the surface, especially to the media, Yost can come across as an unimaginative grump. He does not bare his soul to the masses like he does for the 25 men in his clubhouse. He was asked last week during a news conference about the importance of a weekend series in Chicago, against the American League Central-leading White Sox, and Yost quickly fired back that every game is important.

Perhaps it is just a coincidence that the Royals have won three straight series since their trip to the Bronx. Before that four-game series, which they also lost, they'd dropped four series in a row.

In just one week, Kansas City has made up 3½ games on the division leaders. The Royals won five of seven, and showed flashes of what took them to back-to-back World Series: a dominant bullpen, clutch hitting and a smattering of mind-blowing defensive plays.

"It definitely did [make a difference]," first baseman Eric Hosmer said. "When you get that boost of confidence and that message from your manager ... After that meeting, you just kind of hear everyone exhale. That next day, it feels like a fresh start."



Royals first basemen Eric Hosmer congratulates center fielder Lorenzo Cain after his solo home run in the sixth that helped KC beat the Chicago White Sox 2-1 on Saturday. The Royals took two of three games in the series. Dennis Wierzbicki/USA TODAY Sports

IN YOST'S FIRST few years in Kansas City, there used to be a lot of team meetings. The Royals lost at least 90 games in each of his first three seasons from 2010 to 2012. Because they were so bad for so long, a run of futility that far predated Yost, the club was able to stockpile high draft picks, nurture them through the farm system, and hope that one day their promise would pan out and that all of their time together would lead to great chemistry.

Yost played a huge role in that, much as he did in turning around the Milwaukee Brewers in the mid-2000s. He arrived in Milwaukee in 2003, taking over a team that had won just 56 games the previous year, and made them a .500 ball club by '05. Maybe he's patient with players because his former employer wasn't with him. Yost's team was 16 games above .500 in September of 2008, then lost 11 of 16. He was fired, and the Brewers went to the playoffs without him.

The game has gone the way of analytics, but Yost still goes by his gut. He is slow to lose confidence in a player. In 2014, he waited so long to send a slumping Mike Moustakas to Omaha that some fans wondered if he'd ever make it back. Moustakas, who was hitting .152 before his demotion, was recalled about 10 days later. He went on to hit five home runs during the 2014 postseason.


HELL-BENT ON proving that their 2014 World Series appearance wasn't a fluke, the Royals began the 2015 season by winning their first seven games. Their exuberance was so palpable it irked a few teams. They celebrated and fought most games as if it was Game 7 of the World Series.


Fast-forward a year, and Kansas City looks, at times, as if it has lost some of that energy. In the first week of May, the Royals looked tired and defeated. Dave Flemming, the play-by-play announcer for San Francisco, has seen that look before. The Giants won titles in 2010, 2012 and 2014, and every odd year, they've seemingly looked out of sorts.

Flemming believes that extra month of postseason grind, plus the stress that accompanies it and the celebrations that follow, takes a toll on a team.

"It sounds funny because even if you play through October, you still have at least three full months to recuperate, and that sounds like a long time," said Flemming, who also calls games for ESPN. "But I think it's not enough time when you do all that stuff that comes along with winning a World Series. I do think in the Giants' experience it hasn't always manifested itself in the first few weeks. Sometimes they hit a wall in the summer and didn't have enough energy stored up.

"Winning a World Series is a good reason to be tired. But I do think you pay a price that next season."

San Francisco's records in the first month after a World Series season have been 13-13, 15-12 and 9-13.

The Royals insist they are not tired. They do not celebrate and carry on like schoolboys, a la 2015, because they haven't had as much reason to celebrate. By the time they hit New York the second week of May, Yost could see how hard they were trying, and the results just weren't coming. Lorenzo Cain hit three home runs in one game, but the pitching collapsed in a 10-7 loss.

"In New York," Duffy said, "he just said, 'You guys are playing your butts off. Keep doing what you're doing and it's going to happen.'"


ROYALS GENERAL MANAGER Dayton Moore stood at the top of the Royals' dugout last week, impeccably dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt, eyeing several reporters waiting to talk to him. "We're fine," he said jokingly before anyone could ask him a question.

Pitcher Tim Lincecum was on the market recently, and the Royals' starting rotation was in desperate need of a boost. The team did not enter the sweepstakes for Lincecum, a former two-time Cy Young Award winner. Moore knew the numbers were abysmal, that three of their starters had an ERA of 4.85 or higher, and two of them -- Kris Medlen and Chris Young -- were on the disabled list.

But he was convinced the club had options in-house. A couple of days later, Dillon Gee, a former castoff with the Mets, threw five solid innings in a 4-1 win against the White Sox. Truth is, Moore didn't need a great rotation in 2015, when Kansas City's starters ranked 12th in the American League in ERA.

But they will need the bullpen to be nearly perfect again. It showed cracks in the first quarter of the season, and the pitcher who has drawn the most ire from fans is Joakim Soria.

Soria was the closer for the Royals years ago before making stops in Texas, Detroit and Pittsburgh. His return to Kansas City, so far, has been disappointing. He carried a 3.63 ERA heading into Sunday, he has been booed by the home crowd, and when Soria enters the game, Twitter blows up with skepticism. Yost inserted Soria on Saturday in Chicago with the bases loaded, no out and Kansas City clinging to a 2-0 lead in the seventh inning. Soria coaxed a double play and pitched two strong innings in a 2-1 victory.

And for a second, Let-It-Ride Ned looked like a genius.

"Ned's an absolute pro," Moore said. "Look, one of the things I'm most proud of is that we've done everything we could to win every single year. I've said the same thing to our baseball operations department, our players, every single year: All of our success is tied together, and we have a small window to win. The window is now. It's the same window it was in 2007, and the same window it is in 2016. Nobody can predict what happens in a baseball game. If you could, nobody would show up. So we just go out, put the best team we can on the field, and go out and play."


FIRST BASE COACH Rusty Kuntz says Yost is by far the most glass-is-half-full manager he has ever worked under. Every day, Yost does what Kuntz calls a fly-by, visiting each player and coach to see how they're doing. The interactions last only about 30 seconds, and they're usually filled with effusive praise even if things are going poorly. But it helps Yost monitor the pulse of his team.

"I think there's a different relationship that has evolved over the past few years between the players and Ned and the staff in general," pitcher Jason Vargas said. "He doesn't have to take care of everybody in here like they're little kids anymore."

During a home stand last week, the Royals did not appear panicked. The clubhouse was filled with the sound of the Backstreet Boys over the speakers. Designated hitter Kendrys Morales, struggling to hit .200, took extra cuts in the batting cage. And Yost made the rounds, checking on each of his children.

They have been together through everything, the losing and the sudden success of 2014 and '15. They know it's still May, way too early to change a thing. People forget, Yost said, that last September, the Royals were supposedly dead. They'd lost 10 of 17, and looked nothing like a team that would need just five games to win the World Series against the New York Mets.

"That was a great experience for us to go through," Yost said with his glass half-full, driving people nuts.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 9:17:49 AM)

The MLB competition committee voted to redefine the bottom of the strike zone as the top of the hitter's knees and allow teams to forego throwing four pitches on intentional walks, ESPN reports.

translation ... more wiggle room for umps. The favored teams will simply get MORE calls than they do now. Wheee.




CPAMAN -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 10:02:04 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

The MLB competition committee voted to redefine the bottom of the strike zone as the top of the hitter's knees and allow teams to forego throwing four pitches on intentional walks, ESPN reports.

translation ... more wiggle room for umps. The favored teams will simply get MORE calls than they do now. Wheee.


It should be the bottom of the hitter's knees. The top of the knees is essentially the bottom of the thigh. The top of the strike zone used to be "across the letters" or essentially chest high. Now, the top of the strike zone is the baseball below the letters. So the strike zone continues to shrink. Why not place the baseball on a tee and eliminate pitchers from the game altogether? Sheesh. [:(]




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 12:41:30 PM)

On May 23, 2002, Dodgers slugger Shawn Green went 6-for-6 with four home runs and set a single-game MLB record with 19 total bases.





Stacey King -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 3:56:28 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

On May 23, 2002, Dodgers slugger Shawn Green went 6-for-6 with four home runs and set a single-game MLB record with 19 total bases.




Kirby Puckett went 6-for-7 on this date in 1991. Also had 6 hits on 8/30/87. The only 6-hit games in Twins history.

Three American Leaguers have had two 6-hit games. Philadelphia Athletics' Jimmie Foxx and Doc Cramer in the '30s, and Kirby in '87 & '91.

[image]http://i68.tinypic.com/535lar.jpg[/image]




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 3:57:12 PM)

'87 and '91


Hmmmmmmm




Steve Lentz -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (5/23/2016 4:58:15 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

'87 and '91


Hmmmmmmm

Two of the best years of my life. I admit I'm a bit blinded by sports.




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