bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 5, 2014 15:13:58 GMT -5
More news on Andrew McCutcheon. It turns out he does not have an oblique strain at all. Instead, he has a broken rib, and cartilage damage.
What does it all mean? Good question, as he still is in the same spot. He is not on the D.L just yet, as he wants to try to play through it if possible. And, if he does go on the D/L, the time frame is pretty much the same for oblique strains as broken ribs, anytime between 2- 8 weeks.
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Post by poprocksncoke on Aug 5, 2014 15:16:56 GMT -5
Coming on the heals of the latest Biogenesis arrests, I see the follow commentary - The federal investigation that brought about those arrests have “revealed previously unnamed MLB players,” ESPN.com’s T.J. Quinn reports on Twitter, which could well lead to another round of suspensions. (Quinn, whose Twitter timeline has quite a bit of additional coverage, says to “expect more suspensions.”) It can only be hoped that we will not see a repeat of last year’s seemingly endless saga. Nevertheless, the potential impact on baseball’s transactional side remains a realistic consideration. Reports have not yet surfaced regarding the details of the newly-discovered information, such as what players might be involved and what sort of evidence arguably incriminates them. The bulk of the suspensions that came down last year were for fifty games apiece, and several notable players (including Nelson Cruz and Jhonny Peralta) ultimately missed the playoff stretch for contending clubs. RUT ROW! would be hilarious if Jeter was named.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 5, 2014 15:23:48 GMT -5
Coming on the heals of the latest Biogenesis arrests, I see the follow commentary - The federal investigation that brought about those arrests have “revealed previously unnamed MLB players,” ESPN.com’s T.J. Quinn reports on Twitter, which could well lead to another round of suspensions. (Quinn, whose Twitter timeline has quite a bit of additional coverage, says to “expect more suspensions.”) It can only be hoped that we will not see a repeat of last year’s seemingly endless saga. Nevertheless, the potential impact on baseball’s transactional side remains a realistic consideration. Reports have not yet surfaced regarding the details of the newly-discovered information, such as what players might be involved and what sort of evidence arguably incriminates them. The bulk of the suspensions that came down last year were for fifty games apiece, and several notable players (including Nelson Cruz and Jhonny Peralta) ultimately missed the playoff stretch for contending clubs. RUT ROW! would be hilarious if Jeter was named. HEADS WOULD EXPLODE!!!!!
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Post by nava on Aug 5, 2014 17:02:14 GMT -5
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 5, 2014 17:06:03 GMT -5
I saw. It just looks like it was going to be a strike, then, took a sharp right turn....
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Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2014 17:10:54 GMT -5
More news on Andrew McCutcheon. It turns out he does not have an oblique strain at all. Instead, he has a broken rib, and cartilage damage. What does it all mean? Good question, as he still is in the same spot. He is not on the D.L just yet, as he wants to try to play through it if possible. And, if he does go on the D/L, the time frame is pretty much the same for oblique strains as broken ribs, anytime between 2- 8 weeks. It means McCutcheon is old school. He aint gonna sit on no bench unless he has to. Good man, unlike most athletes who cry when they get a hangnail. Heck, the a guy like Dwight Evans would have laughed that off and no one would have ever even heard about it. What is it with these guys today? They are entirely too spoiled, that's what.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 5, 2014 17:16:51 GMT -5
More news on Andrew McCutcheon. It turns out he does not have an oblique strain at all. Instead, he has a broken rib, and cartilage damage. What does it all mean? Good question, as he still is in the same spot. He is not on the D.L just yet, as he wants to try to play through it if possible. And, if he does go on the D/L, the time frame is pretty much the same for oblique strains as broken ribs, anytime between 2- 8 weeks. It means McCutcheon is old school. He aint gonna sit on no bench unless he has to. Good man, unlike most athletes who cry when they get a hangnail. Heck, the a guy like Dwight Evans would have laughed that off and no one would have ever even heard about it. What is it with these guys today? They are entirely too spoiled, that's what. On one hand, and just as a baseball fan, I agree with you, and like that he is willing to tough this out. But, the fantasy baseball player in me wants to tell him to shut it down. Whatever he does from here on out, it will likely not be near the level he has put out so far, so, he might as well get well now, and be ready come next season.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2014 17:19:51 GMT -5
It means McCutcheon is old school. He aint gonna sit on no bench unless he has to. Good man, unlike most athletes who cry when they get a hangnail. Heck, the a guy like Dwight Evans would have laughed that off and no one would have ever even heard about it. What is it with these guys today? They are entirely too spoiled, that's what. On one hand, and just as a baseball fan, I agree with you, and like that he is willing to tough this out. But, the fantasy baseball player in me wants to tell him to shut it down. Whatever he does from here on out, it will likely not be near the level he has put out so far, so, he might as well get well now, and be ready come next season. I agree that he needs to let it heal. He is not going to be near as good until it does. I just admire his willingness to play through it. He recognizes that the Pirates are in a playoff chase and he is willing to tough it out. I like that about him but yeah, he needs to sit out and let it heal, you are right.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 5, 2014 17:28:49 GMT -5
On one hand, and just as a baseball fan, I agree with you, and like that he is willing to tough this out. But, the fantasy baseball player in me wants to tell him to shut it down. Whatever he does from here on out, it will likely not be near the level he has put out so far, so, he might as well get well now, and be ready come next season. I agree that he needs to let it heal. He is not going to be near as good until it does. I just admire his willingness to play through it. He recognizes that the Pirates are in a playoff chase and he is willing to tough it out. I like that about him but yeah, he needs to sit out and let it heal, you are right. At least his issues are known. What I hate is when a guy has an injury, and even his team and trainer don't know. So, in fantasy, you keep trotting the guy out there. BUT, if you really knew the 100% truth, you would make changes accordingly. So frustrating, all of it....
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Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2014 17:35:17 GMT -5
I agree that he needs to let it heal. He is not going to be near as good until it does. I just admire his willingness to play through it. He recognizes that the Pirates are in a playoff chase and he is willing to tough it out. I like that about him but yeah, he needs to sit out and let it heal, you are right. At least his issues are known. What I hate is when a guy has an injury, and even his team and trainer don't know. So, in fantasy, you keep trotting the guy out there. BUT, if you really knew the 100% truth, you would make changes accordingly. So frustrating, all of it.... Yes, I suppose it is. I don't play fantasy because I work two jobs and just don't have the time you have to put in to keep up with everything going on with everybody in both leagues. I do try to keep up with it, though. Fantasy sports has just never turned me on. I might try basketball this year. Maybe.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 5, 2014 17:39:55 GMT -5
At least his issues are known. What I hate is when a guy has an injury, and even his team and trainer don't know. So, in fantasy, you keep trotting the guy out there. BUT, if you really knew the 100% truth, you would make changes accordingly. So frustrating, all of it.... Yes, I suppose it is. I don't play fantasy because I work two jobs and just don't have the time you have to put in to keep up with everything going on with everybody in both leagues. I do try to keep up with it, though. Fantasy sports has just never turned me on. I might try basketball this year. Maybe. I only do baseball, as it to me is a full 9 month every day commitment. That said, and in respect to you trying basketball, I will imagine that one thing is the same for all fantasy sports. If you REALLY get into it, it changes how you look at games, and, changes your fandom, or, how you are a fan. After around 25 years, I am not sure if this is a good thing, or, a bad thing. I just know it changes, and it's different. REALLY different.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2014 17:44:25 GMT -5
Yes, I suppose it is. I don't play fantasy because I work two jobs and just don't have the time you have to put in to keep up with everything going on with everybody in both leagues. I do try to keep up with it, though. Fantasy sports has just never turned me on. I might try basketball this year. Maybe. I only do baseball, as it to me is a full 9 month every day commitment. That said, and in respect to you trying basketball, I will imagine that one thing is the same for all fantasy sports. If you REALLY get into it, it changes how you look at games, and, changes your fandom, or, how you are a fan. After around 25 years, I am not sure if this is a good thing, or, a bad thing. I just know it changes, and it's different. REALLY different. I'm sure it is different. I started keeping up with the NBA in depth last year instead of just watching a game here or there so I am familiar with most of the players. The problem is that players change teams so much and with that change roles so it is hard to keep up with everybody. I've been getting into baseball a lot more than usual this year though I am sure I am not as up to speed as the other guys on here are. The Braves suck so sometimes it is hard to stay interested. LOL
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 5, 2014 17:53:09 GMT -5
I only do baseball, as it to me is a full 9 month every day commitment. That said, and in respect to you trying basketball, I will imagine that one thing is the same for all fantasy sports. If you REALLY get into it, it changes how you look at games, and, changes your fandom, or, how you are a fan. After around 25 years, I am not sure if this is a good thing, or, a bad thing. I just know it changes, and it's different. REALLY different. I'm sure it is different. I started keeping up with the NBA in depth last year instead of just watching a game here or there so I am familiar with most of the players. The problem is that players change teams so much and with that change roles so it is hard to keep up with everybody. I've been getting into baseball a lot more than usual this year though I am sure I am not as up to speed as the other guys on here are. The Braves suck so sometimes it is hard to stay interested. LOL For all fantasy sports, it's all about news and info, and if and how you can get it faster than "the other guy". As such, if you do this, say goodbye to what now is your otherwise free time. If you want to do really well that is.
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Post by redseat on Aug 6, 2014 6:45:57 GMT -5
Matt Garza - Do I keep him?
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 9:33:27 GMT -5
Matt Garza - Do I keep him? I think you kind of have to. I say that, as there is unlikely going to be someone of his calibur on your waiver wire. As for his injury, I am learning more and more that oblique strains are a very tricky injury, taking anywhere from 2-8 weeks to heal. That said, Garza has had this before, and, he is saying that his current injury is lesser than his last.
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 9:36:27 GMT -5
A quick hitter for you daily change leaguers. Bench both Big Papi & Todd Walker today. Papi loses out due to being in St. Louis, and having no D.H. Walker on the other hand has an injury. He came out yesterday after 3 a.b's, this being after he missed a game already due to being hurt. For Walker, you will want to monitor his situation daily for now, as at least there is no talk of him being D/L'ed. Yet.
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Post by redseat on Aug 6, 2014 9:36:54 GMT -5
Matt Garza - Do I keep him? I think you kind of have to. I say that, as there is unlikely going to be someone of his calibur on your waiver wire. As for his injury, I am learning more and more that oblique strains are a very tricky injury, taking anywhere from 2-8 weeks to heal. That said, Garza has had this before, and, he is saying that his current injury is lesser than his last. I hope he is right. You are correct, I am not too sure but I don't think there is anyone of his "caliber" left out there unless I want to do a trade. Which I won't do
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 9:41:24 GMT -5
Big surprise. I have a soft spot for fat athletes. Here is a Rob Neyer story on the subject, with one guy in particular being highlighted.
There are 46 pitchers in major-league history with listed weights of at least 260 pounds. Wanna guess how many of them have pitched in the 21st century?
All but two: Walter “Jumbo” Brown and Garland “Gob” Buckey.
Of course, listed weights are often merely a snapshot in time. Baseball-Reference.com lists CC Sabathia at 285, but we well-remember that Sabathia has weighed both significantly more and significantly less than 285, just during his time as a Yankee.
Meanwhile, 1930s pitcher Jumbo Brown is listed at 295 – the second-highest figure in B-R.com’s data – but in The Hot Stove League, historian Lee Allen wrote that Brown weighed “only” 265. I say “only” because that still made him the heaviest major leaguer on record. Also according to Allen, “The peculiar thing about Brown was that he put on sixty-eight of his 268 pounds during a single winter. He belonged to Cleveland at the time and weighed only 197 at the close of the 1927 season. But after an operation for the removal of his tonsils, he shot up to 265, and despite working out five hours a day at the Y.M.C.A. gymnasium, he was never able to shed the excess suet.”
Brown spent four seasons with the Yankees, managed by Hall of Famer Joe McCarthy. Brown supposedly did a disproportionate amount of his pitching against the Philadelphia Athletics, who played in Shibe Park and weren’t much good. A reporter once asked McCarthy why he saved Brown for the Yankees’ games in Philadelphia. “It’s the only way I know to fill Shibe Park,” he replied.
Allen writes that Buckeye, who’d been a great football player, “was officially listed at 238” … although now we’ve got him at 260. Buckeye finished his career in the minors, finally retiring after a game in which “he attempted to field a bunt, fell on his stomach and was helped to his feet by two infielders.”
Again, 44 of the 46 heaviest pitchers in major-league history have pitched in this century. And 22 of those 44 have pitched in just these last two seasons! That’s astounding.
Granted, players have gotten steadily bigger over the years. Allen estimated that players in the 1870s averaged around 5’9” and 160 pounds. By the early 1950s, the average was around six feet and 185 pounds. Which must have been significantly larger than the average young, well-bodied American male ... but is small compared to our current behemoths.
What does Jumbo Diaz have to do with all of this? Well, you might say he’s the first Jumbo since Jumbo Brown (although big Jim Nash also carried the nickname at least occasionally). When Diaz arrived in the majors six weeks ago after 12 seasons in the minor leagues, I was immediately intrigued by his nickname. But it wasn’t until yesterday that I went to B-R.com and actually looked him up...
315
Checking Play Index, I discovered that he’s the only pitcher in history, and one of only two players in history – here’s the other – who tops 300 pounds, officially.
Again, “officially” is important here. It’s hardly a secret that CC Sabathia has weighed more than his listed 285. Still, it sure seemed to me that Jumbo Diaz must be the heaviest pitcher in major-league history and probably the heaviest player, period. After all, 315.
So then I went to see him pitch and he doesn’t actually look that big.
And then I watched an interview with Diaz, in which he says he weighed 330 last season in the minors but reported to camp this spring weighing just 278. Oh, and by the way he’s having the best season of his professional career. This might not be a coincidence.
All of which I bring up mostly because there’s a big difference between Jumbo Diaz’s listed weight and his claimed weight, and there’s a big difference between Jumbo Brown’s listed weight and Allen’s claimed weight, and there must be hundreds of similar (if less extreme) differences that might throw off a researcher. Ideally, I think, the sources for these data would at least list a range of weights, if only to suggest that further research into a particular season is worthwhile.
Granted, you’re probably not a researcher. Or if you are one, you’re highly diligent and know all of this already. Really, I just enjoy knowing the Reds have one pitcher named Jumbo and another who’s Big Pasta.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 9:43:47 GMT -5
Gotta love Cubs fans. At least this one is hedging his bets, as he has given himself 86 years for the Cubs to win the big one again.
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 9:48:38 GMT -5
So, I see I went to bed way too early last night. Adam Dunn,.......PITCHING. I read he gave up a run in his inning of work, but, that he did not look all that bad doing it.
Wish I would have seen it.
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 9:49:36 GMT -5
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 10:16:08 GMT -5
The logo that will be used in next years All Star game in Cincinnati
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 10:17:33 GMT -5
Angels first baseman Albert Pujols tied the game and continued to move up the all-time list in Tuesday's eighth inning, crushing a titanic home run off Dodgers reliever Brian Wilson to give him 513 for his career.
With that homer -- a solo shot to left, tying the game at 4 -- Pujols moved past Hall of Famers Ernie Banks and Eddie Mathews for sole possession of 21st place. Next up are Ted Williams, Willie McCovey and Frank Thomas, each of whom have 521.
Pujols' homer was his 21st on the season and his first since July 9. He's on pace for 30 home runs this season.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 10:27:54 GMT -5
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 10:30:24 GMT -5
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Post by redseat on Aug 6, 2014 11:35:53 GMT -5
Gotta love Cubs fans. At least this one is hedging his bets, as he has given himself 86 years for the Cubs to win the big one again. LMAO... Good luck finishing that tat!
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 11:51:15 GMT -5
Today, August 6th, is Tony Gwynn day.
On this date back in 1993, he gets his 2,000th hit. Then in 1999, he gets his 3,000th.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 12:26:22 GMT -5
Time to start paying attention to Brian Dozier again. After being on fire the first 2 months this year, then after being ice cold for the next 2, he is once again showing signs of life.
Like in his first a.b today.
Brian Dozier singled to shallow right. Brian Dozier stole second.
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Post by poprocksncoke on Aug 6, 2014 13:01:53 GMT -5
Really Madden???
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Aug 6, 2014 13:16:10 GMT -5
To Madden - "Thank you, Captain Obvious!"
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