Let’s be honest: The trade of R.A. Dickey has given Mets fans every reason to punt on the 2013 season.
Yes, you’re looking ahead to 2014 and 2015, but 2013 comes first.
And maybe, just maybe, there’s a way we can pretend that the Mets could be contenders this year.
So that got me thinking—what is that one combination in 100 that puts the Mets into October?
Login to Join (0 members)
{/exp:tag:subscribed}Page rendered in 0.5655 seconds, 102 querie(s) executed
Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
1. Colin posted on September 03, 2012 at 04:42 PM # hit 0 | hit 0He's the master at that.
...and still leads the lead in walks with 80.
That's an accomplishment of note. I know everybody else trails the lead.
Since hitting that thing, he's gone .152/.304/.276. He'd started every game but six until yesterday. His OBP is still .340, well above average, but a platoon of Jose Constanza and Reed Johnson (in LF, with Prado moving to 2B, as noted) should be able to match that.
I disagree wholeheartedly. Uggla's numbers were sensational during his streak last year. During the 33 game hit streak, he hit .377/.438/.762. After the streak, he obviously cooled off, but he hit .237/.343/.454 the rest of the way (178 PA), which is fine. If you mean that his numbers over the whole season aren't great, that's true. His first half was beyond abysmal, much worse than anything he's done this year. Maybe he's just prone to long streaks.
EDIT: I realize now that you probably meant "overall numbers" to be just that, overall numbers. I took it as a comment on the streak itself, like the criticism you may see every so often about how so-and-so has a long hitting streak, but generally only goes 1 for 4 with a single every day during that streak.
correct. relax big fella
guys like uggla who get late starts tend to see things end early on ye olde skill set. that's a generalization of course
It's too late for "on the horizon." He's been awful all year.
Given this, the Marlins' crappy season and the fact that it's a monstrosity, I think we can safely assume the thing is cursed.
Well, he's looked horrible. But in terms of actual results, an OBP-heavy 92 OPS+ out of a middle infielder isn't exactly awful. He's not worth the money they're paying him, and the contract is going to end up being a huge problem. But benching Uggla for a Jose Constanza/Reed Johnson platoon may not actually improve the team right now.
Uggla's hitting streak last year included a stretch in which his batting average improved in 27 straight games. I'm reasonably confident that nobody has ever done that before.
The problem with Uggla, though, is that he is only worth playing in the middle infield if he is posting a 110 OPS+.
Uggla's fielding isn't great, but it isn't THAT bad. All MLB second basemen this year have an OBP/SLG of .317/.381. Uggla's at .340/.373. He gives back a bit on defense, but he's still a perfectly cromulent player.
He's headed in the wrong direction, of course. And most people (including me) can't stand to watch him, given that he's all walks and strikeouts now. But he's more of an asset in the lineup that Jose Constanza.
I have two questions: What number does the flashing light machine wear, and; what kind of parents name their child flashing light machine?
It's pretty bad, actually.
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.