Colon had 5 RBIs vs Cards. Does that raise his chances to above 10% to make the 25 man roster??
Colon had 5 RBIs vs Cards. Does that raise his chances to above 10% to make the 25 man roster??
JohnAdcox (03-05-2018)
50PoundHead (03-04-2018), bravesfanMatt (03-03-2018), Hudson2 (03-04-2018), JohnAdcox (03-05-2018), Managuarantano's Volunteers (03-04-2018), nsacpi (03-03-2018), Tapate50 (03-04-2018), zedsdead (03-04-2018)
Ever since Dansby came up, I questioned his "stepping in the bucket" with right foot as a limiting factor on his hitting ability.
Big Three Sports Blog has an interesting Blog on Dansby's foot work during swing. Compares early '17 to after his return for AAA. I still don't like the continual movement of the right foot. The right foot is the foundation of the swing.
https://www.bigthreesports.com/dansb...training-2018/
Aggression with prospects is fine, but being stupid is not. There should be a way to find a happy medium between a Pirates like idea of being overly cautious with prospects and going stupidly fast with prospects.
Really good article on Dansby - love the detail they go into:
“Getting [your front foot] down too early can mess up timing and alter the kinematic sequencing of the swing.” Jason Ochart quickly summed up via Twitter what I speculated might be true.
For almost all of Swanson’s 2017, before his change in late August, his front foot was down earlier than your standard hitter (in the video on the left above).
“For most hitters, the pressure shifting onto the front foot is what initiates their swing. Force plate data shows that the forceful heel drop works as the trigger of the swing and works as a brake to send energy upward through the body… to accelerate the bat late in the swing arc, as all the best hitters do.”
Breaking down Orchart’s points make a complex explanation simple. A hitter’s front foot is used to initiate their swing. When this foot plants, it helps transfer energy from one’s lower body to upper body. Eventually that energy affects a hitter’s bat.
“Force plate data” sounds complex, but it’s nothing more than a plate on the ground that measures exerted force. In this case, the force from a hitter’s front foot. (YouTube is always here to help as well).
Ochart went on to state research shows that shorter time between the peak of one’s front-foot force and contact with the baseball can lead to greater exit velocity. If your front foot peaks early, as a hitter’s might if they’re planting as early as Swanson was, the effects could be detrimental on the one variable most hitters are focused on.
There are a lot of moving parts. If Santana makes the team as the 4th OF/6th IF, I will be curious to see what happens to a lot of guys. It could boil down to Colon and Lane Adams for the last spot if Santana goes north. I'm still thinking that there will be someone on the opening day roster that currently isn't in camp.
jpx7 (03-04-2018)
Snitker has hinted a couple times that they will start the season with a 7 man pen and go to an 8 man pen when the schedule gets busier.
This means a 5 man bench coming out of spring training: Suzuki, Culberson, Adams (also the weak side of the platoon in left), Santana and Ruiz.
I don't count Tucker since he would be the nominal starter in left.
There is still a chance we pick someone up. In which case one of the 5 listed above would not be on the opening day roster.
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
Is it possible that albies is flying under the radar?
I'm pretty bullish on Anthopolous, but I'm getting nervous that he has inadequately prepared for the quality position player depth that's needed if injuries strike in even a normal way. I know we're not gearing up to win the World Series, but I think there is a basic level of decency you've got to aim for just to keep a winning culture on the team. Added to that, I think it's in the team's best long-term interest to create a plausible way to keep Acuna down for 2 months. How do you do that when Markakis breaks his leg and Dustin Peterson is the next man up?
With all due respect to some of these guys, we're projected to have a couple of AAAA players share time in LF, then multiple AAAA players competing for reserve infield spots. There's still a decent chance he's waiting out the market, but I'm starting to get nervous. Even just one upgrade to our position player group would make a big difference, and I think is warranted.
Hawk (03-05-2018)
I'd sign Brandon Moss for the league minimum once he is released. He is planning to retire if no one signs him, I'd give him a shot to back-up first and play some LF again. He has power and could bounce back enough if given a shot. If not then just cut him as he won't be making much. He could be a Matt Adams replacement if all goes well though. Nothing special but nice to have on your bench and in a platoon in LF IMO. I could see him doing better than Tucker if he bounces back.
Opening day would be ridiculous with Acuna, but I'm legitimately going to have a sad if they decide to hold him down for longer than somewhere between Tax Day-May 1st, unless he has an injury issue or doesn't perform.
Aggression with prospects is fine, but being stupid is not. There should be a way to find a happy medium between a Pirates like idea of being overly cautious with prospects and going stupidly fast with prospects.
Braves1976 (03-04-2018)
You're crazy, AA won't go for that no matter what Snitker wants. We won't give up that extra year for nothing, though we might call him up as soon as we can once that extra year is covered. However, if it is clearly another rebuild then waiting a couple months makes the most sense.
I still believe we are going to read about a large contract for both albies/Acuna in two months. I believe that Liberty has the money and to give the fans the assurance of two cornerstone players will work well to get people through the gate.
I also believe that 2018 is a dark horse for a wc spot and Acuna being up on April 1st goes a long way to getting us there.