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Around SBN: Johan Santana's No-Hitter Inspires Field Stormer

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nmckenzie1

Jul 21, 2008 Feb 21, 2012 6 32

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Burnt Orange Nation Help a longhorn fan out

I am living in Saint Louis with my only pipeline of Longhorn related news coming from this site, the 'Cosm and Barking Carnival.  I am a daily (routinely twice or three times daily) reader of all of these sites and am really grateful for the work that these writers bring fans like myself.  I guess those of you lucky enough to have attended UT would call me a t-shirt fan for never having been to Austin, but I am nearly about to rectify that glaring and obvious personality flaw.   I have vacation set in Austin from tomorrow through the weekend and could use some sincerely sound advice on the best places to visit.  Now I have looked through all of the other posts like this and have a general idea, but I will also be scouting the city to make a career move as well and I would love any suggestions on that subject.  So bottom line, I became indoctrinated with being a Texas fan in Omaha, several years ago when I appreciated and admired the tenacity and spirit of the Texas faithful and I want to know THREE places/activities that I absolutely should not miss during my time in Austin.  If all goes well, I will be arranging to join the promised land permanently.  Thank you BON

45 comments  | 

McCovey Chronicles Brock Bond




I am an avid follower and fan of the St. Louis Cardinals and our affiliated SB Nation Blog, Vivaelbirdos.  As an alumni of Lindbergh High School in Saint Louis, I knew Brock Bond pretty well.  I have lost contact with him in the last few years and I recently noticed that he has been excelling at the Triple A level of the Giants organization.  He appears to the be the every day second baseman, and hitting extremely well.  I am writing this post to gather insight from knowledgeable Giants faithful about Brock's chances/ timetable for making the big club.  It's always nice when one of your own succeeds and I would love to hear any info/insight on Brock.  Thanks for the effort in advance.

32 comments  | 

Viva El Birdos A look into the Cardinal hitting approach 5/27/2010

As requested by Cards fan in Chi Town, I am going to go through the TESS game that I watched tonight and point out where a general lack of aggressiveness is killing what could be a potent cardinal offense.

Top of the 3rd:  Lopez leading off takes a curve right down central.  While this is frustrating because Correia had shown he would throw a first pitch breaking ball earlier in the game, it is the 90 mph fastball in the middle of the plate on pitch two that frustrates me.  I played Division 3 ball, and pitches located there usually are crushed.  Watching the at bat, it seemed Lopez was surprised by a fastball.  Next batter, John Jay, takes fastballs 0-0 and 2-1 that have a ton of plate.  These are hitters counts, which should be approached with a mentality of looking for a pitch to drive.  I saw none of that in this inning.

Top of the 4th:  Holliday strikes out, but at least takes a hack on a 2-0  and 2-1 fastball.  I am more concerned with Holliday chasing pitches down in the zone.  With his high leg kick it is very difficult to hit pitches down, and coupled with his long(ish) swing, he tends to get beat.  On a high note, I often watch Holliday buckle his front knee and rope breaking pitches down into the outfield.  So win some lose some I guess.

Top of the 5th:  My biggest pet peeve in baseball (other than leadoff walks, hitting guys with 0-2 counts, and failing to score runners from 3rd with less than 2 outs) is when hitters strike out with men on after being ahead 3-0.  I understand Holliday is taking 3-0, but he decided not to swing at the 3-1 pitch before Correia even let it go.  You could tell by his body language and sharp words for the umpire he was looking to walk.  We do not trade away Brett Wallace and pay exorbitant amounts of money for Matt Holliday to walk with the bases loaded.

Top of the 6th:  Yadi takes a 1-0 fastball slightly above his belt and then a 1-1 slider in the middle of the plate.  While I have applauded his approach to consistently look to hit the ball up the middle and to the opposite field, I really would love to see him turn on an inside pitch.  In doing so, or at least sending Oquendo to the deck with a foul ball, lets pitchers know that they cannot simply bust him inside where he cannot extend his arms to shoot the ball the other way.  Corriea was tiring and I felt like we had no chance to take advantage.

Top of the 7th: Ludwick K's on three pitches that were all relatively in or around the strike zone, taking two in a row to fall way behind.  John Jay is to be commended for attacking pitches in the strike irregardless of his outcome.

Top of the 8th:  Ahhh the quintessential at bat that defines Albert's struggles this season.  Teams know Albert is struggling, he has not had many XBH in a while and they are consistently pitching him away.  With Holliday underperforming, there is absolutely no reason for them not to nibble at the outside corner, away from his incredibly quick hands, and potential power zone.  Teams are confident right now that they can bust Albert away, and if he walks or singles, they can deal with Holliday or Rasmus.  Consequently, Albert begins expanding his zone, to pitches that not even he can do much with.  First pitch: slider off the plate and a terrible swing from Albert.  Second pitch: fresh off an ugly swing, Albert takes a fastball on the outer third, slightly above his knees, a pitch that I have seen him crush into the right center gap and over the wall dozens of times.  Strike two.  Third pitch:  another mechanically terrible swing and Pujols is gone on strikes.  Inconsistencies with tonight's home plate umpire aside, Albert must understand he cannot right the ship until he stops expanding his zone away from his body.

Just when I think Holliday is a lost cause, he shifts right back into aggressive mode, taking huge cuts at pitches all around the zone.  I guess he was pissed off about taking a 3-1 pitch with the bases loaded....

Top of the 9th:  Colby must absolutely start looking to drive pitches to the opposite field.  He has completely shut down on pitches on the outer half and is looking to pull everything.  I realize that in most cases we would ask a batter to take a strike in this situation, but if Colby is to become the impact player we need, he has to feel comfortable putting a good swing on a pitch in this situation.  Because of his desire to pull, his front shoulder is bailing, and he is swinging through pitches that we know he can crush.  The first pitch fastball he takes in this at bat was easily the best pitch he was going to see.  I would love to see him look for pitches away and just react to those inside.  Kudos to Skip for putting a good swing on a pitch in the middle of the plate, after taking a strike like he should have.  Also kudos to Ludwick for recognizing the spot he was in, and swinging at pitches that gave him a chance for a hit. 

Top of the 10th:  Freese gets ahead in the count 2-0 and stares down 2 fastballs with more than enough plate.  Low and behold the count is now 2-2, and Webb snaps off a dirty slider to put Freese and the Cardinals away in a pathetic inning.  Once again an unwillingness to attack the strike zone hampers the heart of the Cardinal order.

Top of the 11th:  As if Colby is reading my mind like Holliday, he takes a large hack at the first pitch, an outside fastball.  He then proceeds to punch a tough pitch into center field.  For the sake of children and others with high blood pressure, I am not even going to voice my displeasure concerning the absolute embarrassment on the bases later in this inning.  Oquendo or whomever decided to send Rasmus should be swiftly executed.  (kidding of course, because who would manage the Redbirds after La Russa leaves?)

12th:  Lopez swings at a good pitch, Mather looks like he belongs in Springfield, and Pujols tags a pitch that gets caught.  I hope to see more of this from Albert in the near future.  

13th:  Freese expands his zone and looks foolish, but at least he is aggressive.  Colby just missing pitches because he is seeing half the field right now.  

 

Overall, these are just a few of the snapshots I have been observing and lamenting over the past few weeks.  These may be very detailed and very nit picky, but I have been observing an overall inability to hit the right pitches in the right counts from this team.  With our rotation in tatters, I pray that WW, Carp, and Garcia can throw up as many zeros as possible until Penny returns and/or Albert begins driving in runs again.  This boiled to a breaking point for me because I would have punched someone right in the face if they told me Jerry Fucking Hairston Jr. would be responsible for two Padre victories on solo home runs.  It is still very early and McGwire has time to fix things yet.  I welcome any comments, suggestions and viewpoints on this matter and appreciate you taking the time to read it.  Hopefully I will be able to post a little more regularly.    

9 comments  |  7 recs | 

Viva El Birdos Batting the pitcher 8th




Many times on this blog I have been graced with very impressive statistical analysis by the readers and others who care deeply about Cardinal baseball.  We have all had our internal disagreements with Tony LaRussa during his tenure here in St. Louis, but despite all that, he has become one of the most successful managers in the history of baseball.  A good deal of his legacy will reflect the time he spent here and the decisions he made day in and day out.  So here is the challenge that I pose to the readers and more knowledgeable of this blog:

Has LaRussa's decision to bat the pitcher 8th actually had a measurable influence on the runs scored by this franchise?

Observing our relative inability to provide offense this year, (with the obvious exception of the superhuman Albert Pujols), has this particular strategy benefitted the Cardinals in a way that we can tell?

Better question:  Would the current version of the St. Louis Cardinals actually score less runs if LaRussa did not employ this tactic?  (A chlling thought, I know....)

 

Please, someone with some experience with FanGraphs or other statistical baseball knowledge far beyond my own attempt to answer this question for me?

16 comments  | 

Burnt Orange Nation USC fans feels voters are biased against his team

This guy from California is an idiot and gets owned by the author of the article.

 

Hilarious...

 

 

Trojan disrespect?

From Jeff in Upland, Calif.: USC has been a national powerhouse for quite some time. The Trojans have whipped pretty much everyone in big-time games except Vince Young. So why is there so much bias against them? They show they can play and beat other top-ranked teams, but voters never vote for them. Surely after their past performances, people would get smart.

You're kidding, right?

There is no bias against USC. In each of the past five seasons, the Trojans started the season ranked no lower than sixth and three times were preseason No. 1. Is that bias? Lest we forget, in 2003 LSU defeated Oklahoma for the BCS national championship, but The Associated Press voted USC its version of the national title. Is that bias?

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Associated Press
Joe McKnight and the Trojans lost their title chances when they lost to Oregon State.
<!-- End Image--> No way.

Its on-field performance and recruiting success ensures that USC will be ranked high at the start of each season, and it should. But the Trojans can only blame themselves for failing to get into the BCS national championship game in the past three seasons.

The Trojans, and not Florida, would have played Ohio State for the 2006 national championship had they not lost to UCLA in the final regular-season game. A home-field loss to a Stanford team that finished 4-8 cost the Trojans a shot in '07. Last season, the Trojans lost to Oregon State. Utah, which went undefeated and beat Oregon State, had a better argument for playing in the BCS title game than did the Trojans.

If there were a playoff, USC probably would have claimed at least one more national championship in the past three seasons. But the current system matches teams with the best résumés, not necessarily the best teams. In the past three seasons, other teams have had better résumés. That's a matter of fact, not a matter of bias.

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Viva El Birdos Mets Fans

Was it just me or were the fans at Shea last night more unruly than usual? 

It really is embarrassing to watch games on TV and realize what players in other Major League parks have to go through.

I mean it is New York and all, but I must say that I am proud to be a part of the greatest fans in Major League baseball.

Congratulations on our classy hard-fought win, everyone go have a beer

 

7 comments  |