CyYoung31
Shift Leader
I think Elder was called up to give several innings if we got up or down big. We’ve leaned on our main guys a lot.
I’ve leaned on your mom a lot.
I think Elder was called up to give several innings if we got up or down big. We’ve leaned on our main guys a lot.
I think Elder was called up to give several innings if we got up or down big. We’ve leaned on our main guys a lot.
Who cares about the As?
So Strider is having a historic season as a starter. This is not to call out anyone, but I know many believed his role would be the bullpen, and I don't think anyone could have predicted this.
Is it not likely that Goodens fall was related to drug and alcohol issues?
Don't think anyone is particularly worried about being "called out" - there's a legitimate chance he becomes more useful at the back end of games at some point if he doesn't develop a third pitch of some kind.
If - and actually more to the point when - he loses a couple ticks off his fastball, he suddenly becomes MUCH MORE normal and hittable. Anderson can get it up there in the mid-90s and has an elite change - how's he doing now that everyone has figured out those are the only pitches he has? If Strider has to take a little off that fastball to get into the 6th inning of games and is throwing 95-96 instead of 99-100 (in the hope he can reach for that extra gear to blow someone away in tight spots) he'll become human. He gets A LOT of takes on sliders in the middle of the zone right now because everyone has to gear up for 99 - that won't always be the case (unless he develops some kind of show-me third offering). That fastball isn't Rivera's cutter (or even Jansen's for that matter) that he can throw 18 times out of every 20 pitches - eventually hitters are going to be able to catch up to it. To survive with the two pitches he has, he needs to be deGrom - and I don't think it's unfair to be someone who takes a wait-and-see approach about that. deGrom's a unicorn when he's healthy, sure - is there a whole lot of reason not to expect Strider to have the same kind of trouble staying healthy since his shoulder wasn't designed to throw a ball that way anymore than Jacob's?
None of that takes anything away from what Strider's accomplished - he's likely going to be in the record books for quite some time and it's been absolutely fascinating to watch him. I don't miss a single pitch of any of his starts. That said, Gooden was at his peak when I was in high school and was being talked about in the same breath as all-time greats too. 3-4 years later he was a middle or back-end starter by the time he was 30.
Strider's change is actually pretty good, in the samples we've seen, he just hasn't really had to use it much. His combination of skill/talent, discipline, and intelligence makes me optimistic we haven't seen the end-point of his development.
Don't think anyone is particularly worried about being "called out" - there's a legitimate chance he becomes more useful at the back end of games at some point if he doesn't develop a third pitch of some kind.
If - and actually more to the point when - he loses a couple ticks off his fastball, he suddenly becomes MUCH MORE normal and hittable. Anderson can get it up there in the mid-90s and has an elite change - how's he doing now that everyone has figured out those are the only pitches he has? If Strider has to take a little off that fastball to get into the 6th inning of games and is throwing 95-96 instead of 99-100 (in the hope he can reach for that extra gear to blow someone away in tight spots) he'll become human. He gets A LOT of takes on sliders in the middle of the zone right now because everyone has to gear up for 99 - that won't always be the case (unless he develops some kind of show-me third offering). That fastball isn't Rivera's cutter (or even Jansen's for that matter) that he can throw 18 times out of every 20 pitches - eventually hitters are going to be able to catch up to it. To survive with the two pitches he has, he needs to be deGrom - and I don't think it's unfair to be someone who takes a wait-and-see approach about that. deGrom's a unicorn when he's healthy, sure - is there a whole lot of reason not to expect Strider to have the same kind of trouble staying healthy since his shoulder wasn't designed to throw a ball that way anymore than Jacob's?
None of that takes anything away from what Strider's accomplished - he's likely going to be in the record books for quite some time and it's been absolutely fascinating to watch him. I don't miss a single pitch of any of his starts. That said, Gooden was at his peak when I was in high school and was being talked about in the same breath as all-time greats too. 3-4 years later he was a middle or back-end starter by the time he was 30.
I’ve leaned on your mom a lot.
His interviews are legit entertaining. He has even said he hasn’t needed his change much so why throw it
Strider's change is actually pretty good, in the samples we've seen, he just hasn't really had to use it much. His combination of skill/talent, discipline, and intelligence makes me optimistic we haven't seen the end-point of his development.