Kelric wrote:Voted for Bryce Harper and Broxton (let KC get their guy in their for a potential save) as the last man.
Have you seen Broxton pitch?
At least the game will be exciting if he gets in the game.
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Kelric wrote:Voted for Bryce Harper and Broxton (let KC get their guy in their for a potential save) as the last man.
Octavious wrote:Wright not starting at 3B in the All-Star game? Seriously what does he need to do walk on water? Stupid stupid stupid. Not that it really matters at the end of the day, but man that's silly.
Wright, who led Sandoval by as many as 400,000+ votes just days ago has lost the 3rd base vote by 1.6 million. We knew that Giants fans were a bit crazy but that just boggles the mind.
Teggy wrote:Shameful.
pr0ner wrote:Teggy wrote:Shameful.
There was a lot of ballot box stuffing going on in SF at the very end, it seems.
Teggy wrote:pr0ner wrote:Teggy wrote:Shameful.
There was a lot of ballot box stuffing going on in SF at the very end, it seems.
I'm no conspiracy theorist, but that many votes sounds like hacking.
LawBeefaroni wrote:Teggy wrote:pr0ner wrote:Teggy wrote:Shameful.
There was a lot of ballot box stuffing going on in SF at the very end, it seems.
I'm no conspiracy theorist, but that many votes sounds like hacking.
You're allowed at least 25 votes a day per email address. Get fans motivated enough and they could easily cast a hundred votes a day, "legally."
triggercut wrote:LawBeefaroni wrote:Teggy wrote:pr0ner wrote:Teggy wrote:Shameful.
There was a lot of ballot box stuffing going on in SF at the very end, it seems.
I'm no conspiracy theorist, but that many votes sounds like hacking.
You're allowed at least 25 votes a day per email address. Get fans motivated enough and they could easily cast a hundred votes a day, "legally."
Or by having computer guys from nearby Palo Alto who are Giants fans setting up email bots to create accounts and cast votes automatically.
LawBeefaroni wrote:triggercut wrote:LawBeefaroni wrote:Teggy wrote:pr0ner wrote:Teggy wrote:Shameful.
There was a lot of ballot box stuffing going on in SF at the very end, it seems.
I'm no conspiracy theorist, but that many votes sounds like hacking.
You're allowed at least 25 votes a day per email address. Get fans motivated enough and they could easily cast a hundred votes a day, "legally."
Or by having computer guys from nearby Palo Alto who are Giants fans setting up email bots to create accounts and cast votes automatically.
MLB.com is fairly secure. I think they's still need at least some peons to enter the captcha code. Of course they can outsource that for like a dime per 100 votes.
triggercut wrote:Buster Posey starting ahead of Yadier Molina is also something of an injustice. Carlos Ruiz should be there ahead of Posey as well.
El Guapo wrote:Is there any prospect of changing it back so that the All-Star game does not decide home field advantage in the World Series? If it didn't count then I wouldn't care about voting injustices or shenanigans.
Just make it so that if it's tied after 11 or 12 innings, or whatever, then you have each team nominate a player to compete head-to-head in a home run derby.
And then there's Daniel Nava. His pedigree was so modest that he …
• tried out for his college team at Santa Clara as a walk-on
• didn't make it
• became the equipment manager
• left after two years because he couldn't afford tuition
• transferred to junior college
• went undrafted
• signed with the Chico Outlaws of the Golden Baseball League
• got cut by the Outlaws after a tryout
• came back a year later
• and finally got signed by the Red Sox on the say-so of assistant director of pro scouting Jared Porter …
• … for $1.
Nava is now the leadoff man for the Sox, hitting .294/.411/.462 and making the league minimum, after J.D. Drew's $70 million contract expired at the end of last season. The little things always matter. Even when you're a team as flush as the Red Sox.
El Guapo wrote:You wonder who else is out there who would flourish in MLB, but for whatever reason hasn't gotten a shot.
Freezer-TPF- wrote:That's it--we need an American Idol-style show for baseball players so we can discover that unknown talent.
El Guapo wrote:Shame that the Nats weren't this good back when I had access to my old law firm's season tickets.
LawBeefaroni wrote:Down on the Reds farm, Billy Hamilton stole his 100th base. This season. In 78 games.
He got caught just 21 times and has a .417 OBP.
He's got fielding issues (.935%), but I bet he's a ton of fun to watch.
At baseball reference.
ImLawBoy wrote:The numbers aren't quite the same, but my dad has been arguing that the Cubs should be putting Tony Campana out there every day to run like crazy and drive opposing batteries nuts. He's the most exciting part of the Cubs.
Of course, this was before The Savior was called up and displaced our All Star first baseman while getting the game winning RBI in three of his first five games and leading the Cubs to a 5-1 record. World Series here we come!
ImLawBoy wrote:The numbers aren't quite the same, but my dad has been arguing that the Cubs should be putting Tony Campana out there every day to run like crazy and drive opposing batteries nuts. He's the most exciting part of the Cubs.
Of course, this was before The Savior was called up and displaced our All Star first baseman while getting the game winning RBI in three of his first five games and leading the Cubs to a 5-1 record. World Series here we come!
El Guapo wrote:ImLawBoy wrote:The numbers aren't quite the same, but my dad has been arguing that the Cubs should be putting Tony Campana out there every day to run like crazy and drive opposing batteries nuts. He's the most exciting part of the Cubs.
Of course, this was before The Savior was called up and displaced our All Star first baseman while getting the game winning RBI in three of his first five games and leading the Cubs to a 5-1 record. World Series here we come!
Would you take Adrian Gonzalez straight up for Tony Rizzo?
triggercut wrote:Wow, what the heck happened to AGonz this season? Is he maybe playing hurt?
LawBeefaroni wrote:triggercut wrote:Wow, what the heck happened to AGonz this season? Is he maybe playing hurt?
No idea. He's started about 25% of his games in the OF so maybe with Youk gone full time at 1B will help him?
The big concern is his power outage.
LOS ANGELES—The Los Angeles Dodgers were forced to stop play Sunday against the Chicago White Sox to allow the grounds crew to come out and pull a tarp over the unsightly Dodger Stadium crowd. "You hate to stop the game, but it was getting next to impossible for the guys to play in conditions like that," manager Don Mattingly said of the 38,000 hideous Dodger fans who filled the stands, nearly ruining the game by being clearly visible.
The specially made tarp used to cover Dodger Stadium attendees is the second-largest tarp in Major League Baseball behind that used by the Indians during home games to cover the rest of Cleveland.
triggercut wrote:Wow. Interesting.
In 2009, Gonzalez put up the best OPS of his career, .958. His chase rate was 23%. He hit 40 HR.
In 2010, Gonz's chase rate jumped to 31.8%. He hit 31 HR.
In 2011, it jumped again to an astounding 35.5%. How the heck did Gonzalez have 213 hits chasing that many pitches out of the zone?? My gosh, that's Vlad-like. His HR total dropped to 27.
This year, his chase rate is up to 37%.
It looks like his strike zone judgment is catching up with him. Maybe without Ellsbury in the lineup, he's pressing. What is normally true is that the higher your chase rate, the lower your BaBIP is, which suggests that Gonzalez hit in a lot of luck in 2011, but that's changed in 2012. I dunno, I haven't seen him play enough. Perhaps that's too simplified.
What is disturbing is that the drop in power isn't an overnight thing. 40 in 2009 seems like it might have been his ceiling, and that his real expectation for HR totals is 25-30.
(Having said this, like with Rasmus and Pujols, I now expect Gonzalez to enter September with 30 HR and an OPS of 1.025.)
triggercut wrote:Wow. Interesting.
In 2009, Gonzalez put up the best OPS of his career, .958. His chase rate was 23%. He hit 40 HR.
In 2010, Gonz's chase rate jumped to 31.8%. He hit 31 HR.
In 2011, it jumped again to an astounding 35.5%. How the heck did Gonzalez have 213 hits chasing that many pitches out of the zone?? My gosh, that's Vlad-like. His HR total dropped to 27.
This year, his chase rate is up to 37%.
It looks like his strike zone judgment is catching up with him. Maybe without Ellsbury in the lineup, he's pressing. What is normally true is that the higher your chase rate, the lower your BaBIP is, which suggests that Gonzalez hit in a lot of luck in 2011, but that's changed in 2012. I dunno, I haven't seen him play enough. Perhaps that's too simplified.
What is disturbing is that the drop in power isn't an overnight thing. 40 in 2009 seems like it might have been his ceiling, and that his real expectation for HR totals is 25-30.
(Having said this, like with Rasmus and Pujols, I now expect Gonzalez to enter September with 30 HR and an OPS of 1.025.)
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