Jump to content

I’ve pretty much stopped watching


Frobby

Recommended Posts

If the team ever gets good again, they'll come back....   but at the current rate, that will be years and years....

After tonight, I won't watch anymore.   It's one thing to lose 7-5, but most nights it's 10-2, 8-1, too lopsided to derive any kind of enjoyment...

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Frobby said:

This team has pretty much become unwatchable.   I check the score on my phone when I’m done with dinner, generally around 8:00.   Inevitably they’re already losing.   I keep an eye on the game every 15 minutes or so in between checking the minor league box scores.   Most nights, it’s just never worth it to turn on the game.   It’s sad.

I was thinking the exact same thing.  By the time you check the box score, they're almost always losing already.

The starting rotation is horrendous.  Particularly without Means.

Those who thought this team had a baseline of 68 wins, and should "go for it", are being shown to be more wrong by the day.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, DocJJ said:

If the team ever gets good again, they'll come back....   but at the current rate, that will be years and years....

After tonight, I won't watch anymore.   It's one thing to lose 7-5, but most nights it's 10-2, 8-1, too lopsided to derive any kind of enjoyment...

 

 

Some will but not all.  Even in 2014 attendance wasn't that strong (2.46M).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, Pickles said:

Eh.  Did they lose them in 2008?

Apples to oranges though…more entertainment options, different generation, older fans (those who generally watch the sport) are getting older and perhaps literally dying off.  
 

The need to bring in new fans is huge and MLB is already struggling with that as is…add on a team that is terrible and has been for most of this century and it becomes increasingly harder to get people involved.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

Apples to oranges though…more entertainment options, different generation, older fans (those who generally watch the sport) are getting older and perhaps literally dying off.  
 

The need to bring in new fans is huge and MLB is already struggling with that as is…add on a team that is terrible and has been for most of this century and it becomes increasingly harder to get people involved.

They'll never be what they were in the mid 90s.  That's a cold, hard truth.

The more they lose, the more prestige they will lose.  I agree with that as well.

It has a ripple effect.  I agree.

The only solution is to win consistently for a long time.  Our model should be the St. Louis Cardinals.  And I believe it largely is.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I spend most of my baseball time this year following Bowie and the other minor league teams online, then I think to check on the Orioles.

It's incredibly discouraging to think ownership isn't trying to win or doesn't have the resources to compete. If that is true, please sell the team.

I can live with a rebuild, but I cannot stand the idea of not being able to sign the players we rebuild around. I will just spend more time with the Colts if this continues. I would never follow another MLB team, but I can't invest myself into a team that isn't trying to compete and compete long term.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, orioles22 said:

I spend most of my baseball time this year following Bowie and the other minor league teams online, then I think to check on the Orioles.

It's incredibly discouraging to think ownership isn't trying to win or doesn't have the resources to compete. If that is true, please sell the team.

I can live with a rebuild, but I cannot stand the idea of not being able to sign the players we rebuild around. I will just spend more time with the Colts if this continues. I would never follow another MLB team, but I can't invest myself into a team that isn't trying to compete and compete long term.

I believe they intend to try to copy the Rays techniques of selling players before they hit free agency.  With the slight benefit that we should have a little more resources to keep the occasional player we like and who will accept a team friendly contract.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I remember when I was living in bmore '04-'09, the team was just plain awful. And they had been since the late 90s. I had a hard time watching the Orioles play, but I did tune in and watch pretty often.

One thing I did during those years was start paying much more attention to what was going on in the minors. I kept telling my friends that the team would be competitive in 2012. Obviously I had no idea, but I was hopeful . And sure enough, they were. What a fun season that was. Unfortunately, it didn't last very long.

I feel like we're right back in that scenario again. This team is pretty pathetic, but I'm looking forward to seeing some of the younger guys come up over the next few years. Hopefully, if things pan out, we might be able to sniff the playoffs by 2023 or 2024. But even that doesn't seem too realistic with how many good, young players our division rivals are putting out there.

I'm not going to abandon the team or anything, but I certainly hope we don't have another 15 year stretch of basement dwelling in store for us. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don’t watch either. I detest the Broadcast folks, Palmer excepted, and when I listen I usually turn on the opposition team, several of whom I like. I’d endure it if they’d call up some prospects and let them play, but it is impossible to watch bad baseball night after night, read The beats ignoring the problems or spouting the party line, and watch Hyde unable to get them to play fundamental baseball and make bad decision after bad decision.

I check the score, root for some guys like Wynns, and play candy crush…

  • Upvote 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think back to the 18 consecutive winning seasons in a (beloved) dumpster of a stadium. And then the era where Camden Yards was so special that the team could draw a crowd even if they weren't all that great. Then came the 14 consecutive losing seasons combined with the arrival of the Nats to our region. We're now conclusively a small market team that plays in a truly great stadium. We'll never draw crowds and enjoy a payroll advantage the way we did in the 90's. But we can do what the Rays have been doing for the past decade, but with a great stadium and a fan base that actually cares. It's clear that the game plan for 2021 is to keep the kids on the farm, then let them arrive in bulk in '22. We'll get a few second tier pitchers and position players to get excited about debuting this year, but this year is absolutely engineered to drive us fans mad. If the net result sets us up to sustain success beyond a five year window it will be worth our agony this year, and we're relatively close to start enjoying the payoff for our suffering. I'm just sobered by the reality that the Angelos family is still in control. It's hard to imagine that any other owner who purchased the team in 1993 could have produced worse results than the curse that they inflicted on this franchise. I've taken comfort from the appearance that the organization is maneuvering like a team that is positioning itself for sale. That will make this dumpster fire totally worth it, all by itself. 

  • Upvote 1
  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, orioles22 said:

I spend most of my baseball time this year following Bowie and the other minor league teams online, then I think to check on the Orioles.

It's incredibly discouraging to think ownership isn't trying to win or doesn't have the resources to compete. If that is true, please sell the team.

I can live with a rebuild, but I cannot stand the idea of not being able to sign the players we rebuild around. I will just spend more time with the Colts if this continues. I would never follow another MLB team, but I can't invest myself into a team that isn't trying to compete and compete long term.

This is tough to watch and if I believed ownership didn't have the resources to compete it would be even tougher.  I don't think that is the case at all.  I think this is a more an issue with the system that exists with baseball.  Teams are not rewarded for spending a medium level of money.  When Peter Angelos ran the Orioles they spent plenty of money and it hasn't bought them anything as far as long term success.  They need to build their talent base and right now winning 70-80 games doesn't help get the top talent they need.  They are investing in the Dominican baseball academy which will also help bring talent from that regent that was woefully neglected for too many years.  I can't blame anyone for not watching.  I turned it off tonight and I rarely do.  As far as investing in a team that isn't trying to compete in the long term if I believed that I couldn't invest as well.  I believe they feel this is the best way to compete for the long term.  Only time will tell if they are right or not.  Look at the record of the Houston Astros from 2011-2014 and look at them now.  

  • Upvote 1
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

    • I think yesterday was the nail in the coffin for him being on the playoff roster, assuming we make it.
    • I feel that way, too. I keep thinking about 2005.  2005: 10 games over .500 on June 20th. 1st place, two games up.  Shortly after they went on a 2-16 skid, and their last game at .500 was at the the start of that awful home 4 game series in late July when the White Sox swept them, and Raffy was exposed as taking PEDs. They fell under .500 that series and kept on sinking.  2024: 24 games over .500 on June 20th. 2nd place, a half game back.  Then immediately lose five straight. Due to their great start, they can't finish 14 under .500, but the dive feels eerily similar with all of the injuries, dormant bats, and all happening at the same time of year.  The floor coming out from underneath them feels a lot like it. That team was cooked by late July and by the first week of August, Mazzilli got the axe. That won't happen with Hyde this time, as they had a fine start this year, but this can't happen two years in a row under him. 
    • I know …. Gotcha. Trade away Stowers & Norby for Garbage and pick up Rivera & Jiminez. And be surprised when you offense stinks. 
    • You could cut and paste this write up for about every team in the organization. 
    • It’s because the strategies that they are taught and employ work much better in the minors with pitchers with worse stuff and command than in the majors.  This, in turn, inflates their minor league stats.  The good news is that thus far after an adjustment period those players do seem to adjust and do well. 
    • This was the lineup today: The problem is injuries. Hyde didn't have to run out this sort of lineup in May or June. You can nitpick about whether these were the right nine to start, but these are the players on the roster right now and it's because guys who were here in the winning months are not available.
    • I think you agree Roy. The injuries are one thing, but combining them with the continual influx of rookies/ near-rookies - (as promising as they may be) creates instability.  Holliday, Cowser, Mayo, Norby, Kjerstad, Povich, even Stowers.  The past two years: Rutschman and Henderson. One rookie, a solid unremarkable, yet reliable core that had been playing together for several years. Maybe Elias needs to answer for this. I’m not buying the injury excuse for position players. The pitching - amazing job for the injury plague (Kimbrel not included). Have to wonder if these injuries have something to do with the training staff don’t you?
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...