JF_Gophers
2147483647
The Cubs have finally called up Kris Bryant.
He's finally got enough work in at 3rd base defensively to not be a liability in the majors.
The Cubs have finally called up Kris Bryant.
The Cubs have finally called up Kris Bryant.
3 K's so far.
The longer guys like Miggy and Gonzalez hit like this, the harder it is for me to even fathom how Ted Williams hit .406.
Gonzalez is still over .500, and on the west coast, and on the Dodgers, so I don't really watch those games, but it seems like Miggy gets on base every time and he's still only hitting .450. The fact that someone was able to do something like this for an entire season is just incredible. And Williams was just the LAST guy to do it, plenty of others had done it before him.
The ones before him...different era.
Frankly, with specialization (relievers, mid-relievers, etc) it's amazing anytime someone flirts with .350 for a whole season. (Note: I haven't looked anything up as to numbers, taking a semi-educated stab at a number).
With the things you mentioned I'm surprised sometimes that anyone can hit .350 for a whole month sometimes. Hell, gloves alone are twice as big as they were in the Babe's day. A ball that was 3 or 4 inches outside of his reach in in the outfield and rolling to the wall for a double in 1925 is safely nestled in the glove of today's outfielder as a harmless flyball out. Gonzalez' slugging average is one of the more interesting stats to me right now. He's 227 points ahead of the Os Adam Jones in second place. You go 227 points below Adams and you don't go to 3rd or 4th or 5th place or even 10th place, you go all the way down to the 21st ranked player.
By the same token, though, foul territory has gotten smaller, the parks have gotten smaller, and they've lowered the mound several times. There have been some significant advantages for hitters added in the last 20-30 years, too.
Reds manager Bryan Price attacked Cincinnati Enquirer beat reporter C. Trent Rosecrans today in a lengthy and profane rant that accused the scribe of being too good at the job of accurately reporting news about the Cincinnati Reds.
Ah, ****. I’m just, I’m ****ing ****ing up a rope in this ****ing business. Because everyone has to know everything all the ****ing time. That’s not my ****ing obligation, it’s not their obligation. You know why ****ing Billy Hamilton didn’t ****ing play? The other day? Because his ****ing finger’s hurt and he couldn’t hit right-handed comfortably. Right? So that’s something that I need to know and no one else needs to know. No one else needs to ****ing know it, and all of a sudden it’s out there. His ****ing fingers are sore. It doesn’t benefit us. It wasn’t from you, but it doesn’t benefit us one bit to ****ing announce to the ****ing other teams that we’re playing to bring in lefties when they need to ****ing get Billy out. There’s no benefit. So, I’m ****ing, to be honest with you, I’m ****ing sick of this ****. I’m sick of listening to this ****ing ****, I’m sick of ****ing the ****ing second-guessing bull****, you guys can do whatever the **** you want, but I’ll tell you this — I’m not going to ****ing tell you everything about this ****ing club, because you ****ing guys are going to out there and sniff it out anyway. I don’t ****ing like it one ****ing bit. I bend over backwards to be honest and direct with you ****ing guys and you stick it right up my ****ing *** — and the ****ing team’s ***. And I’m sick of it. What do you got? If you don’t got anything, get out and I’ll do this ****ing interview with Marty. You don’t have anything? Just get out, please.
On a scale of Zero - to - Lee Elia, how would you rank Cincinnati Reds skipper Bryan Price?
http://deadsp.in/1bn6nI5
Weird. Bernie Williams (NYY) never retired. Hasn't played since 2006. He will retire now though.