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Jesus Manny, enough is enough....when the #### is he going to snap out of this slump?
Jesus Manny, enough is enough....when the #### is he going to snap out of this slump?
Agreed.. though detroit is firing on all cylinders offensively and Boston is mired in a big slump. Ortiz and manny aren't hitting.. youk was out hurt....etc. 2 of the 3 games were very close... Dice was just Off today.. couldn't locate anything. Even the best guys have those sorts of outings. Not worried at all.I am happy with the best record in baseball at the break, but Detroit definitely showed they are the better team at the moment.
No sooner than Aug. 1 for Schilling, my guess is middle of the month. I haven't heard anything about lester coming up.when is schilling's return scheduled? anyone know? & speaking of pitching, is lester scheduled to come up after the break?
I like that. Where did you get it from?Just got this in the mail yesterday, now just need to get it framed...
http://img352.imageshack.us/img352/2194/p6100002it8.jpg
I had it commissioned, a guy on ebay will paint any painting if you give him a photo / instructions of what you want. He does good work, and is cheap (that was $65 shipped, and is 20x24)the moops said:I like that. Where did you get it from?Just got this in the mail yesterday, now just need to get it framed...
http://img352.imageshack.us/img352/2194/p6100002it8.jpg
8 games
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Easy, guys. I don't think Boston can UnClinch the Division since they won it back in May.Someone do me a favor and change that best record thing. Detroit is .002 better than the Red Sox.
A few guys in here might still think he's better than Clemens.What does the Sox contingent here think about the Tavarez situation? It's pretty much all the rage over at SOSH and Sox Prospects.My stance is to either stay put for 2 more Tavarez starts or call up Hansack (NOT LESTER). I think Pineiro's time here might be coming to a close.
Offense is an issue. Ortiz is hurt. Manny looks lost. Lowell is cooling in the second half as usual. Youk is struggling through a cold snap as well. Pitching has been great except Tavarez. We need Schilling to come back and at LEAST pitch like a #2 or #3...... Tavarez needs to go to the pen and we can keep Gabbard up for the time being. Interested to see what Boston does as the deadline approaches.Sox have been playing very poor in the last few weeks. Are Sox fans getting nervous? (Serious question. Im not trying to stir the pot since 7 GB is still a ton).
For all the crap you people gave Darth Cheaney it sounds like he predicted just about all of these things to happen.Offense is an issue. Ortiz is hurt. Manny looks lost. Lowell is cooling in the second half as usual. Youk is struggling through a cold snap as well. Pitching has been great except Tavarez. We need Schilling to come back and at LEAST pitch like a #2 or #3...... Tavarez needs to go to the pen and we can keep Gabbard up for the time being. Interested to see what Boston does as the deadline approaches.Sox have been playing very poor in the last few weeks. Are Sox fans getting nervous? (Serious question. Im not trying to stir the pot since 7 GB is still a ton).
Honestly, who couldn't predict Tavarez reverting to the norm or Lowell having a slow-ish 2nd half? That said.... some numbers from another source: * Since an awful start in April, Manny Ramirez has been consistently great with a .970 OPS in May, .938 in June, and .931 thus far in July. He has definitely lost a little bit, and this may turn out to be the worst year of his career, but his bat still puts fear in pitchers’ hearts, and Manny is good enough to continue being one of the best hitters in baseball even with a somewhat slower bat. * Since June 1, Coco Crisp has hit .315 with an .843 OPS. If you really want to make his numbers look good, start on June 16, as Crisp has posted a 1.063 OPS in the past month. Crisp’s resurgent bat augments the fabulous season he is having in the field, and makes him a valuable asset to the Red Sox while Jacoby Ellsbury matures into a future star. * J.D. Drew has hit .306/.400/.495 since June 1, which is exactly what was expected of him when he signed with the Red Sox. In fact, the THT projection for Drew was actually a bit more pessimistic at .282/.386/.480. Even if he does lose a little batting average, Drew really looks like he has turned a corner, and the Red Sox should expect to get what they paid for over the next two-and-a-half-months. * Surprisingly, David Ortiz has not lost any of his value despite playing on a torn meniscus. His OPS through June 1 was 1.010; since, it’s 1.019. As long as the meniscus doesn’t bother him any more as the season wears on, there’s nothing to worry about with Big Papi.• Mike Lowell hit very poorly in June, but has been stellar in July. His OPS approached 1.000 at one point, but that is just too much to expect. Above-average offense, however, isn’t, and Lowell will continue to be one of the better third basemen in the American League.• Then, of course, there is the much maligned Julio Lugo, whose spectacular .309 OPS in June would have tied him for 62nd in the major leagues that month in batting average. Lugo’s .089 batting average, of course, ranked last, making him the only player who couldn’t even hit triple digits. Overall, Lugo has been awful this season, but he’s actually put together a nifty little July, hitting .359 with an .894 OPS.For all the crap you people gave Darth Cheaney it sounds like he predicted just about all of these things to happen.Offense is an issue. Ortiz is hurt. Manny looks lost. Lowell is cooling in the second half as usual. Youk is struggling through a cold snap as well. Pitching has been great except Tavarez. We need Schilling to come back and at LEAST pitch like a #2 or #3...... Tavarez needs to go to the pen and we can keep Gabbard up for the time being. Interested to see what Boston does as the deadline approaches.Sox have been playing very poor in the last few weeks. Are Sox fans getting nervous? (Serious question. Im not trying to stir the pot since 7 GB is still a ton).
i'm not complaining about the record. it's just that we scored 2 or less runs 11 times! in june & we're 11-13 so far in the month.Still best record in baseball, and schedule is suddenly very cake...if we win the next 2 games against texas we'll be at .500 for the month.
i love the win, but where's the friggen offense? 12th game this month with 2 or fewer runs.
can i worry about the offense yet?damn it'll be nice to get back home! & how about tito lights a fire under the offense's ###, we need to score some damn runs.i'm not complaining about the record. it's just that we scored 2 or less runs 11 times! in june & we're 11-13 so far in the month.Still best record in baseball, and schedule is suddenly very cake...if we win the next 2 games against texas we'll be at .500 for the month.
i'm officially worried about the ####### offense. this better just be a 31 day long funk.i love the win, but where's the friggen offense? 12th game this month with 2 or fewer runs.do you think the sox might be in the market for an outfielder that can hit for average?
There HAS to be a SNORK rating or 2 that [icon] can throw your way that should ease your worries.i'm not complaining about the record. it's just that we scored 2 or less runs 11 times! in june & we're 11-13 so far in the month.Still best record in baseball, and schedule is suddenly very cake...if we win the next 2 games against texas we'll be at .500 for the month.
i love the win, but where's the friggen offense? 12th game this month with 2 or fewer runs.can i worry about the offense yet?damn it'll be nice to get back home! & how about tito lights a fire under the offense's ###, we need to score some damn runs.i'm not complaining about the record. it's just that we scored 2 or less runs 11 times! in june & we're 11-13 so far in the month.Still best record in baseball, and schedule is suddenly very cake...if we win the next 2 games against texas we'll be at .500 for the month.
i'm officially worried about the ####### offense. this better just be a 31 day long funk.i love the win, but where's the friggen offense? 12th game this month with 2 or fewer runs.do you think the sox might be in the market for an outfielder that can hit for average?
What's that tell you about the teams clutchibility? My point with this Sox team is that they don't have any heart. The 2004 team had attitude that IMO outpaced their actual ability. I don't see that with this team. Drew, Lowell, Crisp, Lugo.......these guys aren't warriors. It's almost like the Sox have become a poor man's Yankee team. Where the Yanks would go get " square superstars" and pound them into round holes the Sox are married to this Jamesian numbers stuff.Yeah getting 11 hits in 1 game is really really mediocre- they were 1 for 7 with RISP
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"This Jamesian numbers stuff"...What's that tell you about the teams clutchibility? My point with this Sox team is that they don't have any heart. The 2004 team had attitude that IMO outpaced their actual ability. I don't see that with this team. Drew, Lowell, Crisp, Lugo.......these guys aren't warriors. It's almost like the Sox have become a poor man's Yankee team. Where the Yanks would go get " square superstars" and pound them into round holes the Sox are married to this Jamesian numbers stuff.Yeah getting 11 hits in 1 game is really really mediocre- they were 1 for 7 with RISP
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I don't agree with much of what you are saying here. The 2004 team won because they had a ton of heart. Damon at the top of the order was a great table setter, they don't have that this year, it is something they are missing.The 2004 team didn't win because they were #1 in the league in OBP, they won because they drove those guys in.They won because they got great pitching when it counted, unexpected pitching from Derek Lowe and Keith Foulke's finest season at closer.I hear this argument that there is no such thing as clutch hitters. I dont agree with it. Some guys respond better under pressure than others. JD Drew is not a guy that is going to respond under pressure, Lugo, Crisp, really don't think they are either."This Jamesian numbers stuff"...What's that tell you about the teams clutchibility? My point with this Sox team is that they don't have any heart. The 2004 team had attitude that IMO outpaced their actual ability. I don't see that with this team. Drew, Lowell, Crisp, Lugo.......these guys aren't warriors. It's almost like the Sox have become a poor man's Yankee team. Where the Yanks would go get " square superstars" and pound them into round holes the Sox are married to this Jamesian numbers stuff.Yeah getting 11 hits in 1 game is really really mediocre- they were 1 for 7 with RISP
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Repeat after me: THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS CLUTCHIBILITY.There are good hitters and bad hitters. Productive players and not productive players. The 2004 team didn't win because it had "warriors". It won because they were the best hitting team in the league (#1 in OBP and Slugging in all of baseball) and were THIRD in team ERA. This year's Sox team?
Heading into the 2004 postseason, did you trust a guy like Mark Bellhorn? Without him, the Sox are 89 years and counting, you know?Bottom line there are guys on this team I do not trust in the postseason. Drew, Lugo and Crisp to name the main three. Drew's postseason numbers are horrendous. They need another bat. They obviously know how to get guys on base but they need someone else that is going to drive in runs.The problem that we all know though is that the way this team is constructed it is hard to plug another player in.
No I didn't trust Bellhorn. I guess your argument is that someone else will automatically step up. I'm not sure we can take that for granted and bad hitting can be contagious. This team needs a player to come in and give them some spark to put them over the top. Right now, they have a 1 in 4 chance at best in the AL, I would like to better those odds.Heading into the 2004 postseason, did you trust a guy like Mark Bellhorn? Without him, the Sox are 89 years and counting, you know?Bottom line there are guys on this team I do not trust in the postseason. Drew, Lugo and Crisp to name the main three. Drew's postseason numbers are horrendous. They need another bat. They obviously know how to get guys on base but they need someone else that is going to drive in runs.The problem that we all know though is that the way this team is constructed it is hard to plug another player in.
Yeah, the whole "clutch" argument? Doesn't exist. Given enough at-bats, players (and yes, TEAMS) will have pretty much the same OPS in "clutch" situations (like RISP) as they will in "non-clutch" situations. It's been proven time and time again statistically. The 2004 team drove guys in because they had TONS of guys on base. Yes, they won because they were #1 in OBP (among other things...). "Heart"? Tell me something: Did the 2004 team have more "heart" than the 2003 team that lost the ALCS but came back from the 0-2 deficit against the A's? Or the 1999 team that came back from the dead against Cleveland only to get smoked by the Yankees.Heart, fart. Give me a team that gets on base, pitches well and plays good defense. OPE! That's this year's Sox team too.Fine, get off the bandwagon. Don't forget your pink hat.I don't agree with much of what you are saying here. The 2004 team won because they had a ton of heart. Damon at the top of the order was a great table setter, they don't have that this year, it is something they are missing.The 2004 team didn't win because they were #1 in the league in OBP, they won because they drove those guys in.They won because they got great pitching when it counted, unexpected pitching from Derek Lowe and Keith Foulke's finest season at closer.I hear this argument that there is no such thing as clutch hitters. I dont agree with it. Some guys respond better under pressure than others. JD Drew is not a guy that is going to respond under pressure, Lugo, Crisp, really don't think they are either."This Jamesian numbers stuff"...What's that tell you about the teams clutchibility? My point with this Sox team is that they don't have any heart. The 2004 team had attitude that IMO outpaced their actual ability. I don't see that with this team. Drew, Lowell, Crisp, Lugo.......these guys aren't warriors. It's almost like the Sox have become a poor man's Yankee team. Where the Yanks would go get " square superstars" and pound them into round holes the Sox are married to this Jamesian numbers stuff.Yeah getting 11 hits in 1 game is really really mediocre- they were 1 for 7 with RISP
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Repeat after me: THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS CLUTCHIBILITY.There are good hitters and bad hitters. Productive players and not productive players. The 2004 team didn't win because it had "warriors". It won because they were the best hitting team in the league (#1 in OBP and Slugging in all of baseball) and were THIRD in team ERA. This year's Sox team?
XAccording to Baseball Reference, the entire league is 176-1076 (.140) when trailing after 7 innings, Red Sox for the season are 7-35 (.167); Yanks are 4-33 (.108).What's that tell you about the teams clutchibility? My point with this Sox team is that they don't have any heart. The 2004 team had attitude that IMO outpaced their actual ability. I don't see that with this team. Drew, Lowell, Crisp, Lugo.......these guys aren't warriors. It's almost like the Sox have become a poor man's Yankee team. Where the Yanks would go get " square superstars" and pound them into round holes the Sox are married to this Jamesian numbers stuff.Yeah getting 11 hits in 1 game is really really mediocre- they were 1 for 7 with RISP
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Well we are going to disagree. You explain individuals who perform better in the postseason, with runners on base as a variance. I explain it as individuals that rise to the occassion in the clutch.Getting on base is great but unless they cross home plate it doesn't matter.You seem to be a Bill James disciple, I am not, we are going to disagree here.Yeah, the whole "clutch" argument? Doesn't exist. Given enough at-bats, players (and yes, TEAMS) will have pretty much the same OPS in "clutch" situations (like RISP) as they will in "non-clutch" situations. It's been proven time and time again statistically. The 2004 team drove guys in because they had TONS of guys on base. Yes, they won because they were #1 in OBP (among other things...).
I have mountains and mountains of evidence on my side.You have the romantic notion of "clutch".Good luck with that.I'll make this interesting: Give me the name of 5 players you feel are "clutch" and I'll post their career stats for you. Make it a guy who's played at least 7+ seasons so there's enough data available.Well we are going to disagree. You explain individuals who perform better in the postseason, with runners on base as a variance. I explain it as individuals that rise to the occassion in the clutch.Getting on base is great but unless they cross home plate it doesn't matter.You seem to be a Bill James disciple, I am not, we are going to disagree here.Yeah, the whole "clutch" argument? Doesn't exist. Given enough at-bats, players (and yes, TEAMS) will have pretty much the same OPS in "clutch" situations (like RISP) as they will in "non-clutch" situations. It's been proven time and time again statistically. The 2004 team drove guys in because they had TONS of guys on base. Yes, they won because they were #1 in OBP (among other things...).
11 singles.Yeah getting 11 hits in 1 game is really really mediocre- they were 1 for 7 with RISP
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George BrettPete RoseReggie JacksonDavid OrtizMark LemkeI'll make this interesting: Give me the name of 5 players you feel are "clutch" and I'll post their career stats for you. Make it a guy who's played at least 7+ seasons so there's enough data available.
I'll take them one at a time as time permits today.I'll show you batting avg/obp/slg for each guy in this order:OVERALLRISPRISP 2 outsINNINGS 7-9I'll start with George Brett:.305/.369/.487.307/.410/.481.290/.422/.464.296/.371/.468OK, looks like in every "clutch" case, Brett slugged UNDER his overall totals. His OBP was better in the 3 "clutch" cases and his average was at or below his norms. Seems to me that you'd have a hard time making the case that Brett was better in "clutch" situations. If anything, he tended to take more walks than get hits.George BrettPete RoseReggie JacksonDavid OrtizMark LemkeI'll make this interesting: Give me the name of 5 players you feel are "clutch" and I'll post their career stats for you. Make it a guy who's played at least 7+ seasons so there's enough data available.
Where do postseason numbers fall in your definition of what isn't clutch hitting?I'll take them one at a time as time permits today.I'll show you batting avg/obp/slg for each guy in this order:OVERALLRISPRISP 2 outsINNINGS 7-9I'll start with George Brett:.305/.369/.487.307/.410/.481.290/.422/.464.296/.371/.468OK, looks like in every "clutch" case, Brett slugged UNDER his overall totals. His OBP was better in the 3 "clutch" cases and his average was at or below his norms. Seems to me that you'd have a hard time making the case that Brett was better in "clutch" situations. If anything, he tended to take more walks than get hits.George BrettPete RoseReggie JacksonDavid OrtizMark LemkeI'll make this interesting: Give me the name of 5 players you feel are "clutch" and I'll post their career stats for you. Make it a guy who's played at least 7+ seasons so there's enough data available.
Umm Red Sox have played the Blue Jays, Royals, and White Sox during this same stretch. THey should be staying even with the Yankees during their soft part of the shchedule yet they are losing ground.you guys panicking with a 7 game lead?Everyone knew the yankees schedule was butter soft after the break.Relax and enjoy the ride.
Small sample size. Brett played in 43 postseason games 166 at-bats total. Brett had over 10,000 career at-bats in the regular season. Those 166 at-bats account for about 1.5 percent of his total career. Think about that. For comparison's sake, over a 162 game season, 1.5% of your total at-bats would come in one single extra inning game. Is one game in a season an accurate reflection of a player's skill?Where do postseason numbers fall in your definition of what isn't clutch hitting?I'll take them one at a time as time permits today.I'll show you batting avg/obp/slg for each guy in this order:OVERALLRISPRISP 2 outsINNINGS 7-9I'll start with George Brett:.305/.369/.487.307/.410/.481.290/.422/.464.296/.371/.468OK, looks like in every "clutch" case, Brett slugged UNDER his overall totals. His OBP was better in the 3 "clutch" cases and his average was at or below his norms. Seems to me that you'd have a hard time making the case that Brett was better in "clutch" situations. If anything, he tended to take more walks than get hits.George BrettPete RoseReggie JacksonDavid OrtizMark LemkeI'll make this interesting: Give me the name of 5 players you feel are "clutch" and I'll post their career stats for you. Make it a guy who's played at least 7+ seasons so there's enough data available.