bigjag19 said:
It's not recency bias. MVP, sustained playoff success, 3 homers in a playoff game, walkoffs, he's done it all. And not done.
Keep in mind nostalgia is a thing too. We sometimes romanticize Biggio.
bigjag19 said:
It's not recency bias. MVP, sustained playoff success, 3 homers in a playoff game, walkoffs, he's done it all. And not done.
I'm afraid I have to agree. As much as I respect Biggio and Bagwell it's a fact that their post-season stats are a stain on their careers. Last year we saw Altuve go into a post- season slump as bad as either of them but by the end of the ALCS he shook it off and helped the Astros win. Those two guys could never seem to do that.bigjag19 said:
It's not recency bias. MVP, sustained playoff success, 3 homers in a playoff game, walkoffs, he's done it all. And not done.
tjack16 said:
Altuve > Biggio/Bagwell
It's not recency bias.
McInnis said:Wow, that had to be a viscous line drive. I still feel bad for David Clyde, I don't know what else the Rangers could have done to scuttle any chance he had of a good career.Ag4life80 said:
Hardest hit ball I've ever witnessed was hit by Bob Watson off David Clyde in the dome. Low turnout, so we moved behind home plate. Watson crushed a low hooking, knuckling line drive that went between SS Toby Harrah's legs on the fly and ended up as a double is the gap. Harrah's face lost all color. Probably had to change pants. Late exhibition game right before the opener, circa '73 or '74.
Pinder > Dubon, btw
Quote:
Unfortunately, the 2022 season was one of the least-productive of his six-year big league career (.235/.263/.385 in 379 plate appearances). Spring training with his new club didn't go any better, as Pinder was just 4-for-39 with nine strikeouts in 42 plate appearances over 15 games. Overall, he slashed just .103/.167/.154 in this spring's small sample of at-bats.
tjack16 said:
Altuve > Biggio/Bagwell
It's not recency bias.
rausr said:McInnis said:Wow, that had to be a viscous line drive. I still feel bad for David Clyde, I don't know what else the Rangers could have done to scuttle any chance he had of a good career.Ag4life80 said:
Hardest hit ball I've ever witnessed was hit by Bob Watson off David Clyde in the dome. Low turnout, so we moved behind home plate. Watson crushed a low hooking, knuckling line drive that went between SS Toby Harrah's legs on the fly and ended up as a double is the gap. Harrah's face lost all color. Probably had to change pants. Late exhibition game right before the opener, circa '73 or '74.
Pinder > Dubon, btw
Proud Westchester Wildcat here.
Went to the old stadium in Arlington to watch him pitch in his first game - the first sellout for the Rangers there.
astros4545 said:tjack16 said:
Altuve > Biggio/Bagwell
It's not recency bias.
Altuve May literally be the all time postseason Hr leader in a few years
Ridiculous
EastCoastAgNc said:
On Pinder:. https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2023/03/reds-release-chad-pinder.htmlQuote:
Unfortunately, the 2022 season was one of the least-productive of his six-year big league career (.235/.263/.385 in 379 plate appearances). Spring training with his new club didn't go any better, as Pinder was just 4-for-39 with nine strikeouts in 42 plate appearances over 15 games. Overall, he slashed just .103/.167/.154 in this spring's small sample of at-bats.
We aren't signing him. If you can't cut it for the reds you are washed up.
Lonestar_Ag09 said:
Because they didn't have an additional team and lights out arms to carry the team while they struggled.
You can't give Jose credit for coming around in the second round without pointing out that he didn't do anything to help the team get there.
Harry Dunne said:
I'm an old. Love the killer Bs. TBH will probably always love them more than this generation of Stros just because of nostalgia…
But they were absolute playoff chokers and if they had been even a remote semblance of themselves in the playoffs they would have a couple of rings as well.
If they had played well and just didn't have the supporting cast, I'd feel differently, but they did have great teams around them and just failed to get it done. There's no comparison between them and Altuve in my opinion.
Harry Dunne said:
I'd like to see the evidence on that, but even if it's true it's sort of a self-fulfilling prophecy. You tend to be the underdog when your best two players hit like Niko Goodrum in the playoffs and everyone knows it.
WES2006AG said:
I grew up in the 90s with Bagwell as a hero and Biggio a close second.
With that said, Altuve is not only the best player in franchise history but also my favorite player by far.
Lots of nostalgia for the Killer B's but Altuve is so much more fun to watch and root for.
Dusty said Javier will "probably" pitch Friday's second game of the season.
— Brian McTaggart (@brianmctaggart) March 26, 2023