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04-22-2008 03:31 AM #46
Funny, BP's #1 most comparable player for LH....Cintron.
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04-22-2008 04:05 AM #47
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04-22-2008 06:35 AM #48
Too bad we aren't getting good D from LH. On top of that, he apparently showed up out of shape for the start of the season, which hurt his agility. He had no business making this team, and he hasn't done anything to keep the job that was gift-wrapped for him. If LH isn't going to play decent defense, you might as well go with someone who owns a bat.
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04-22-2008 06:37 AM #49
Jim Palmer absolutely ripped LH for this during Friday's game. He said that he showed up out of shape. And, as a result, Palmer said his agility has been limited all year. That's why, in his opinion, he isn't getting to the balls he should get to. Palmer seemed pretty disgusted by it.
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04-22-2008 08:09 AM #50
If that's true, it's absolutely unbelievable and indefensible. The kid had to know that this was likely his one chance in his life to stick as a major league player and set himself up for being very rich. At the very least it would be his best chance at that. He was coming off a year where he didn't hit a lick yet was still being handed a major league job, and he showed up 20 lbs heavier? The implication is that it's not muscle - and you have to try really hard to gain 20 lbs of fat in six months. I don't think I could do that if I just laid on the couch eating Fritos 24/7.
Did nobody take him aside at the end of the year and tell him it would be in his best interest to hang out with Brian Roberts in that Arizona workout center? Or at least go to the local gym a few times a week?
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04-22-2008 08:10 AM #51
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04-22-2008 08:12 AM #52
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04-22-2008 08:14 AM #53
You mention Derek Jeter. Isn't he a real life example that proves, like at every position, there is a continuum of different types of players who can be successful? Isn't it obvious that since a team that makes the playoffs every single year can have a poor defender at short it's not a requirement that all shortstops be great defenders?
In real baseball teams usually take the best player they can find at each position and don't always rigidly adhere to ideologies like "pitching and defense win championships" when they're vast oversimplifications of a complex world.
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04-22-2008 08:15 AM #54
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04-22-2008 08:18 AM #55
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Hernandez obviously isn't the answer, but I'm not sure Cintron is either.
I'd prefer Cintron if Hernandez keeps playing as poor of defense as he has. If he can play at the far above average level he's been touted as, I'd prefer Hernandez. I don't think Cintron is physically ready yet anyway, so Luis will get a little more time to work on getting his D back to an elite level. If he's only playing average defense, then there is no way anybody can support him staying the SS, even amongst a slew of other horrible options.
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04-22-2008 08:19 AM #56
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04-22-2008 08:19 AM #57
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04-22-2008 08:20 AM #58
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04-22-2008 08:20 AM #59
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04-22-2008 08:42 AM #60
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A few defensive stats are pretty revealing:
2007: 139 innings, 43 balls in zone, 40 plays made, .930 RZR, 7 outs outside of zone
2008: 118 innings, 42 balls in zone, 31 plays made, .738 RZR, 3 outs outside of zone
That, my friends, is the problem with relying on a small sample size.


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