Jump to content

Samuel Basallo 2023


Tony-OH

Recommended Posts

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Replies 417
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

The primary beat writers, Roch, Rich and Steve, all repeated the same gaslighting or propaganda by the Orioles PR machine.  That Basallo left the game with a muscle spasm.  I copied a link to the game and at 47:45 into the archived game, he pops up to foul of 3B and immediately puts his left hand on his left hip. As he hobbled around and walked back to dugout, he continued to press the upper area of where the thigh comes into the hip.

I earned my WWW.MD degree thru Google, and I stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night, so I have a feeling this is a bit more than a muscle spasm and more likely a Hip Flexor strain.  Which as a catcher, and the shear violence involved in a baseball swing, hydrating with Gatorade isn't going to fix this.  

I hope my bed was lumpy and that my miss spelled something in my medical research... but that walk and urgency from the training staff wasn't over a spasm.

 

https://www.milb.com/live-stream-games/g728114

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, CHIP said:

The primary beat writers, Roch, Rich and Steve, all repeated the same gaslighting or propaganda by the Orioles PR machine.  That Basallo left the game with a muscle spasm.  I copied a link to the game and at 47:45 into the archived game, he pops up to foul of 3B and immediately puts his left hand on his left hip. As he hobbled around and walked back to dugout, he continued to press the upper area of where the thigh comes into the hip.

I earned my WWW.MD degree thru Google, and I stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night, so I have a feeling this is a bit more than a muscle spasm and more likely a Hip Flexor strain.  Which as a catcher, and the shear violence involved in a baseball swing, hydrating with Gatorade isn't going to fix this.  

I hope my bed was lumpy and that my miss spelled something in my medical research... but that walk and urgency from the training staff wasn't over a spasm.

 

https://www.milb.com/live-stream-games/g728114

 

Well, it’s the same group that said Mullins would be back soon, then suddenly it’s “hopefully before the season ends.”

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Legend_Of_Joey said:

Well, it’s the same group that said Mullins would be back soon, then suddenly it’s “hopefully before the season ends.”

@Filmstudy (tagging in case I'm paraphrasing inaccurately) has made the point on his pod that it's basically a waste of breath for the media to even ask coaches about injury status. There are incentives for them to withhold the truth, and if they do say anything it'll be aspirational.

That's amplified in a contact sport like football, but really in any sport the fans are in the dark with injuries.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, Alasdaire said:

@Filmstudy (tagging in case I'm paraphrasing inaccurately) has made the point on his pod that it's basically a waste of breath for the media to even ask coaches about injury status. There are incentives for them to withhold the truth, and if they do say anything it'll be aspirational.

That's amplified in a contact sport like football, but really in any sport the fans are in the dark with injuries.

Right on the money.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Now slashing .301/.379/.512 as an 18-year old at low A.

Fred McGriff as a 19-year old at low A:  .260/.369/.484

Two strapping lads (both 6'3") who started at catcher.   Basallo is also likely to switch positions.  

The dude's going to be a beast--we shouldn't trade him unless it's for a controllable front-end starter like Mitch Keller.   He's in the Mayo/Kjerstad "almost untouchable" category as far as I'm concerned.  

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Three Run Homer said:

Now slashing .301/.379/.512 as an 18-year old at low A.

Fred McGriff as a 19-year old at low A:  .260/.369/.484

Two strapping lads (both 6'3") who started at catcher.   Basallo is also likely to switch positions.  

The dude's going to be a beast--we shouldn't trade him unless it's for a controllable front-end starter like Mitch Keller.   He's in the Mayo/Kjerstad "almost untouchable" category as far as I'm concerned.  

Sure you’re not thinking of Carlos Delgado?   McGriff throws LH.  I didn’t check but I doubt he started as a catcher.    Basallo looks like the catcher of the future depending on Rutschman.  Basallo isn’t “likely” to switch positions either.

Edited by RZNJ
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, RZNJ said:

Sure you’re not thinking of Carlos Delgado?   McGriff throws LH.  I didn’t check but I doubt he started as a catcher.    Basallo looks like the catcher of the future depending on Rutschman.  Basallo isn’t “likely” to switch positions either.

You are correct, I was confusing the two.  McGriff was never a catcher.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, Three Run Homer said:

Now slashing .301/.379/.512 as an 18-year old at low A.

Fred McGriff as a 19-year old at low A:  .260/.369/.484

Two strapping lads (both 6'3") who started at catcher.   Basallo is also likely to switch positions.  

The dude's going to be a beast--we shouldn't trade him unless it's for a controllable front-end starter like Mitch Keller.   He's in the Mayo/Kjerstad "almost untouchable" category as far as I'm concerned.  

Basallo is a notch ahead of Mayo for me.   He plays the most important position in the game and has a chance to stick there.  It’s not only his bat that’s special, he had an accurate cannon as well.  

Edited by emmett16
  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 7/26/2023 at 12:49 PM, RZNJ said:

Sure you’re not thinking of Carlos Delgado?   McGriff throws LH.  I didn’t check but I doubt he started as a catcher.    Basallo looks like the catcher of the future depending on Rutschman.  Basallo isn’t “likely” to switch positions either.

I wouldn't agree with that. I do think it's likely he will need to move to 1B at some point. He's a huge young man that is going to fill out and be an even huger young man. It's not his arm and he's very limber for his size, but I just can't see a a 6-4 (He looks bigger than 6-3 to me), 230 or 240 pound catcher. That a lot of size and weight to bend down all the time. 

If the bat is as special as it looks like it could be, I think he'll end up at 1B. 

To me, Willems has the better chance to stick at catcher.

  • 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 know the Brewers are in 1st, but I wonder if they'd be interested in trading Devin Williams if it was primarily MLB pieces being swapped. Looking at their roster, I feel they could use an OF and maybe a 1B/DH lefty bat.  When the time comes, I wonder if something built around around Williams for Ohearn, Santander could come into play? Depends on performance and need closer to All Star Break.  If Milwaukee thinks they can make a run and Williams was healthy, Id probably not trade him
    • I have long said that baseball is the ultimate reality show because you just never know what will happen, what personalities will emerge, what fresh talent will shine through.    Very curious to see the show Netflix is doing with the Red Sox this year. I don’t think it will be the last of its kind because behind the scenes of a MLB team for a season is endless drama. 
    • And it really goes hand in hand. He is hanging in there more this year in ABs, getting into deeper counts so he gets a chance to hit some mistakes. That AB last night was the perfect example of it. If my memory serves he laid off one, and fouled off one prior to the hanger.
    • He is having a better year statistically. He doesn’t have a better arm. 
    • One thing I love about baseball is its constant capacity to surprise you.   I feel like in other sports, players kind of are who they are.   You don’t see basketball players score 15 points per game one year and 27 the next, dropping back to 21 the following year.  You don’t see healthy wide receivers go from 60 catches to 100, then back to 70.   Hockey players don’t score 25 goals one season and 50 the next, then 35.    But in baseball, crazy fluctuation and guys coming out of nowhere is kind of par for the course.  Sure, there are some players who are very consistent from year to year, but it feels like team success is built largely on having several guys suddenly have career years, or players popping out of nowhere.    For the Orioles, nobody had Mateo doing what he’s doing.  Maybe 5% of fans (if that) could have even told you that Albert Suarez was on our roster when spring training started.  By the same token, I’m sure nobody foresaw Hays and Mullins being as awful as they’ve been.   Watching Tampa, last year a whole bunch of their hitters had career years.  This year, most of those same guys are crapping the bed.  But will it continue?  Stay tuned! Anyway, I love the unpredictable nature of the game and can’t wait to see what will happen next.    
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...