Jump to content
Talk Sox
  • Create Account

sk7326

Verified Member
  • Posts

    7,647
  • Joined

  • Last visited

 Content Type 

Profiles

Boston Red Sox Videos

2026 Boston Red Sox Top Prospects Ranking

Boston Red Sox Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

Guides & Resources

2025 Boston Red Sox Draft Pick Tracker

News

2026 Boston Red Sox Draft Pick Tracker

Forums

Blogs

Events

Store

Downloads

Gallery

Everything posted by sk7326

  1. Devers has had a terrific postseason and has earned the chance to start. There is not much defensively separating him and Nunez and Devers' bat is much better. Devers' performance against the best competition has been very enouraging.
  2. It's a bit reductive. And it is hard to tell where managers end and players begin in terms of credit/blame pie. A bad manager can only screw things up so much. I mean the Royals won two pennants with a bad tactical manager. The Rangers did too. (both are probably very good at the stuff we don't see) But either way you want sustained excellence - building a successful culture that can optimize players. Cora has shown a ton in year 1 - but hell, he still has to demonstrate more over time ... I mean Kevin Cash has a strong track record for what you want from a manager without the hardware.
  3. The Red Sox bullpen has been unfairly maligned because of a stretch late in the year where Sale's absence created a serious lack of reliable innings from the starting rotation. But the bullpen in reality has largely been pretty good all season, and Brasier's emergence late was huge. The team's depth has been a tremendous strength - which allowed them to absorb Devers' struggles, and then allow for Devers to re-emerge in October. The Red Sox have been the league's best team from wire to wire without a real weakness (shaky infield defense and an offensive black hole at catcher). They are the best team in the league. They might not win the World Series - because that's baseball. But we should not be afraid of the reality.
  4. The thing with the shift is that it should have caused an inordinately large LH/RH split leaguewide - since lefthanders are subject to the most extreme shifting. But as far as I can tell, there is not much actual evidence therein. The emphasis on defensive positioning has been a long time coming - the Royals won two pennants on it. Like any sport the league became copycats there. Eventually there will be a team which will just feast on slap hitting and maybe the curve bends back. The move to cable is less than it seems too. I mean outside of the NFL, the other major sports all run their playoffs predominantly on cable prior to the Finals - and they are all still paying through the nose for the rights to do so. FOX put the LCS on FS1 because the channel needed some sort of ratings boost. Pace of play does have some merit - although stuff like a pitch clock is a bad idea. I think a better idea is saying that a pitcher who enters the game has to face at least three hitters. The comical level of pitching changes in close games and hyper matching up is bad. Also - while the emphasis on bullpens is sensible (third time through the order penalties and so forth) - a world where we are no longer expecting high paid starting pitchers to be Jack Morris in 1991-style heroes I think is less entertaining. (and entertainment of course is why all of this exists in the first place) The league could also benefit from people at the league office level who actually celebrated the players and stars the game is generating now. (MLB network's flagship broadcast was 20+ weeks of Grandpa Simpson "Old Men Yell At Cloud" level get off my lawn bellyaching) There are no shortage of young stars in this World Series - let's see the league embrace it.
  5. The checks were still clearing. I'd take a vacation too.
  6. The Red Sox were overloading in 2013 - they talked about their shifting then. The Pirates had a dedicated analytics assistant for defensive positioning at least that long. It is hard to argue that shifts are okay, while shifts that are better thought out are bad. I mean there are definitely aspects of analytically driven baseball which are antithetical to fun - bullpen games being the most egregious. Shifts are just the usual cat and mouse game between defense and offense. The pace of play stuff is silly - and it is one of the areas where the shifting HAS hurt. There is evidence that walks are up - possibly because pitchers are trying to be too fine to pitch to the defensive alignment. I mean, the biggest atrocity of the LCS series entertainment-wise was Game 1 of the LCS ... and that's because allegedly the two best teams in baseball could not stop walking people.
  7. Tito, Dick Williams ... everybody else Cora is off to a terrific start ... at the same time Farrell's start is not all that dissimilar. (Cora obviously started with a better situation) Moreover - Tito and Williams' results in other places reinforced their quality.
  8. Because it costs less money
  9. why? there are holes in the infield - just in different places. I mean back in the 90s I remember teams shifting for lefthanders - they are just better positioned now. The actual bad part of the shifting is increasing the amount of walks.
  10. Responsibility #1 - don't make an out Responsibility #2 - see responsibility #1
  11. NL purists get a thrill from watching somebody do a job badly. I like good baseball so I want the DH.
  12. I live in the real world where 12 games proves nothing one way or the other. The 100+ games of 1.008 OPS shows far more evidence that if you added 100 games to the 12, the OPS would go up. Location in the batting order means almost exactly bubkus. The team that got thrashed was in every game entering the 8th inning. I mean the sweep at Tampa the Red Sox suffered - that was an actual thrashing.
  13. This season has resembled 2013 from my recollection. There was a new manager. The Red Sox were the league's best team from start to finish. However, it was hard to fully embrace it - if nothing else, due to the nature of Red Sox fans generally. You watched the Tampa series, and them pulling out close games and beating a division rival we respected the hell out of. You watched the Detroit series, against a team with a filthy starting rotation - you wondered how they could match up. And then they beat them - complete with an extremely unlikely on paper defeat of Verlander by our #2 starter.
  14. I don't know if they have done any work with him during the season ... but it would make much more sense for the lineup to play him at 1B. But the most likely move is to sub him for Bradley, especially if there is a lefthander on the mound. This is one of the reasons that the AL team has a (very slight) edge in the World Series over an NL team. The AL's pinch hitter in an NL ball park is better than the NL team's DH in an AL park.
  15. Bregman went 1 for 9 in the 2 games at leadoff. Bregman went 2 for 15 in the 5 game. Aside from the teeny tiny sample size problem - there is much more evidence that (gasp!) the Red Sox pitched him well than anything else. OUTS ARE BAD ... there was a reason Boston and Houston were both near the bottom in sacrifice hits. Productive outs reduce your expected runs in almost every situation. The game will always change - that's fine.
  16. The Astros were so defeated that both game 3 and 4 were on the table in the 8th inning at worst.
  17. The Red Sox were the best team in the league in 2007 - they got within one game of death. The Red Sox were arguably the best team in the league in 2004 - we know how desperate that got The Red Sox were the best team in the league in 2013 - they were never in dire trouble It's baseball - the best thing about the postseason is that it's a tense exciting way to determine a champion. It has next to nothing to do with identifying the best team. And that's fine.
  18. Bregman was inches away from a game winning double in Game 4. Price was brilliant in Game 5 and that's baseball for you. I did not know the NL switched to aluminum bats.
  19. Game 1 is Tuesday. So Price will have 5 days of rest for Game 2.
  20. Hinch moving Bregman had 0 to do with it. The Red Sox played horrendously in Game 1 and lost. Seriously, 10 walks and 3 hit batters would make it hard to beat Baltimore in mid-July. The Red Sox played better in Games 2-5 and won. The Red Sox were relentless offensively - not giving away outs. The bottom of the lineup - the real weak spot of this team all season, came through. Bradley and Devers had great series, and the catcher position was never a serious drag on things.
  21. The studio show on FOX is pretty good. I expect Boston to be favored in the World Series. At the same time, there is no such thing as a true blue "shocker" at this stage of the season. The Dodgers are probably a tougher matchup - but the Brewers could absolutely win the whole thing. And aside from the Red Sox having to be the ones to lose, it'd be a good story for baseball.
  22. Bradley was the deserving MVP of the ALCS. But Devers had a really good series and has had a pretty damn good postseason.
  23. It's baseball - the opponent will be tough. I think we've learned by now that any grand pronouncements of sweep or whatever is based entirely on expertise that gets pulled out of one's butt.
  24. Verlander has lost 1 career postseason game to an AL team - that AL team was BOSTON
  25. After the first time through the order, Cora will start watching the odometer. If Price gets through the order twice, Cora will do backflips.
×
×
  • Create New...