The 2016 Major League Baseball Player Chatter, News and Fantasy Thread...

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  • Cross
    SBR Hall of Famer
    • 04-15-11
    • 5777

    #2521
    Canwe get the playoffs to start already, these last few weeks of been so awful waiting for it to start.
    Comment
    • Chi_archie
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 07-22-08
      • 63167

      #2522
      Yeah the last two games are the playoffs for a few teams!
      Comment
      • JAKEPEAVY21
        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
        • 03-11-11
        • 29271

        #2523
        Angel Pagan might have a future in the WWE..

        Comment
        • BigSpoon
          SBR MVP
          • 11-04-10
          • 4113

          #2524
          Originally posted by Otters27
          Blue JAYS now at risk of not making the wild card
          11-16 in the month of September. The two constants during September have been leaky bullpen work and issues hitting with RISP.
          Comment
          • Otters27
            BARRELED IN @ SBR!
            • 07-14-07
            • 30756

            #2525
            Mariners fighting tooth and nail to stay alive
            Comment
            • Fire in da hole
              SBR Hall of Famer
              • 09-29-10
              • 6262

              #2526
              Rangers are taking down the AMerican League again this year.
              Comment
              • EmpireMaker
                SBR Posting Legend
                • 06-18-09
                • 15580

                #2527
                The White Sox are set to replace manager Robin Ventura with bench coach Rick Renteria, reports Daryl Van Schouwen of the Chicago Sun-Times. General manager Rick Hahn is likely to announce the move at an 11 a.m. press conference on Monday.
                [RELATED: Three Needs: White Sox]
                It’s unclear if the decision to end Ventura’s tenure in Chicago is his call, the club’s or a combination of both. Bob Nightengale of USA Today reported Wednesday that the White Sox were hoping to re-sign Ventura, whose contract will expire at season’s end, if he wanted to return. Ventura is content to move on, per Van Schouwen, who adds that the 49-year-old’s relationship with the organization is “amicable” and devoid of hard feelings.

                Ventura, a former third baseman who spent the majority of his 16-year major league career with the White Sox, took over their dugout in 2012. Unfortunately for Ventura and the club, his stint as its manager hasn’t been nearly as successful as his playing days were, though it’s not as if Ventura has been given excellent rosters during his five years as Chicago’s skipper.
                Under Ventura, the White Sox have gone 375-433 with only one above-.500 campaign and no playoff berths, thereby extending their postseason drought to eight years. The Ventura-led Sox got off to an excellent start this year with a season-best 24-12 mark on May 13, but they’ve gone just 54-70 since and now own the American League’s fifth-worst record (78-82).
                In Renteria, the White Sox have someone with previous managerial experience in the city. Renteria oversaw a rebuilding Cubs team that finished 73-89 in 2014, and the 54-year-old has drawn praise this season from Ventura and other White Sox coaches, notes Van Schouwen. Renteria is also a fluent Spanish speaker, which is an obvious asset.
                “He’s just a good baseball guy,’’ Ventura said of Renteria. “You see the work he puts in, all the little things he does and [what he can do for] our Latin guys. His interaction. He does a lot of stuff people don’t see. Gets there early, does video work. It’s been great.’’
                While the White Sox are set to move forward with Renteria, it remains unknown which approach they’ll take during the offseason. A rebuild is possible, it seems, as left-handers Chris Sale and Jose Quintana would command enormous returns if the Sox were to trade one or both. However, owner Jerry Reinsdorf is reportedly reluctant to take that route, meaning Renteria could be at the helm of a team that aims to end its lengthy skid next season.
                Comment
                • BarkingToad
                  SBR Hall of Famer
                  • 08-31-08
                  • 5913

                  #2528
                  6 Cardinals have at least 20 homers this season.
                  Comment
                  • Chi_archie
                    SBR Aristocracy
                    • 07-22-08
                    • 63167

                    #2529
                    Weird how white sox handled that

                    fans here smell trickery
                    Comment
                    • koz-man
                      SBR Hall of Famer
                      • 11-21-08
                      • 7102

                      #2530
                      Sweet take down by Angel Pagan
                      Comment
                      • u21c3f6
                        SBR Wise Guy
                        • 01-17-09
                        • 790

                        #2531
                        Originally posted by koz-man
                        Sweet take down by Angel Pagan
                        It certainly was. However, I don't think he should have done that. I don't know what the security plan is for a fan running on the field but I am pretty sure it doesn't include the players getting involved unless they are defending themselves. This could have gone very bad if the fan was injured or worse if Angel hurt himself during the takedown.

                        Joe.
                        Comment
                        • JAKEPEAVY21
                          BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                          • 03-11-11
                          • 29271

                          #2532
                          baseball is dead to me now that football is in full force
                          Comment
                          • BigSpoon
                            SBR MVP
                            • 11-04-10
                            • 4113

                            #2533
                            Originally posted by JAKEPEAVY21
                            baseball is dead to me now that football is in full force
                            Baseball is dead to me as soon as the Jays are out, which will probably happen soon.
                            Comment
                            • Cross
                              SBR Hall of Famer
                              • 04-15-11
                              • 5777

                              #2534
                              Bye bye Cardinals, year of the Cubs.
                              Comment
                              • mr. leisure
                                SBR Posting Legend
                                • 01-29-08
                                • 17507

                                #2535
                                Looking forward to the playoffs as always .
                                Comment
                                • EmpireMaker
                                  SBR Posting Legend
                                  • 06-18-09
                                  • 15580

                                  #2536
                                  With the 2016 regular season now in the books, the preliminary order has been set for the 2017 amateur draft. The order is set by a reversal of the standings, with the league-worst Twins getting the first overall pick. When two or more teams have the same record, the better pick goes to the club who had the worse record in the previous season. For instance, the Reds won 68 games in 2015, the Padres 74 games and the Rays 80 games, which established the order of the second, third and fourth overall selections. Jonathan Mayo of MLBPipeline.com has the breakdown of where all 30 teams will pick in the first round of next June’s draft…
                                  1. Twins (59-103)
                                  2. Reds (68-94)
                                  3. Padres (68-94)
                                  4. Rays (68-94)
                                  5. Braves (68-93)
                                  6. Athletics (69-93)
                                  7. Diamondbacks (69-93)
                                  8. Phillies (71-91)
                                  9. Brewers (73-89)
                                  10. Angels (74-88)
                                  11. Rockies (75-87)
                                  12. White Sox (78-84)
                                  13. Pirates (78-83)
                                  14. Marlins (79-82)
                                  15. Royals (81-81)
                                  16. Astros (84-78)
                                  17. Yankees (84-78)
                                  18. Mariners (86-76)
                                  19. Cardinals (86-76)
                                  20. Tigers (86-75)
                                  21. Giants (87-75)
                                  22. Mets (87-75)
                                  23. Orioles (89-73)
                                  24. Blue Jays (89-73)
                                  25. Dodgers (91-71)
                                  26. Red Sox (93-69)
                                  27. Indians (94-67)
                                  28. Nationals (95-67)
                                  29. Rangers (95-67)
                                  30. Cubs (103-58)
                                  Given the ongoing negotiations between the league and the players’ union about a new collective bargaining agreement, there is a chance the draft’s rules could be altered under a new CBA, whether it relates to draft spending pools, tying free agent compensation to the draft, etc. Since it’s already October, however, it’s probably more likely that the same general framework will be in place for this winter’s transactions market, and any significant changes will apply to the 2017-18 offseason and the subsequent 2018 draft.
                                  Under the current rules regarding free agent compensation, if a free agent rejects his team’s one-year/$16.7MM qualifying offer, that team is entitled to a compensatory pick between the first and second rounds if that player signs elsewhere. The signing team would surrender its first-rounder, or highest remaining pick if it signs multiple QO free agents.
                                  The top ten picks in the draft (held by the Twins, Reds, Padres, Rays, Braves, A’s, D’Backs, Phillies, Brewers and Angels) are protected, so if any of those teams signed a qualifying offer free agent, they would keep that pick and instead surrender their next-highest selection. Owning a protected pick is a silver lining amidst disappointing seasons for these 10 clubs, as they can now still pursue a top free agent while retaining that valuable position at or near the top of the draft. Teams who just missed the protected pick bottom-10 now face a tough decision; the White Sox, for instance, have made a few big free agent signings under GM Rick Hahn, but they’ll have to weigh signing a QO free agent against the value of that No. 12 overall selection.
                                  Comment
                                  • Otters27
                                    BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                    • 07-14-07
                                    • 30756

                                    #2537
                                    Even if the playoffs where back when they only had one wild card both NL and AL would have a one game playoff so same difference
                                    Comment
                                    • Fire in da hole
                                      SBR Hall of Famer
                                      • 09-29-10
                                      • 6262

                                      #2538
                                      Originally posted by EmpireMaker
                                      With the 2016 regular season now in the books, the preliminary order has been set for the 2017 amateur draft. The order is set by a reversal of the standings, with the league-worst Twins getting the first overall pick. When two or more teams have the same record, the better pick goes to the club who had the worse record in the previous season. For instance, the Reds won 68 games in 2015, the Padres 74 games and the Rays 80 games, which established the order of the second, third and fourth overall selections. Jonathan Mayo of MLBPipeline.com has the breakdown of where all 30 teams will pick in the first round of next June’s draft…
                                      1. Twins (59-103)
                                      2. Reds (68-94)
                                      3. Padres (68-94)
                                      4. Rays (68-94)
                                      5. Braves (68-93)
                                      6. Athletics (69-93)
                                      7. Diamondbacks (69-93)
                                      8. Phillies (71-91)
                                      9. Brewers (73-89)
                                      10. Angels (74-88)
                                      11. Rockies (75-87)
                                      12. White Sox (78-84)
                                      13. Pirates (78-83)
                                      14. Marlins (79-82)
                                      15. Royals (81-81)
                                      16. Astros (84-78)
                                      17. Yankees (84-78)
                                      18. Mariners (86-76)
                                      19. Cardinals (86-76)
                                      20. Tigers (86-75)
                                      21. Giants (87-75)
                                      22. Mets (87-75)
                                      23. Orioles (89-73)
                                      24. Blue Jays (89-73)
                                      25. Dodgers (91-71)
                                      26. Red Sox (93-69)
                                      27. Indians (94-67)
                                      28. Nationals (95-67)
                                      29. Rangers (95-67)
                                      30. Cubs (103-58)
                                      Given the ongoing negotiations between the league and the players’ union about a new collective bargaining agreement, there is a chance the draft’s rules could be altered under a new CBA, whether it relates to draft spending pools, tying free agent compensation to the draft, etc. Since it’s already October, however, it’s probably more likely that the same general framework will be in place for this winter’s transactions market, and any significant changes will apply to the 2017-18 offseason and the subsequent 2018 draft.
                                      Under the current rules regarding free agent compensation, if a free agent rejects his team’s one-year/$16.7MM qualifying offer, that team is entitled to a compensatory pick between the first and second rounds if that player signs elsewhere. The signing team would surrender its first-rounder, or highest remaining pick if it signs multiple QO free agents.
                                      The top ten picks in the draft (held by the Twins, Reds, Padres, Rays, Braves, A’s, D’Backs, Phillies, Brewers and Angels) are protected, so if any of those teams signed a qualifying offer free agent, they would keep that pick and instead surrender their next-highest selection. Owning a protected pick is a silver lining amidst disappointing seasons for these 10 clubs, as they can now still pursue a top free agent while retaining that valuable position at or near the top of the draft. Teams who just missed the protected pick bottom-10 now face a tough decision; the White Sox, for instance, have made a few big free agent signings under GM Rick Hahn, but they’ll have to weigh signing a QO free agent against the value of that No. 12 overall selection.
                                      nice information..
                                      Comment
                                      • JAKEPEAVY21
                                        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                        • 03-11-11
                                        • 29271

                                        #2539
                                        Originally posted by BigSpoon
                                        Baseball is dead to me as soon as the Jays are out, which will probably happen soon.
                                        it's dead to me after the Padres are out, which is usually after a month or 2
                                        Comment
                                        • BigSpoon
                                          SBR MVP
                                          • 11-04-10
                                          • 4113

                                          #2540
                                          Originally posted by mr. leisure
                                          Looking forward to the playoffs as always .
                                          Great pitching matchup for the NL Wild Card game with Bumgarner v Syndergaard.

                                          Starters for tomorrows AL WC game still not announced. Stroman or Liriano v Tillman or Jimenez most likely.
                                          Comment
                                          • Cross
                                            SBR Hall of Famer
                                            • 04-15-11
                                            • 5777

                                            #2541
                                            Giants are not having their World Series run this year.
                                            Comment
                                            • koz-man
                                              SBR Hall of Famer
                                              • 11-21-08
                                              • 7102

                                              #2542
                                              Originally posted by EmpireMaker
                                              With the 2016 regular season now in the books, the preliminary order has been set for the 2017 amateur draft. The order is set by a reversal of the standings, with the league-worst Twins getting the first overall pick. When two or more teams have the same record, the better pick goes to the club who had the worse record in the previous season. For instance, the Reds won 68 games in 2015, the Padres 74 games and the Rays 80 games, which established the order of the second, third and fourth overall selections. Jonathan Mayo of MLBPipeline.com has the breakdown of where all 30 teams will pick in the first round of next June’s draft…
                                              1. Twins (59-103)
                                              2. Reds (68-94)
                                              3. Padres (68-94)
                                              4. Rays (68-94)
                                              5. Braves (68-93)
                                              6. Athletics (69-93)
                                              7. Diamondbacks (69-93)
                                              8. Phillies (71-91)
                                              9. Brewers (73-89)
                                              10. Angels (74-88)
                                              11. Rockies (75-87)
                                              12. White Sox (78-84)
                                              13. Pirates (78-83)
                                              14. Marlins (79-82)
                                              15. Royals (81-81)
                                              16. Astros (84-78)
                                              17. Yankees (84-78)
                                              18. Mariners (86-76)
                                              19. Cardinals (86-76)
                                              20. Tigers (86-75)
                                              21. Giants (87-75)
                                              22. Mets (87-75)
                                              23. Orioles (89-73)
                                              24. Blue Jays (89-73)
                                              25. Dodgers (91-71)
                                              26. Red Sox (93-69)
                                              27. Indians (94-67)
                                              28. Nationals (95-67)
                                              29. Rangers (95-67)
                                              30. Cubs (103-58)
                                              Given the ongoing negotiations between the league and the players’ union about a new collective bargaining agreement, there is a chance the draft’s rules could be altered under a new CBA, whether it relates to draft spending pools, tying free agent compensation to the draft, etc. Since it’s already October, however, it’s probably more likely that the same general framework will be in place for this winter’s transactions market, and any significant changes will apply to the 2017-18 offseason and the subsequent 2018 draft.
                                              Under the current rules regarding free agent compensation, if a free agent rejects his team’s one-year/$16.7MM qualifying offer, that team is entitled to a compensatory pick between the first and second rounds if that player signs elsewhere. The signing team would surrender its first-rounder, or highest remaining pick if it signs multiple QO free agents.
                                              The top ten picks in the draft (held by the Twins, Reds, Padres, Rays, Braves, A’s, D’Backs, Phillies, Brewers and Angels) are protected, so if any of those teams signed a qualifying offer free agent, they would keep that pick and instead surrender their next-highest selection. Owning a protected pick is a silver lining amidst disappointing seasons for these 10 clubs, as they can now still pursue a top free agent while retaining that valuable position at or near the top of the draft. Teams who just missed the protected pick bottom-10 now face a tough decision; the White Sox, for instance, have made a few big free agent signings under GM Rick Hahn, but they’ll have to weigh signing a QO free agent against the value of that No. 12 overall selection.
                                              And the Reds will screw this up too....
                                              Comment
                                              • Chi_archie
                                                SBR Aristocracy
                                                • 07-22-08
                                                • 63167

                                                #2543
                                                Originally posted by Cross
                                                Giants are not having their World Series run this year.
                                                would be amazing
                                                Comment
                                                • mr. leisure
                                                  SBR Posting Legend
                                                  • 01-29-08
                                                  • 17507

                                                  #2544
                                                  Originally posted by BigSpoon
                                                  Great pitching matchup for the NL Wild Card game with Bumgarner v Syndergaard.

                                                  Starters for tomorrows AL WC game still not announced. Stroman or Liriano v Tillman or Jimenez most likely.
                                                  Stroman vs. Tillman
                                                  Comment
                                                  • Fire in da hole
                                                    SBR Hall of Famer
                                                    • 09-29-10
                                                    • 6262

                                                    #2545
                                                    Excited that the playoffs start tonight. Let's get it on!
                                                    Comment
                                                    • EmpireMaker
                                                      SBR Posting Legend
                                                      • 06-18-09
                                                      • 15580

                                                      #2546
                                                      Chances are, you didn’t first fall in love with baseball by reading about it on the internet. More than likely, it happened as you sat amidst the peanut shells at a ballpark; smelled the leather of a new mitt; stumbled onto a Wrigley day game on WGN while flipping through the channels one summer; heard your dad grumbling about a blown call in last night’s contest; picked up the glorious tones of a golden-voiced announcer through an intermittently-fading radio signal.
                                                      However it happened, what led you here was likely something quite different from the statistics, money, and rules that we discuss on a daily basis. Probably, the reason you care about the player transactions that shape Major League Baseball is that you first found yourself intoxicated by the intricate details of the game itself, while absorbing it as a fan and amateur participant.
                                                      Baseball is cherished by those who have found it because it is exponentially rewarding in its repetitive, utterly simple details. Look closer and you’re drawn further in. The punctuating moments have such meaning only because they emerge from a layered canvas, with all its patina.
                                                      And that is why Vin Scully, the now-former Dodgers broadcaster, is so important and so meaningful — and not just because he calls a good game. For all his great calls, which we’ve enjoyably relived in recent weeks, his singular excellence resided in the mundane.
                                                      Just how is that batter digging in? Where’s the happiest kid in the stands and what is it about this pleasant good evening that he’s enjoying so much? Who, really, is this mop-up pitcher who’ll handle the eighth inning of a meaningless, late-season blowout? What is the count, and the score, and how does that relate to the standings and the [insert memory/history lesson/interesting fact] and oh look! just what are those brawling players shouting at each other (give or take)?

                                                      Baseball by Vin is sharing memories, imparting and receiving wisdom, experiencing an event with the like-minded while seeking out and valuing different perspectives, exhibiting vigorous curiosity, accumulating and disseminating knowledge, building standing in a community with (and through) humility and gratitude, deriving meaning from the commonplace — whether times or moments are good or bad.
                                                      He didn’t just provide us with the best way to take in a ballgame. Broader lessons reside in the countless hours that Scully spoke into a microphone — often from the words themselves, but also from the steady cheer of the man who delivered them and the sheer fact that he did it for so long and with such obvious care. In a way, if we listened closely, he showed us how to navigate our lives, with all their ups and downs but also their sometimes-monotonous routines and easily-overlooked opportunities for appreciation.
                                                      It is bittersweet to think these thoughts now, and not just because we’ll no longer hear Scully’s perfect narration of yet another 9 innings — never again listen to his gentle cadence guide us through the game — but because baseball and life intersected more jarringly last Sunday.
                                                      The loss of Jose Fernandez was an unthinkable tragedy, a gut punch not only to his loved ones, but also — in a different but still-meaningful way — to most anyone who follows the game of baseball. That devastating blow reinforces Scully’s essential meaning, because Fernandez — whose immigrant journey was every bit as quintessentially American as Scully’s New York-to-Los Angeles epic — possessed an infectious joi de vivre different in form, but not in kind, from Scully’s.

                                                      Scully’s dependability and longevity, and Fernandez’s fleeting brilliance and flair, speak to the same fundamental messages: Life is best lived buoyantly. Its many splendors, great and meager, ought to be treasured daily. Celebrating our differences as well as our commonalities is our bond. There’s zen to be found in a ballgame, and just about anywhere else, with observation and appreciation. And the way to cope with the stultifying or the unfortunate things that life throws at us is not to despair or retreat, but to double down on joy.
                                                      Thanks, Vin, for letting us listen in. If we truly heard you, we might just end our days with only two regrets: that we didn’t absorb your life’s wisdom sooner, and that we didn’t catch enough ballgames with you at the mic.
                                                      Comment
                                                      • JAKEPEAVY21
                                                        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                                        • 03-11-11
                                                        • 29271

                                                        #2547
                                                        adios Vin
                                                        Comment
                                                        • koz-man
                                                          SBR Hall of Famer
                                                          • 11-21-08
                                                          • 7102

                                                          #2548
                                                          Lowest Road ERA in Postseason - MLB History (Min. 25 IP)
                                                          Bumgarner 0.60
                                                          Bob Gibson 0.97
                                                          Mariano Rivera 1.02
                                                          Sandy Koufax 1.04
                                                          Comment
                                                          • El Nino
                                                            SBR Posting Legend
                                                            • 05-03-12
                                                            • 18426

                                                            #2549
                                                            Blue Jays/Giants
                                                            Comment
                                                            • Chi_archie
                                                              SBR Aristocracy
                                                              • 07-22-08
                                                              • 63167

                                                              #2550
                                                              Originally posted by koz-man
                                                              Lowest Road ERA in Postseason - MLB History (Min. 25 IP)
                                                              Bumgarner 0.60
                                                              Bob Gibson 0.97
                                                              Mariano Rivera 1.02
                                                              Sandy Koufax 1.04
                                                              quite amazing
                                                              Comment
                                                              • BigSpoon
                                                                SBR MVP
                                                                • 11-04-10
                                                                • 4113

                                                                #2551
                                                                Thank you to Buck Showalter for bringing in Ubaldo Jimenez instead of Zach Britton.
                                                                Comment
                                                                • Fire in da hole
                                                                  SBR Hall of Famer
                                                                  • 09-29-10
                                                                  • 6262

                                                                  #2552
                                                                  Jays vs rangers should be interesting
                                                                  Comment
                                                                  • EmpireMaker
                                                                    SBR Posting Legend
                                                                    • 06-18-09
                                                                    • 15580

                                                                    #2553
                                                                    Major League Baseball’s wild-card game is in its fifth year, and it doesn’t sound as if it’s going away. Speaking to reporters before Tuesday’s single-elimination matchup between Toronto and Baltimore, commissioner Rob Manfred expressed support for the format. “In terms of the games themselves, I understand that baseball doesn’t usually have one-game knockouts, but I do believe these two games get our playoff season off to a really exciting start,” said Manfred. “I’ve gone to the wild card games, each of them, the last two seasons. The atmospheres in the ballparks are phenomenal, and I think it gives a great jump start to our playoff season.”
                                                                    Manfred also touched on several other pertinent topics as the league and the players’ association continue working toward a new collective bargaining agreement. Here’s a roundup (courtesy of the Associated Press and Jim Caple of ESPN.com):
                                                                    • For the first five months of the regular season, all major league teams play with a 25-man active roster. When Sept. 1 rolls around, that number increases to 40. September doesn’t quite resemble the rest of the regular season as a result, and Manfred isn’t a fan. “I don’t think 18 pitchers in a game is a good thing,” Manfred said of the increase in pitching changes that September brings. “I do believe in a reform of those rules, again protecting the benefits that are available to players, I’m not looking to take away service time or anything like that, but I do think it would make sense to get to a situation where we played out September games closer to the rules that we play with the rest of the year.”
                                                                    • Home runs have skyrocketed across the majors in recent seasons, leading to questions about whether the ball is juiced. Manfred shot down that idea, saying, “We are absolutely convinced this issue is not driven by a difference in the baseball. My own view is the spike is related to the way the game is being played now, the way we are training hitters from a very young age. We have not been able to find any external cause that explains the spike in home runs.” Whatever the reason, batters hit nearly 1,500 more HRs this season than they did in 2014 (5,610 to 4,186), while the league’s homer-to-fly ball rate was at 9.5 percent two years ago compared to 12.8 percent in 2016.
                                                                    • In terms of putting together a schedule, 32 teams would be better than the current total of 30, according to Manfred. However, he’s not on board with expansion until the stadium situations with the Athletics and Rays are figured out.
                                                                    • Manfred left open the possibility of eventually introducing an award to honor former Marlins ace Jose Fernandez, who died in a boating accident Sept. 25. “I understand there’s some strong feelings on this topic,” Manfred stated. “It’s not the right time of year to be thinking about additional awards. But it’s an issue we’ll talk about during the offseason. Obviously, we recognize the significance of Jose in terms of his importance to the Marlins franchise, and the fact that he was symbolic of the next generation of players.”
                                                                    • MLB has come out in support of the Save America’s Pastime Act, a piece of legislation that limits the pay and benefits of minor league players. When Brendan Kennedy of the Toronto Star (Twitter link) pressed Manfred on that Tuesday, the commissioner commented, “We’re not opposed to paying minor league players any particular wage. What we are opposed to is the imposition of administrative requirements in terms of keeping track of hours and overtime.” Manfred also referred to those requirements as “impractical” and wondered aloud whether extra batting practice or going to the gym would qualify as overtime. “For us it’s really not about the money so much as the burden that would be imposed,” he added.
                                                                    Comment
                                                                    • EmpireMaker
                                                                      SBR Posting Legend
                                                                      • 06-18-09
                                                                      • 15580

                                                                      #2554
                                                                      Originally posted by koz-man
                                                                      Lowest Road ERA in Postseason - MLB History (Min. 25 IP)
                                                                      Bumgarner 0.60
                                                                      Bob Gibson 0.97
                                                                      Mariano Rivera 1.02
                                                                      Sandy Koufax 1.04
                                                                      He hasn't been good in August (4.14 ERA)and September (3.92 ERA) this year (8 of his last 9 games combine for a 5.3+ ERA). He also has a good record at Citi Field but again it is hard to believe he's all of the sudden going to find his good form at the flip of a switch.
                                                                      Comment
                                                                      • JAKEPEAVY21
                                                                        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                                                        • 03-11-11
                                                                        • 29271

                                                                        #2555
                                                                        hopefully they find the fan that threw the beer can last night
                                                                        Comment
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