That sign behind home plate looks interesting....
1 ticket, two brews, $22. Bleachers & Brews
1 ticket, two brews, $22. Bleachers & Brews
Some people are optimistic because we still acquired pretty good / cheap talent without giving up much and the owners will spend more next year.Alvarado Times said:
Seems many are happy with the rebuild effort...but sure seems to be a lot of holes... 1st base? 2nd base, ss elvis, 3rd base, lf, cf..... i still see more questions than answers
They look like stormtroopers or KKK supporters.DannyDuberstein said:
I try not to be a special uniform fuddy duddy, but these are pretty ridiculous. It looks like the Rangers are wearing pajamas.
DannyDuberstein said:
With Minor's history, they need to seriously consider shutting him down soon.
Quote:
Rangers Considering Cutting Rougned Odor's Playing Time
August 25th, 2019 at 11:23am CST By Anthony Franco
While it seems no such move is imminent, the Rangers are at least contemplating cutting into the playing time of second baseman Rougned Odor, reports Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News. The 25 year-old is amidst his second dreadful season in three years.
Among qualified hitters, only Orlando Arcia has been less productive in the batters' box than Odor, whose .197/.273/.406 slash (67 wRC+) is a far cry from the passable production he logged just last season. As the slash line indicates, Odor hasn't had trouble hitting for power, as he's bopped 21 home runs and posted a strong .209 ISO. Rather, he's just given away way too many plate appearances, whether via strikeout (31.6%) or pop-up (15.6% IFFB). Odor ranks in the top ten leaguewide in both categories, with only Domingo Santana more strikeout-prone among qualifiers.
Given that lackluster performance and Odor's similarly abysmal 2017 numbers, the organization's patience is wearing thin. General manager Jon Daniels candidly acknowledged to Grant that "big ups and downs don't work from a team standpoint, not when you are in the lineup every day," and pointed out the organization has "some guys who overlap from a positional standpoint."
Daniels clarified that his comments weren't meant to be punitive or to put extra pressure on Odor, who both GM and manager Chris Woodward stressed has remained extremely diligent in trying to work out of the rut. That said, it's impossible to continue to run out a player who makes as many outs as Odor has been making, and Texas does indeed have other interesting, if flawed, options.
In other words, we're getting down to a buyout amount we could stomach if we had to.
A lot of people don't like his style, his demeanor, and how the organization takes up for him at every turn while they're so quick to jettison some other guys who perform just as bad. The whole thing is just not a good situation and not a good look.DallasAg 94 said:wbt5845 said:Quote:
Rangers Considering Cutting Rougned Odor's Playing Time
August 25th, 2019 at 11:23am CST By Anthony Franco
While it seems no such move is imminent, the Rangers are at least contemplating cutting into the playing time of second baseman Rougned Odor, reports Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News. The 25 year-old is amidst his second dreadful season in three years.
Among qualified hitters, only Orlando Arcia has been less productive in the batters' box than Odor, whose .197/.273/.406 slash (67 wRC+) is a far cry from the passable production he logged just last season. As the slash line indicates, Odor hasn't had trouble hitting for power, as he's bopped 21 home runs and posted a strong .209 ISO. Rather, he's just given away way too many plate appearances, whether via strikeout (31.6%) or pop-up (15.6% IFFB). Odor ranks in the top ten leaguewide in both categories, with only Domingo Santana more strikeout-prone among qualifiers.
Given that lackluster performance and Odor's similarly abysmal 2017 numbers, the organization's patience is wearing thin. General manager Jon Daniels candidly acknowledged to Grant that "big ups and downs don't work from a team standpoint, not when you are in the lineup every day," and pointed out the organization has "some guys who overlap from a positional standpoint."
Daniels clarified that his comments weren't meant to be punitive or to put extra pressure on Odor, who both GM and manager Chris Woodward stressed has remained extremely diligent in trying to work out of the rut. That said, it's impossible to continue to run out a player who makes as many outs as Odor has been making, and Texas does indeed have other interesting, if flawed, options.
In other words, we're getting down to a buyout amount we could stomach if we had to.I don't see the bolded part in the article.(I was looking at the DMN article)
Evan Grant has been after Odor, for quite some time.Quote:
Triple-A infielder Eli White might also have gotten a call-up for September had he hit a wall, quite literally, playing the outfield recently. The resulting shoulder injury is expected to end his season.
I wonder why so many people dislike Odor... no I don't really. I said this earlier this week, that Grant is feeding this.
The white Sox intentionally walked solak, a rookie we just acquired via trade, and loaded the bases to face odor.DallasAg 94 said:That's fine. I think Woody spoke about why people don't like him.Grapesoda2525 said:
A lot of people don't like his style, his demeanor, and how the organization takes up for him at every turn while they're so quick to jettison some other guys who perform just as bad. The whole thing is just not a good situation and not a good look.
If you're going to act the way odor does, you better be a good player and the last few years he's been atrocious.
Give me some players the Rangers jettisoned that were better than Odor?!
The good news for you is, it looks like JD will be publicly criticizing Odor in an attempt to ensure as many fans as possible, dislike Odor. This helps reduce the fan backlash.
Hanser AlbertoDallasAg 94 said:That's fine. I think Woody spoke about why people don't like him.Grapesoda2525 said:
A lot of people don't like his style, his demeanor, and how the organization takes up for him at every turn while they're so quick to jettison some other guys who perform just as bad. The whole thing is just not a good situation and not a good look.
If you're going to act the way odor does, you better be a good player and the last few years he's been atrocious.
Give me some players the Rangers jettisoned that were better than Odor?!
The good news for you is, it looks like JD will be publicly criticizing Odor in an attempt to ensure as many fans as possible, dislike Odor. This helps reduce the fan backlash.