Jump to content

Tracking Ex Oriole Thread


Rene88

Recommended Posts

  • 2 weeks later...

o

 

Nick Markakis' Final Numbers (2016)

 

.684) l) Plate Appearances

.269 )l) Batting Average

.346 l)) OBP

.744 ).) OPS

))13 ))., HR

ol38 )).l 2B

ol89 )).l RBI

 

 

Nick Markakis, Places in the Lineup:

 

1st: )oo) .245 BA ))o)) .358 OBP ))o)) .652 OPS )lolll 0 HR lllo))o 5 2B ll.oll 13 RBI llllo)oo (123 llllPlate Appearances)

2nd: oo)) .314 BA ))o)) .400 OBP ))o)) .914 OPS ))ol) 0 HR )))o)ll 7 2B ).lo)lll 8 RBI ))o))oo (40 l1l)Plate Appearances)

3rd: oo)) .250 BA ))o)) .333 OBP )))o) .833 OPS ))o)) 0 HR )))o)ll 2 2B ).llo)ll 2 RBI )))oo)o (9 1l)lyPlate Appearances)

4th: )oo) .264 BA ))o)) .330 OBP ))o)) .738 OPS ))o)) 5 HR )))o) 10 2B ))o)) 23 RBI )))o)oo (194 lllPlate Appearances)

5th: )oo) .278 BA ))o)) .349 OBP ))o)) .764 OPS ))o)) 8 HR ))o)) 14 2B )oo)) 43 RBI ))))ooo (315 lllPlate Appearances)

8th: oo)) .000 BA )))o) .000 OBP )o))) .000 OPS ))o)) 0 HR )))o)ll 0 2B ).l)o)lll 0 RBI )))o)oo (1 1l)l.Plate Appearances)

9th: oo)) .000 BA ))o)) .000 OBP ))o)) .000 OPS ))o)) 0 HR )))o)ll 0 2B )o.lollll 0 RBI )))o)oo (2 1)ll.Plate Appearances)

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...

MASNSports Roch

Quote

Yovani Gallardo, who was traded to the Mariners for Smith. Gallardo went 0-2 with a 7.47 ERA and 1.66 WHIP in five Cactus League starts, with 13 runs and 19 hits in 15 2/3 innings. He tossed three scoreless innings yesterday and on March 4, but there were a few duds in there, including a March 27 start against the Padres when he surrendered seven runs and nine hits in 4 1/3 innings.

Left-hander T.J. McFarland, who signed with the Diamondbacks, made six one-inning appearances and allowed three runs and 14 hits for a 4.50 ERA and 2.50 WHIP.

Fourteen hits in six innings. That’s some serious scattering.

McFarland and teammate Brian Matusz were reassigned to minor league camp. Matusz was 1-0 with a 5.68 ERA and 1.74 WHIP in eight games, with four earned runs (five total), 10 hits, one walk and nine strikeouts in 6 1/3 innings.

Catcher Matt Wieters was 5-for-35 with no home runs or RBIs and 12 strikeouts after signing with the Nationals.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guts (Jeremy Gutherie) likely to start for Nats when they need a 5th. He was going to retire, but my guess is was talked out of it and promised this start. Joe Ross has to stay 10 days in the minors so Gutherie will be the guy. Good luck Guts!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, backwardsk said:

Zach Davies had a forgettable season debut.  Gave up 6 runs in 4.1.  Four walks to one strike out.

If it were for us, I'd have been complaining. Like I normally do on those smallish pitchers. Or Jake Arrieta. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, weams said:

If it were for us, I'd have been complaining. Like I normally do on those smallish pitchers. Or Jake Arrieta. 

http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/what-on-earth-happened-with-jake-arrieta/

Quote

Here is one Jake Arrieta fastball. 91 miles per hour. Harder than I can throw! Here is another Jake Arrieta fastball. 90 miles per hour.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

o

 

Although he never pitched for the Orioles' Major League club, Andrew Triggs (2015 AA-Bowie) pitched 5.33 Innings of 0 earned run ball last night in win over the Angels.

Triggs did have a bad Strikes-to-Balls ratio in the 91 Pitches (50 Strikes, 41 Balls) that he threw while ceding 3 Walks, and notching only 1 Strikeout.

 

o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tonight’s Mariners – Angels game featured several former Orioles, headlined by Yovani Gallardo making his Mariner debut.  Yovani was ho hum, giving up 3 ER and 8 hits in 5 IP. The most interesting thing was that he was sitting 92-94 mph with his four seamer and had good velocity on the two seamer as well

http://www.brooksbaseball.net/pfxVB/pfx.php?month=4&day=7&year=2017&game=gid_2017_04_07_seamlb_anamlb_1%2F&pitchSel=451596&prevGame=gid_2017_04_07_seamlb_anamlb_1%2F&prevDate=47&league=mlb

Bud Norris pitched out of a jam of his own making, Danny Valencia went 1-4 and made a couple of nice defensive plays, and Nelson Cruz went 1-4 while driving in the M’s only run.

It was a thrill a moment I tell ya!

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

50 minutes ago, InsideCoroner said:

Today against the Phillies, Guthrie had one of the worst pitching lines I've seen in recent years. 2/3 of an inning, 6 hits, 4 walks and 10 earned runs. 

That outing ain't Royal.

Same ERA as Liriano.  He gave up twice as many runs, but got twice as many outs.

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

    • Baseball America - “Jackson Holliday’s One Flaw” Orioles shortstop Jackson Holliday is the No. 1 prospect in baseball. He’s the reigning Minor League Player of the Year. The year before that he was High School Player of the Year. He enters 2024 as one of the favorites to be the American League Rookie of the Year. The 20-year-old is an outstanding prospect and should be one of the better players in baseball over the next decade. It’s hard not to get excited about Holliday’s potential. But no player is perfect. In Holliday’s case, his one blemish is worth monitoring as he competes for a spot in Baltimore’s Opening Day lineup at second base or shortstop. It also explains why he’s not viewed as a potential third baseman. Holliday’s arm is short for shortstop at this point in his young career. Players can improve arm strength with healthy doses of long toss or other training techniques. But right now, arm strength is the only big question for the top prospect in baseball. Holliday has quick hands, a fast exchange and quick release. His body control is excellent and he seems to have the ability to know where everyone is on the diamond, even when he’s running with his back to home plate to try to run down a fly ball. As a savvy and advanced player for his age, Holliday figures out ways to ensure that his arm is rarely a hindrance. He has mastered a hip slide that allows him to pop up and throw when needed. But he rarely lets it rip on a throw.  In his month at Triple-A Norfolk to end the 2023 season, Holliday averaged 78.4 mph on his throws from shortstop, as tracked by MLB Statcast. His fastest throw on any play in the infield was 83.1 mph. The league average for MLB shortstops was 86.3 mph, according to Statcast. Elly De La Cruz and Masyn Winn are outliers on the upper end of the range. De La Cruz averaged 95 mph on his throws and topped out at 100, while Winn averaged 92.4.  But of the 65 MLB shortstops who had enough throws to qualify for a Statcast ranking in 2023, just three—Nick Ahmed, Thairo Estrada and David Fletcher—averaged throws slower than Holliday’s 78.4 mph. And 38 of the 65 qualified MLB shortstops had a higher average velocity on their throws than Holliday’s max throw of 83.1 mph. To get a better understanding of Holliday’s defensive ability, I watched well over 100 plays he made in the minors in 2023, including every televised extra-effort play, every non-routine throw and every ball at shortstop where he fielded the ball moving to his right. Watching that many plays, I saw a lot of what makes Holliday special. With two outs in a tie game in the 11th inning against Hudson Valley, Holliday saved the game for High-A Aberdeen with his savvy. Spencer Jones was running from second on a slow chopper well to Holliday’s left. Holliday realized he wasn’t going to be able to throw out the runner at first, but he decoyed a throw anyway, then spun and fired home to nab Jones by five feet. Aberdeen then won the game in the 12th. You see numerous examples of Holliday’s feel for the game. He knows when he can take his time on a throw and when he needs to get rid of it quickly. He seemed to be in sync with a wide variety of double-play partners, which was a necessity for a player who played at four different levels. Holliday’s range to his left is excellent. He regularly ranges beyond second base to make plays on choppers that would be tough for a second baseman going to his right to turn into outs. He is equally adept at coming in on choppers, fielding and throwing in one fluid and quick motion. Holliday also has soft and sure hands. He made just 13 errors all season. That range also plays into his ability to cover for his arm. At shortstop, he often sets up shaded significantly toward third base when a righthanded hitter bats with the bases empty. In these situations, he doesn’t have to worry about covering second base on a ball hit to an infielder.
    • Kinda surprised he isn't also a veteran. 
    • OnlyOneOriole challenged him to post a photo of himself.   There ya go.
    • Your statistical case is pretty convincing, but I hesitate to judge him harshly without having watched him play a lot.    
    • I disagree and Westburg isn’t “just average” at second.
    • 30 days for a pitcher. 20 days for position player. 
    • The flip side of Davey's knack for winning and having good mojo, was Ray Miller's terrible anti-charisma as a manager.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...