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Choi hasn't exactly been tearing it up in AAA, either. The OBP looks good, but his SLG doesn't impress. He'd be a better pinch-hitting option, if nothing else.
I don't see the point of keeping Snow on the team. His defenseisn't much better than Youks', Youks seems to hit righties better than lefties, and Snow is old.
BTW, anybody see this before:
Daughter of Kevin Youkilis
I can't see anyone giving anything of value for Snow. But, it makes sense to invest some energy into making him happier and attempting to dump him.
And it is his ball, and he can take it home if he wants to.
A-Rod is an extraordinary player, yes. It's hard to argue argue a guy's mental approach to the game is flawed when he's been one of the best, if not the best, players in baseball for years. But you can't rule out the chance that A-Rod could be better if he had, in Tewksbury's view, a healthier response to failure. I have my doubts, but it's not completely outlandish. Not everybody can be Mr. Intensity and play like a Paul O'Neill clone. Not everybody can take Manny's dispassionate attitude, either, but the conventional wisdom is that baseball players have to be able to accept failure as a part of the game and not obsess over it.
your buddy bl disagrees.
it is completely outlandish. let's take this and turn it on its head and suggest that manny, who, while very good, is not as great as a-rod, could be a better player if he were a little less affable. saying that a-rod could be better at baseball than he is simply because someone else is very good because at baseball because he's good at being easygoing is by definition ludicrous. yeah, i guess i can't rule it out, but tewksbury's very assertion is specious since it can't be demonstrated that he's right. he's finding causes where there are none.
Choi as a statue on the bench will be a waste, but he's a waster at AAA right now too. He will probably strengthen the bench, but the concern over his approach is pretty un-outlandish.
I like the idea of dealing Snow for squat and then using the savings on Clemens.
...
yeah, i guess i can't rule it out
Your witness.
Really? I wouldnever have thought that of you, Darren.
i can't remember where it was, but the other day i heard something about how manny is very good at finding flaws in other players' approach at the plate from video.
I'll be there on Tuesday, because it's required by state law that at least 80% of games I attend must be started by Tim Wakefield.
Be interesting to see Schilling vs. Wang tonight. Schilling seems to be settling in as about 2/3 good-ankle Schilling and 1/3 bad-ankle Schilling. Too many hits and homers due to too little splitter action, but enough juice on the fastball and enough good splitters to be an effective starter. His current 4.20 ERA is probably not much worse than where he'll end up, I think. (The question as to whether some of his struggles were caused by the 133-pitch outing is open at this point. I tend to be skeptical, but the numbers are not so pretty.)
Wang, on the other hand, is a guy the Sox should pound into the ground, like the Yankees always used to do to Lowe (Game 7 excluded, natch.) Wang has a real nice sinker, but a guy without great control and without swing-and-miss stuff shouldn't be able to get through 5 innings against a lineup like hte Sox'. Those expectations, though, tend to lead to frustating viewing experiences.
Eric Van had an interesting post over at SoSH about Wang:
***
Someone in the game thread suggested that the split is the result of his being deceptive out of the windup but not out of the stretch. And consider:
-- He's a rare guy who has below average K and BB rates, and is better than average on every measure of hardness of contact. The poster child for easy outs early in the count, and that spells deception with a capital D.
-- He has a big career split in ERA between within-division and outside, doing much worse within. This suggests that the more guys see him, the worse he fares.
All of this suggests that his MLB success so far is largely the result of deceiving folks who are unfamiliar with his windup derlivery. The only thing counter to this is that his runners-on numbers this year have gotten worse, whereas the hypothesis says the base-empty numbers should be worse in his second year.
***
On Wang, it's certainly an interesting theory, but his windup looks pretty generic to me. I don't see where a hitter would get deceived.
He nearly comes to a stop at the top of his windup. I could definitely see this messing with players' timing, particularly ones who spin the bat or point it at the pitcher to set up their timing. It's as good a theory as any why Wang has been reasonably successful with a K rate that has not allowed any others to succeed.
Like EVM, I have wondered if teams seeing him a 2nd and 3rd time might start to catch up to him because of this. I hope it's true.
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