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Herein resides a small Konspiracy Korner. It's got little teeth in its mouth, too, so bring your spider-swatter and can of Raid. Alternatively, scan down to where you see Nelson Cruz' name. Either way, have a good one. - Jeff
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At Hey Bill, the conversation took a turn for the (much) worse:
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All the players being younger than you is no big deal. When the MANAGERS are all younger than you are...
Asked by: shthar
Answered: 8/10/2015
Most of the players now are about the same age as my kids. So the next step for me is the players being younger than my kids. . . .
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Lloyd McClendon is fortunately 4 years older than I am, though Don Wakamatsu is two months younger. Edgar is one month younger, so when he takes over SSI will impose a tectonic-plate change on its tone in discussing the Mariners. Seniority has its privileges, don'cha know.
My son JOHN is 23, turns 24 in November, and ... could beat most Mariners at most sports, other than baseball and softball, obviously. :: beams proudly :: kind of odd that all current Mariners are older than him, isn't it?! Scanning down their roster you find exactly one (1) Mariner younger than 24, whether starting or sitting. And Taijuan -- at 22 -- is considered a baby.
So there y'go amig-O. Dr. D is right on the brink of a new brand, rolled out in synchronicity with The Edgar Press Conference. Sour old curmudgeon who is right often enough to be infuritating. :: bows to four directions ::
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Jesus Montero's home run into the bullpen a couple days ago ... he didn't load the bat up any more than when he whistles a rifle shot through the 2B hole. He got me thinking that, at some point on down the road, he might turn some of those doubles into homers. All it would take is a bit more anticipation, and a bit more windup.
Hm.
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Since you brought up synchronicity. ... That would make a fun Konspiracy Korner, wouldn't it? Kids wouldn't know, but everybody older than Lloyd McClendon is aware that World War I started with the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, archduke of Austria/Hungary. He was shot in 1914 in a car whose license plate read "A 111118". True, His Franzness spoke German rather than English, but get with it pokey. Over the next century the famous little grainy license photograph would be enjoyed by far more English-speakers than German-speakers.
World War I was obviously destined to end on November 11, 1918, which of course was the day the Armistice (get it, A?) was signed. So it was appointed unto man to do things his own way for 4 years, 4 months, and 20 days ... right at 1600 days, I think, which would be a "forty days in the wilderness" times, um, forty days in the wilderness.
Unfortunately, those four years weren't quite enough of a lesson, as it turned out. We demanded a bigger lesson. But since then, we've been more careful. There have been a merciful 70 years' worth of abstinence from wars involving 100 countries at the same time. Unnervingly, 70 years is also a Biblical period of time that is bounded on either end ...
No, Dr. D isn't a member of the 700 Club. Not by a long shot. We're goofing off here.
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Nelson Cruz' last home run was 140 feet high, you say? We've mentioned before, but ... imagine a 14-story building that stood behind the shortstop. Some world-class pitcher is going to attack you, and you're going to physically hit a baseball over that building when he does.
The most tragicomic element in this entire season, is the waste of Nelson Cruz' season. But the way he's going right now, a 178 OPS+ and a firm determination to hit the ball hard to all 4 points of the compass, it's hard to believe he won't give us at least a decent cleanup season in 2016.
Cruz' comps, such as Jay Buhner and Jayson Werth, tend not to play well at ages 34 and beyond. Of course, general principles have nothing to do with specific chess positions. It's not so often that somebody goes from a 178 OPS+ in one year to a 95 OPS+ in the very next one.
I got to thinking something un-PC the other day. Is it just me, or are there a lot of Latin players who age better than their templates generally? Edgar Martinez, Vlad Guerrero, Ivan Rodriguez, Rafael Palmeiro (roids), Manny Ramirez, David Ortiz ... I wasn't able to immediately think of Latin stars who fell off the table real early. Juan Gonzalez was done about 34-35, but that's not exactly retiring early.
It would be hard to study; I'm not thinking of Gehrig-level galacticos and not thinking of merely "good" players. I'm thinking of "ordinary cleanup hitters" who hit their way off the island .... walks and homers at age 23, like Alvin Davis, is a predictor of early aging. "Old players' skills" are dangerous past 30; with guys like Vlad and Nellie we're talking about guys who let the bats fly.
Just a thought. Could be way wrong.
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They went with Johnny Bullpen last night, wasting my $100 in tickets and concessions, because ... Roenis Elias would poison the culture? They are going THAT far to freeze out a rookie 10-game winner? Or do I have that wrong?
True, Johnny Bullpen did good. But it goes to the issue of not being Pete Carroll, counselor.
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We find out today that the Seahawks asked Brandon Mebane to take a pay cut. Wait wait wait. Is it reasonable to adjust signed contracts, based on circumstances? Or is it not?
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Ketel Marte, of whom Dr. D is not a fan, has --- > not only (1) unusual ability to cover a pitch, with (2) a very pleasing eye for the strike zone, but also has (3) a Mike Montgomery-type assumption that he can play major league baseball.
There are SOME little guys, such as Mark McLemore, who run nice OBP's just because they foul off tough pitches, and are so blamed stubborn about pitches outside the strike zone. It's not impossible that Marte should become a fast, SS-capable Mark McLemore. He's got Dr. D wobbling a little.
Cheers,
Jeff