Might be time to explore a platoon at third base.
It's not just the hitting. His defense last year was subpar. Thinking Maldy's absence has such a huge effect on this years team doesn't explain Hader's drop-off. And to say that Brown and Valdez didn't regress last year despite Maldy's presence is revisionist history.The Porkchop Express said:
Is it just the anger at the lack of Maldonado's hitting that makes people question everything about his value?
I have never understood the raging denial that he might have been worth something significant to the pitching staff.
Using the White Sox current pitching staff as a reason that Maldonado isn't a good catcher is pretty myopic. The White Sox are tanking for draft picks, and have already started Lee more than Maldy. If anything, they signed him in order to trade him to team that needs help with pitching inconsistency come July/August.
Certainly his absence has not turned the Astros from contender to pretender all by itself.
But you guys steadfastly refuse to believe the fact that Pressly, Abreu (the less ****ty one), Brown, France, Verlander, and Valdez all having significantly higher ERAs than last year could possibly have to do with a change with the guy behind the plate?
For a community where so many people thrive on analytics, that seems like a blatant omission based on personal dislike of a former player.
MaxPower said:
I know the Nats are a frequent comparison for the Astros. At 19-31, they were 8.5 games out of the wild card. The tombstone Astros were 10.5 games back so actually more impressive. Seems like 10 games back is the farthest you can realistically fall.
Based on current trends, I'm assuming Soto had 68 HR and 237 RBI that year.tjack16 said:MaxPower said:
I know the Nats are a frequent comparison for the Astros. At 19-31, they were 8.5 games out of the wild card. The tombstone Astros were 10.5 games back so actually more impressive. Seems like 10 games back is the farthest you can realistically fall.
That team had two bonafide aces plus Patrick Corbin who had a 3.30 ERA. We don't have one ace right now based on performance. That's the big difference. They had the pitching in place and healthy.
Also Juan Soto and Rendon combined for 70 HR and 240 RBI that season for them.
The Porkchop Express said:Based on current trends, I'm assuming Soto had 68 HR and 237 RBI that year.tjack16 said:MaxPower said:
I know the Nats are a frequent comparison for the Astros. At 19-31, they were 8.5 games out of the wild card. The tombstone Astros were 10.5 games back so actually more impressive. Seems like 10 games back is the farthest you can realistically fall.
That team had two bonafide aces plus Patrick Corbin who had a 3.30 ERA. We don't have one ace right now based on performance. That's the big difference. They had the pitching in place and healthy.
Also Juan Soto and Rendon combined for 70 HR and 240 RBI that season for them.
Ag_07 said:
I think Salisbury nailed this morning on 790. He said there are way too many people in this organization who are too comfortable.
From the coaching staff, to players, to front office. No one seems to have any urgency or drive. They all think they can just show up and be the Astros.
I don't think we need a fire sale but we need a shake-up of some sort. Something to get everyone uncomfortable.
who we takin fellas pic.twitter.com/y9Id0Qothc
— christian (@StroudMerchant) May 8, 2024
And as always for this season, thank GOD for the Aggies.tjack16 said:who we takin fellas pic.twitter.com/y9Id0Qothc
— christian (@StroudMerchant) May 8, 2024
2025 First Round pick for the Astros: Jace LaViolette
texasaggie2015 said:
I will say, I did have a conversation with one of my people last night. They mentioned complacency- which is what some of you mentioned on this thread already. I think there's a lot of truth to that.
texasaggie2015 said:
I will say, I did have a conversation with one of my people last night. They mentioned complacency- which is what some of you mentioned on this thread already. I think there's a lot of truth to that.
I get it's annoying to hear but you'd rather their expected average is higher than showing, "Hey no this guy just sucks". It means they are at least making quality contact.tjack16 said:Ag_07 said:
I think Salisbury nailed this morning on 790. He said there are way too many people in this organization who are too comfortable.
From the coaching staff, to players, to front office. No one seems to have any urgency or drive. They all think they can just show up and be the Astros.
I don't think we need a fire sale but we need a shake-up of some sort. Something to get everyone uncomfortable.
They also said screw the "expected" outcomes because the expected ain't happening right now
That's exactly how I feel. If a guy is hitting .200 but his "expected average is .290"… he's still a .200 hitter
texasaggie2015 said:
I will say, I did have a conversation with one of my people last night. They mentioned complacency- which is what some of you mentioned on this thread already. I think there's a lot of truth to that.
cc10106 said:
I wonder how demoralizing it is for this team knowing that they would be around .500 right now despite all the issues if the back end of the bullpen just did its job.
MaxPower said:I get it's annoying to hear but you'd rather their expected average is higher than showing, "Hey no this guy just sucks". It means they are at least making quality contact.tjack16 said:Ag_07 said:
I think Salisbury nailed this morning on 790. He said there are way too many people in this organization who are too comfortable.
From the coaching staff, to players, to front office. No one seems to have any urgency or drive. They all think they can just show up and be the Astros.
I don't think we need a fire sale but we need a shake-up of some sort. Something to get everyone uncomfortable.
They also said screw the "expected" outcomes because the expected ain't happening right now
That's exactly how I feel. If a guy is hitting .200 but his "expected average is .290"… he's still a .200 hitter
I think everybody has been saying this one way or another, and if you look back at last year you can pretty much see the same thing towards the end of the season. Every year even teams that win the 'ship they make offseason moves, this team didn't. That was a big red flag right there.Ag_07 said:
I think Salisbury nailed this morning on 790. He said there are way too many people in this organization who are too comfortable.
From the coaching staff, to players, to front office. No one seems to have any urgency or drive. They all think they can just show up and be the Astros.
I don't think we need a fire sale but we need a shake-up of some sort. Something to get everyone uncomfortable.
Sure but we're all human, even pro baseball players. Obviously "demoralizing" is an exaggeration especially with the marathon that is an MLB season.Ag_07 said:cc10106 said:
I wonder how demoralizing it is for this team knowing that they would be around .500 right now despite all the issues if the back end of the bullpen just did its job.
Professional athletes are wired differently.
I can almost guarantee position players are not thinking that way and instead thinking 'Man if I could just get right at the plate and get back to hitting with RISP the back end wouldn't have to be perfect and we'd be .500 easily'.
Or at least that's how they SHOULD be thinking instead of just pointing fingers.
This to me is Breg's biggest issue. Great eye at the plate but the contact is off. Add in all the other things going on with him this year, he has an uphill battle. His goal was a big contract and every at bat chips away at that yearly amount.texasaggie2015 said:
So much of baseball is mental and I think a lot of the struggles we're seeing are the results of pressing. That's no excuse obviously- just my two cents.
Bregman needs to admit his approach and personal hitting guy are his problem. Find someone else to try something different. Golfers change swing coaches all the time to rework things. Hell Tiger did it three times, once after winning everything and being the best in the world. You also have to be willing to trust the hitting coach and do what they say. He's too invested in his own ideas.n_touch said:This to me is Breg's biggest issue. Great eye at the plate but the contact is off. Add in all the other things going on with him this year, he has an uphill battle. His goal was a big contract and every at bat chips away at that yearly amount.texasaggie2015 said:
So much of baseball is mental and I think a lot of the struggles we're seeing are the results of pressing. That's no excuse obviously- just my two cents.
Is that what our hitting coaches are for? I really don't know their every day duties, what exactly do they do?Mathguy64 said:Bregman needs to admit his approach and personal hitting guy are his problem. Find someone else to try something different. Golfers change swing coaches all the time to rework things. Hell Tiger did it three times, once after winning everything and being the best in the world. You also have to be willing to trust the hitting coach and do what they say. He's too invested in his own ideas.n_touch said:This to me is Breg's biggest issue. Great eye at the plate but the contact is off. Add in all the other things going on with him this year, he has an uphill battle. His goal was a big contract and every at bat chips away at that yearly amount.texasaggie2015 said:
So much of baseball is mental and I think a lot of the struggles we're seeing are the results of pressing. That's no excuse obviously- just my two cents.
Not much apparently._veeyah_ said:Is that what our hitting coaches are for? I really don't know their every day duties, what exactly do they do?Mathguy64 said:Bregman needs to admit his approach and personal hitting guy are his problem. Find someone else to try something different. Golfers change swing coaches all the time to rework things. Hell Tiger did it three times, once after winning everything and being the best in the world. You also have to be willing to trust the hitting coach and do what they say. He's too invested in his own ideas.n_touch said:This to me is Breg's biggest issue. Great eye at the plate but the contact is off. Add in all the other things going on with him this year, he has an uphill battle. His goal was a big contract and every at bat chips away at that yearly amount.texasaggie2015 said:
So much of baseball is mental and I think a lot of the struggles we're seeing are the results of pressing. That's no excuse obviously- just my two cents.
As a senior leader on the team, I would expect Bregman to recognize how much he is killing our run scoring opportunities hitting behind Yordan, and approach Espada about being moved down in the lineup.Mathguy64 said:Bregman needs to admit his approach and personal hitting guy are his problem. Find someone else to try something different. Golfers change swing coaches all the time to rework things. Hell Tiger did it three times, once after winning everything and being the best in the world. You also have to be willing to trust the hitting coach and do what they say. He's too invested in his own ideas.n_touch said:This to me is Breg's biggest issue. Great eye at the plate but the contact is off. Add in all the other things going on with him this year, he has an uphill battle. His goal was a big contract and every at bat chips away at that yearly amount.texasaggie2015 said:
So much of baseball is mental and I think a lot of the struggles we're seeing are the results of pressing. That's no excuse obviously- just my two cents.