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Here Is Your Baseball Thread!!! (pg. 36)
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Member of X
quote:
Originally posted by trunks1022
i would also suggest they don't trade away cano or wang when the time comes


Any trade for Roger alludes to losing Cano and/or Wang. That will piss me off more than any Mets fan after trading Kazmir!!

Matsui... BANZAI! First HR in 180 bats...
Shamez214
quote:
Originally posted by Member of X
Any trade for Roger alludes to losing Cano and/or Wang. That will piss me off more than any Mets fan after trading Kazmir!!

Matsui... BANZAI! First HR in 180 bats...


I wouldn't go crazy if they trade Wang and Cano. However... if they trade Eric Duncan... that's where I'd go Cuckoo!
Member of X
quote:
Originally posted by Shamez214
I wouldn't go crazy if they trade Wang and Cano. However... if they trade Eric Duncan... that's where I'd go Cuckoo!


He needs to learn to play first then. He's learning a little there but is kind of blocked by E Rod at third.

Douchebag is up to his old tricks tonight even though he started out by throwing some serious gas at 95-96 mph. Reminded me for a split second of 1998 but then the line drive rockets in the latter innings woke me up from my dream.
partyhopper
Yanks help make Buddy Bell look really good in his managerial debut for the Royals (with the worst record in the majors!), as the Royals win 5-3
What will Brian (who was there to see it in person) and the Boss do?

BoSox won today, so they moved ahead and gained some ground on the O's.
Blue Jays also won, so they'll move ahead of Yanks, and push them down to 4th.

Those damn Mets, they couldn't take advantage of both Marlins and Braves losing 2 in a row.
Granted it's his first day back from injury, but Beltran had runners in scoring position three times, but couldn't drive anyone home.
Looks like they'll move down to 4th as well, with Nats beating Braves to move up, and Phillies are not too far behind.
Highmay
quote:
Originally posted by partyhopper
Yanks are helping make Buddy Bell look really good in his managerial debut for the Royals (with the worst record in the majors!)

BoSox won today, so they moved ahead and gained some ground on the O's.
Blue Jays also won, so they're on track to move ahead of Yanks, and push them to 4th.

Those damn Mets, they couldn't take advantage of both Marlins and Braves losing 2 in a row.
Granted it's his first day back from injury, but Beltran had runners in scoring position three times, but couldn't drive anyone home.
Looks like they'll move down to 4th as well, with Nats beating Braves to move up, and Phillies are not too far behind.



thank you, len berman with sports...
Shamez214
quote:
1. ERIC DUNCAN, 3b Age: 20 Ht: 6-3 Wt: 210 B-T: L-R
Drafted: HS—Florham Park, N.J., 2003 (1st round) Signed by: Cesar Presbott

Background: When his family moved from California to New Jersey when he was in fifth grade, Eric Duncan was on his way to becoming a Yankees fan. Duncan, whose father Hal idolized Mickey Mantle, grew up admiring the stars of the recent New York dynasty, such as Derek Jeter and Paul O’Neill, his favorite player. Less than a year after being drafted 27th overall in 2003, he found himself working out next to Jeter at the club’s winter facility in New York. Duncan had committed to Louisiana State, where the coaches considered him the nation's top prep hitter likely to go to college. Once the Yankees selected him in the first round though, it was clear he wasn't going to school. Duncan improved his draft stock by hitting six balls out of the Great American Ballpark during a predraft workout for the Reds, who strongly considered him at No. 14.

Strengths: An advanced hitter for his age, Duncan has significant power. He doesn't have a perfect swing or one that's exceptionally short, but it's a simple stroke that he repeats easily, and he generates good bat speed. His lefthanded pull power should make him an ideal fit for Yankee Stadium. He overpowers pitches left over the plate, ranking among the organization's leaders in extra-base hits as a teenager in his first full season. Duncan impressed the Yankees by showing up to spring training in excellent shape, adding muscle and quickness during the offseason. Low Class A Battle Creek manager Bill Mosiello likened Duncan's work ethic and approach to another lefthanded slugger Mosiello had coached at the University of Tennessee: Todd Helton. Duncan thrived after a promotion to high Class A Tampa, improving both his plate discipline and his defensive consistency at third base.

Weaknesses: While Duncan's error rate improved as the season wore on, he still gives scouts pause about whether or not third base is his best position. His arm is average at best because he short-arms the ball and doesn’t always follow through properly, a correctable flaw. His agility and first-step quickness also are a little below hot-corner standards. With repetition and experience, the Yankees believe he'll be an average defender at third. He tends to get a little pull-happy as many young sluggers do, and he slumped late in his stint at Battle Creek when pitchers exploited that weakness. New York correctly deduced that Duncan was getting stale against Midwest League pitching and with a mediocre team and challenged him with a promotion. He responded by making more consistent contact against tougher competition.

The Future: Duncan was pushed aggressively this year in part because the Yankees needed to showcase their most talented minor leaguer as trade bait. Rodriguez is entrenched as New York's third baseman and is signed for six more seasons. If the Yankees could somehow unload Jason Giambi, Duncan could give them a powerful, cheap option at first base. He probably needs two more years of minor league at-bats before that could happen. In the interim, he remains the New York's most valuable bargaining chip.


That's from Baseball America. So... he's not a good defender. They should stick him at 1st for good.
partyhopper
Dang, Royals beat the Yanks for the second night in a row, 3-1, and take the series
They were one strike away from a shutout before Bernie's home run
Johnson got outpitched again
Shamez214
quote:
Originally posted by partyhopper
Dang, Royals beat the Yanks for the second night in a row, 3-1, and take the series
They were one strike away from a shutout before Bernie's home run
Johnson got outpitched again


Eeeek... yeah... that's bad. Randy should've destroyed that lineup. I dunno man, I'm really starting to think he's done. I most likely am wrong, but I figure I'll say it so if I'm right, I said it before everyone else. :cD

These are his three best games:

Seattle 8.0 7 3 3 1 2 7
Toronto 9.0 7 2 2 1 3 9
Texas 8.0 3 1 1 0 1 7

He still hasn't K'd double digits yet, either. And he's faced teams like the Devil Rays, Athletics, Mets, and Mariners.

Hmmm....
Shamez214
Interesting stat of the day:

Victor Zambrano has given up more than 3 ERs in a start ONCE this year. Meanwhile, RJ has given up more than 3 ERs in a start FOUR times this year.

Granted, it's misleading because VZ has gone 6 innings or less every start except tonight and RJ has gone 6 innings or more every start, but it's still interesting. :toothless
kid nyce
quote:
Originally posted by Shamez214
That's from Baseball America. So... he's not a good defender. They should stick him at 1st for good.


I was in baseball america coming out of highschool in summer of 98 as a top prospect in the catholic collegiate circuit. I played summer ball with the Bayside Yankees. I won 7 awards when I played for the yankees. 3 in Michigan for the Series 11 tournament - 1 in Florida - 2 in San Diego and 1 in St. Louis MO. Baseball was my life up until I hurt my elbow. Torn ligament in my left elbow on a 0-2 slider that i let my palm get under the ball snapping a ligament on the backside of my elbow. I lost temporary use of my left forearm which meant i couldn't squeeze a baseball or grip a bat.

I rehabbed for 4 months and it never was the same. I played d2 in college and hung up the glove and cleats my 2nd year in college. Something just wasn't right ever since that injury. My curve ball never snapped off the table like it use to. My fastball barely reached 85. I was throwing in 87 consistently about 50-70 pitches into a game. 87 mph for a 5'5" asian kid with a left hand curveball that would rip you a new was my forte. I had a killer change up which avg around 80mph from a lefty a change usually drops down and away to a right hand batter. and avg 7mph slower than my heat. the slider which now is a cutter with less pop, was my strike out pitch.

damn everytime i hear baseball america i fall back into another life time when i had scouts clocking my delivery time from behind the fence. I played with the best of them - Rudy Lugo, Jason Patterson, Ryan Dolan, lols sorry for such a long memory post but baseball was what i breathed ate and slept. i love this game!

Member of X
Yanks about to be swept by the lowly Royals. That's kind of a hard pill to swallow to be frank. Yanks starting to show me that they kill when the going gets good and give up a little when it starts to head south. Obviously the 17-1 loss to Boston took a lot of wind out of their sails. Nothing's over... but this team just doesn't have a good feel to me. Maybe I'm wrong, I have been before. I'm not jumping ship just being a realist and what I feel. Look to last year's playoffs, going good up 3-0. Then they fall apart and don't fight back.

Pavano has really been another disappointment. He really doesn't have great stuff.

Ugggh... just frustrated!


:(
Highmay
theyre gonna hear it from Torre tonight...guaranteed...he looks like he's gonna explode...
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