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RE: MLB General Information PT 4

 
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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 12:49:07 PM   
Mr. Ed


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The Mets have scratched star righty Noah Syndergaard from his scheduled start today, manager Terry Collins told reporters including MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo (Twitter links) and SNY’s Steve Gelbs (via Twitter). Syndergaard is dealing with discomfort in his right biceps, likely caused by tendinitis, leading to what Collins phrased a “tired arm.”

At this time, it’s not known whether this is more than a single-start blip, or whether there’s cause for greater concern. The Mets will surely take a cautious route regardless; as Collins put it, “we can’t take a chance on this guy.


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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 1:08:18 PM   
SoMnFan


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Damn.
Hate seeing young arms have issues.
Wish we'd figure it out.
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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 1:19:13 PM   
SoMnFan


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Watching Mets/Braves today
Harvey and Dickey both sweating like plow mules.
Probably should watch Cool As A Cucumber Gibby work once.
You guys are doing it wrong.
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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 1:23:26 PM   
SoMnFan


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The game has gotten so different
Every tme something happens, someone's hurt
Cespedes jogging to second on a double, now being helped off
Hammy issues.

And now Dickey comes up lame.

< Message edited by SoMnFan -- 4/27/2017 1:26:16 PM >
Post #: 8754
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 1:25:50 PM   
SoMnFan


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Could win a bunch of money with this one ....
Who's got the second most hits in baseball the past decade?
Nick Markakis.
He would have been about the thousandth guy I would have guessed.
Post #: 8755
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 3:56:17 PM   
SoMnFan


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Crasnick on a subject near and dear to our hearts ....
One of my all-time favorites ... Buster Posey.

Buster Posey has made two trips to the disabled list in his major league career, and they both left a mark.

In May 2011, Posey suffered a devastating injury to his left leg in a home plate collision with Miami Marlins outfielder Scott Cousins. Posey returned to make four All-Star teams, lead the San Francisco Giants to titles in 2012 and 2014, and avoid the DL until this month, when he took a 94 mph fastball from Arizona's Taijuan Walker off the helmet and spent a week recovering from a concussion.

Most days behind the plate, Posey is subject to the same predictable drumbeat of hazards. He's a magnet for foul tips off the mask or knuckles, not to mention the stray bat recoil off the noggin. And when he's not sprawled in the dirt taking an errant slider off the cup, his knees and back feel the strain from all those hours in a crouch. He has learned from experience that life on the Salvador Perez black-and-blue plan can tax a man's pain threshold.

Nevertheless, Posey is resolute. When it's suggested that a move to a different position could be a boon to his career, he stands his ground.

"If I ever got to the point where they said, 'Hey, we feel like this is better for the team,' I'm not gonna be a guy that's stubborn and says no,'' Posey says. "Until they tell me that, my value is behind the plate. As cliché as it is, it's about winning ballgames.''

Giants general manager Bobby Evans confirms the team has no plans to move Posey anytime soon. The Giants signed veteran free agent Nick Hundley with the expectation that Posey would start 115-120 games behind the plate. Throw in 15-20 appearances spelling Brandon Belt at first base and a few at DH during interleague play, and Posey is looking at a regimen of 145 games or so this season.

"When you have a guy that's led us to three titles, a lot of it is because of his preparation and guidance of the starting rotation and the bullpen,'' Evans said. "I think it distinguishes him from other positions -- and other guys. My mindset is we're a better team with Buster back there, and as long as we can keep him back there, we want to do it.''

It's hard to envision Posey maintaining his current schedule for the long haul, though. His nine-year, $167 million contract runs through 2021, and if the Giants were to exercise his $22 million club option for 2022, Posey would be 35 at the end of the deal. Fellow catcher A.J. Pierzynski started 104 games for the Atlanta Braves at age 38, and the Cardinals' Yadier Molina just agreed to a three-year contract extension at age 34, but they're notable exceptions to the rule.

Most front-line catchers have to deal with an alternate reality: Beyond the daily grind, the passage of time is the biggest threat to their claim to the position.

While Madison Bumgarner's health and a slow start are glaring immediate issues for the Giants, they also face a long-term quandary about Buster Posey's place on the diamond. Tim Clayton/Corbis/Getty Images

As the Giants assess the fallout from ace Madison Bumgarner's dirt bike injury and a start so poor it has put the entire season in jeopardy, Posey's role with the organization grows ever more complex because of some shifting circumstances.

Defensively, he's at the top of his game. Posey ended an eight-year run by Molina with a first career Gold Glove in 2016, and the metrics reflect his all-around excellence.

At the same time, Posey's power numbers have slipped. Since 2014, his home run totals have dropped from 22 to 19 to 14, with a corresponding decline in slugging percentage from .490 to .470 to .434. Although it's hard to draw any conclusions from this season because of the small sample size and Posey's early DL visit, he has only one home run and three RBIs in 61 plate appearances.

Industry standards for the catching position indicate that a reversal is unlikely as Posey, 30, continues to age. According to John Fisher of ESPN Stats & Information, 104 catchers have posted an OPS above .800 over the past 10 seasons. Of that group, just 16 (or 15 percent) were 32 or older.

That ratio assumes greater meaning when contrasted with the positions where catchers eventually gravitate. Of the 203 third basemen who have surpassed an .800 OPS over the past 10 years, 27 percent were 32 or older. The rate increases to 28 percent for the 165 left fielders, and 29 percent of the 215 third basemen.

"If I ever got to the point where they said, 'Hey, we feel like this is better for the team,' I'm not gonna be a guy that's stubborn and says no. Until they tell me that, my value is behind the plate. As cliché as it is, it's about winning ballgames."

Beyond that, the value of a given set of numbers varies from one position to the next: A catcher with an .800 OPS is 14 percent better than the average catcher, but a left fielder with an .800 OPS is only 8 percent better than the average left fielder.

So when front offices consider moving catchers to another spot, two questions predominate: (1) Will a position change help a catcher stay healthy and enhance his career longevity; and (2) if a catcher is a strong producer behind the plate but middle-of-the-pack at another spot, what's the point?

Like Posey, Texas Rangers catcher Jonathan Lucroy is 30 years old with roughly 700 career starts behind the plate and a concussion on his résumé (sustained on a foul tip off the mask in September 2015). Unlike Posey, Lucroy is eligible for free agency in November. He knows his value on the open market is higher because he produces at a position where offense is tough to find.

"I'm a catcher first,'' Lucroy said. "It's my best position, and I take a lot of pride in that. I've said this in the past when the question was brought up: I would go from an above-average catcher to a below-average first baseman. It would be one thing if I'm hitting 30 home runs a year, but I'm not.''

Through the years, some accomplished catchers have made the switch for a variety of reasons. In 1992, the Astros moved Craig Biggio to second base because he weighed 165 pounds and they feared he might not survive a violent home plate collision. Biggio, then 26, went on to amass 3,000 hits and make the Hall of Fame. Joe Torre also experienced a career revival after the St. Louis Cardinals shifted him from catcher to first base at age 28. Two years later, he won a batting title (.363) and a National League MVP award.

In 2014, the Minnesota Twins put Joe Mauer at first base because of ongoing health concerns. Mauer was dealing with the fallout from a concussion -- not to mention knee, back, hip, shoulder and leg issues -- and it was the best option available for the Twins to maximize the five years left on his $184 million contract extension.

"Most catchers would want to play the position as long as they can,'' Mauer said. "I really enjoyed the position and I miss it. But obviously, mine was more of a necessity. I tried to find as many doctors as I could to tell me it was OK, but I didn't find that.''

While Mauer has done a better job staying on the field at first base, his numbers don't stack up very well at his new position. In 2016, Mauer's .389 slugging percentage ranked 22nd among MLB first basemen with at least 400 plate appearances.

Teammates during the World Baseball Classic, Buster Posey and Jonathan Lucroy both share a realistic outlook on the toll catching could take on their career span. Alex Trautwig/WBCI/MLB Photos/Getty Images

For Posey and other catchers who eventually contemplate a move, the emotional repercussions are hard to ignore. Of the eight non-pitcher positions on the field, catchers and shortstops are the most territorial when it comes to surrendering their terrain.

Johnny Bench reflected the overall sentiment in a 1981 New York Times interview, and it still holds true for the fraternity. While lamenting his sore elbow, cracked toenails and persistent back spasms, Bench described the constant lure of the catching position.

"There's nothing like it,'' Bench said. ''You have a sense of control. Your time is always full. And when it's going good, when you're in rhythm with the pitcher, you feel like a symphony conductor. You can be 0-for-4 at the plate, but if you call a good game, or throw a runner out stealing, or block a run from scoring, you feel you've contributed.''

In 1982, Bench moved from catcher to third base in hopes of adding a final flourish to a Hall of Fame career. He made 19 errors in 103 starts at third and retired the following year at age 35.

Lucroy, a two-time All-Star, took up catching as a 12-year-old in Little League and warmed to it immediately. In the 18 years since, he's found that the adrenaline rush and sense of gratification he gets from the position outweigh his self-preservation instincts.

"All of us catchers, when we're together, we understand the hardships of the position,'' Lucroy says. "A lot of other guys are like, 'Tough it out.' But they don't realize what it feels like to get a foul tip off the throat. You've got to be stupid or crazy to catch. There's no way a sane person would get back there and get beat up like that all the time.

"I take the field every day knowing I'll probably have arthritis the rest of my life, and things will pop up when I'm 60 that stem from this. But you know what? That's OK. I'm willing to make that sacrifice right now, because I love what I do.''

Posey feels the same sense of achievement when he pores over the scouting reports and helps nurture pitchers through a low-scoring victory. In an effort to prolong the experience, he's constantly thinking of ways to keep himself fresh and fend off the ravages of age. Maybe it means spending a little less time in the batting cage, or more time in the trainer's room.

"I can look at age curves and try to learn from that and say, 'All right, maybe I need to adjust some workouts or spend more time in the cold tub,'" Posey said. "There are different things I might have to do more now than when I was 23, 24 or 25.''

As his ninth MLB season ratchets up, Posey's emotional investment makes it hard for him to imagine watching the game unfold from anywhere but behind the bars of a mask.

"I'm not saying this in an egotistical way, but I think there's value in having a good hitter behind the plate and being able to put a bat at first base as well,'' he said. "Maybe my career is three years shorter this way. But I know I'm getting the most out of it.''
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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 4:01:19 PM   
Mr. Ed


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Cespedes will undergo another MRI on Friday to reevaluate his hamstring, tweets MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo. “Ther’s no indication for how long it will be,” manager Terry Collins told New York reporters (via DiComo). However, Collins’ assumption is that Cespedes will land on the disabled list, Carig tweets. Collins added that Cespedes could be “out a while,” tweets James Wagner of the New York Times.

Seem to be a lot of early injuries.

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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 4:05:27 PM   
Mr. Ed


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All passed on Leonys Martin

APRIL 27: Martin has been outrighted to Triple-A after clearing waivers, Divish was among those to tweet. He’ll remain under Seattle’s control, then, though bringing him back to the active roster would require a 40-man move.

Remember, the Twins,with their AWESOME 40-man roster,have dibs on all guys put on waivers. ALL of them.

November 11 - April 30 (or the 30th day of the next season): The club with the worst won-loss record in the previous season has priority.

May 1 – July 31 (31st day of the season – July 31): The club with the worst won-loss record in the current season has priority.

August 1 through November 10: The club with the worst won-loss record in the current season has priority, but American League clubs have priority for AL players, and National League clubs have priority for NL players.


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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 4:09:55 PM   
SoMnFan


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Cespedes will undergo another MRI on Friday to reevaluate his hamstring, tweets MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo. “Ther’s no indication for how long it will be,” manager Terry Collins told New York reporters (via DiComo). However, Collins’ assumption is that Cespedes will land on the disabled list, Carig tweets. Collins added that Cespedes could be “out a while,” tweets James Wagner of the New York Times.

Seem to be a lot of early injuries.

Came back way too early
He never ran at full speed the entire trip to second.
Never really sped up, just kinda cruised and then pulled up lame a step or two away.
Losing Thor and Cespedes in the same day ... that's a tough day.
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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 4:27:11 PM   
SoMnFan


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Nats spend another day crushing the Rockies early season hopes.
Pounded them this series
Post #: 8760
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 4:33:41 PM   
MDK


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Nats spend another day crushing the Rockies early season hopes.
Pounded them this series


These days it is good to be a Washington sports fan.

_____________________________

MAGA needs to change to MAWA= Make America White Again

Tom Smothers RIP: Easter "is when Jesus comes out of his tomb and if he sees his shadow, he goes back in and we get six more weeks of winter."
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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 4:34:10 PM   
SoMnFan


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MDK

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Nats spend another day crushing the Rockies early season hopes.
Pounded them this series


These days it is good to be a Washington sports fan.

So far ...
Post #: 8762
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 8:00:55 PM   
SoMnFan


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Chris Sale was picked up by the Bosox to be their Yankee killer
Pitching well, but receiving no run support
Yankees quietly building a nice staff
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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 8:37:08 PM   
SoMnFan


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Another nice win for the 13-7 Yanks. 3-0 Final.
Good tight game.
Post #: 8764
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 9:02:31 PM   
Mr. Ed


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Another nice win for the 13-7 Yanks. 3-0 Final.
Good tight game.


Hicksie 2-4/2R

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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 9:03:33 PM   
Mr. Ed


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From: Minne-so-ta
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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: MDK

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Nats spend another day crushing the Rockies early season hopes.
Pounded them this series


These days it is good to be a Washington sports fan.

So far ...


Bad day in the colorado pen

11 run 7th inning

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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 9:04:42 PM   
SoMnFan


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Another nice win for the 13-7 Yanks. 3-0 Final.
Good tight game.


Hicksie 2-4/2R

I hear he's got 3 more days, then the glass slipper shatters .....
Post #: 8767
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/27/2017 9:06:07 PM   
Mr. Ed


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Another young pitcher needing TJ

Diamondbacks right-hander Shelby Miller has been diagnosed with flexor strain and a partially torn ulnar collateral ligament, Miller himself tells reporters (Twitter links via FanRag’s Tommy Stokke). Miller is considering his options, including Tommy John surgery, and will make a decision sooner rather than later.

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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/29/2017 8:04:07 PM   
Mr. Ed


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Former ChiSux AdamEaton torn ACL

Aww

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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 4/30/2017 4:32:16 PM   
Mr. Ed


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Syndergaard has a “possible lat strain,” according to the Mets. After opting against an MRI previously, he’ll head back to New York to undergo one (Twitter link via Bob Klapisch of the Bergen Record).

1:25pm: In what could be a disastrous turn of events for the Mets, ace Noah Syndergaard left his start against the Nationals on Sunday after 1 1/3 innings with an apparent injury. The right-hander grabbed his biceps as he walked off the mound with a trainer, David Lennon of Newsday was among those to report (via Twitter).


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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 5/1/2017 10:24:59 AM   
Mr. Ed


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The Mets announced on Monday morning that right-hander Noah Syndergaard has been diagnosed with a partial tear of his right lat muscle. Per the team, there’s no timetable on his return, but Syndergaard will be placed on the 10-day disabled list.

The Ranger announced after yesterday’s game that infielder/outfielder Jurickson Profar has been optioned to Triple-A Round Rock in order to clear a spot on the roster for infielder Pete Kozma, who was claimed off waivers from the Yankees.


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RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 5/2/2017 11:00:24 AM   
SoMnFan


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Orioles admitted they get called the N word in Boston constantly
Shocking
Not
Post #: 8772
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 5/2/2017 11:06:41 AM   
SoMnFan


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Damn you, Matt.

I am now addicted to MLB Network every morning
She's unreal
Post #: 8773
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 5/2/2017 11:13:42 AM   
McMurfy


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From: Portland, Oregon
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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Orioles admitted they get called the N word in Boston constantly
Shocking
Not



Make America Great Again.


All those Boston Goons feeling good about dropping N Bombs, again and out loud!

_____________________________

The Curse of Mauer is gone!
Post #: 8774
RE: MLB General Information PT 4 - 5/2/2017 11:16:56 AM   
SoMnFan


Posts: 94902
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: McMurfy

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Orioles admitted they get called the N word in Boston constantly
Shocking
Not



Make America Great Again.


All those Boston Goons feeling good about dropping N Bombs, again and out loud!

Our Ns are better than your Ns.
Nothing worse than closet Klanners
Post #: 8775
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