Jump to content

Tanner Scott - breakout candidate?


Luke-OH

Recommended Posts

o

 

(vs. NATIONALS, 8/15)

 

At the beginning of the 6th inning, the Orioles had a 5-2 lead. On the first pitch of the top half of the frame, Asher Wojciechoswki ceded a home run to Trea Turner.

Scott entered the game with the Orioles needing to stem the bleeding ........ and Scott delivered.

He went 3-up/3-down to close out the 6th, and then proceeded to retire the first 2 batters that he faced in the 7th before Brandon Hyde removed him from the game.

5 batters ........ 5 outs ........ 21 Pitches )(15 )Strikes,)6 )Balls.)

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/15/2020 at 10:01 PM, OFFNY said:

o

 

(vs. NATIONALS, 8/15)

 

At the beginning of the 6th inning, the Orioles had a 5-2 lead. On the first pitch of the top half of the frame, Asher Wojciechoswki ceded a home run to Trea Turner.

Scott entered the game with the Orioles needing to stem the bleeding ........ and Scott delivered.

He went 3-up/3-down to close out the 6th, and then proceeded to retire the first 2 batters that he faced in the 7th before Brandon Hyde removed him from the game.

5 batters ........ 5 outs ........ 21 Pitches )(15 )Strikes,)6 )Balls.)

 

o

o

 

Steve Melweski (on Tanner Scott)

 

Tanner Scott, the lefty with the blazing fastball and big potential, is now realizing it before our eyes. The Nationals hit Asher Wojciechowski hard, scoring twice off him in the 4th inning and making some loud outs in the 5th. When Trea Turner homered leading off the 6th to cut Baltimores lead to 5-3, Orioles manager Brandon Hyde called for Scott.

Scott would face some of the Nationals' best hitters, and get all of them out. He faced 5 batters, fanning 2. It might have been his best outing as an Oriole yet. He is doing a good impression of Andrew Miller right now for this club.

Last night, Scott got those 5 outs on just 21 pitches. He threw 11 fastballs at an average of 97 MPH, and 10 sliders that averaged 90 MPH. The Nationals swung at 11 of his pitches, and whiffed five times.

Scott has an ERA of 1.13 over 8 games so far this season. In 8 innings Pitched, hes allowed 2 Hits and 1 Run, with 4 Walks and 11 Strikeouts.

 

https://www.masnsports.com/steve-melewski/2020/08/notes-on-os-20-game-start-the-bullpen-and-more.html

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

o

 

Left-hander Tanner Scott faced 2 batters on Monday night, and struck them both out. He hasnt been charged with an earned run in 8.67 innings so far this season. Hes allowed 1 hit and struck out 13.

Im really pumped about Tanner Scott, manager Brandon Hyde said. What he did Monday night, thats just wipe-out stuff. Hes been doing that for the last few weeks.

 

SOURCE: ) Steve Melewski

 

https://www.masnsports.com/school-of-roch/2020/08/notes-on-sisco-atop-the-order-scotts-dominance-hays-healing.html

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 1/7/2020 at 6:18 AM, sportsfan8703 said:

What worries me is that it sounds like he was trying to guide the pitch for survival and he’s only got the one option left now. At this point he could try and change his fastball back and blow up and never collect MLB paychecks. 

Eye test: Scott doesn't look to be guiding pitches this year. The delivery looks smooth even when he misses his spots. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

51 minutes ago, Beef Supreme said:

 

Eye test: Scott doesn't look to be guiding pitches this year. His delivery looks smooth, even when he misses his spots.

 

o

 

Scott's confidence and demeanor when he pitches reminds me a little of Jim Johnson in his first few years with the team, circa 2007 through 2010 ........ if you got the better of him in those days, it was NOT due to a lack of confidence. Even though the franchise at-large was struggling in those days, Johnson seemed to have balls of steel out there on the mound. I see some of that in Scott, also.

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He misses a ton of bats.  Obviously strikeouts won’t be an issue.

He has to throw more strikes.  Last year and so far this year, he is throwing less than 59% of his pitches for strikes.  League average is usually around 63-64%.

Besides walks, homers have been his other issue.  Once he learns to throw for more strikes and he gets better fastball command on the corners (ie throwing quality strikes), he will be another Andrew Miller.  But he has to learn to do that.  He is progressing very well but still a ways to go until I think you feel really comfortable with him out there. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can see by the reactions of better hitters - like Juan Soto - that he's earning respect - they're wowed by his stuff.  And he's certainly showing better command than he has in the past.  I wouldn't trust him to be a closer, but he's coming in with people on base and leaving them stranded.  I think he's improved quite a bit and has become an asset to the O's.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, interloper said:

 

It's about time !!! 

But I'm still sort of waiting to see if the wheels fall off. Until then, he's looked fantastic. 

 

o

 

As a team, the wheels may be in the process of falling off.

For individuals such as Scott and Santander, it's quite possible that the wheels will be staying on.

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/20/2020 at 10:28 PM, OFFNY said:

o

 

(vs. RED SOX, 8/20)

 

Tanner Scott has inherited 12 base-runners so far this season ........ not a single one has scored.

 

 

SOURCE: ) Kevin Brown, MASN Play-By-Play Announcer

 

o

o

 

Make that 14 inherited base-runners who have not scored so far this season ........ this guy is good.

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Posts

    • 100%! I say abolish divisions, play a fully balanced schedule and take the top 4 or 6 or 8 or whatever teams in each league to the playoffs. 
    • The question was asked, a few months ago, whether winning the division was necessary. A lively debate resulted, some saying the division didn’t matter(“just make the playoffs and anything can happen”) and some taking the opposite view. I wanted the Division and I’m disgusted the play has been so bad. And I haaaate the Yankees( sports hate. I’m sure they are all great guys in person.) It will not magically improve, and I despair of winning more than two more games…not even 90 wins. And in a Homer–prone park, how many homers will the Os give up? The thought is not comforting. And there’s little reason to think things will improve against the Tigers or Royals. But at least: 1) next year they will hopefully have Bautista and the position players healthy. 2) The farm has very few MLB-ready players so there won’t be so much bouncing back and forth. Hopefully the guys can settle in and just play. 3) the Os will be looking for a fourth consecutive winning season, which hasn’t happened since the 70s So there’s that…
    • I was about to post a similar thread, but despite my memory issues, I recalled this thread.  I still find myself enjoying sports less and less.  The issue is not my teams, but myself.  It's a sad reality that I'm bothered when my team doesn't win, or does win, but wins in a way that is not how I wanted them to!  LOL!  It's ridiculous.  Frankly, I'm somewhat ashamed. The O's are very likely going to the playoffs.  But instead of being happy about that, I'm more concerned with how awful we've been and how little I expect from them as the post-season draws near.  A real fan loves his team and sticks with them, through thick and thin.  It's absolutely okay to be critical, even frustrated, at times, but when those are the default and dominant expressions, it makes me feel... less than.  It's like this with all my favorite teams (O's/Ravens/Terps).  It's therapeutic, in a way, to reveal such truths.  But the quest to find a way to enjoy sports again, to enjoy what my teams are doing, is a process that is taking longer than I'd hoped.  
    • I wouldn’t say I’m fired up.  I’d like to do enough to (1) win the season series (which only takes one win), (2) clinch a playoff spot (which probably only takes one win, depending what other teams do, and (3) improves our chances of getting the no. 4 seed (which might take a couple of wins, depending how other teams do).   
    • It feels like a foregone conclusion that the O’s sneak in with the third wild card spot and then lose the wild card series. So it just doesn’t really matter all that much what happens from here on out.    Then again, get hot at the right time and this could still be a World Series contender. I have to see some fire in this team before I entertain that thought though.
    • I am not really fired up per se.  I am just hoping that something happens that is different than what we have seen for months.  A late comeback to win the game.  A big inning of 4 runs or more.  Some big hits from Adley or Holliday.   1 win means we win the season series against everyone in the East for the second year in a row.  That would be great.  And even if we lose, I am hoping that watching the Yankees celebrate in front of them and the fans celebrate around them fires them up.   
    • I feel like I asked once years ago, but can someone please explain the acronym “MFY?”
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...