bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 10:45:08 GMT -5
A picture of a very young Barry Bonds, and what would I guess qualify as his pre-school rookie card.....
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 10:46:23 GMT -5
A picture of a very young Barry Bonds, and what would I guess qualify as his pre-school rookie card.....
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 10:52:53 GMT -5
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 10:54:07 GMT -5
The Brewers are desperately hanging on in the NL playoff race, but things will be that much more difficult after Thursday night thanks to first baseman Mark Reynolds. In the bottom of the eighth, with the Brewers up 2-0 over the Cardinals, Reynolds forgot that there was only one out, and missed an opportunity for an inning-ending double play.
Kolten Wong would end up safe at second because no one tried to make it otherwise, giving the Cardinals a man in scoring position with two outs. You can probably guess what happened next, but just in case you're not aware how Cardinals' Magic works:
•Matt Carpenter walked, giving the Cardinals runners at first and second with two outs •Jon Jay singled, driving in Wong to make it 2-1 Brewers. •The Cardinals challenged a call on the field to turn an out into a Matt Holliday infield single that loaded the bases •Jonathan Broxton, who should have been out of the inning after his first pitch, walked Matt Adams to tie the game. •The Cardinals won 3-2 in extra innings. All of this because Mark Reynolds forgot how many outs there were after a pitching change. It cost the Brewers the game, the series, and dropped them another game back of the Pirates in the wild card standings. Uh, get 'em next time, I guess?
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 11:15:47 GMT -5
It was on this date back in 1986 that Joe Cowley walks seven batters and gives up a run, but the White Sox right-hander no-hits the Angels at Anaheim Stadium, 7-1. The 28-year old Kentuckian will become the first pitcher in major league history never to win another game after tossing a no-hitter when he is released by the Phillies next season.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 11:38:11 GMT -5
The New York Yankees are on the verge of reaching a home run milestone no other franchise has done before.
As of Sept. 18, the Yankees have hit 14,997 home runs in franchise history and will become the first team to reach the 15,000 home run milestone.
In fact, no other franchise other than the Yankees have even reached 14,000 home runs.
The San Francisco Giants have clubbed 13,980 since 1883.
And since the All-Star Game, the Bronx Bombers have hit 57 HRs, second most in the American League.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 13:11:04 GMT -5
If the spot I found this did not have this picture, a clip from the movie A Clockwork Orange, I would have found this and put it here myself anyway, as this is how I envision this looking like. Take a peek inside the frazzled mind of a major-league hitter these days. It isn't a pretty sight. Pitchers are throwing harder than ever. Batters are striking out more often than ever. And their judgment is getting shakier: Hitters are chasing more pitches outside the strike zone. It is enough to make some teams wonder: What if we could just rewire hitters' brains to react to pitches better? As it turns out, at least three major-league teams are engaged in a covert science experiment to find out. Several years ago, the Boston Red Sox began working with a Massachusetts neuroscience company called NeuroScouting. The objective was to develop software that could improve hitters' ability to recognize pitch types and decide, with greater speed and accuracy, whether they should swing. The result was a series of no-frills videogames that became a required part of hitters' pregame routines in the minor leagues. When Theo Epstein left his job as general manager of the Red Sox to become president of baseball operations for the Chicago Cubs in 2011, he brought the same methods to Chicago's farm system. And last year, the Tampa Bay Rays made the neurological training games mandatory for minor leaguers—threatening to fine those that didn't complete their assignments. Now, a startup company with a near-identical name says it is in talks with four other major-league teams about providing tests to evaluate the neurological strengths and weaknesses of their minor-league hitters. The company, Neuroscout, would put electrode caps on players to measure their relevant brain activity during computer simulations of pitches coming at them. Red Sox general manager Ben Cherington said the idea is to improve the connection in hitters' brains between the visual stimulus of a pitch and the decision of whether to swing. "There's a connection there," he said. "And if you're trying to hit a baseball moving at 90 miles per hour and moving in different directions, it probably helps for that connection to be strong." Though NeuroScouting's games vary, most of them depict a ball coming from the pitcher's mound toward the hitter. Using a laptop or tablet, players are given instructions such as, "Hit the space bar when you see the seams on the ball spinning vertically," and are scored based on their reaction time and accuracy. The Rays have a leaderboard that shows players which of their teammates fared best on a given drill, like the high-scores screen at the end of an arcade game. NeuroScouting executives declined to go into detail about their methods or their clients, citing teams' demand for confidentiality. But Wesley Clapp, one of the company's co-founders, said their software can identify how well each player's brain reacts to specific pitch types—an outside curveball or a low fastball, for instance—and tailor their training to the areas where they need to improve the most. "The best players have the best neural skills," Clapp said. "It's like a dimmer switch. The more you turn that dimmer up, you see more and more impact on the field." The need for hitters to react faster is clear. The average major-league fastball this year is 91.8 mph, according to the statistics website FanGraphs, a figure that has steadily increased from 89.9 in 2002. Hitters' decision-making is slumping, too. They have swung at 30% of pitches outside the strike zone this season, according to pitch-tracking data, up from 27.9% in 2009. But players are divided on the benefits of brain games that, for many, feel more like homework than baseball. "For the most part, guys just seem like, every other day, 'Ugh, I have to do this again,' " Rays outfielder Kevin Kiermaier said. "You try to get in a routine, and it's like, 'Oh, you have to do neuroscience or you're going to get fined.' " He said that fines for players who skipped their assigned videogames were in the $25 to $50 range. Rays general manager Andrew Friedman declined to comment. In the majors, where players have more autonomy, few choose to continue with the games. "People didn't have that stuff 10 years ago. People could still hit," Rays outfielder Wil Myers said. "Don't try to reinvent the game." Nonetheless, teams' interest in the neuroscience of hitting is only growing. What began as a training tool for the Red Sox has also become a scouting device. Before each amateur draft, the Red Sox assess hitting prospects in part based on how well they score on the NeuroScouting games. Mookie Betts, Boston's fifth-round draft pick in 2011, recalled meeting with a Red Sox scout in an empty classroom one day during his lunch period at a Tennessee high school. At the scout's request, he completed a series of games on a laptop. "I was thinking, 'What does this have to do with baseball?' " Betts said. "I guess I did pretty well, since he kept on pursuing me." Betts, 21, said the daily NeuroScouting drills he did in the minors helped put him on a fast track to the majors. "It gets your brain going," he said. In 43 games through Thursday, his .363 on-base percentage ranked second among major-league rookies behind Chicago White Sox star Jose Abreu. Teams still aren't sure if any of this will boost their offense. The Red Sox have seen hitters such as Betts rate well on the neuro tests and blossom into productive players. But Cherington said other prospects have scored well and not panned out. Likewise, Rays catcher Curt Casali said his hitting improved after the team introduced NeuroScouting while he was still in the minors last year, but has no idea if one had anything to do with the other. "You could just be a really good hitter," Casali said. The only thing teams know for sure is offense continues to fall. The major-league batting average is .251, which would be the lowest for a single season since 1972, the year before the American League introduced the designated hitter. The leaguewide strikeout total is on pace to reach an all-time high for the seventh consecutive year. At this point, they don't need to know an experiment will work. The fact that it might is enough. "Intuitively, it would make sense that this would be a helpful tool," Cherington said, "but I just don't know if anyone yet can prove that it's predictive. The hope is maybe it can be."
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 13:34:50 GMT -5
So, baseball should have it's first 20 game winner in about 3 hours. Unless you think the 68-85 Cubs, going with Edwin Jackson and his 6.07 e.r.a, are going to beat the Dodgers and Clayton Kershaw today.
I'll just have to assume that the odds are well in favor of the Dodgers today. They are already a single or a sac fly away from taking a 1-0 lead in the first.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 13:35:54 GMT -5
...or, this could happen.
Matt Kemp homered (379 ft.) to deep left, Yasiel Puig and Adrián González scored.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 13:52:05 GMT -5
It's going to be a golden day.....
6-0 Dodgers after a 1/2 inning.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 14:06:43 GMT -5
O.K. So I spoke too soon. WAAAAAY too soon.
Still, at 6-3 after an inning, I still like the Dodgers chances today.
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Post by BHR on Sept 19, 2014 14:34:59 GMT -5
big D...just looking at the boxscore. Did the Cubs catcher get hurt or did they just pinch hit for him in the first?
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 14:35:15 GMT -5
Another day, another chance for someone to give Derek Jeter free stuff. Prior to tonight’s Yankees game New Era CEO Chris Koch will be presenting Derek Jeter with bronzed version of the New Era 59FIFTY cap.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 14:41:08 GMT -5
Another day, another chance for someone to give Derek Jeter free stuff. Prior to tonight’s Yankees game New Era CEO Chris Koch will be presenting Derek Jeter with bronzed version of the New Era 59FIFTY cap.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 14:44:01 GMT -5
big D...just looking at the boxscore. Did the Cubs catcher get hurt or did they just pinch hit for him in the first? Still checking, and trying to find out.....
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 14:49:40 GMT -5
big D...just looking at the boxscore. Did the Cubs catcher get hurt or did they just pinch hit for him in the first? I've still got nothing, but, an injury would be the best educated guess at the moment.
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Post by BHR on Sept 19, 2014 15:28:48 GMT -5
Someone told AJ Ellis that the season started
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Post by BHR on Sept 19, 2014 15:29:24 GMT -5
big D...just looking at the boxscore. Did the Cubs catcher get hurt or did they just pinch hit for him in the first? I've still got nothing, but, an injury would be the best educated guess at the moment. Game Notes C W. CASTILLO (LEFT RIB CONTUSION) LEFT GAME BOT 1ST
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 15:41:27 GMT -5
I've still got nothing, but, an injury would be the best educated guess at the moment. Game Notes C W. CASTILLO (LEFT RIB CONTUSION) LEFT GAME BOT 1ST Thank you for the assist. I was still checking on this.....
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 15:43:14 GMT -5
HAPPY, HAPPY. JOY, JOY.
Yasiel Puig homered (395 ft.) to deep left center, A.J. Ellis and Dee Gordon scored
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 15:48:26 GMT -5
So,...........I see that Paul Konerko is back in the White Sox lineup, just like he said he would be. However, he is back tonight, when the Sox are in Tampa. As such, this is not "one for the home crowd". It is due to this that I wonder why he is playing 1B, and Jose Abreu is the D.H. Konerko's hand is no less broken than it was 2 1/2 weeks ago.
Maybe this is just me, but I think playing the field should have waited until they got back to Chicago, just in case he does something tonight that would for sure prevent him from playing more. And/so, if he HAS TO play tonight, why not D.H him?
Hmm...
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 16:21:22 GMT -5
SI.com writer Jay Jaffe like to play "what if's" with standings. Like, what if there were a bunch of teams to tie with the exact same record, and how far the powers that be would have to go to straighten it all out. Meaning, many levels of tie breakers and such.
Ponder this -
For maximum chaos, the sweet spot in the NL is 88 wins. To get there would take the Cardinals going 3-6, the Pirates 6-4, the Brewers 9-0, the Dodgers 1-8 and the Giants 4-6.
The Dodgers got ( or will get ) their 1 win in an hour or so. Meaning, that this unlikely senario goes from difficult to impossible very quickly.
But still, what if......?
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 16:37:21 GMT -5
Even having nobody to deal with is not ruining my good baseball day today. It's the new feast or famine Dodgers, where they either drop a "football score" on someone, or, someone does it to them.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 16:40:51 GMT -5
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 16:51:40 GMT -5
Derek Jeter needs one more run to move into sole possession of tenth place on the all-time runs scored list. He is currently tied with Alex Rodriguez (1,919). With A-Rod likely coming back next year, he will not hold this spot for long. He does though still have a good chance to pass Bobby Abreu for 13th all time in K's, as he only needs 7 more.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 19, 2014 17:20:12 GMT -5
Forget 300 wins. When will the next 200 game winner arrive, and who will it be? 10 years in, I see Justin Verlander has 150 wins. However, with the way he has been going this year, will he be around to get # 200? Maybe, probably, but, maybe not. The $ 86.5 mil he has made so far would keep him, his Upton girl, and all of their future spawn rolling in dough forever.
Cliff Lee is 4 years older than Verlander, and is sitting on 143 wins. I say no for him. That next leaves Jared Weaver, who at 31, has 130 wins in his 9 year career. I could see him playing another 7 years, and winning 10 games per.
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Post by bigddude on Sept 22, 2014 9:49:58 GMT -5
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Post by bigddude on Sept 22, 2014 9:59:29 GMT -5
The Mets rookies, looking good....
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Post by bigddude on Sept 22, 2014 10:00:55 GMT -5
Much better that the Angels rookies.....
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Post by bigddude on Sept 22, 2014 10:50:32 GMT -5
This should make at least 2 people that visit here quite happy.
The Braves have fired general manager Frank Wren, the team announced. John Hart, a senior advisor with the club, will become the interim GM and will also be part of a three-man team (along with team president John Schuerholz and former manager Bobby Cox) in charge of finding a permanent general manager.
It was reported earlier today by David O’Brien of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that a front office move was on the verge of happening, and Wren’s firing comes just a day after the Braves were officially eliminated from postseason contention. The team is in the midst of a dreadful 4-14 stretch and the slump brought with it several rumors that Wren was on the hot seat. The Braves will also make changes to their international scouting and player development departments, Peter Gammons reports, though manager Fredi Gonzalez’s job appears to be safe according to CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman (Twitter link).
Wren had been a member of the Braves front office since 2000, first serving as Schuerholz’s assistant GM and then taking over the general manager’s job following the 2007 season. While Wren obviously had a tough act to follow given Atlanta’s string of consecutive playoff appearances under Schuerholz, the Braves “only” reached the postseason three times during his eight seasons as general manager and never advanced further than the NLDS. The Braves were in playoff contention for much of this season before their September collapse sunk their chances and left the team in danger of only its third sub-.500 record in the last 24 years.
It was just this past winter that Wren received a contract extension and wide praise around the baseball world for locking up several of the Braves’ young stars (Freddie Freeman, Andrelton Simmons, Julio Teheran, Craig Kimbrel and Jason Heyward) and then acting fast to sign Ervin Santana in Spring Training when Brandon Beachy and Kris Medlen both went down to Tommy John surgeries.
What ultimately doomed the 2014 Braves, however, was a lack of hitting, which underlined Wren’s two biggest mistakes — signing B.J. Upton to a five-year, $75.25MM free agent deal and signing Dan Uggla to a five-year, $62MM extension after acquiring the second baseman in a trade from the Marlins. As ESPN’s Jerry Crasnick put it, these two moves alone probably cost Wren his job, since Uggla was released earlier this year and Upton has been a bust since coming to Atlanta.
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