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5GoldGlovesOF,75

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Everything posted by 5GoldGlovesOF,75

  1. Absolutely hated the hiring -- not the man -- because it represented a total shift in the Red Sox philosophy of rebuilding. It was obvious Bloom was hired to trade the best homegrown player of our lifetimes, and fairly impossible he'd receive commensurate talent in return (especially when it was also obvious he was forced to include sourpuss Price in the deal). But if you're swapping a Hall of Famer like Betts from a club in dire need of pitching to the most pitching-rich team in the business, it is unforgivable not to land at least one acceptable arm.
  2. I saw this and thought: maybe he doesn't see live pitching as well as he used to. Has anyone tested Raffy's vision lately? This was the main career downfall of Jim Rice, a guy who never lost his strength, and still whacks golf balls a mile... but they just sit still on the grass, waiting to be punished.
  3. Except Bloom studied the Classics at Yale. That explains why he traded for Schwarber, whose speciality is to Homer, but also the Odyssey of Chaim's yearly bargain bin pitching staffs.
  4. Just guessing: Monday was Baltimore's home opener, so they left Tuesday free in case of a snow-out or freezing-rainout in March.
  5. It is a measured fact that modern pitchers on average throw harder than ever. I'm not a physicist (though the one I watch on TV knows nothing about baseball), but doesn't a timed swing that barrels a fast pitch usually make the resultant hit go farther than off a slow pitch? If true, then batters don't need to swing with all their might... and should instead use a little less violence and a little more precision. Maybe they do, and when they whiff, it's the physical momentum of a swing and miss that just looks like they're trying to pulverize the pill... They all made the majors, but hopefully some recall amateur advice on the best approach vs. fastballs: don't swing harder, swing sooner... ... the question is: do professional coaches remember this?
  6. If Crochet wins the Cy Young, there's a clause that allows Giolito to opt out. Just in from NBC Sports Boston blabbing heads, explaining the Red Sox' offensive offense: Raffy originally hurt his shoulder in Spring Training 2024 hitting weighted baseballs slipped into pitching machines by Driveline coaches hired by Breslow. Nerd scandal!
  7. He'll do better in THE SHOW than he will in the concealment.
  8. Why can't ex-Yankee coaches come to Boston and construct more batters that are 6 foot-7 who weigh 282 pounds?
  9. 1-for-34 with 26 Ks. So that means eight times he made contact. If any of us stood in the box and with two hands just held a torpedo bat parallel over the center of the plate for 34 at bats, could at least nine pitches ricochet off a sweet spot and stay fair? Could even two land over infielders... or more likely dribble in front of them? Notice I didn't say anything about running them out, or making Papelbon squeal (that might be difficult, after most of the ricochets bounce off my face).
  10. Devers now has 15 Ks in five games, and passed Joe DiMaggio's 13 out of 622 plate appearances in 1941. But I'm not here to bash Raffy, because yesterday I witnessed the worst strikeout ever by Ceddanne Rafaela: three pitches, three straight curveballs in the dirt, three windmill swings and misses with his head looking at the 10th floor dorm room of the north building of Boston University's Warren Towers on Commonwealth Avenue. Why would anyone ever throw him anything near his bat again? Anthony-Duran-Abreu
  11. "If he stays healthy, we'll finally get to see a full season of Trevor Story." How many times was this uttered, and who else was afraid to reply what they were really thinking: yikes.
  12. I've coached Little League, high school and college, and even 10-year olds understand when we tell them, "You can't hit what you don't see." But guys pull their heads all the time when they overswing trying to pull home runs (they also "step in the bucket" when they pull their whole bodies out of the box). If you run video on all Raffy's swings from this weekend, and stop at the point where he misses, I'll bet his head is already turned toward first base. But on his last swing in his last at bat yesterday -- when he hit a foul to the left side -- his head was right down over the plate, with eyes looking in the vicinity of contact. That's hope... One simple strategy is called Shoulder To Shoulder: batter's stance starts with chin on front shoulder, and he practices keeping it in the same spot during his swing, which should end with chin on back shoulder. It's all designed to keep the head still -- which is always the goal to keep your eyes on the ball. Maybe his shoulder is too sore or there's just some impingement preventing him from staying contained?
  13. The '23 to '24 heart of the order replaced Justin Turner with Tyler O'Neill -- whose K-rate was basically twice as bad: 33.6% to 17.6%. Verdugo wasn't a whiffer -- 15.4% in '23 -- and he was traded before last year, too. Five guys fanned at least 110 times in '23, while six did in '24, but that included four outfielders as opposed to just Adam Duvall. Casas missed 100 games, but he and his subs still struck out more than he alone did in '23. It goes on. This new offense, even if they add the energy of Anthony and Mayer, will still be hacking and flailing. Maybe they can market a a new line of Golden Sombreros in different colors and sell them instead of batting helmets.
  14. Ironically, Campbell bought into organizational advice on how to improve, and worked on the changes so diligently that he made the majors in one year. Maybe it just takes old dogs longer to learn new tricks. It worked in 2018 when JD Martinez helped younger guys improve, and in '21 when Schwarber did the same. Hopefully, Bregman can make a similar impact and impart different perspectives. Meanwhile, an offense that strikes out as much as the Red Sox has major issues, and is doomed to lose many frustrating games.
  15. If the Red Sox could just play in Mexico vs. pitchers not good enough for the majors, they'd score at least 10 runs a game.
  16. At least the Sox didn't trade him for "a future All-Star," according to the other team's GM. Can we really blame this Small Suckitude Start all on Raffy? After four games on the road vs. a good team, Boston leads the American League in Strikeouts, but more importantly, in Left On Base. The Red Sox are batting .146 with Runners In Scoring Position (6-for-41). Two guys each have two of those hits, Abreu (2-for-3) and Campbell (2-for-4). Devers is 0-for-4 with two walks with RISP. That means everyone else is 2-for-30... on an offense some of us have called overrated since last year.
  17. Raffy's last at bat was at least promising, and not just because he walked -- instead of whiffed to end the game. With two outs In the 9th inning of Game Four, and the tying and winning runs on base, Devers' best swing of his weekend might have been the 3-2 foul to left, because for those watching carefully, his head was right down on the ball the whole swing... and not pulling off, like on just about every strikeout. Even if sore shoulders are a factor (which I don't believe, considering he was trying to launch pitches to the Oklahoma on every swing) it can't hurt his shoulders more if he shortens up and goes oppo. He can still do this.
  18. At his age, with damaged shoulder/s, this may be as good as it gets. Saying "This is who I am" isn't a lie right now, but swinging from the heels no matter what the count isn't who Raffy used to be. The best hitters make constant adjustments during their careers. When Yaz was in his 20s, supple muscles allowed him to hold his bat six feet above his head and still catch up to fastballs thrown off 15-inch mounds. But as he aged he tried a million different stances and swings to compensate for broken down body parts, just to compete... and he still contributed into his 40s.
  19. No proof here, but speculation: Refsnyder keeps his mouth shut no matter his game usage, because he is already regarded by the org as a future coach.
  20. Like I said, on the bench as a non-starter. But if Yoshida starts blasting extra-base hits, he could force his way back into the line-up, at least at part-time LF or DH. I don't think Devers stays healthy. Even after half a year of shoulder issues (including, apparently this winter) he was still swinging from his heels at pitches out of the strike zone and whiffing three times in a row. On Day One. Does any fan feel he has changed a bit? Forget about adjusting to DH; how about adjusting as a professional hitter -- did he shorten up with two strikes and try to line a pitch to the left side even once? As to who Yoshida could replace on the current roster, do the Sox really need to carry eight relievers? The last guy is always on the Woo train, anyway. Also, if Refsnyder isn't going to platoon with Abreu or even pinch-hit for him, then he becomes expendable. The problem is if Anthony totally rakes in Triple A -- which he already did last summer -- Breslow has to make room in the starting outfield for baseball's Number One position prospect. Trading Yoshida doesn't do that; it's got to be one of yesterday's outfielders we saw in Texas.
  21. I can't give up on a big league hitter in his prime who has averaged .285 and .775 in two seasons. Let Yoshida fully heal and if he has more extra base power, keep him in the majors -- even if it's in the dugout. True contenders can use a quality bat that can come off the bench and make better contact than anyone else on the roster. It's not like Boston is overloaded with talented hitters who don't strike out...
  22. My father had a salmon on his forearm. He would've been glad to get sent to Canada -- that's where he ran into his idol, Ted Williams, when they were both fishing on the Miramichi River. They talked flies, but none that could reach the red seat.
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