Jump to content

Home run/Lineup predictions. Starting 9.


OriolesMagik11

Recommended Posts

Career bests:

Roberts - 18

Markakis - 23

Lee - 46

Guerrero - 44

Scott - 27

Reynolds - 44

Jones - 25 (AAA)

Wieters - 27 (A/AA)

Hardy - 26

=280

2011

Roberts - 15

Markakis - 24

Lee - 26

Guerrero - 28

Scott - 30

Reynolds - 41

Jones - 25

Wieters - 18

Hardy - 17

=224

Awesome post. Thanks for the career highs!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 87
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Roberts - 11

Markakis - 21

Lee - 25

Guerrero - 27

Luke - 29

Reynolds - 46

Wieters -28

Jones - 20

Hardy - 15

I'm bullish on this lineup. Wieters breaks out and becomes a big time power threat. Markakis is reminiscent of his most valuable Oriole year. Lee is good, Vlad is good, Luke is good. Reynolds makes short work of the left field seats. Good year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Protection's a myth. Getting more runners on base in front of Nick might help his numbers, but it probably won't matter a wit who bats behind him.

a myth? look at his bb totals. They pitch around the guy...you honestly believe that opposing pitchers will want to put guys on base for Vlad, Lee, Reynolds..No..He'll get more pitches in the zone..more fastballs and you'll see his HR totals rise. a myth?!?!?!??:laughlol:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

a myth? look at his bb totals. They pitch around the guy...you honestly believe that opposing pitchers will want to put guys on base for Vlad, Lee, Reynolds..No..He'll get more pitches in the zone..more fastballs and you'll see his HR totals rise. a myth?!?!?!??:laughlol:

But, see, it actually is a myth. All the things you've been saying? They don't actually happen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's a shorter fence, but I bet the ball carries much better in AZ.

Depends on temperature and humidity, but there are days during the season when you'd lose that bet--when the air in Baltimore is actually less dense than in Phoenix.

There's only an 1100-foot difference in altitude between Baltimore and Phoenix, and the higher humidity alone helps to cancel out some of that. Under typical summer conditions, the density altitude in Baltimore is often as high as 2,000 feet, sometimes more than 2500 feet.

From Wikipedia:

Both an increase in temperature and, to a much lesser degree, humidity will cause an increase in density altitude. Thus, in hot and humid conditions, the density altitude at a particular location may be significantly higher than the true altitude.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Roberts - 10, return to form.

Markakis - 16, he is what he is.

Lee - 24, healthy but old thumb.

Guerrero - 26, he will earn his 8m.

Scott - 30, 100+ RBI.

Reynolds - 41, he's gonna love that short porch.

Jones - 19, yep again.

Weiters - 17, begins a steady upturn.

Hardy - 14, healthy and strong.

Starting 9 - 197

Bench - 14

Total - 211

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Posts

    • What I'd like to see in the next game Holliday plays, is for him to keep his eyes following through on the ball when he swings. In the last game I saw, he was yanking his head off the zone when he swung and couldn't see the bat to the ball. He was missing wildly and it wasn't even competitive. So, keep your eye on the ball! Follow all the way through! If your swing is so violent that it's yanking your head off the sight of the ball, then adjust your mechanics because you can't hit what you can't see!
    • What a great example of pedantic! Please tell us you meant to do that. I honestly can’t tell these days. 
    • Well it certainly doesn't look like he'll be winning Rookie of Year award. And if we send him down for like the tiniest amount of time, we get him for another year, right? I think if this poor hitting continues it's financial mismanagement not to send him back down. Grayson got sent down and came back way better.
    • He certainly isn't a bust but I wasn't happy with the pick at the time and I don't love using the second overall pick for that type of player profile. Westburg signed for slot so he's irrelevant but Mayo was a great use of the money saved.
    • Think Heston will be the next call up. Mayo’s K/BB ratio is poor and I think they’ll want to see that even out. Stowers and Norby have seen their numbers slip a bit.  It will likely take an injury to an outfielder or first baseman, but I think we see HK next. 
    • I have to laugh at some of my pre-draft thoughts as well as others. I will say on behalf of myself and some others is that what we did not understand then was what the Orioles brain trust knew to be their model, and what they best developed. What traits they were looking for is an important thing to know, in hindsight anyway. And really, the Jackson Holliday leap in development was not something most of us heard anything about until about a month before the draft. I saw him the previous summer and I cannot say he was all that impressive, but it was only one look. His physicality took a big jump after that.  I will also add that we’re never going to know what would have happened if they drafted Austin Martin, Jones, Lawler, Lacy, etc. Their development could well have been different as O’s. The funny part of this board, in general, is the absolute certainty some have in their opinions and how eager they are to trash Elias and staff. There is plenty of humility to go around, now that things have played out. It’s fun to finally have a truly great front office and ownership group, and a stacked stable of horses. 
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...