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#16 |
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2013 NL MVP and WS MVP
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 6,376
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
That looks great, but I think it's either Choo OR Hamitlon, not both. I don't think we'll see both of them with the Reds outside of this september.
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#17 | |
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Box of Frogs
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 15,816
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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#18 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Pook's Hill
Posts: 1,472
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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#19 |
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Viva la Rolen
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 6,330
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
I don't know which way it will tip the scales, but it should also be considered that Hanny will be walked/pitched around often with a man on 2nd.
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#20 | |
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KungFu Fighter
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Hamilton, OH
Posts: 2,324
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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You don't have to take steroids to get big and strong. The average player today is taller and weighs more than the average player in the year 2000 when scoring reached it's peak. If size and strength were the major reason for elevated scoring and home run rates then why are those rates lower now even though the players are bigger and stronger? Most of the players busted for PEDs through the years were not powerful sluggers by any means. Many of the best home run hitters during the Steroids Era were not believed to have taken steroids -- Ken Griffey Jr., Frank Thomas, Adam Dunn and many more. I believe steroids were a scourge on baseball and harmed the game a lot and the cheaters should have been punished, but I don't believe steroids had nearly as much impact on the game of baseball as many people do. If we blame steroids for all the higher scoring rates then we will fail to see and appreciate all the sweeping changes that came into baseball over the same period and were the true reasons why the game is so much different today than it was in the last century. |
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#21 | |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 2,430
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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You've really got stop building OBP opponents like it's 2003. I was saying, assuming Hamilon becomes a .350+ OBP hitter and stolen bases are substantially more valuable in front of Cozart, might it be worth giving up the ideal leadoff hitter in order to take full advantage of his base stealing by batting him 7? I'd lean towards no in our case, but mainly because I don't see anyone else that fits anywhere close to that well into the leadoff spot.
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#22 | |
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For a Level Playing Field
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Oakwood, OH
Posts: 11,242
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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So... the 50 HR mark was reached 21 times in 77 years after the 1st time. Then in the next 12 years it was reached 19 times. It has happened only twice since 2007.
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Small market fan... always hoping, but never expecting. |
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#23 | |
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Box of Frogs
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 15,816
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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#24 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 2,430
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
I didn't think about that. You can mitigate the negative aspect of a CS by hitting him in front of Hanigan, but I guess that also sets up a lot of filled bases for Cueto and Latos to squander. Sort of limits the upside of a successful steal too. (trying to divert this discussion away from another 55 page steroid debate)
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#25 | |
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Red Ox Dynasty
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Indianapolis, IN
Posts: 1,300
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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Additionally, it is important to understand that WAR is an ever-changing beast and that it (obviously) wasn't around in 1979. Another interesting thought is how WAR might appear today if it was developed 20 years earlier than it was, and maybe a metric from that era directly translated into a statistical analysis of its time rather than one from a generation later. As we gain more information about the sport and what correlates to what, I think that speed, given the era that we are currently in, might be a more valuable tool than others and that folks who are average with plus speed might be a more desirable part than folks who are average with plus power. |
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#26 | |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 2,430
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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#27 | |
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KungFu Fighter
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Hamilton, OH
Posts: 2,324
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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#28 | |
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Viva la Rolen
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 6,330
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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And I swear I'm not knocking you at all, it's just that we won't know for sure how his speed will play until he is actually in the bigs. |
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#29 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 2,430
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
I guess we've got enough decent hitting pitchers now to where it might work. I figure we have plenty in the top half of the order to pound out runs in bunches. It'd be nice if Hamilton was the sparkplug to scratch out a few runs from the bottom, especially against tougher pitchers that can put a clamp on those big innings.
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#30 | |
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KungFu Fighter
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Hamilton, OH
Posts: 2,324
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Re: The Changing Landscape of Baseball and (maybe) a new Roster Approach
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