Jump to content

Wednesday afternoon May 15: Orioles vs Blue Jay


SteveA

Recommended Posts

15 minutes ago, Roy Firestone said:

its intensely frustrating to watch this team right now....

I'm with Roy on this one, it's frustrating as %&#@ to watch this team at the plate right now.  The worst part is that the talent level is through the roof, they shouldn't be slumping this hard for this long.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Moose Milligan said:

I'm with Roy on this one, it's frustrating as %&#@ to watch this team at the plate right now.  The worst part is that the talent level is through the roof, they shouldn't be slumping this hard for this long.  

They swing at everything.  Everything.  Adley and Westburg are pretty much the only two capable of working at-bats.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Ripken said:

They swing at everything.  Everything.  Adley and Westburg are pretty much the only two capable of working at-bats.

Yeah, it's bad.  Like I said earlier, seems like this is a Trumbo team.  Feel like I'm watching Trumbo, Jones, Hardy and the rest just swinging at everything, not walking and waiting for a boom or bust hot streak.

Not sure where the patience from last year went.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Ripken said:

They swing at everything.  Everything.  Adley and Westburg are pretty much the only two capable of working at-bats.

Teams have definitely caught on to the aggressive approach 

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Moose Milligan said:

Yeah, it's bad.  Like I said earlier, seems like this is a Trumbo team.  Feel like I'm watching Trumbo, Jones, Hardy and the rest just swinging at everything, not walking and waiting for a boom or bust hot streak.

Not sure where the patience from last year went.

Is it time to start wondering about our two-headed hitting coach?

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

    • Isn't is just weird that it took 100+ years to figure that out? Hey, that guy hits a bunch of balls right through the box, maybe we should have the second baseman move over that direction a little? Nah, if we do it so will everybody, and we like .350 hitters even when they're on the other team. It would be like a football game where there's a formation where a WR keeps getting completely open downfield and busting 40 yard plays, and it takes 35 years for defenses to adjust. "It's just how it is! If we cover that guy, then the running back might average five yards a carry!"
    • I was thinking the same thing. 
    • Yes, I think that would be a solution that just might work. If you doubled the number of MLB teams it might take a decade or two for talent to catch back up. One of the reasons many strategies of 100 or 150 years ago worked was a much lower talent level, and much bigger spread between the best and worst MLB players. Even just going back 50 years or so it's clear to me one of the reasons pitchers could throw 300 innings was a much shallower pool of hitters, or at the very least choices that favored .220 hitting shortstops with no power. But, what do you think the odds are of Major League Baseball expanding to 60 teams in the next decade? 0.001%? 0.0000001%? The owners would look at such a proposal as an idea for how to slash their shared revenues by 50%, and would probably rather spend the last 20 years of their life fighting it in court than let that happen. This is like the discussions I have with soccer fans on promotion/relegation in the US. Great idea, tremendous benefits, works beautifully in the rest of the world, fosters all kinds of local grassroots interest in the sport, punishes tanking. But current owners would rather gouge their eyes out with their thumbnails than implement it here.
    • I only watched the first two innings.  I didn’t think he’d last much longer because he looked very hittable to that point.  I really question the pitch selection to Rorthsveldt on a 1-2 pitch with a man on third and one out.  He just swung threw a up in the zone fastball, Suarez’ best pitch.  Throw another one same spot, or higher, or in, or even try to bury a changeup low.  Anything to try and get a swing and miss.  But a two seamer (that’s what they called it) down and away? Credit to Suarez for giving us 5.  I don’t really think he’s a starter but he’s getting it done.  Why can he hit 97 in the first inning but not in relief?   I guess it’s a warmup thing.  The 2023-24 Orioles are very good at “winning ugly”.   They find a way more often than not.
    • I hadn’t heard an up to date report on Gillen’s arm.  He’s two years out from that surgery so that’s certainly not good.   I like Lindsey too.  The only real drawbacks are that he’s a RH hitter and the power projection is questionable but he’s got top of the line speed. I’m really not interested in the hit first college types like Amick.   I’d like to see them go HS position player or roll the dice on a Brody Brecht/Jonathan Santucci college pitcher with big stuff and command issues.   At #22 and #32 maybe they can do both.
    • We've really needed Suarez to step up, and so far he has. He does this a couple more times, I might be a believer.
    • Been going downhill ever since Roy started calling for him in the pen. The jinx goes both ways.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...