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Dantes929

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Everything posted by Dantes929

  1. Yes. I would put Dobnak as the 4th starter with Pineda pushing him down to 5th when the time comes. Should be his spot to lose IMO.
  2. Right?? Smotz, Glavine Lemke and Pendleton were fantastic. Puckett's catch, Hrbek/Gant, Bream double play on a hanger/ As much joy as we take in the way things turned out that Series, Braves fans must agonize over that one. 14 playoffs over the next 15 years where they were one of the favorites every time and they only had one WS to show for it. In an alternate universe they could have ended up with half dozen or more but for them I am thinking the 91 Series set the tone.
  3. I wouldn't put Larkin's at bat over Puckett's home run or catch. I would say above all else those two plays put Puckett in the HOF.
  4. Ok, Morris pitched a really great game but a lot of things had to go our way for that great game to be a 10 inning shutout. If ever a pitch looked like a hanger it was the one to Bream. 2nd place was the one from Liebrandt to Puckett. One hit a game winner and one hit into a double play. Such is baseball.
  5. Great article. I wonder what the effect of training with a heavier bat would produce vs just warming up with one. I also wonder what the effect of swinging those bats that have the fans on them to create resistance compared to weighted bats. I am probably more interested in this topic as it relates to golf. Lots of people swear by the Orange Whip but I have also seen articles about swinging a lighter club faster gets you to swing the normal club faster. Of course nothing replaces timing and mechanics. My friend out drives me with 10 mph slower swing speed.
  6. He is a great choice but I will defend him a little. I don't think he went back to his norm. I think he became a good pitcher as his 2012 year suggests and then had arm troubles which kept him from maintaining that. He started the 2013 year on the 15 day disabled list but his curve ball just never had the same bite when he came back. Much like Tyler Duffey though to his credit Duffey has come back from being a one and done guy.
  7. In 1985 Mickey Hatcher maybe peaked getting 9 hits in a row but couldn't keep it up for some reason. His peak year was 1983 though hitting .317. Injury related, but Scott Erickson really only gave us one good year.
  8. Seems like walks should be part of the equation in the first place.
  9. No problem. I did say regular season and I have an easy time distinguishing. You are more a destination guy and I am more a journey guy. I enjoyed the ride in 2006 and thought it was a damn shame it had to end but as happy and excited as I was in 87 and 91 I could say the same thing for those years. "Wait til next year" have always been bitter sweet words to me no matter how the current season ended.
  10. I'm not saying Fidyrich or Valenzuela make my HOF but I would listen. I have never been to Cooperstown so maybe they already have something there but those two added such flavor to the game that it seems like they should be represented somewhere. Less about stats and more about history.
  11. 2006 was my favorite regular season of all time. 25-33 and 11.5 games back. I remember Mike and Mike saying "stick a fork in the Twins. They are done". They went 71-33 the rest of the way in one of the most exciting finishes in baseball history and Morneau was the guy carrying them. I know Mauer was great that year also as were a few other guys but my memory was that no one carried a team over a 100 games like Morneau did that year. I put him at number one and am fine with the rest of the order from there.
  12. We'll just disagree with this which is fine. To me a guy that pitches 20 seasons and gets 300 wins (for simplicity lets just go with that stat and all that goes with it) is less deserving than a guy that pitches 10 seasons and gets 200 wins. If someone wanted to make the case for Fidryich or Valenzuela I would listen. Their star shown so bright for a while they stood out above the crowd in what was a colorful era. I would put them at least on equal footing with Harold Baines who had a very long career of good. Maybe a lone voice in the wilderness here.
  13. Cliff Lee was really good and my memory was that he would be a fringy candidate but looking at his career he's got a Cy Young and two top 5 finishes so not really a great comp to 2 Cy Youngs and 3 top 5 finishes. A better comp is a guy that I Have been calling for and that is Ron Guidry. One Cy Young in about the most dominant seasons ever that ended in World Series Champion along with 3 top 5 finishes Again, do you want a HOF of very good for a long time or great for a shorter time. My HOF would probably have Santana and Guidry ahead of Blyleven and Morris. I'm not going to be outraged no matter what.
  14. We'll see. I kind of view Mauer as having roughly the same chance and he does have an MVP. In my book, 3 batting titles or two Cy Youngs should get you in.
  15. Interesting that Liriano wasn't on the list. Hard to determine from that list how much longevity is valued. Think about it though. Aside from the Yankees, the Red Sox the Dodgers and Cardinals how many other teams would have Santana ranked 5th and Viola 8th. How many other teams could you name 10 great pitchers? 5?
  16. I thought I was in mid season form by complaining about two things that logically contradict each other. For example you shouldn't complain that the starter who went 5 innings should have been pulled in the 3rd while also saying that the relievers shouldn't have been brought in until the 7th. The fact that I confused Baldelli with the author I am currently reading just proves I'm in mid season form.
  17. Baldacci doesn't have any idea what he is doing. His pitching management is the worst. He's bringing the relievers in way too soon and leaving the starters in way too long.
  18. Below is a link to the cluster that ended with Mack leaving. He was not a platoon player. I believe he got hurt during 1993 and also missed the first 30 games in 1994. He was having a monster year before the strike was called. Mack was 2nd in WAR in 1991 only to Tapani. He was 2nd only to Puckett in 1992 and he was 2nd only to Knoblach in 1994 and only because he played 28 fewer games. He was on pace for a 7.8 WAR over 162 games. Keep in mind those teams had Knoblach, Puckett, Hrbek, etc. Yes, he did mash left handed hitting but he was good against righties also. https://www.twinkietown.com/2017/5/11/15626864/how-the-twins-lost-shane-mack
  19. I think Kaat was probably appreciated in his time. I just don't know if he is remembered in the same vein. For second highest fWAR he just is never talked about much on these boards. Carew, Killebrew, Allison, Oliva and yes, even Tovar are brought up way more often.
  20. Honorable mention goes to Nick PUnto. Most fans here would have guessed his WAR as a Twin at somewhere around -70 based on comments while he was here. It was actually +10 so his spread of 80 is by far the biggest.
  21. Just my own take. I have always thought Mack was overlooked. His career OPS as a Twin was better than Puckett's. I think Radke has always been valued exactly as he was. A good durable pitcher. I would take him off the list. Goltz was much the same pitcher but no one really talks about him. Koske would be on top of my list. I just don't remember him being as good as his numbers but his numbers were really good. I don't know about Mauer. He was great and people knew it and then he was just ok and people knew it. Tapani doesn't qualify but he had the best ERA, by far the best WHIP and the best OPS+ of any of the regulars on the 91 team. Rick Aguillera honorable mention. My list 1. Koskie 2. Goltz 3. Tobar 4. Kaat
  22. I had high hopes for him as well but think the "making the ball go very far" was the problem. He was a .300 hitter in the minors and hit home runs at a better rate than in the majors but am guessing the ones in the majors went a lot farther and were more clustered down the right field line. Just another guy that put on some muscle and fell in love with how far he could hit it rather than how often.
  23. Never saw Vic Power. Mienkiewecz and Morneau were very good. Mauer was probably deserving of a Gold Glove. Hrbek was definitely deserving of at least one. My memory of Carew was that he was just ok. I know killebrew was listed at 6'0 but he seemed shorter and just didn't seem like a good target. I felt like he was less of a defensive liability at 3rd base. First base isn't just about making the plays you are expected to make. Its about saving errors for your teammates whether through good scoops or good reach. I just remember thinking Killebrew and Carew didn't have it.
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