Ope3
Baseball Grid Addict
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2008
- Messages
- 10,000
- Reaction score
- 7,481
- Points
- 113
Thanks. And damn.Looked like he jammed his wrist. I'm sure he has some discomfort.
Thanks. And damn.Looked like he jammed his wrist. I'm sure he has some discomfort.
Pretty spiffy from our Ace -Yet another one run victory for the Twins
He sure has turned it around from a couple months ago. Now 14-8Pretty spiffy from our Ace -
López answers the call with career-high velocity
ST. PETERSBURG -- The Twins have been running low on star power as they await the end of Carlos Correa’s drawn-out plantar fasciitis saga and seek further updates on Byron Buxton’s most recent hip setback. But every fifth game still brings Pablo Day -- and boy, do they need thiswww.mlb.com
He had never thrown a pitch at 98 mph in his career entering Thursday -- but he threw three of them in this game alone, topping out at 98.6 mph.
Wow - didn’t realize he was up to 14 now - awesome.He sure has turned it around from a couple months ago. Now 14-8
Rocco will evaluate him for 5 days then determine next steps.Looked like he jammed his wrist. I'm sure he has some discomfort.
Those were the days when you knew you were a real Twins fan.Left fielder Gary Ward went 4-for-4 in a 7-3 win in Texas on this date in 1983. It was Howard Sinker's first game as the Star Tribune's Twins beat writer.
Sinker estimates there were maybe 2,000 fans in attendance... on Labor Day!
Those were the days when you knew you were a real Twins fan.
God Bless Herb Carneal as calling the Twins during those bleak years was a tall task. His dulcet tones were as soothing as a cup of warm cocoa on a January snow day and kept this baseball fanatic coming back for more.
as a fan, you could literally walk up 10 minutes before game time and buy a ticket anywhere in the stadium, and you never had to deal with crowds or long lines at the concession stands and bathrooms. so from that perspective, it was great.
My opinion of this is that the talent gap between the best of the best and everyone else is less now days. Ronnie Lott at 75-80% was probably still really good compared to the rest. Winfield Jr at 75-80% probably not as much."Discomfort". I'm trying to envision a scenario where a guy like Ronnie Lott misses large parts of nearly every season he plays in simply because he didn't feel 100% every single day.
Thanks, as your above paragraph provides a perfect definition of bleak years for normal teams/fans. Although, since we’re dealing with the Calvin era, fondly is wholly acceptableI actually look back at the 1983 campaign sort of fondly, as they went 70-92 and finished T5, when the year before they went 60-102 and were DFL. The kids were starting look competitive.
Also the HHH Dome installed air conditioning in June 1983. We didn't have central air at our house, so there were a handful of games my Dad was eager to take us into Mpls to seek shelter from the heat & humidity.
I think Cal also lowered the price of tix in the LF pavilion. Despite the improvement on the field, the AC and more affordable prices they only drew 858,939 which was their lowest ever at the MetroDome. It is the last time they failed to cross the Seven Figure mark (except for pandemic impacted 2020).
It was also the last full season in the Griffith era.
2.38 ERA and 0.99 WHIP over his last 12 starts.Pretty spiffy from our Ace -
López answers the call with career-high velocity
ST. PETERSBURG -- The Twins have been running low on star power as they await the end of Carlos Correa’s drawn-out plantar fasciitis saga and seek further updates on Byron Buxton’s most recent hip setback. But every fifth game still brings Pablo Day -- and boy, do they need thiswww.mlb.com
He had never thrown a pitch at 98 mph in his career entering Thursday -- but he threw three of them in this game alone, topping out at 98.6 mph.
I agree. When Buxton is playing with "discomfort", the Twins are probably better off bringing up a player from Wichita in terms of production.My opinion of this is that the talent gap between the best of the best and everyone else is less now days. Ronnie Lott at 75-80% was probably still really good compared to the rest. Winfield Jr at 75-80% probably not as much.
This is especially true in baseball where the game has gone global. Bigger pool of players means less of a talent gap. Correa played less than 100% most of last year and wasn't very good.
True. But then they let Max Kepler play on a sore knee for two months and wonder why he hasn't hit HR since June.I agree. When Buxton is playing with "discomfort", the Twins are probably better off bringing up a player from Wichita in terms of production.
That is indeed a paradox.True. But then they let Max Kepler play on a sore knee for two months and wonder why he hasn't hit HR since June.
If he could ever have a good start to the season, he’d be a perennial Cy contender.2.38 ERA and 0.99 WHIP over his last 12 starts.
Who would you have wanted to get for $10M to replace him?That is indeed a paradox.
Perhaps some nuance, in that Kepler is a pending Free Agent (not an asset they need to be worried about beyond 2024) and has been a relative Iron Train compared to Buck.
My main issue with they way the Falvey-Levine have handled Kepler was picking up his Team Option for this year to begin with. Given the budget constraints, gambling that his hot 2nd half in 2023 could have been flipped to a tradable asset was Fool's Gold.
I think they had/have ample corner OFs to pick up his ABs. I would have used the resources to acquiring a couple of reliable bullpen arms, or saved it for a trade deadline acquisition.Who would you have wanted to get for $10M to replace him?
That's gold. I actually ran across that a few months ago. I love Sparky in the other dugout.Hard to believe this was 40 years ago from the 1984 WS -
Goose Gossage vs. Kirk Gibson: Should've Walked Him. LOL #mlb
Legendary battle between Goose Gossage and Kirk Gibson. Baseball is the best.#baseball #mlb #pitching #viral Shop now at PitchingNinja.com !Follow on social ...youtube.com
I think the days of the crusty white haired manager/savant was done after Jim Leyland’s retirement.That's gold. I actually ran across that a few months ago. I love Sparky in the other dugout.
In Gibson's career the 1988 G1 bomb he hit off of Eck is obviously more remembered, but this was a biggie too.
Interesting sidenote, that contest (1984 WS G5) was the last World Series game to be played outside and not in Prime Time. The Twins/Cards 1987 G6 was a late afternoon start as well, but played under the Teflon sky of the HHH Dome.
Add Lasorda and you've got your foursome for Sunday morning.Can you imagine sitting down for a couple of cold ones with : Sparky, Dick or Earl Weaver? Those analytics would be amazing.