CyYoung31
Shift Leader
Keuchel took 8 months off and was decent without roiding lol.
Quit moving the goal posts and take the L.
Keuchel took 8 months off and was decent without roiding lol.
I heard that Colon was hard at work looking for another shot
I heard that Colon was hard at work looking for another shot
Just saw a video of Camargo. Did someone kill Camargo and take his place? Looks like a different guy.
[tw]1228416652255154176[/tw]
I think someone mentioned it earlier, but we should probably sticky this thread and take the off season post off the sticky.
He worked at a law firm near his Knoxville, Tenn., residence, studied for the LSAT and passed it before heading to last year’s Spring Training hoping to just enjoy what would likely be his final baseball season.
Bowman has spring-training-hope-springs-eternal feel good piece on Pfeifer making camp, which contains this factoid:
https://www.mlb.com/news/philip-pfeifer-on-cusp-of-majors-with-braves
The LSAT, like the regular SAT, gives you a score within a range (120 - 180). Even if you miss every question, you still "pass" with a 120. So Bowman's journalistic fact-checking skills are in midseason form at least.
[tw]1228416652255154176[/tw]
There was always a bit of lightning in his bat as a RHH. It’s the other side of the plate where he’d spend the majority of his PAs that’s the real problem.
There was always a bit of lightning in his bat as a RHH. It’s the other side of the plate where he’d spend the majority of his PAs that’s the real problem.
That’s the real issue with Camargo starting. LHH.
Not sure how many times this has to be said, but the LSAT 120 -180 range is different for prospected lawyers compared to actual lawyers. For a prospected lawyer a 180 means you can expect an average 3.2 court case wins per year. But a 180 for an actual lawyer is more like 7 wins a year. This is simple stuff guys.
Not sure how many times this has to be said, but the LSAT 120 -180 range is different for prospected lawyers compared to actual lawyers. For a prospected lawyer a 180 means you can expect an average 3.2 court case wins per year. But a 180 for an actual lawyer is more like 7 wins a year. This is simple stuff guys.