I guess it depends upon your definition of "enormous". The line that I refer supposedly has around 20 freights a day. A few years ago there was some sort of potential issue with the Suez Canal. That 20 was going to grow to I want to say short of 40 if the canal was closed.
FYI, my daughter grew up with "stuff" trains and "people" trains. So if this discussion continues and I accidently use those technical terms, just play along.
I pass over a fairly busy rail line every day on the drive to and from work. Its a straight stretch in each distance and the commuter train which presumably is going to or from Chicago has to be doing 70 MPH through there.
So, trains are to sound their horns when approaching these crossings. I oblige and honk back sometimes. It just seems the polite thing to do.
Bonderman was one of the first, if not the first, to have the thoracic outlet syndrome. I wonder how much of that might have factored into his decision to retire early.
I wonder how much playing through the pandemic might have adjusted some guys' priorities. I only bring that up because I looked at Rendon's stats. His fall off occurred after the 2020 season. Maybe the fall off is independent of COVID. Maybe the timing is just coincidence. Maybe he changed and that change affected his performance.
Those pillars seem more annoying now than back then. But, damn, those orange seats right behind the dish had to have been awesome to sit in. Everything laid out right in front of you, close proximity to the field, a little leverage above the field. If you could hear Ernie, too? Those seats had to have been good living.
Tough first week for Jackson Holliday. The kid is only 20, so its not a surprise. But given all of the hullaballoo about starting the season in AAA, its probably not how anyone envisioned the debut week.
Man, I can’t stand bad defense. They’ve been better than I thought they on defense. This was a tough one to take.
Todd Jones’ opinion of the glove being a counterweight was kind of interesting. I don’t know if that’s what caused the Skubal toss to first to be so wide. I’m also not sure Torkelson couldn’t have saved that out with better feetwork at the bag. But in his defense, that throw was really unexpectedly off and slow.
I think Keith gets a bit of a reprieve as that final bounce did look bad. I don’t know, maybe he could have come in a step and cut down that hop from mid to short hop which might have avoided that error. Maybe he didn’t have enough time to do that, I’m not sure. To his credit, he’s looked fine with what’s been hit to him so far this season.
This brings to mind Perez perfectly timing his leaping catch in yesterday's game right against the wall. I think the ball would have gone out. But even if it wouldn't have, he played that so impressively well for not having many reps in the Detroit OF.
That's interesting. When I look at % of base runners to score on a batter's plate appearance, I see that Canha has scored 13.2% of his inherited base runners. Its below the league average of 14.4%, but better than the Tigers' 11.9% as a whole.
https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/DET/2024-batting.shtml
But we can go with your 4 game sample if you prefer to pick nits.
We were in Boston last summer. Saw the exterior of Cheers. There was a line to get in and I knew that the real inside wasn't like TV, so declined to check it out.
Indeed. Hey also had a 3rd team all NBA selection while a Piston. The ending was brutal, but I can understand his frustration with getting kicked to a team that had gotten itself into a quagmire.
I think that might be the thing to do right now. Add Carpenter in at 3rd, and then just figure it out from there. I guess Torkelson 4th because he did kick into last year and hopefully he finds that groove again. 5th through 9th, go ahead and play the matchups or least cold bats or however.