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monkeytargets39

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Everything posted by monkeytargets39

  1. Where’s Chris’ clearly of age significant other?
  2. Do people give Masyn Wynn as hard of a time for all his big chains as they do a Max Clark?
  3. Campos not at Erie? I see he’s starting back at WM. Not a great look for a third season of A ball
  4. In other news, Brandon Inge is throwing out the first pitch tomorrow. Can you check your swing on your own pitch?
  5. I’m less talking about having Riley/Tork/Carp do that type of stuff and more about having them just play for the sac fly or productive directional groundout when it’s obvious they’re scuffling a bit. I’d suggest the Meadows/Baez/Vierling group be more of the sac bunt types. There’s roughly an 75% chance they’re going to make an out anyway, might as well try for a positive result out.
  6. Well yeah, if we had guys who made consistent contact: swing away. But we don’t, so there needs to be times where we look to some ways to offset that inconsistency. I think we are starting to get a group of guys like that with how Keith and Dingler are developing, along with McGonigle and Torres. Adding Clark to that mix, and subtracting Javy will help as well….we just aren’t there yet.
  7. Well if they don’t want the friction on what they are asked to do, don’t strike out 200+ times a season, don’t hit 30 HRs with an OPS under .800, or don’t go 6-62 over multiple years when you have a runner on second and/or third. Be willing to make the right play for the team at the right time. You’ll get more than enough ABs in situations where you can slug all you want.
  8. To add onto this, I think a main reason we don’t do this much is too many guys on this team lack the bat-to-ball skills required. Meadows for example would be so much more useful if he could just make consistent directional contact, but his pitch recognition isn’t there. You also really can’t rely on several guys to make contact at all—particularly Javy. If we are going to stick with our typical lineups the way we have, then I wonder if it would’ve been better to use Jahmai Jones’ roster spot for an extreme pinch runner/high contact/low power guy. Something like what Terrance Gore was for a few championship teams.
  9. Not entirely. I’m more suggesting that these stretches where multiple impact bats like Carp/Greene/Tork all seem to be scuffling at the same time that we shift strategies more fluidly—be more willing to sacrifice/steal/etc when it becomes obvious runs are going to be at a premium both ways. We know a lot of Skubal starts can be won if we just score 2 runs, so if the other pitcher is dealing early on, make adjustments to the approach.
  10. I’m largely speaking anecdotally on that over 35 years of following the team, but the Diamondbacks were #1 in the league in 1 run inning percentage last year and just swept us. Granted it wasn’t all small ball, but they executed in key situations offensively and defensively where we shot ourselves in the foot.
  11. The one-run only stat jumps out at me a bit with how low we are on it. It signals to me that we don’t do a good job of situational hitting and manufacturing a run. Just a minor example from yesterday- Skubal is pitching a great game but it’s 1-0 and we’ve put very little pressure on Gallen. McGonigle triples with one out. All we need at point is to get that run home: RBI groundout, sac fly, squeeze play, whatever. Torres proceeds to get behind in the count and then swings at a pitch near the top of the zone and tries to drive it but instead hit a line drive and ends up as a double play. We hit probably 10 fly balls out to center and right field off Gallen but couldn’t do it the one time we really needed it with one of our more skilled hitters. Not to criticize Gleyber or AJ or anything, but it’s worth pointing out that when our offense isn’t clicking, we don’t seem to have a lot of faith in the hitters to execute a sacrifice, steal a base, put a ball in the air or on the ground, etc. I get going for the big inning if you string a hit or two together or a walk, but the types of teams that outperform their expectations each year are the ones that don’t squander those opportunities nearly as often as we seem to.
  12. Now do Carpenter, Riley and Javy
  13. It’s just alarming how few of our hitters can recognize low breaking balls—even when they barely start in the zone. Anything down and in or down and away is an off balance swing from Carpenter and Greene. Javy is swinging at stuff that starts 2 inches off the plate and ends up in the left handed batters box. Parker never looks like he really has a plan up there regardless, but he fans at balls in the dirt all the time too. You can tell a huge difference between those guys and Keith/McGonigle/Torres, who recognize it early and either let it go, foul it off, or adjust the swing. Dingler has been consistent with his approach and staying balanced too. I think Tork will be ok because his approach is decent and he has some level of plate discipline—just not much ability to shorten the swing. Everything with Carp, Riley, Javy, and Rogers is trying to hit the ball 500 feet and all you have to do to get them in an 0-2 count is throw some breaking balls down around their ankles. Then as soon as they’re behind in the count, throw an outside edge fastball and they stand there flabbergasted. With Skubal being in a walk year, this should’ve been the year where everyone has bought in and made adjustments to better recognize pitches and cover the strike zone. Instead several guys have just continued on from last years August/September and just spent all offseason thinking it was a fluke instead of an obvious adjustment pitching staffs made against us.
  14. If he is still scuffling to get a .200 obp after a few more weeks, it’s time to eat the contract. He makes just as many wild throws to first as he does amazing plays.
  15. Pinch running for a 25 year old outfielder is kinda pathetic
  16. Carp Ks on 4 pitches, none of which were strikes
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