Somebody dig up McLean Stevenson…it’s been renewed!
Read More...Larry Dierker, who has been a part of Major League Baseball in Houston as a player, manager and broadcaster for almost a half-century, will rejoin the team as a special assistant to new Astros president of business operations Reid Ryan, the team announced today.
“I’ll be doing some writing and will be a right-hand man for Reid, mostly in the area of public relations,” Dierker said. “I get the feeling that I will gravitate to the area ...
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1. Mayor Blomberg posted on August 10, 2012 at 10:27 PM # hit 0 | hit 0J.D. Martinez was replaced by Fernando Martinez, who was called up from AAA, by the way.
and yeah, i was pretty disappointed in the guys - they gotta keep those W down - only got 5 left to win, 6 to tie
(And I should talk, because the team I root for has won of of their last ten games & made five errors today!)
actually, not really. the manager is better, the coaches are better, the team is winning - mostly because of all the AAAA guys (the pitching SUXK massively)
which translates to an OPS+ of 85--it's pretty easy to identify the worst 100 RBI seasons in MLB history (Joe Carter, we luvs ya), but I wonder what was the worst season for anyone leading his TEAM in RBIs (or RBI even)
John Ganzel in 1901 had a 53 OPS+ and led the Giants in RBI with 66.
I also found Hobe Ferris who in 1909 led the Browns in RBI with 58 RBI but had a 69 OPS+. The interesting thing about him was that that would be his final season in the majors. He got sent off to Minnesota after that year and spent the rest of his career in the minors. So JD is pulling a Hobe.
Lahman database.
the fact that Aurelio fucking Rodriguez led ANY team in RBIs is mind-boggling--this is a team that had Norm Cash, Willie Horton, Northrup,McAuliffe, Mickey Stanley--one year removed from an ALCS appearance
1. What was the deal with that one year Carter spent in San Diego? Why was he so bad? He put up an 85 OPS+ at age 30 in SD but consistently put up 104 to 130 OPS+ years the four seasons preceding and following his bad San Diego year. Also of interest, he was traded to SD for Sandy Alomar (and others) but then dealt from SD with Roberto Alomar.
2. Of COURSE Jeff Francouer would be on the worst 100 RBI year list.
3. That 2004 Tony Batista season was something special wasn't it? Easily the most impressive bad offensive year in MLB history, 32 HR and 110 RBI (and 14 steals in 20 tries!) but a .272 OBP and an 81 OPS+. How many guys post 30 HR/100 RBI and then have to go to Japan to find a good job the next season?
I suppose Brock's fingers could have slipped. But I'd like to think that he did that intentionally.
(And Dag Nabbit's team has "won of of their last ten games." Which sounds pretty futile to me.)
Meanwhile the team minimized the number of pitchers on the roster by giving a combined 116 starts to its top three pitchers, having John Hiller throw 125 relief innings, having almost all the relievers average 2 innings per appearance, and so on.
My mind went immediately to the 2011 Mariners, but their leader was Miguel Olivo with an ops+ of 80. (62 rbi)
He is number too on that worst 100 RBI season list and he just missed being number one with his 99 RBI, 73 OPS+ season.
See post 15. :-)
I didn't think anyone would admit to being a Mariners fan. :)
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