***Official Houston Astros 2022-23 Offseason Thread***

1,071,041 Views | 12340 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by Beat40
bearkatag15
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bearkatag15
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I imagine we will see it added to the score bugs on tv broadcasts
Deluxe
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bearkatag15 said:



Dird-y
Texaggie7nine
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Deluxe said:

bearkatag15 said:



Dird-y



What are his HRs called? Dirdy Birdies?
7nine
Texaggie7nine
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Way to go Billy's Willie
7nine
Harry Dunne
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EastCoastAgNc said:



Sounds like either a dread pirate or a bougie patchwork shirt.
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bearkatag15
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Our field might not have it in view of the cameras but other fields had it very much in view behind the batter
bearkatag15
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I hate this so much
cc10106
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(nevermind)
AggieJ2002
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I prefer to be able to see the clock. Not seeing it doesn't help me believe that it's not a part of the game
OKCAg2002
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Hopefully they have some common sense in the regular season and dot call that.
Harry Dunne
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I find it interesting that so few here were against the shift but so many against the clock.
AggieJ2002
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OKCAg2002 said:

Hopefully they have some common sense in the regular season and dot call that.


Yeah but the team that they are playing will (rightfully) complain ... you can't call it in the first and not in the 9th ... its not a subjective call like a ticky tack defensive holding which we all know ow would never be called in a game ending call in the Super Bowl right?
Mathguy64
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$10 says they ditch this fast. Imagine a playoff game ending on a clock violation.
bearkatag15
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Mathguy64 said:

$10 says they ditch this fast. Imagine a playoff game ending on a clock violation.


They should just change it to a game can't end on a clock violation
Fightin' Texas Aggie and Sam Houston State Bearkat
Ag_07
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OKCAg2002 said:

Hopefully they have some common sense in the regular season and dot call that.

Why? It's a rule whether it happens in the 1st or 9th.

They don't like it maybe they shouldn't have implemented this crap.
MAROON
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If a team Loses a playoff game due to a pitch clock violation Rob Manfred better have tight security. That dude will be hunted down by crazed fans
What do you boys want for breakfast BBQ ?.....OK Chili.
wangus12
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bearkatag15 said:



I hate this so much


Refs/Umps taking over outcomes of games will never not happen
PhatMack19
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He was in the box just not looking at the pitcher. Who comes up with this bull*****

AggieNiebs
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wangus12 said:

bearkatag15 said:



I hate this so much


Refs/Umps taking over outcomes of games will never not happen
This isn't them "taking over outcomes", this is them calling the rules.... you complaint would be like them NOT calling an out at first with 2 outs in the 9th, because it would end the game and determine the outcome....
AggieNiebs
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PhatMack19 said:

He was in the box just not looking at the pitcher. Who comes up with this bull*****


the fact that he took off to first thinking he was award the base shows that he was aware of the rules and possibility of a free ball if the pitcher is not ready, so he understands the rules, and chose not to abide by them.
AggieJ2002
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I think there should be no automatic strikes ... pitcher should just be able to start the pitch at 8 or under even if the batter is not looking at them or ready
Lonestar_Ag09
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What I don't like is that it's a "pitch clock" not a batter clock

If the batter isn't ready that's should be on them not an automatic strike. If he's out of the box let the pitcher throw it once it hits 8 seconds.
EastCoastAgNc
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The nitpicking of these new rules is bringing the "umm actually" to baseball. I hate Rob Manfred
EastCoastAgNc
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Deluxe
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I see a little Mike Lamb in Dirden
The Porkchop Express
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35 days until opening day leads us to a bittersweet entry at #35. Justin Verlander, we hardly knew ye.




Wearing #35 from 2017-2022, Verlander put together the greatest 5-year stretch by a pitcher in Astros' history. There's no other way to look at it. He went 61-19 as an Astro with a 2.26 ERA, a no-hitter, 2 Cy Young awards, 2 World Series title, and an ALCS MVP.

We all know the story of the last-second deal to get JV in August 2017. The Astros were 80-53 when he was acquired. They went 21-8 down the stretch. And that trade to date has been one of the most lopsided in MLB history. Franklin Perez is 25 and yet to make it to the majors, Daz Cameron is 26 and has played in 73 MLB games with a .201 career batting average, and Jake Rogers is 27 and has also played just 73 games with a .182 career average.
i
JV was 10-8 with a 3.82 ERA when the Astros traded for him. His first start with the Astros was at Seattle on September 5 when he went 6 innings, allowed 1 run, and struck out 7. His second start, against the Angels, saw him throw 8 innings of 1-hit shutout ball with 9 strikeouts. Over his final three starts of the year, he was 3-0, pitched 20 innings, allowed 3 runs, and struck out 27 batters.

In the ALDS vs. Boston, he started Game 1 and got the win, allowing 2 earned runs in 6 innings, then beat the Red Sox in relief in Game 4, a 5-4 Astros win. He was even better against the Yankees, pitching a complete game 5 hitter in Game 2 with 13 strikeouts, and 7 scoreless innings in Game 6 with 8 strikeouts. He was named ALCS MVP for his troubles.

In the WS win over LA, he was 0-1, allowing 5 earned runs in 12 innings and striking out 9. Pitching great in the WS was his Achilles' Heel until 2022, but getting his team to the Big Show was never a problem.

He followed 2017 up with a 16-9 2018 with 290 strikeouts and a 2.52 ERA. In 2019, he won the Cy Young over Gerrit Cole with a 21-6 record, a 2.58 ERA, and 300 strikeouts in 223 innings. He got hurt in his only start of 2020, missed all of 2021, and then was so incredibly fantastic in 2022 you couldn't believe what you were seeing at times: 18-4 with a 1.75 ERA. Not including the 1981 strike season, that ERA is the 10th lowest since divisional play started in 1969.

JV also gave us the gift that keeps on giving. The hottest WAG of all time in Houston sports history.




Before there was JV, there was Joe Sambito, who wore the # from 1976-1984 and was the Astros' first really great closer.



An Astro draft pick in 1973, he was a closer throughout his career, piling up 33 wins, 72 saves, and a 2.42 ERA in 8 years with the team. He also had a hilarious .286/.583/.429 slash line at the plate in 1979 when he went 2 for 7 and somehow drew 5 walks.

He was an all-star in 1979 when he went 8-7 with a 1.77 ERA and 22 saves, striking out 83 batters in 91 innings. He pitched 2/3 of an inning at the All-Star game, getting a ground out from Reggie Jackson and a fly ball from George Brett.

In 1980 as the Astros won their first division title, he was 8-4 with a 2.19 ERA and 17 saves, finishing 5th in the Cy Young race. Teammate Joe Niekro finished 4th.

He tore ligaments in his pitching elbow in 1982, missing that season and 1983 before throwing 32 games in 1934 with a 3.02 ERA as a middle reliever. Dave Smith had taken over the closer role and Sambito was released in April 1985. He played a few months with the Mets, then was cut again. He wound up with the Red Sox in 1986 and made the World Series, but struggled in Game 7, giving up 2 runs.

The number was later worn by Aurelio "Senor Smoke" Lopez, and flash in the pan John Hudek, who was an all-star and finished second for Rookie of the Year in 1994 with 16 saves and a 2.97 ERA as the team's closer, and then was not so great anymore after that.







Life is better with a beagle
YellAg2004
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No free passes to break the rules, doesn't matter if it's the first pitch or last pitch. I hate when people expect officials/umpires to ignore rule violations just because it's the end of the game. Like I said in the thread about robot umpires, a ball is a ball, a strike is a strike, safe and out are safe and out. Now in this instance the batter was in the box and looking or he wasn't.

I do agree that the pitcher should just be allowed to let pitch whether the batter is ready or not vs. calling an auto-strike, but that's not the rule.

I also think the umpires were likely told to be extremely strict with calling it in spring training so players get used to it. At the end of the day, no one cares that a spring training game ended like that, but the players will develop their internal clocks and routines to fit in the time limit so it's not really an issue during the regular season and even more so in the playoffs.
Texaggie7nine
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AggieJ2002 said:

I think there should be no automatic strikes ... pitcher should just be able to start the pitch at 8 or under even if the batter is not looking at them or ready


Makes way more sense.

7nine
Harry Dunne
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Deluxe said:

I see a little Mike Lamb in Dirden
excellent and obscure comp.

Harry Dunne
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AggieJ2002 said:

I think there should be no automatic strikes ... pitcher should just be able to start the pitch at 8 or under even if the batter is not looking at them or ready
This is awesome. Yes.
HerschelwoodHardhead
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YellAg2004 said:

No free passes to break the rules, doesn't matter if it's the first pitch or last pitch. I hate when people expect officials/umpires to ignore rule violations just because it's the end of the game. Like I said in the thread about robot umpires, a ball is a ball, a strike is a strike, safe and out are safe and out. Now in this instance the batter was in the box and looking or he wasn't.

I do agree that the pitcher should just be allowed to let pitch whether the batter is ready or not vs. calling an auto-strike, but that's not the rule.

I also think the umpires were likely told to be extremely strict with calling it in spring training so players get used to it. At the end of the day, no one cares that a spring training game ended like that, but the players will develop their internal clocks and routines to fit in the time limit so it's not really an issue during the regular season and even more so in the playoffs.


Agreed, the batters will change their habits and adjust accordingly. Probably won't see it called all that often after a few months of adjustment.
EastCoastAgNc
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The pitch clock and shift rules shouldn't even be in effect. Just like the ghost runner stuff. The fact Manfred has the power to unilaterally institute whatever idiotic ideas he comes up with is criminal. He's ruining the game.
malenurse
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HerschelwoodHardhead said:

YellAg2004 said:

No free passes to break the rules, doesn't matter if it's the first pitch or last pitch. I hate when people expect officials/umpires to ignore rule violations just because it's the end of the game. Like I said in the thread about robot umpires, a ball is a ball, a strike is a strike, safe and out are safe and out. Now in this instance the batter was in the box and looking or he wasn't.

I do agree that the pitcher should just be allowed to let pitch whether the batter is ready or not vs. calling an auto-strike, but that's not the rule.

I also think the umpires were likely told to be extremely strict with calling it in spring training so players get used to it. At the end of the day, no one cares that a spring training game ended like that, but the players will develop their internal clocks and routines to fit in the time limit so it's not really an issue during the regular season and even more so in the playoffs.


Agreed, the batters will change their habits and adjust accordingly. Probably won't see it called all that often after a few months of adjustment.
This is why you call it "by the book" in spring training. So the players can get used to the flow.
The last thing I want to do is hurt you. But, it's still on the list.
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