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When Being Medium Is No Mean Feat
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/19/sp...l/19score.html
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Re: When Being Medium Is No Mean Feat
This article makes so much sense, yet I'd lay 10-1 odds that Lee Sinnis will denigrate it.
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Re: When Being Medium Is No Mean Feat
A team of "average" performers would do well, IMO.
It's the BAD players that muck you up. |
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Re: When Being Medium Is No Mean Feat
Thanks WoY.
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Re: When Being Medium Is No Mean Feat
Great article from a great writer.
Unrealistic expectations up and down our roster drive this board. |
Re: When Being Medium Is No Mean Feat
"The Bill James of today is nothing more than a shell of his old self. The old James would have a field day ridiculing and discrediting the new one. He made his name in the 1980s and is just lazily living off of it with bad works. "
James is definitely more "lazy" in his publicly released research than he used to be - particularly in his refusal to review other peoples' work before going off and writing basically the same thing. That being said, he's still pretty good. |
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James has drawn a lot of ire by pointing out the value of the "average" player and by pointing out that what has been defined as "average" in the stats community is actually well above average. A lot of people here were hot for Orlando Hudson last year and many of the folks who'd like to see Denorfia get the CF job hold that opinion because they see the value of an average hitter with a good glove at that position.
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Re: When Being Medium Is No Mean Feat
Really? I disagree. Each move, IMO, has its detractors and supporters. Some like each and every move and defend everyone in the Red braintrust as if they were a part of The Family. Others balance out likes and dislikes, pointing out positives and negatives. Still other posters seemingly despise each move with the heat of a thousand suns.
One of the reasons I enjoy the board is that give and take. While precious few actually change their minds, all try to give their opinion. Some use pure statistics. Others use pure emotion. Still others choose to balance that out. The nature of this board is one, I think, of guarded pessimism. There's not a day that goes by that someone doesn't use verbal irony is summing up Cincinnati problems. Most days, I find that amusing. Others, I tend to get snippy. Still, the board is a righteous place to be, especially when there's news to be had. Really, would you rather be back on the old Cincinnati.com board? |
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I honestly don't think I can come up with a single regular poster who loves or hates every single move. I imagine that if you really laid them out and looked at each individual's opinions, they're formed on a move-by-move basis and usually have reason behind them. I don't agree with a lot of them, but they're not blind love/hate opinions.
It's a discussion board. We discuss. |
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In general, the Reds have spent the bulk of this century making bad moves, many of the obvious variety. Yet my guess is that your perception of the number of posters who hate every move is far, far higher than the number who actually do. Quote:
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It happens every offseason here. You can pretty much plot it on an astral calendar. I've been told I'm just being cynical for insisting that Dave Williams, Ramon Ortiz, Cory Lidle, etc. weren't going to pan out. Yep, that's it. I'm cynical. Apparently that makes me hip now too. And all I thought I was doing was grasping the obvious. |
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