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one_eyed_jack

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Everything posted by one_eyed_jack

  1. On the final pitch: 1. It was a strike Be honest, Duran throws that pitch in that situation and doesn’t get the call, you’re demanding the ump’s head on a platter 2. I can see why Max thought it wasn’t given how he was rung up on a pitch inside in his previous AB 3. But with the season on the line, you can’t stand there with the bat on your shoulder and hope for the benefit of the doubt on a close pitch. Protect the plate for God’s sake
  2. I would highly recommend caring about the Wolves. Anthony Edwards will make it worth it.
  3. Sigh. Feels like so many of the postseason losses to the Yankees. A good team coming up short against a powerhouse. Only behind by a run or two, but it felt insurmountable. One big hit was all the Twins needed, but you knew it wasn’t coming. There will be the condescending pats on the head with talk of how hard the Twins fought and what a bright future lies ahead of them. I had more than enough of being the Little Team that Could during the Gardenhire years. I want a deep playoff run. Hopefully this was a step to something better
  4. It took some gall to throw a tantrum about that call after the gift third strike against Julien.
  5. One of those rare games where the Twins have the lead after 8 and I am comfortable bringing in Pagan to pitch the ninth.
  6. This is great but I will not be comfortable heading to the bottom of the 10th unless the Twins score at least 2 more.
  7. It’s hard to be as ugly as these uniforms. Not sure who thought “obscure, illegible MS Word font meets 80’s track pants” was a good look.
  8. That Pagan inning was as ugly as these Ranger uniforms.
  9. Feels like a similar case for Jason Kendall. When you look closely, his case is stronger than you would have expected, but still well short of any reasonable Cooperstown standard. And probably the same result as Kendall, one-and-done. I lean more “big hall” but I am not interested in lowering the bar to the point where every above-average player who hung around for a while gets in.
  10. I think it also came from the fact that the Twins would get hits but end up stranding a lot of guys on base. Their opponents who had power hitters didn't have that problem. Take for example the 2009 ALDS. The Twins outhit the Yankees 29-23 in that series but were outscored by the Yankees 15-6 thanks largely to the fact that the Yankees outhomered the Twins 6-0. So it was all "you can't beat the Yankees with small ball, you need to have guys who can hit the ball over the fence to match their power." Which wasn't wrong, but it's odd to see the "you can't rely on home run hitters to score runs in postseason" takes being advanced by the same people now. But in any case, like you said, it's been the same basic story of the Twins unable to score runs both now and then. Although I find these last 2 years, particularly this year, infinitely more frustrating due to the degree that the lineup underperformed. Just a lot of really, really bad at-bats from guys who can and should do better. I think Twins hitters not named Nelson Cruz were 5-for-53 this series? That's just wretched.
  11. One thing I've found mildly amusing in the aftermath of this latest playoff debacle is the local media folks and their "you can't win with Bomba-ball in the postseason, you need to be able to scratch out runs" hot takes. Same people who 10-15 years ago were writing "you can't win with Piranha-ball in the postseason, you need power hitters who can hit the long ball".
  12. Maddening. Excruciating. Soul crushing. I am running out of adjectives to describe what it’s like to watch this team excel in the regular season then defecate all over themselves in the postseason. I don’t know what the answer is. Horrible at-bats by quality hitters. Bad base running. Untimely errors. Dubious managerial moves. Just a complete meltdown.
  13. There were a few dubious decisions to be sure but this series was so one-sided that it's hard to imagine a different outcome had different decisions been made. It was such a frustrating series, made even more so by the fact that every other DS is competitive - we're the only team that got so easily sent home. I'm so sick of the condescending pats on the head, the "plucky midwestern overachievers who get routinely stomped by the big bad bullies from the Bronx" narrative. Open the vaults, get a couple of shutdown starters and lockdown bullpen guys and flip the effing script. I don't want to hear about how proud you are of your regular season. I want to hear about how you're not satisfied with being playoff punching bags.
  14. This one really stings. It reminds me of the 2006 season - a team that was a ton of fun to watch and exceeded everyone's expectations - entered the playoffs with a roar and exited in 3 games with a whimper, though that time to Oakland. To me, what makes these series with the Yankees so maddening is that not only are they the better team, but every break, every call and every bounce seems to go their way when we play them in the postseason, and the Twins don't help themselves with their habit of self-inflicted injuries. (Cave, what in God's name were you thinking diving for that ball.) And I can't stand hearing about how brilliant the Yankee pitching was. Yeah, they were good, but a lot of it was just bad at-bats by the Twins. Flailing away at garbage way out of the zone, fouling off destroyable pitches, we made their 3 serviceable starters look like Maddux/Glavine/Smoltz 2.0. Rosario, Arraez and Polanco were the only 3 guys that didn't consistently look clueless and helpless at the plate. Garver, Sano and Kepler were particularly disappointing. Oh well, hopefully this is an experience that they learn from, and they come back hungry in the spring. And we spend some money on pitching - we just don't have the arms to compete in October right now.
  15. Yeah I don't see us beating the Yankees 2-1 or 3-2. I think they key will be jumping on Severino to build a healthy lead and let Odo relax a bit while forcing the Yankees to go to their pen early. A close game in the late innings does not favor us.
  16. I didn't expect the Twins to win over 100 games and break the home run record. I had more fun watching Twins baseball this year than I have in years. But man, another loss tomorrow, particularly if it's another loss of the non-competitive variety, and it will be hard to look back on it positively. At least initially, when it's still raw and emotions are running high. I'm sure I'll feel differently as the off-season progresses and the conversation shifts to talking about 2020. I agree that a win tomorrow would be huge, even if that's all we win. I just don't see beating the Yankees 3 straight. But for the love of God, rise up and win one effing game. Give the home fans something to cheer about. End the historic postseason losing streak so we don't have that hanging over us next time we play October baseball. And show the world we at least belong on the same field as the Yankees, cuz we sure didn't look like it this weekend. Severino is a beatable pitcher. Odo is capable of throwing a good game. Get it done.
  17. These 2 losses have been painful, much more so than years past. At least last decade, you expected it. The Yankees top-to-bottom simply had much better teams - especially in terms of starting pitching and offensive depth. Still, the Twins were competitive in most games, and were often in position to win until foiled by a bad bounce, a bad call or a bad pitch. But there isn't that same talent disparity this time around. To watch this Twins lineup flail against utterly hittable Yankee pitching is maddening. 14K's? Blech. Let's see what happens on Monday, Severino is another hittable pitcher. But as good as this team has been, if Monday's game is a repeat of today's, the fans will be well within their rights to boo the hometown team off the field.
  18. I understand the idea of a HOF, and don't disagree with reserving the highest honor for the very best of the best, but it does leave a lot of players who contributed a lot to the game out. I've wondered whether the binary HOFer/non-HOFer distinction is too simplistic, and maybe there should be other categories that can be used to honor guys who aren't worthy of induction to the HOF, but are still worthy of recognition. The defensive wizards. The super sluggers. The scrappy, speedy lead-off hitters. The guys who excelled for short stretches and were on HOF trajectories until injuries derailed their careers. The iron men who had productive 20+ year careers. The current HOF process results in these guys getting critiqued and put down for everything they weren't. Wouldn't it be better if there were some way to celebrate and honor what they were?
  19. I've long wondered whether TK, Puck and Hrbek made a deal with the Devil back in the day: 2 World Series crowns for a lifetime of sports suffering. "You shall twice celebrate as world champions", Satan said, "but for the next 2 generations, should any of your local teams appear poised to win a third, it shall not happen. They may get close, but to a man, they shall fail spectacularly in the biggest of moments." And so when Satan came to enforce this unholy bargain on the Lynx, Maya Moore said to him, "Aha, but we are not men" as she calmly drained a 3 in his face.
  20. Sad day but probably the right decision for Joe. Amazing career that could have been a lot more amazing without the concussions. I'll miss watching him play.
  21. I mostly lurk on this great site, don't post a whole lot, but I can't not chime in on Mauer. Great guy, great player. It's a shame that he and Morneau both had their careers so limited by injuries. In '06 I thought those 2 would be terrorizing opposing pitching for the next decade plus. I never understood the venomous hatred of Mauer spewed from the darkest corners of the Twins fan base, or why certain members of the local sports media (Barreiro and Souhan in particular) not only felt compelled to pour gasoline on that fire by spreading vicious rumors and bizarre theories about him, but take a certain savage pleasure in doing so. Who knows, maybe he's not done. Maybe a few months or even a year from now, he'll decide he's still got some baseball left in him. But in any case, it was a nice swan song today, and it left me sadder than I thought it would that I'll probably never hear him introduced at Target Field again.
  22. But it's not like the victim's testimony is the first and last thing that happens at a rape trial and jurors are required to assess it in a vacuum. Plenty of other types of evidence are introduced: eyewitnesses who saw either the accuser or the defendant after the alleged incident, witnesses who knew both parties to describe their relationship, alibi witnesses for the defendant if the defendant is claiming it wasn't him, surveillance video if they were together in a public police before it happened, credit card receipts, medical records, expert testimony, social media posts, text messages, and phone records for starters (Even in this incident, which happened 2 years ago and was not reported to anyone at the time, the MLB found 20 witnesses to interview.) It may well be that none of the other evidence corroborates the accuser's account, making it hard to get a conviction, but that's why the constitutional presumption of innocence exists - so that the state can't rip you from your home and lock you in a cage without proof you did anything wrong; it's a feature, not a bug.
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