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USAFChief

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Everything posted by USAFChief

  1. respectfully disagree. Doesn't matter where the ball was caught. Until you're sure the ball is on the ground, your first step is always back towards the bag, even on a contact play. If it's caught in the air, you might get back. If it's not caught, play it as you see fit. If it hits the ground, you're off (on a contact play). If it's past the infield, you score anyway. If it's caught by an outfielder in the air, you're tagging up anyway. And in this case, the play was 150 feet away. Inexcusable to get picked off. Agree on Arraez. Shouldn't happen.
  2. I was thinking the same thing, but also thinking..."Who else do I trust to get 3 outs with a 3 run lead?" And the answer is "nobody."
  3. guys get doubled off third on line drives to first all the time? Again, I disagree. And as pointed out above, it wasn't even a strong throw to third, Olson threw from his backside. Cave just screwed up. It shouldn't have happened. Much like the play recently where Buxton got caught tagging and going to third on a fly ball to center, costing the Twins a run (and ultimately the game), I'm quite positive if you could privately ask the player (in this case Cave, not Kep), he'd say, "yeah, I know. Bad play on my part. Won't happen again."
  4. I disagree. Even if the contact play is on, which I have zero problem with, that's on a ground ball. If the ball is in the air, your first step is always back towards third. The line drive was caught at first, not third, an entire infield away. There's no way to excuse getting picked off third on a ball caught at first. None. Fundamentals. That, plus the Arraez gaffe, cost the Twins two runners in scoring position. There's been a lot of that. Both of them were inexcusable, IYAM.
  5. Ray will end up with the Yankees, if traded. I can't imagine why Cincinnati trades Gray.
  6. True story. Also true: in the years 1883-2016, and 2018, over one thousand teams* dropped 16 of 17 and went on to miss the postseason. *number pulled completely out of my ***
  7. Good call. May is worse than Parker. My rankings: Avian flu > Parker > May.
  8. he could have asked him in April not to hot dog every. Single. Catch. Rosario styles everything, and it caught up to him.
  9. There is no real, actual bullpen help internally. Go get some real, bullpen help, and pay what it costs. Falvine failed over the winter, so now pay the price. I repeat...stop pretending the help is already in the organization. That's insulting, if you ask me.
  10. No bad luck involved, or at least not enough to matter. Bad play.
  11. One huge and noticeable difference between Baldelli and Molitor, in evidence in both games this series: Molitor routinely left his starter in too long. Then after the damage was done, he'd make his grim faced march out to the mound to remove the guy. Baldelli is much more likely to go get his starter before the game is lost. I'm very confident that both last night and tonight, Molitor would not have removed his starter. Huge props.
  12. Best win of the season so far. Rogers! Side note: Will Smith blew his first save of the season for the Giants tonight...get him while his value has cratered!!1! EDIT: too late. SF scored 4 in the top of the 10th, Smith will get the W, and his value will SKYROCKET!!1
  13. It took a great deal of courage to open this article. I just knew what it was going to be about.
  14. as a practical matter, I agree. I understood the question to be about eligibility, perhaps I read it wrong.
  15. they could. There are no minimums to be eligible, only maximums. To be eligible for ROTY, a player can't have accumulated more than 130 ABs or 50 IP, or spent more than 45 days on a 25 man roster outside September, in any previous year(s). If a player meets that criteria, he is eligible for ROTY.
  16. You're aware, aren't you, that Rogers spent the majority of his minor league career as a (fairly nondescript) starter? And was moved intentionally to a relief role?
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