Jump to content

Joey Rickard Headed to the DL (Finger Injury)


OFFNY

Recommended Posts

27 minutes ago, RZNJ said:

o

Seems mighty convenient.  

Hey Joey, you want to get sent down, or hang out with us for 10 days and collect your full pay?

o

o

 

Dear Mr. Manfred:

Joey hurt his finger. Please excuse him from the Baltimore Orioles' active roster for a week and-a-half.

 

Signed,

Epstein's Mother

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Can_of_corn said:

Left middle finger.

Thank goodness it was him and not you.

I really have come full circle on head first slides. I was never injured doing it while I played, but switched anyway after realizing the higher potential of injury.

http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/the-death-of-head-first-sliding-hopefully/

"You can of course still injure yourself going in with the feet. But Molina aside, if a player hurts himself going in feet-first, it’s likely to be an injury to the foot or the leg. Head-first, it’s more likely to be an injury to the hand, finger, arm, or shoulder, which is much more difficult for a hitter to rebound from."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Il BuonO said:

I really have come full circle on head first slides. I was never injured doing it while I played, but switched anyway after realizing the higher potential of injury.

http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/the-death-of-head-first-sliding-hopefully/

"You can of course still injure yourself going in with the feet. But Molina aside, if a player hurts himself going in feet-first, it’s likely to be an injury to the foot or the leg. Head-first, it’s more likely to be an injury to the hand, finger, arm, or shoulder, which is much more difficult for a hitter to rebound from."

Don't forget the occasional concussion.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Archived

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



  • Posts

    • Just did a bit of a walk. Some decently large braches down, one segment of privacy fence missing and standing water on the property in a low spot.  
    • Just woke up and I don't hear any wind or rain.
    • Not that I am in any way full agreement, but this is a classic post.  Doesn't Machado play chess?  Maybe we could get some chess boards in the clubhouse and junk all the legos.  Not all great baseball men are John McGraw bad asses.  Some can be Christy Mathewsons as well, I suppose.  Not that I imagine today's young players much resembling McGraw or Mathewson, but they are the first two contrasting old school types that come to mind.  I will say just based on his postseason alone I'd much rather have Tatis over Machado.
    • Well I refuse to believe that only the O's have no players that want extensions.
    • Customer advocate groups have tried for decades to force the cable companies to allow channel by channel (a la carte) subscriptions, but the cable companies fought this because it would result in far less revenue (than forcing us to pay for a hundred channels we don't watch).  The government refused to intervene, so we've been stuck with the existing business model for all this time.  Streaming is forcing the change because streaming -- for now -- is an a la carte model.   MLB's fear must be this: if the regional sports network cable channel model goes away, will most users pay anywhere close to what these channels made as part of a cable bundle for just one streaming channel where all you watch are Orioles games (or maybe Orioles and Nats games -- whatever the case may be)?  So if you pay $100/month for cable with MASN, you are probably watching at least a few other channels too.  But will you pay $15/month (or whatever the price may be) just to watch the Orioles -- even during the months when there is no baseball?  The existing basic cable model has been quite stable because people tend to watch at least 5 or 6 channels.  They're reluctant to cancel their whole cable package just because baseball season is over -- or they've been too busy to watch many games this season.  But with a single streaming channel of just baseball there is bound to be a far more unstable revenue base.  All the streaming channels are already dealing with this problem.  I think MLB is maybe reluctant to go all in on streaming for this reason.  Perhaps they're looking for new different model that could allow them to bundle individual team channels with Netflix, or Prime, or maybe with your cell phone plan or something else.  This could give them some stability, but it could also be a turn off for the more hardcore fans who just want the Orioles and little else.  It will be interesting to see how this all shakes out and if MLB, and the Orioles, will prosper or suffer as a result.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...