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MLB > If you had a time machine

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message 101: by Lance (new)

Lance (sportsbookguy) | 15697 comments Mod
Mike wrote: "There's a new book out on the expos called Up, Up, and Away. It says it's the definitive history of the Expos."

Do you know the author? Searching that title gets you a long list of kids books...


message 102: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments Jonah Keri


message 103: by C. John (new)

C. John Kerry (cjkerry) | 12737 comments My second choice would be to go back in time to a game where Ruth is pitching.


message 104: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments That would be cool. I like that choice. I'd like to see him pitch against Walter Johnson. That would be a hell of a game


message 105: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments Or Smoky JOE wOOD
Mike LINN


message 106: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) If I had a time machine, I would go into the future, to see Clayton Kershaw's perfect game. Fuck Hamley Ramirez.


message 107: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments Holy cow!


message 108: by Lance (new)

Lance (sportsbookguy) | 15697 comments Mod
Yikes!


message 109: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) Mattingly said he considered sending in Carlos Triunfel as a defensive replacement for Ramirez in the seventh inning, but decided the eight-run lead wasn't enough. He made the switch in the eighth.

The 8-run lead wasn't enough?
#firedonmattingly


message 110: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) I'm sorry. Should I not have sworn? Should I have used an asterisk instead of a vowel? Using the GoodReads app on my phone, I can't edit what I post. Anyway, the decision was Mattingly's, but Hanley could have said something to him . But I guess most players are too vain to admit to weakness on the field. Do their egos stand in the way of being real team players? What my mom would call false pride.


message 111: by Lance (new)

Lance (sportsbookguy) | 15697 comments Mod
No, no asterisk was necessary. Just call it the shock value. As for your question on whether egos get in the way of being team players, the answer sadly is more often than not, they do. Of course there are exceptions, but yes that happens alot in all sports.


message 112: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) Now I'm thinking narcissism must play a part. In which case, that would account for a player thinking no matter how he felt he would be able to help the team.


message 113: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments Lisa, how do you really feel? Lol. You know that's a tough call for a player because everyone thinks their the best and wants to be out there. If he got taken out too early then he might have felt embarrassed. . I'm guessing he has an injury due to you passionate outburst.


message 114: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments Lisa it seems like you are fine to me. Any news about your facebook post last week?


message 115: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments Unfortunately, Ramirez made an error that happen to cost Kershaw the perfecto, kind of like Jim Joyce did to Galarraga. It`s a shame, but that`s baseball. We will all know in our hearts exactly what Kershaw did.
Mike Linn
P.S. I got back from Viet Nam when I was 21 , and at our first family dinner in nearly 2 years, my mother, who I had never heard say anything stronger than: HELL`S BELLS, said; "would someone please pass the fu*$ng salt. My mouth dropped open, but all we Linn`s did, was laugh! Bravo Lisa.


message 116: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments Ouch I didn't realize there was an error


message 117: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments Me neither now I get it Lisa.


message 118: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) It's not enough to ruin the afterglow of a wonderful game. Of the handful of games I've been to this season it was nice to be there when they won, let alone for such a special event!


message 119: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) Not sure if I made that clear. Hanley did not ruin the game. Completely.


message 120: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments That is an historic event-wish I had been there


message 121: by C. John (new)

C. John Kerry (cjkerry) | 12737 comments Lisa wrote: "Mattingly said he considered sending in Carlos Triunfel as a defensive replacement for Ramirez in the seventh inning, but decided the eight-run lead wasn't enough. He made the switch in the eighth...."

Well Boston once had an 11 run lead over Toronto and the Jays ended up winning the game 15-13.


message 122: by Lance (new)

Lance (sportsbookguy) | 15697 comments Mod
I watched the Twins lose a 10-0 lead to the Indians on the next to last day in 1984 that eliminated them in a thrilling pennant race with the Royals. After the game, Gary Gaetti gave one of my favorite quotes of all time: "It's hard to play baseball with both hands around your neck."


message 123: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) Well, I would venture to say that neither the Sox nor the Twins had a no-hitter going with a Cy Young Award winner pitching for them. #amiright


message 124: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) But what a bummer to watch those wonderful leads slip away like that. And I must admit, the Dodgers have done their fair share of that also. I just don't think it was at all likely to happen in this case. And that is a wonderful quote.


message 125: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments Is Hanley hurt? Because if he isn't I can't recall a team who takes out their starting shortstop for defensive purposes.


message 126: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) Yes! He was hit on his right hand ring finger the day before Kershaws' no hitter and was taken out of the game and listed as day to day!


message 127: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) P.S. #firedonmattingly


message 128: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments I could have sworn I said the exact same thing as Lisa, 6 MONTHS AGO! (or 3, or 12,or......
Mike Linn
Torre campaigned for him to get the Yankee job also


message 129: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments Interesting article by Rosenberg about LA Dodgers and Phillies:
http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/do...


message 130: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments Several years ago, while still with the Marlins, Hanley made National sports headlines by loafing after a ball all the way into the left field corner. His fielding numbers on paper, indicate being slightly BELOW being an average fielding shortstop, and he has never, and will probably NOT win a gold glove award. His error the other night, really was no big deal, but because of what was going on, he is once again in a familiar place- the hot seat. If my gut instinct is right, once he is a free agent again, among others, the Yankee tailor will be looking to take his measurements
Mike Linn


message 131: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments hahahah-I think you may be right Mike. I remember that play very well. He had to apologize publicly


message 132: by Jim (new)

Jim Townsend | 212 comments Remember that the 1951 Giants- Dodgers playoff counted as regular season. My pick would be either 1980 NLCS or Halladay's perfecto@ Marlins 5/29/2010.


message 133: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments Well I saw those 5 games against Houston. One of the top 2 or three best playoffs ever.(but not in person).
Also 1951 was the last year that teams could choose whether to bat first or last when they were at home. Until 1951 it was the home team's choice. Cool!
Haliday's no hitter against Cincy in 2010 meant a lot more


message 134: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) Hey Harold, you threw me when you said that article was by Rosenberg. Its Rosenthal, which matters to me only because I follow him on Twitter and have had a little interaction with him. Anyway what does this mean: . Now, less than a year later, he’s going to reverse a course, waive his 10-and-5 rights and approve a deal? And why wouldn't the other teams be interested in acquiring a shortstop? Seems like LA. & New York will want new ones next season.


message 135: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Kilbride (lisajen) Oh Michael, there's a Facebook page called Fire Don Mattingly you might like.


message 136: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments Hey Lisa, he's saying that just a year ago Utley signed a team friendly deal for two years, plus three one year options. So why in a years time after trying so hard to stay here would he say ok you can trade me. Rosenthal doesn't see Rollins wanting to leave either since his wife is from here and they have a home here. Howard and Lee are owed a ton of Cash still so basically the Phil's are going to ride it out with these guys and see what happens.


message 137: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments L.A. and New York will want a shortstop next year, just not a 36 year old one. I thought the Dodgers had a Cuban kid who played short while Hanley was injured.


message 138: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments Omg Mattingly might not be great but it's it's not his fault that The Dodgers haven't been Giant Slayers so to speak. L.A. I has made up 5 games in the last week. The Dodgers are only as good as their team Doctor. I still believe this is a hard team to gauge. Even with all the name players I still don't like their lineup. Crawford's hurt, A-Gon has seen his power numbers go down two years in a row and now after a hot April he's hitting .250 close to July. Eithier has 3 home runs, Uribe has been hurt, the catcher has been hurt although hit can't hit while healthy. Hanley has 10 homers but is another .250 hitter. Dee Gordon has cooled off after a nice start. Kemp and Puig are the only two playing well and the reports keep saying they want to get rid of Kemp. They have 3 solid starters that are keeping them in the race. This is a hard team to read because the names jump out at you as star players but most of them haven't had a good season for a couple of years now.


message 139: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments Hey Mike, you REALLY think Mattingly can manage? True , this is a star-studded , overpaid, underachieving team, but how much does that roster really have to beat. The Giants-period. Every team is hurting, but give me Joe Maddon any day, and I`ll take my chances.
Mike Linn


message 140: by Harold (last edited Jun 21, 2014 04:49AM) (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments Sorry I'm late but Mike A. answered your question and yes I did mistakenly refer to Rosenberg rather than Ken Rosenthal. I have read that the dodgers are happy with Dee at second and they won't trade for Rollins to replace Hanley because the power is one sided plus the age of Rollins would make it foolish. The Giants have Brandon Crawford at ss. But I think they would love Utley even at 35 to bolster 2nd base.
Utley has been a Philly since he came up shortly in 2004 and I think he wants to be a Philly for life. His wife does animal cruelty work in the area and they are happy here. BUT Utley wants to win and if they are 6 games under .500 by the all-star game, I think he'd approve a trade to the Giants. The real question is what could the Giants provide in return. But today the Phillies are only 3.5 games out with Lee on the not too distant horizon and now a healthy Cody Asche. Maybe they can make a run.(whose kidding who?)
And Mike Linn, I wouldn't count the Dodgers out yet. They still have the best pitching staff and as you correctly say, it's pitching that counts. The Giants are faltering with their pitching and while they have been hitting timely and with power, I'm not convinced they can sustain it.
PS the dodger shortstop who I thought looked great when Hanley was injured is Erisbel Arruebarruena


message 141: by Michael Linn (last edited Jun 21, 2014 04:49AM) (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments There are 90 games to go, the Dodgers are still the team to beat there, I just wish they had a manager
Mike Linn
And they`ve cut a 9 1/2 game deficit to 4


message 142: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments It's not that I think he's a great or even good manager, hell even Danny Ozark won 3 division titles with the Phillies, i just think he's a lightning rod for criticism because people expect this team to win it all. I agree with you on Madden. It would be interesting to see what he could do with a normal payroll. Just my opinion now but I don't think managers have the same impact that they used to. I'm not sure how you judge them. If they have a big payroll and don't win they're bad, if they have a low payroll and do ok they're great. Who knows maybe if Tampa had more money and kept some of their guys with long term deals Maddon might have had a tougher time being forced to play some of these guys. His outfield might have been Crawford, Hamilton, and Delmon Young, who all could have easily been on the DL at the same time.


message 143: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments Harold, the Phillies aren't that good their division stinks. The bull pen is shaping up who knows. Remember the 73 mets went 82-79 and won the east.


message 144: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments I agree that managers in baseball are less causative of results than probably any other sport. But when it comes to a close division race, it's like what Buck Showalter says. He works his tail off for years and he says it may account for two wins a season, but that may be the difference in making the playoffs.
Managing is just that; managing the players efforts and keeping them disciplined and engaged. You don't need to be a genius to do that.(Ozark was probably the dumbest manager I can ever recall


message 145: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments Managers are difficult to judge. How many wins does a good manager get all by himself for a year? A handful? If a manager gets ANY by himself, that`s good managing, but the converse has to be true too. With a star-studded team, does a manager COST his team victories. I think the most difficult thing managers HAVE to do, is coordinate the bullpens, one of the hardest, if not THE hardest task in baseball. How good was a Billy Martin, abraisive and all, improving teams wherever he went? Or was he very counter-productive?
Mike Linn


message 146: by Lance (new)

Lance (sportsbookguy) | 15697 comments Mod
I do believe managers have impact on a club's performance to a degree. The talk about Maddon is good. My exhibit A for a manager making an impact is the above mentioned Buck Showalter. Where were the Orioles when he was hired in the middle of 2011 and where are they now? A playoff appearance in 2012 and a significant player in the AL East. Yes it's weaker this year but you get my point. They would not be there without Showalter.


message 147: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments The major knock on Showalter , was that he was Hitler in PINSTRIPES! There has to be a reason he was dismissed from 2 clubs that went on immediately to win championships. I guess this time around, he`s mellowed(right) and lets his experience take over.
Mike Linn


message 148: by Mike (new)

Mike (mike9) | 6455 comments In New York George thought he should have won and didn't. Goodbye


message 149: by Michael Linn (new)

Michael Linn | 11288 comments And in Arizona?
Mike Linn


message 150: by Harold (new)

Harold Kasselman | 19194 comments Mike I agree the Phillies aren't a playoff team but injuries and underperforming by other teams can make some surprising endings. Look at the Cards in 2011- I think they were mostly .5oo until the last 6 weeks and went bonkers. of course they were a much better team that us. My point is that the Phillies brass won't trade the veterans if they stay within 6 games of first. They may even try to add a bat or starter.
I still think the Nats will pull away in late July.


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