Ag_07 said:
Should we know who this is?
Depends on just how deep you dive into Major League Baseball.
Ag_07 said:
Should we know who this is?
Farmer1906 said:Ag_07 said:
Should we know who this is?
Depends on just how deep you dive into Major League Baseball.
Ag_07 said:Farmer1906 said:Ag_07 said:
Should we know who this is?
Depends on just how deep you dive into Major League Baseball.
Ok...
Ag_07 said:Farmer1906 said:Ag_07 said:
Should we know who this is?
Depends on just how deep you dive into Major League Baseball.
Ok...
linkdude said:Tucker and Bregs leading the pack in terms of selectiveness.Last year's leaders in zone-swing (Z-Swing) minus out-of-zone-swing (O-Swing on FanGraphs)
— Eno Sarris (@enosarris) January 11, 2023
1) Kyle Tucker
2) Jesse Winker
3) George Springer
4) Ronald Acuńa Jr.
5) Alex Bregman
6) Andrew Benintendi
7) Corey Seager
8) Andrew McCutchen
9) Luke Voit
10) Marcus Semien
11) Jeff McNeil
J.B. Bukauskas 🫡 https://t.co/F2G1hvzK46
— Michael Schwab (@michaelschwab13) January 12, 2023
According to a poll from MLB Pipeline, the Astros received votes in the following categories:
— Kenny Van Doren (@thevandalorian) January 12, 2023
Uses the Draft best
Plays the international market best (T-1st)
Most underrated system (T-2nd)
Best develops pitchers (T-3rd)
Best develops hitters (2nd)
Best develops sleepers (2nd)
Mathguy64 said:
Nelson Cruz just signed a 1 year deal with the Pads. $1MM. That seems cheap.
The old heads who consider a one pitcher no hitter a "true" no hitter need to realize that pitchers are not just throwing straight heat anymore with a little spin added in. The pitches being thrown now days have so much spin and torque on them it really strains a pitchers arm, and when you are paying those pitchers over $45mil+ a year, you play it safe with them.Harry Dunne said:Yeah good point. I remember it was such a rarity when Oswalt & co. threw that combined no-hitter, but now more of them are combined than not...McInnis said:
I wonder how many single pitcher no-hitters we'll ever see again? Starting pitchers going nine innings is starting to seem almost as rare as no-hitters used to be.
But in 2021 there were surprisingly 7 solo NH and only 2 combined so I think it's still going to happen because if a guy has no-hit stuff there's a decent chance he's going to get through 9 in 110 pitches.
With Javier, he has only gone over 100 pitches 3x in his entire career (one of them was the NYY no-hitter), but as he gains control, experience and endurance and now that he's been part of a couple, I expect he'll get to the point where he's actively trying to pitch a CG no-hitter and goes after guys the way he needs to and he will eventually get one.
bigjag19 said:
I'm happy to play here in the fine city of Miami!
(Minnesota)
Whatever.
*****
A no-no is extremely special even if it is a combined. But you gotta admit, there is something a little more special about seeing a guy up there in the 6th or 7th inning with a pitch count in the 60's thinking is this really happening?All I do is Nguyen said:The old heads who consider a one pitcher no hitter a "true" no hitter need to realize that pitchers are not just throwing straight heat anymore with a little spin added in. The pitches being thrown now days have so much spin and torque on them it really strains a pitchers arm, and when you are paying those pitchers over $45mil+ a year, you play it safe with them.Harry Dunne said:Yeah good point. I remember it was such a rarity when Oswalt & co. threw that combined no-hitter, but now more of them are combined than not...McInnis said:
I wonder how many single pitcher no-hitters we'll ever see again? Starting pitchers going nine innings is starting to seem almost as rare as no-hitters used to be.
But in 2021 there were surprisingly 7 solo NH and only 2 combined so I think it's still going to happen because if a guy has no-hit stuff there's a decent chance he's going to get through 9 in 110 pitches.
With Javier, he has only gone over 100 pitches 3x in his entire career (one of them was the NYY no-hitter), but as he gains control, experience and endurance and now that he's been part of a couple, I expect he'll get to the point where he's actively trying to pitch a CG no-hitter and goes after guys the way he needs to and he will eventually get one.
Sources: #Rangers among most serious suitors for Bryan Reynolds. Here’s my latest report for @MLBNetwork. @MLB pic.twitter.com/xNKYMn5Ghv
— Jon Morosi (@jonmorosi) January 12, 2023
We’re adjusting @ComericaPark’s outfield dimensions and lowering wall heights in key areas prior to Opening Day 2023.
— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) January 11, 2023
EastCoastAgNc said:We’re adjusting @ComericaPark’s outfield dimensions and lowering wall heights in key areas prior to Opening Day 2023.
— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) January 11, 2023
The reverse orioles move, make it easier to hit home runs
Thanks for giving me a good laugh to start the morning young fella.All I do is Nguyen said:The old heads who consider a one pitcher no hitter a "true" no hitter need to realize that pitchers are not just throwing straight heat anymore with a little spin added in. The pitches being thrown now days have so much spin and torque on them it really strains a pitchers arm, and when you are paying those pitchers over $45mil+ a year, you play it safe with them.Harry Dunne said:Yeah good point. I remember it was such a rarity when Oswalt & co. threw that combined no-hitter, but now more of them are combined than not...McInnis said:
I wonder how many single pitcher no-hitters we'll ever see again? Starting pitchers going nine innings is starting to seem almost as rare as no-hitters used to be.
But in 2021 there were surprisingly 7 solo NH and only 2 combined so I think it's still going to happen because if a guy has no-hit stuff there's a decent chance he's going to get through 9 in 110 pitches.
With Javier, he has only gone over 100 pitches 3x in his entire career (one of them was the NYY no-hitter), but as he gains control, experience and endurance and now that he's been part of a couple, I expect he'll get to the point where he's actively trying to pitch a CG no-hitter and goes after guys the way he needs to and he will eventually get one.
I agree with us being #1, but I am unsure about the rest. LA at #2 is hard because I believe in the Padres. The Yankees at #6 seem way too low when Boston got worse, TB is still TB (good but probably not winning 100 games again like 21), and the Blue Jays seem to underperform constantly.Quote:
1. Houston Astros
The defending champs lost Justin Verlander, which is, obviously, not nothing. But they're still pretty stacked, and they've even added Jos Abreu, some veteran leadership on a team that is certainly not lacking for it. They also have an exciting young pitching staff, with a couple of guys in Framber Valdez and Cristian Javier who might just go out and win a Cy Young themselves. And more to our larger point here: As exciting as the Mariners might be, as spend-happy as the Rangers might be and as truly desperate as the Angels might be, none of those three teams seem particularly close to being in the Astros' league right now. Winning another World Series will be a huge challenge. Winning another AL West will be decidedly less of one.
Thanks for the lesson. All of that is news to me.All I do is Nguyen said:The old heads who consider a one pitcher no hitter a "true" no hitter need to realize that pitchers are not just throwing straight heat anymore with a little spin added in. The pitches being thrown now days have so much spin and torque on them it really strains a pitchers arm, and when you are paying those pitchers over $45mil+ a year, you play it safe with them.Harry Dunne said:Yeah good point. I remember it was such a rarity when Oswalt & co. threw that combined no-hitter, but now more of them are combined than not...McInnis said:
I wonder how many single pitcher no-hitters we'll ever see again? Starting pitchers going nine innings is starting to seem almost as rare as no-hitters used to be.
But in 2021 there were surprisingly 7 solo NH and only 2 combined so I think it's still going to happen because if a guy has no-hit stuff there's a decent chance he's going to get through 9 in 110 pitches.
With Javier, he has only gone over 100 pitches 3x in his entire career (one of them was the NYY no-hitter), but as he gains control, experience and endurance and now that he's been part of a couple, I expect he'll get to the point where he's actively trying to pitch a CG no-hitter and goes after guys the way he needs to and he will eventually get one.
Kashchei said:
Would one of your Springer's be orange and a size medium, and would you be willing to sell it?
Now I will say that there is a train of thought that kids are learning how to throw new ways to add spin etc and it isn't natural and it is tearing up their arms...where as those old school guys did it naturally so it worked for them. I believe that is why there were so few dominant and so few extremely hard throwers back then.Harry Dunne said:Thanks for the lesson. All of that is news to me.All I do is Nguyen said:The old heads who consider a one pitcher no hitter a "true" no hitter need to realize that pitchers are not just throwing straight heat anymore with a little spin added in. The pitches being thrown now days have so much spin and torque on them it really strains a pitchers arm, and when you are paying those pitchers over $45mil+ a year, you play it safe with them.Harry Dunne said:Yeah good point. I remember it was such a rarity when Oswalt & co. threw that combined no-hitter, but now more of them are combined than not...McInnis said:
I wonder how many single pitcher no-hitters we'll ever see again? Starting pitchers going nine innings is starting to seem almost as rare as no-hitters used to be.
But in 2021 there were surprisingly 7 solo NH and only 2 combined so I think it's still going to happen because if a guy has no-hit stuff there's a decent chance he's going to get through 9 in 110 pitches.
With Javier, he has only gone over 100 pitches 3x in his entire career (one of them was the NYY no-hitter), but as he gains control, experience and endurance and now that he's been part of a couple, I expect he'll get to the point where he's actively trying to pitch a CG no-hitter and goes after guys the way he needs to and he will eventually get one.
Good thing Nolan didn't have any spin or torque!
That's not teleportation, genius. It's time travel. Get it right.Farmer1906 said:
I'll chime in.
A no-hitter is a no-hitter whether it's 1 pitcher or 9 pitchers. However, a single pitcher throwing a no-hitter is a fantastic individual accomplishment. I am not poopooing a team when it's combined, but I am also not elevating Javier like I would Verlander when it's 6 vs 9.
As for the Gibson '68 season, if you teleport him in 2023 and he throws as he did in '68 now, he probably wouldn't have a single CG because he'd get hit. With the changes to scouting, video, data, training, blah blah blah it's not the same game. I don't think it's fair to compare across eras.
bigjag19 said:
Wonder where we were with the Hill?