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Don't underestimate the importance...
of the ridiculed "veteran presence" some bring to this club...if a playoff run exists, this doesn't hurt:
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By the way, 229 Diamonds :eek: ...are you kidding me??...wow...guess my wife really got shortchanged :D |
Re: Don't underestimate the importance...
Veteran presence is great in the clubhouse, but if it doesn't show up on the field, they aren't getting that ring.
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Veteran presence doesn't mean squat if those veterans can't produce.
Gonzalez provides a defensive bulwark for the IF, that's what's going to help the Reds. If Stanton pitches well, then that will help the Reds. Every team has its share of veterans. The Reds certainly haven't been lacking them over the previous six seasons. Did they teach the team how to thrive and how to handle the pressure of a competitive season? No. All the "leadership" in the world will amount to nothing if you don't have the talent and that talent doesn't already have the necessary internal fortitude. When those two things are in place, then it doesn't matter who your elder statesman are. As long as they can contribute any mix of them will do. |
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Last year, I'm not sure we had a group of guys who could show the team how to "get out" of the free-fall that accompanied the August swoon and the west-coast swing debacle...not that it won't happen again, but I think this team is more insulated to handling the day-to-day and being able to respond accordingly and that's due to having guys who have "been there, done that"... |
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Nobody around here ridicules veterans who actually put up the numbers. |
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Arroyo was with the team last season. Rich Aurilia had been through a number of playoff series, including a World Series. Scott Hatteberg has seen plenty of playoff experience. So you substitute Conine for Aurilia and add Stanton and Gonzalez to the mix, and suddenly the club is better prepared for a playoff run? I don't see it. |
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The stance I hate most about this board is if you're over a certain age, you're worthless.
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Also, though many fans, the franchise and the media try to ignore it, the Reds are rebuilding. The reality is, this franchise needs young talent more than most and until it gets the right mix of young talent then no amount of veteran presence is going to matter. Quote:
If the Reds break through in 2006 it will be because Kyle Lohse is having a career year, because Matt Belisle has become a dependable starter, because some young arms in the bullpen have stepped up, because the Hobbs Hamilton phenomenon keeps rolling, because Brandon Phillips takes another step forward, because Adam Dunn pushes his OPS up toward 1.000 and because Edwin Encarnacion settles down and produces in the middle of the lineup. It's not going to be because older guys have taught the team how to cheat the margins, it will be because younger guys have erased the margins. |
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I do totally agree that lesser-tier vets don't drive the bus, stars do...but sometimes they adjust the steering wheel... |
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Good explanation. What I hear a lot is that the Reds - and it's not just the Reds but other teams as well - need that veteranly goodness to show the young players the ropes. Now that doesn't necessarily limit itself to baseball but also to life in general. And I think that's a good thing. But eventually these young players are going to have 3, 4, 5 years in the majors and they shouldn't need a veteran to show them the ropes anymore. In fact they should be the ones showing the younger (than themselves) players the ropes. A lot of the time gms use veteran players as a crutch because they don't trust younger players. Some managers are like that too. They will bring in and use veterans because they have done it before and they might just do it again. GMs are rarely castigated by the press for bringing in veteran players. When they bring in younger players and they fail is when they get criticized. You look at the Braves. They decided to go with youth to fill their needs a couple of years ago. While they didn't win a division title last year, as seems to be their custom, the players they brought in have by and large succeeded. And Scherholz and Cox have been around the block a few times themselves. No one would bat an eye if they had decided to go with veterans over youth. |
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