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Thursday, September 02, 2010

Dibble done broadcasting Nats - NATS INSIDER

Rob Dibble…you’re fired!

Rob Dibble will no longer be broadcasting Nationals games on MASN, a club spokesman said this afternoon.

Jim Furtado Posted: September 02, 2010 at 11:37 AM | 105 comment(s) | Login to Bookmark
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   1. Latnam's first name is Bob Lemon's middle name. Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:11 PM (#3631800)
Quick, someone get Chip Caray to tell Kris Medlen to suck it up!
   2. cercopithecus aethiops Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:27 PM (#3631813)
I actually enjoyed Dibble on the Nats' games. He was endlessly entertaining (although often unintentionally). Infinitely superior to Ray Knight, no matter how many times he might stick his foot in his mouth.
   3. A One-Shoed Craig K Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:32 PM (#3631816)
Suck it up and keep announcing, you #####.
   4. Dan Szymborski Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:41 PM (#3631824)
Honestly, I rather have someone stupid and jerky with an opinion than a Hawk Harrelson-like mega-shill.
   5. Big Train Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:41 PM (#3631825)
nothing on the brawl?

Morgan is a clown, but the Marlins proved themselves to be bigger clowns.
   6. Big Train Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:43 PM (#3631827)
Dibble could not be as bad as the marlins announcers. this is an actual quote...

"The Marlins hit him in a professional manner, then he steals two bases down 11, which is generally not done, the man has serious issues."
   7. billyshears Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:49 PM (#3631832)
Is it wrong that Strasburg's injury feels like some kind of national (no pun intended) tragedy to me? Maybe it's because I have him on my fantasy team. Or maybe I need to find a hobby other than baseball.
   8. cercopithecus aethiops Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:52 PM (#3631834)
Shouldn't the brawl have its own thread?

he steals two bases down 11, which is generally not done

Yeah, how dare he try to show up his opponent when his team is losing that badly? Must be a new unwritten rule.

Dibble on the brawl would have been a hoot.
   9. Forsch 10 From Navarone (Dayn) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 12:56 PM (#3631838)
Dibble could not be as bad as the marlins announcers. this is an actual quote...

I had the same reaction. I mean stealing bases when you're down by such a margin is certainly dumb, but how is it disrespectful or in violation of someone's code somewhere? Morgan deserved retaliation for his punk move on Bryan Anderson last week, but I'm not sure why the Marlins were out to get him.

EDIT: Or what 8 said.
   10. Textbook Editor Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:06 PM (#3631844)
"The Marlins hit him in a professional manner, then he steals two bases down 11, which is generally not done, the man has serious issues."


This was one of the dumber things I'd heard in a long time. Made me wish the Nats had come back and won the game.

But dumb announcers... This is not new stuff. During the playoffs I usually watch games on mute; this season I've extended the act to most in-season games as well... Leads to less chair-throwing and a happier life.
   11. Justin T contains indigenous nudity Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:18 PM (#3631853)
Nonetheless, Morgan has been a bit out of control recently. He needlessly banged some catcher last week, then injured Brett Hayes on a play this series that was allegedly similar although I haven't seen it. Start with the ball thrown into the stands, and I think we do have something of a pattern.

He's kind of a menace right now.
   12. TDF, situational idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:19 PM (#3631855)
Considering Morgan's antics the past couple of weeks, I'd think it's safe to assume he was trying to "show up" the Marlins by stealing down 11. The guy doesn't deserve the benefit of the doubt at this point.
   13. winnipegwhip Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:19 PM (#3631857)
Aaron Boone on Baseball Tonight was also saying it was "inappropriate" to be stealing bases when losing badly. The tone was not that risking giving up an out to gain 90 feet but rather it was disrespectful of the opposition.
   14. Flynn Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:22 PM (#3631858)
I only watch the Marlins guys about once or twice a season, but they seem pretty damn homerish to me, and not endearing we root for the home team like you but we'll be fair homerism, but Hawk Harrelson homerism.

Mike and Mike, of all people, had a pretty good point this morning when they discussed all the big comebacks in the last couple weeks and wondered aloud why there's an unwritten rule on trying to win. They even eventually came to the idea that it was just a cover for "We don't like Nyjer Morgan". It was surprising.
   15. spike Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:23 PM (#3631859)
They really need to print out the unwritten rulebook. There are far too many to remember off the top of your head, and there seem to be new ones coming out all the time.
   16. Flynn Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:24 PM (#3631861)
Considering Morgan's antics the past couple of weeks, I'd think it's safe to assume he was trying to "show up" the Marlins by stealing down 11. The guy doesn't deserve the benefit of the doubt at this point.


Maybe so but you could always just, you know, throw him out. Throwing behind a guy is ##### stuff, and even if it was ass high Morgan has a right to feel that if you are throwing behind him you're trying to go for the noggin and missed. To then clothesline him, which could have broken his neck, makes it even more hypocritical.

I'm no Nyjer Morgan fan and I think he's a pretty thin skinned guy (besides all his other antics, he's the only CF i've ever seen in San Francisco get visibly upset and annoyed by the CF bleacher bums chanting "Whatsa matter with X? He's a bum!") but that doesn't make the Marlins blameless.
   17. TDF, situational idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:25 PM (#3631862)
They really need to print out the unwritten rulebook
Yea, but...
   18. Big Train Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:26 PM (#3631863)
Considering Morgan's antics the past couple of weeks, I'd think it's safe to assume he was trying to "show up" the Marlins by stealing down 11. The guy doesn't deserve the benefit of the doubt at this point.

He rolled the catcher last night. They hit him in the fourth. He didn't charge at that point, he took his medicine.

If the Nats aren't supposed to steal, why are the Marlins holding him on?
   19. TDF, situational idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:27 PM (#3631866)
To then clothesline him, which could have broken his neck, makes it even more hypocritical.
Kind of like getting pissy after trying to take out the catcher when sliding would have guaranteed a run - in a tied, extra-inning game. Or even hitting the catcher when there isn't even a play at the plate.
   20. Big Train Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:28 PM (#3631867)
I liked Riggleman's take. "The Florida Marlins do not decide when we run, we decide when we run."
   21. Dingbat Charlie Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:30 PM (#3631868)
There was also this. He's certainly had an interesting season.
   22. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:33 PM (#3631873)
Kind of like getting pissy after trying to take out the catcher when sliding would have guaranteed a run - in a tied, extra-inning game. Or even hitting the catcher when there isn't even a play at the plate.

What the hell is wrong with that guy? Is he crazy or stupid or what? Twice in a week he failed to score a run because he deemed it more important to hit the catcher, once in a tie game. If I were Jim Riggleman, I would send his ass home; he's actively damaging the team's efforts to win.
   23. Who wants Teixeira dessert? Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:35 PM (#3631875)
About all Morgan has is his speed, and while it's not a great percentage play to steal when you're down so many runs, you do have to keep playing. Are the Nats supposed to stop trying to score? Should they just call the game when a team is ahead by 10 runs like in little league? The team AHEAD by 10 runs shouldn't run up the score, but if the game was out of reach, why did the catcher bother throwing to second and third? Why would you bother holding runners on - it was too early to start applying all that BS.

Morgan running into the catcher Tuesday night was stupid because he was out and sliding would have likely netted a run, not because it was dirty. The play last week was even dumber. Every time he runs into a catcher or a wall, it costs the Nats a run.
   24. JJ1986 Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:35 PM (#3631876)
How did Sanchez not get tossed?
   25. Textbook Editor Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:36 PM (#3631877)
Did Morgan exhibit behavior like this before (in previous years)? It does seem he's gone off on some sort of crazy behavior bender of late...
   26. zack Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:38 PM (#3631880)
Is there a story behind Dibble getting pushed off? I've been on vacation for a couple weeks and haven't been following much. Dibble was bad but entertaining, unlike Carpenter who is bad and incredibly boring.

Morgan has had a bad season pretty much every way you could slice it. Bad hitting, bad fielding, bad attitude, horrible baserunning. He was my favorite Nat going into the season, but echh.
   27. Yeaarrgghhhh Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:39 PM (#3631883)
I hadn't seen the clip of that Jones HR. I'm surprised that play hasn't gotten that much attention. It's at least as bad as Hanley Ramirez's jog.
   28. winnipegwhip Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:39 PM (#3631884)
I agree with the formal writing of the unwritten rule book. Of course this would also need the inner thoughts of Laz Diaz which may be hard to translate into text.
   29. shoewizard Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:40 PM (#3631886)
Morgan did nothing crazy. It's ridiculous to even say he did.

He got hit......played the game to win. Got thrown behind. He was totally justified to charge the mound. Marlins were completely out of line.

If there we no previous Nyjer Morgan incidents, just about everybody would be saying he was being gritty and not giving up on the game, and that he took his medicine like a man the first time. The second time they threw at him....well a man just has to defend himself.

Of course...there WERE prior incidents. So Morgan will just have to live with the perception. He made his own bed, and all that. But he wasn't in the wrong here. The notion that stealing and trying to get your team a run when losing, no matter by how much, is disrespectful, is one of the most flawed pieces of logic I have come across in a long long time.
   30. TDF, situational idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:42 PM (#3631888)
Teixeira:

This (go to 1:30) is the previous incident I was talking about; there was no play at the plate, he just decided to give the catcher a shoulder anyway. And it certainly was dirty.
   31. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:44 PM (#3631889)
Morgan did nothing crazy. It's ridiculous to even say he did.

Not in this game. His actions in the game before, which precipitated the nonsense in this game, were egregious. And ####### stupid, considering they cost his team the go-ahead run. I can't believe he started the following game, actually. I would have benched his sorry ass as a message that you try to score the run, not take out the catcher.
   32. TDF, situational idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:45 PM (#3631892)
The notion that stealing and trying to get your team a run when losing, no matter by how much, is disrespectful, is one of the most flawed pieces of logic I have come across in a long long time.
I will defer to guys like Harold Reynolds, who actually played MLB.
   33. Don't want the truth; just wanna see some dingers Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:47 PM (#3631896)
I agree with the formal writing of the unwritten rule book


But then we wouldn't have a need for retired jocks to give us insight into how to play the game.
   34. Greg (U)K Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:49 PM (#3631898)
hit him in a professional manner

I just love this phrase. I hope to one day be able to use it following an opening of "But officer, I..."
   35. Der Komminsk-sar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:51 PM (#3631900)
Aaron Boone on Baseball Tonight was also saying it was "inappropriate" to be stealing bases when losing badly. The tone was not that risking giving up an out to gain 90 feet but rather it was disrespectful of the opposition.
Bing. I don't necessarily agree with this thinking, but it's not new and not unknown to Morgan and co.
   36. Don't want the truth; just wanna see some dingers Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:53 PM (#3631904)
#30, that's a very good discussion. Gaby Sanchez really nailed Morgan, too.
   37. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:54 PM (#3631905)
Honestly, I rather have someone stupid and jerky with an opinion than a Hawk Harrelson-like mega-shill.

After being stuck with Harrelson for 2 of the 3 Yanks-Sox games last weekend, I couldn't agree more. It was like listening to 6 hours of Up With People.**

**This link is for mature audiences only
   38. Guapo Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:55 PM (#3631909)
Is there a story behind Dibble getting pushed off?


Once upon a time there was a little boy who left a baseball game with an arm injury. A mean monster went on XM Radio and criticized the little boy, saying when he was a little boy, he sucked it up and played through the pain, and implying the little boy was being less-than-manly. The little boy went to a doctor and had an MRI and it turned out he needs Tommy John surgery. The mean monster's employer was very angry at the monster for unfairly criticizing one of the employer's most valuable assets. The little boy's teammates already didn't like the mean monster, who was often openly critical of their lackluster play, and this was the last straw. The mean monster was fired and replaced by Ray Knight and everyone lived happily ever after. The end.
   39. Nasty Nate Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:56 PM (#3631913)
It seems that being anti-unwritten rules is the primer groupthink. I generally agree with it, but we shouldnt adhere to it like a dogma.

In all likelihood, Morgan wasn't stealing those bases as part of 'trying to win'. He stole right after getting plunked, and the Marlins obviously took it as if it was provocation. I trust their interpretation more than some people just who blindly hate unwritten rules.
   40. Mayor Blomberg Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:57 PM (#3631916)
Greg, it's a phrase you can use to describe a single bullet to the back of the head.
   41. Johnny Sycophant-Laden Fora Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:59 PM (#3631919)
Morgan has had a bad season pretty much every way you could slice it. Bad hitting, bad fielding, bad attitude, horrible baserunning. He was my favorite Nat going into the season, but echh.



Ehh, he's just not that good period
In 2294 minor league PAs he has a .733 OPS
in 1323 MLB PAs he's at .709
What happened was after I turned him down in a trade in my roto league last year, he immediately went on a tear after being traded... and the asshat who offered him to me gave me weekly updates on him...

My guess is that his true talent level is likely that of a .675 hitter, IOW I think he's overachieved somewhat in his MLB career to date... (IOW he's better than he's shown this year, but not by enough to matter)
   42. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 01:59 PM (#3631920)
In all likelihood, Morgan wasn't stealing those bases as part of 'trying to win'. He stole right after getting plunked, and the Marlins obviously took it as if it was provocation. I trust their interpretation more than some people just who blindly hate unwritten rules.

I don't see why that matters, though. Morgan didn't slide violently on those steals. The Marlins had a right to be angry with Morgan for needlessly trucking Hayes the night before, so they hit him. The subsequent steals didn't justify further retaliation.
   43. Nasty Nate Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:02 PM (#3631926)
The subsequent steals didn't justify further retaliation.


I agree with this, they hit him once and then he stole a couple of meaningless bases and they should have let it go. But lets not pretend the base-stealing wasn't a provocation or that it was just a hustling Morgan trying to spearhead a comeback.
   44. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:06 PM (#3631930)
I agree with this, they hit him once and then he stole a couple of meaningless bases and they should have let it go. But lets not pretend the base-stealing wasn't a provocation or that it was just a hustling Morgan trying to spearhead a comeback.

Certainly not. The last few weeks have given us ample evidence that Morgan is a hot-headed idiot who can't control his impulses on the field. But being a jerk doesn't justify violent retribution. Being a violent jerk might just possibly justify such a response, however.
   45. TerpNats Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:15 PM (#3631943)
Bernadina has rendered Morgan largely superflous -- same speed, much more power -- and Nyger knows his days are numbered in Washington. (Especially since he's been hitting poorly of late, leaving Riggleman to bat him eighth.) Add his lackluster steals-caught ratio and occasional bonehead plays, and it appears he'll be playing somewhere else in 2011...if at all.

As for Dibble, he never really seemed to be a good fit for Washington, which certainly isn't the most savvy of baseball towns but is nonetheless sophisticated, and Dibble's style didn't mesh. I don't know who will replace him in 2011; I'm certain it won't be Knight. What's Billy Sample up to these days?
   46. David Nieporent (now, with children) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:15 PM (#3631942)
Considering Morgan's antics the past couple of weeks, I'd think it's safe to assume he was trying to "show up" the Marlins by stealing down 11. The guy doesn't deserve the benefit of the doubt at this point.
Further evidence that the phrase "show up" doesn't mean anything at all, but is just a placeholder for "I don't like this guy."

I dare anybody to substitute some phrase for "show up" that can make the statement by TDF make any sense at all.
   47. Nasty Nate Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:18 PM (#3631949)
I dare anybody to substitute some phrase for "show up" that can make the statement by TDF make any sense at all.


provoke
or
antagonize
   48. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:20 PM (#3631954)
What's Billy Sample up to these days?

What's Junior Samples up to?
   49. Ron Johnson Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:21 PM (#3631956)
it's not new


I've never heard of it before. Oh I've heard plenty of pissing and moaning when the team up by a bundle steals a bases, but when you're losing anything that might bring you back is fair game.

That there isn't much running when you're way behind has everything to do with the understanding that risking an out for a minor gain just isn't smart.
   50. TDF, situational idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:24 PM (#3631960)
Isn't it also possible that the throw behind Morgan was meant to miss him and be a "cut the crap out" message, not a failed attempt to hit him? Because it missed him by alot.
   51. Fly, the most judgment-free human being on Earth Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:34 PM (#3631975)
In fact, running when you're way behind isn't an unwritten rule. It's a written rule. It's called "Defensive indifference."
   52. David Nieporent (now, with children) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:34 PM (#3631976)
He tried to 'provoke' them by stealing a base while down by 10 runs? How does that make any sense? (As someone above said, it might seem like trying to run up the score if you steal when you're UP by 10 runs. But down by 10?)
   53. BourbonSamurai is not Fausto Carmona Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:36 PM (#3631980)
Nonetheless, Morgan has been a bit out of control recently. He needlessly banged some catcher last week,


Look, leave Mike Piazza out of this!
   54. jacksone (AKA It's OK...) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:46 PM (#3631997)
I dare anybody to substitute some phrase for "show up" that can make the statement by TDF make any sense at all.


'Embarrass' works.
   55. Home Run Teal & Black Black Black Gone! Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:49 PM (#3632003)
He got hit......played the game to win. Got thrown behind. He was totally justified to charge the mound. Marlins were completely out of line.


Once you charge the mound it's the law of the jungle. They were justified in gangland stomping him.
   56. Nasty Nate Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:52 PM (#3632012)
He tried to 'provoke' them by stealing a base while down by 10 runs? How does that make any sense?


It doesn't make sense but it's true. The Marlins felt it was provocation, ex-major leaguer commentators think it was a provocation. Given the context I think that its reasonable to think it was provocation. However, the provocation was minor and meaningless, and didn't warrant the escalation by the Marlins.
   57. Rafael Bellylard: Built like a Molina Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:56 PM (#3632024)
The only thing provoking about those two stolen bases were the slides. He slid through the bag both times, making me think he had more interest in hitting the fielders rather than getting an extra base.

The Sanchez takeout was a thing of beauty, though.
   58. Dingbat Charlie Posted: September 02, 2010 at 02:57 PM (#3632029)
#53 is the first Piazza joke I've laughed at in a long while.
   59. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:03 PM (#3632039)
The only thing provoking about those two stolen bases were the slides. He slid through the bag both times, making me think he had more interest in hitting the fielders rather than getting an extra base.

You don't take out fielders on head-first slides. The slides were exuberant and possibly defiant, but they were not dangerous and, therefore, did not justify retaliation.
   60. spike Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:08 PM (#3632048)
Isn't it also possible that the throw behind Morgan was meant to miss him and be a "cut the crap out" message, not a failed attempt to hit him?

I thought throwing behind someone was the most egregious form, as it increases the risk of injury as a result of the natural tendency to back out of the way?
   61. Toolsy McClutch Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:20 PM (#3632074)
I don't have a problem with the stealing of bases, you're trying to win, right? His slides were aggressive, and I take an issue with that. And I take an issue with him going after catchers of late. Trying to injure players always rubs me the wrong way - I like my players healthy and playing good ball.

Bowties all around, I say.
   62. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:23 PM (#3632080)
His slides were aggressive, and I take an issue with that. And I take an issue with him going after catchers of late. Trying to injure players always rubs me the wrong way - I like my players healthy and playing good ball.

The slides were aggressive, but not injurious to any opponents. It's the shots at catchers that make Morgan a bad guy.
   63. Moneyball can't buy you love (Joey B.) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:25 PM (#3632083)
As for Dibble, he never really seemed to be a good fit for Washington, which certainly isn't the most savvy of baseball towns but is nonetheless sophisticated, and Dibble's style didn't mesh. I don't know who will replace him in 2011; I'm certain it won't be Knight. What's Billy Sample up to these days?

I really miss having Don Sutton, who I thought was the epitome of professionalism.

At this point it would be nice to have a decent team that could stay for more than a couple of years.
   64. rLr Is King Of The Romans And Above Grammar Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:33 PM (#3632090)
At this point it would be nice to have a decent team that could stay for more than a couple of years.

That's what they said about the Senators. Wait another forty years.
   65. Benji Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:37 PM (#3632096)
I hated Dibble as a player, but I thought he was candid, funny and even-handed in his criticism. What he said about Strasburg was regrettable but not a firing offense. I guess I'm more sensitive to such things because I'm a Met fan. As hard as they are to watch play-wise, Cohen and Hernandez' constant carping and second-guessing makes it torture. Nobody ever takes the right route to a ball, takes a proper lead, positions himself right, etc. The campaign about Beltran seems almost personal, or they're acting as hit men for the Wilpons to make dumping him palatable to the fans. Give me Dibble anytime.
   66. BourbonSamurai is not Fausto Carmona Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:47 PM (#3632105)
#58, couldn't resist.

I thought Dibble was a good announcer for an awful team. He was frustrated right along with the fans, did a good job injecting some levity, etc. Not the kind of guy you want long term with the demanding players pitch hurt, etc, but a lot of fun when the team is terrible.
   67. Who wants Teixeira dessert? Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:55 PM (#3632121)
Dibble was bad. Knight might be worse. Sutton was better than I thought he'd be, Darling was decent.

Carpenter won't shut up, so they may as well just have him work the games himself and save the money, although, the good thing will be if Phil Wood does the postgames more now that Knight won't be there. Wood at least has a hometown interest.
   68. Gaylord Perry the Platypus (oi!) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 03:59 PM (#3632127)
I really miss having Don Sutton, who I thought was the epitome of professionalism.

I've always enjoyed Sutton. I wish the Braves would put him back on TV, as I don't listen to the games on the radio very often.
   69. winnipegwhip Posted: September 02, 2010 at 04:03 PM (#3632132)
I am all for throwing the book at Morgan. I hate Regina, the Pats, and their alumni.

Go Wheaties.
   70. OsunaSakata Posted: September 02, 2010 at 04:10 PM (#3632142)
At this point, it's worth noting the high point of Nyjer Morgan's season was pretty memorable as well.

Benji: if you'd send Darling back to DC for Dibble, we'll take it.
   71. MM1f Posted: September 02, 2010 at 04:13 PM (#3632145)
This seems accurate...
"RT @SPORTSbyBROOKS: Day Strasburg came along was day ppl actually started watching Nats TV games. Effectively was day Dibble lost his job."
   72. Benji Posted: September 02, 2010 at 04:22 PM (#3632160)
Osuna, I should have said that I excluded Darling from my post. I hope he doesn't get like Keith and that friggin twit Cohen.
   73. Moloka'i Three-Finger Brown (Declino DeShields) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 04:31 PM (#3632170)
Dibble on the brawl would have been a hoot.


Someone should really go to Babelfish and do an Urban-to-Tatooed-Airhead conversion of "Hell 2 DA NAW."
   74. birdlives is one crazy ninja Posted: September 02, 2010 at 05:00 PM (#3632198)
I can't wait for Dibble's blog.
   75. Lassus: Posted: September 02, 2010 at 05:32 PM (#3632227)
#71 is hilarious, and makes perfect sense.
   76. TerpNats Posted: September 02, 2010 at 05:44 PM (#3632240)
Who will team up with Phil Wood for pre- and postgame on weekends the rest of the season, since Johnny Holliday will be working Terrapin football on radio? Maybe Bill Ladson, who's filled in at times.

It will be interesting to see who comes in for 2011. I know Kasten's not a big fan of Carpenter, who seems more suited for a market like St. Louis or Dallas-Fort Worth (he's done both Cardinals and Rangers games) than an eastern city like Washington, but it'd probably be difficult to hire two guys. Personally, I'd bring in an analyst and have he and Bob rotate on TV and radio with Charlie Slowes and Dave Jageler, the way most franchises used to do things before separating TV and radio teams.

Part of me would love to see the Nats hire John Kruk, who has a bit of Dibble's gonzo without his abrasiveness.
   77. The Yankee Clapper Posted: September 02, 2010 at 05:48 PM (#3632244)
Dibble on the brawl would have been a hoot.

I can almost envision Dibble taking exception to the Marlins' announcers description of the altercation, leading to a ruckuss between adjacent TV booths (kind of like hockey fights between the penalty boxes), escalating to a full-fledged melee when reinforcements run in from the radio booths.
   78. Moloka'i Three-Finger Brown (Declino DeShields) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 05:54 PM (#3632250)
I can't wait for Dibble's blog.


Dibble's a little behind on his blogging, but feel free to ask him a question!

Part of me would love to see the Nats hire John Kruk, who has a bit of Dibble's gonzo without his abrasiveness.


Okay, but just as long as a more substantial part doesn't want Kruk anywhere near the broadcasts. Assuming they keep Carpenter, retaining Knight is probably the easiest way to go. They have good chemisty, even if they both come across as a little bit dumb.
   79. SugarBear Blanks Posted: September 02, 2010 at 06:08 PM (#3632263)
After being stuck with Harrelson for 2 of the 3 Yanks-Sox games last weekend, I couldn't agree more. It was like listening to 6 hours of Up With People.**


They stayed in my dorm at Michigan the entire week before Super Bowl XVI in Pontiac, at which they "performed." Ate in the same cafeteria. I had no idea who they were, but most of them wore "Up With People" nametags. I asked around, but nobody else knew who they were either.

So whitebread and saccharine, even NFL Films mocked them in the classic "Lost Treasures" series.
   80. Los Angeles ALBERT F. PUJOLS of Anaheim Posted: September 02, 2010 at 06:08 PM (#3632264)
   81. Benji Posted: September 02, 2010 at 06:15 PM (#3632271)
I loved the "Lost Treasures" series. Abraham Abraham cracked me up. NFL Films and HBO do the best sports documentaries.
   82. My Grate Friend, Peason's pants are rankled Posted: September 02, 2010 at 06:22 PM (#3632281)
# 70: This was also his high point, for this season and forever:

http://www.lookoutlanding.com/2010/5/12/1469664/starting-a-meme
   83. Lassus: Posted: September 02, 2010 at 06:39 PM (#3632302)
Benji: if you'd send Darling back to DC for Dibble, we'll take it.

Bite your tongue.

In regards to what Benji wrote, Keith and Cohen have their problems (the latter more than the former), but they are not the Brenamens of the Mets by a long shot. They love Carlos well enough, they are just noticing he's not the same player as he recovers, because he's not. It's honest commentary.


#82 holy crap, that is the most wonderful thing I have ever read. Did that get its own thread here? If not, it should be posted.
   84. David Nieporent (now, with children) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 06:59 PM (#3632334)
I dare anybody to substitute some phrase for "show up" that can make the statement by TDF make any sense at all.

'Embarrass' works.
How, exactly? How would it embarrass you to have your opponent, down by 10 runs, steal a base?

There may be things a player can do to embarrass an opponent -- to which I would say, "Grow up"; grown men should not be worried about being embarrassed -- but how would stealing a base do so?

em*bar*rass: (1) to cause confusion and shame to; make uncomfortably self-conscious; disconcert; abash;

Stealing a base when down by ten is more likely to embarrass yourself.
   85. SugarBear Blanks Posted: September 02, 2010 at 07:15 PM (#3632346)
Nyjer Morgan wears his socks the right way. Maybe that's why he got plunked.
   86. Rich Rifkin Posted: September 02, 2010 at 07:22 PM (#3632353)
"As someone above said, it might seem like trying to run up the score if you steal when you're UP by 10 runs. But down by 10?"

I don't agree that there is a distinction. The idea -- that it is uncool to steal bases when you're up by a great amount of runs -- is based on the understanding that the game is effectively over. De facto, not de jure. Well, it is the same thing when you are down by a great amount of runs -- that the game is effectively over.

This is, of course, an unwritten rule and it contradicts the ideas that "it ain't over til it's over" and that you should play hard until the last out. So if you don't agree with this "unwritten rule" and favor the idea that teams ought to play hard to the end, that should apply to both clubs, not just the one behind.

Personally, I agree with the game is effectively over ethic. Take your normal at bats, but don't steal, don't hit and run, don't do anything overly aggressive on the basepaths. Just wind down the clock -- or in baseball's case, the outs. In basketball, the tradition is just the same -- when there is too little time for a comeback, just take it easy until the game ends. I'm less familiar with hockey, but I have seen blow-outs in the NHL where, in the 3rd period, everyone just goes through the motions until the clock runs out. And in the NFL, if the score is very lopsided, they will bring in subs and won't use trick plays and so on if the game is effectively over.
   87. Lassus: Posted: September 02, 2010 at 07:30 PM (#3632359)
Personally, I agree with the game is effectively over ethic. Take your normal at bats, but don't steal, don't hit and run, don't do anything overly aggressive on the basepaths. Just wind down the clock -- or in baseball's case, the outs.

Something like three ten-run leads have been lost in the last ten days. I just don't get this in the slightest.
   88. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 07:38 PM (#3632364)
I don't agree that there is a distinction. The idea -- that it is uncool to steal bases when you're up by a great amount of runs -- is based on the understanding that the game is effectively over. De facto, not de jure. Well, it is the same thing when you are down by a great amount of runs -- that the game is effectively over.

It's hard to argue with that, but OTOH if I were on the team that was ahead, I'm not sure why I I should be any less indifferent about stolen bases with a ten run lead late in the game than I would be with a three run lead in the ninth inning. Of course it's stupid, but an insult? Not really, not unless you're looking to be insulted over nothing.
   89. Los Angeles ALBERT F. PUJOLS of Anaheim Posted: September 02, 2010 at 07:45 PM (#3632369)
Personally, I agree with the game is effectively over ethic. Take your normal at bats, but don't steal, don't hit and run, don't do anything overly aggressive on the basepaths. Just wind down the clock -- or in baseball's case, the outs.

Something like three ten-run leads have been lost in the last ten days. I just don't get this in the slightest.
Concur. The "effectively over ethic" could also be called the "surrender ethic", and the 4th inning is way too early in the game to surrender. Not to mention, the Nats did end up scoring 10 runs. If their bullpen had held up, this might have been a much closer game.
   90. SugarBear Blanks Posted: September 02, 2010 at 08:05 PM (#3632388)
Of course it's stupid, but an insult?

I'm not sure it's even stupid.

Isn't the lesson the zealots teach about pitcher wins and ERA that every run counts, no matter the context of the game, because it increases the chances of your team winning? It strikes me that no ERA+ zealot can think that it's ever wrong to steal a base, up 15 runs or down 15 runs as long as the percentages are right.

Unless they want to be entirely inconsistent, of course.
   91. Morally Excellent Posted: September 02, 2010 at 08:20 PM (#3632404)
up 15 runs or down 15 runs as long as the percentages are right.


Well, there's a question of whether the percentages will ever be right, given a 15 run gap. From a WPA perspective, it's hard to imagine that the risk of a CS is going to be worth the gain of a SB when you're down by 15 runs.
   92. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 08:25 PM (#3632411)
Concur. The "effectively over ethic" could also be called the "surrender ethic", and the 4th inning is way too early in the game to surrender. Not to mention, the Nats did end up scoring 10 runs. If their bullpen had held up, this might have been a much closer game.

That shows I should stick to following the AL, since I didn't actually see the plays in question, and hadn't realized how early in the game they took place. When I heard about all the complaints over the stolen bases, I'd assumed that it was much later in the game than the 4th inning.

So I retract the "stupid" part, as I now realize it was just an attempt to get back in the game that was perfectly defensible by any standard.
   93. David Nieporent (now, with children) Posted: September 02, 2010 at 08:35 PM (#3632421)
I don't agree that there is a distinction. The idea -- that it is uncool to steal bases when you're up by a great amount of runs -- is based on the understanding that the game is effectively over. De facto, not de jure. Well, it is the same thing when you are down by a great amount of runs -- that the game is effectively over.
The reason that it's uncool to do it when up by 10 is because beating someone by a lot of runs counts the same as beating someone by a few runs, so therefore "running up the score" is gratuitous, a way to humiliate the other team and rub their faces in how badly you beat them. But trying to catch up is not humiliating the other team. There's just no symmetry.
   94. Nasty Nate Posted: September 02, 2010 at 08:46 PM (#3632427)
I've got a bridge to sell anyone who thinks Morgan stealing 2 bases was him trying to help his team catch up.
   95. Joe Bivens, Schmoo from Massachoosetts Posted: September 02, 2010 at 08:47 PM (#3632428)
But, if the Nats came back and won the game, or even made it really close, people would be saying what a great game it was. Since people go to games in the hops of seeing a great game, who would have a problem with someone on the losing side trying to score, trying to get his team back in the game? It doesn't matter if the odds are long, you play to win, and if you lie down and say it's over, you're cheating the paying customers.
   96. Joe Bivens, Schmoo from Massachoosetts Posted: September 02, 2010 at 08:48 PM (#3632431)
Regardless, NN. And, the game ended a lot closer than we thought it would when it was 15-4.
   97. Home Run Teal & Black Black Black Gone! Posted: September 02, 2010 at 09:08 PM (#3632449)
I don't know if Nyjer did anything truly wrong other than get clocked.
   98. Joe Bivens, Schmoo from Massachoosetts Posted: September 02, 2010 at 09:13 PM (#3632454)
Once the fight starts, wrong goes out the window. Everyone is wrong, or everyone is right. It's a fight.
   99. TDF, situational idiot Posted: September 02, 2010 at 09:19 PM (#3632463)
Of course it's stupid, but an insult? Not really, not unless you're looking to be insulted over nothing.
Real current and former MLB players disagree with you. I'm sure there are things you find insulting in your line of work that those outside would find innocuous.
   100. Athletic Supporter leads the nation in drifters Posted: September 02, 2010 at 09:43 PM (#3632477)
It seems absolutely clear (watching his body language) that:

1) there is an unwritten rule about not stealing in that situation
2) Morgan was stealing specifically to break that rule
3) Morgan wasn't breaking the rule as any sort of protest that the rule was stupid; he was doing it to be a jackass

Given all of these, I don't see how whether or not the rule is stupid has any bearing on the evaluation of Morgan's actions. It would be one thing if he was doing it because he thought the rule was stupid, but it wasn't remotely that noble. He was doing it to piss off the Marlins and not really for any other reason. I half expected a really violent tag when he stole 3rd.

I like Morgan, but then again, I like heels, and Morgan is definitely squarely in that category.
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