Postseason awards

Sep 30, 2006 23:44

My should win ( Read more... )

Leave a comment

Comments 4

llorin October 1 2006, 16:43:18 UTC
i really enjoyed this entry!

Reply


great_unibrow October 3 2006, 05:33:58 UTC
I was gonna post that Uggla deserves it more than Hanley but I looked at his OPS and I have to agree with you. Ramirez is better though I suppose someone could argue that the homers out weigh the OBP, maybe? Which position is more demanding, 2b or SS. I LOVE THE stats you used did you get them from ESPN ( ... )

Reply

don't have a lot of time but... zedsdeadbaby October 4 2006, 17:53:46 UTC
Shortstop is the second most demanding position, second is third most. All the stats were from ESPN. I've been hearing a lot of Oswalt buzz, which is good... and I agree, I hate that because no NL pitcher won more than 16 games they're going to go for a closer who pitched 63 innings and wasn't even that dominant. He blew like five saves? I just don't think a reliever should win it with less than 80. But the W-L thing is absolutely ridiculous. You have guys with dominant K/BB ratio, but only 16 wins, and that makes them undeserving? By the way, you should check out this Page 2 playoff diary on ESPN, by this guy Bill Simmons. It's wicked funny and he just makes fun of Joe Buck and Tim McCarver for being retarded Yankee-loving assholes. He also makes a lot of good points.

Reply

Re: don't have a lot of time but... great_unibrow October 4 2006, 20:27:36 UTC
I watched the last inning of the tigers/yankees game and all they would do was rave about jeter and talk about how he should get the MVP. FOX is so biased in general i feel like, after he hit that homerun(I could of hit that pitch for a homerun serious it was such a fat curveball just hanging their it made me feel like walker did it intentionally-also the way he walked off the field made me feel like that) all the camera did was so the corwd cheer, cheer, cheer for jeter. THe guys got a great OPS for a SS but hell.

"Robertson induces a one-out forceout by Bobby Abreu, followed by Tim McCarver telling us, "Normally a left-handed pitcher … has a lot of success … against left-handed hitters." Here we go."

Reply


Leave a comment

Up