
Mr. Brooks
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Everything posted by Mr. Brooks
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The league would be the worst negotiators in the history of economics if they did anything less than laugh hysterically at the proposition that teams be forced to sign an injured player to a contract (that's what tender means, in this context, "to tender a contract"), and theoretically be forced to do it 4 consecutive seasons to boot (if a Super 2 player were to suffer a career ending injury with 4 arbitration years remaining). Of course they don't have to tender him a contract.
- 61 replies
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- sam dyson
- jaylin davis
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Every player is playing with discomfort after about the third week of the season. That won't be nearly enough of a case for any compensation. There'd need to be evidence that a medical procedure, or official diagnosis was omitted from his medical files. It'd be absurd to expect teams to update a player's medical files everytime they are sore or uncomfortable.
- 61 replies
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- sam dyson
- jaylin davis
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Sure, but (and this assumes he finds a way to stay healthy) Buxton on the field improves every pitcher on the team. I'd rather trade prospects for pitching than Buxton.
- 30 replies
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- royce lewis
- jorge polanco
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Front Page: Week in Review: Closing In
Mr. Brooks replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
He'd still be on normal rest to start game 1, if he starts Sunday.- 38 replies
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- nelson cruz
- miguel sano
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Only if they manage to hit 21 HR's over the last 6 games.
- 51 replies
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- miguel sano
- nelson cruz
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You are claiming context that wasn't there. You specifically and explicitly claimed there were numerous studies that show that increasing innings too quickly causes injuries. It wasn't until after I asked you to link one of these studies that you backtracked to say that what you really meant was that since teams limit innings increases, it must mean that they have studies to support it. There is no context that I missed, and I didn't come in midstream.
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Front Page: Week in Review: Closing In
Mr. Brooks replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I don't necessarily disagree, but Gibson has to share some of that blame as well. I doubt he told the team he was still not ready and they forced him to start anyway. He's a grown man and should be honest with the team, rather than thinking he has to be a tough guy and tell the team he can play when he can't.- 38 replies
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- nelson cruz
- miguel sano
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It's also standard practice for non analytical teams, so I'm not sure that argument has any meaning. For all we know it's just one of those traditions that gets passed on in FO circles, for no actual analytical reason. The opinions you express are fair and valid. I just get uncomfortable when they are stated with factual authority (numerous studies), because that is how misinformation spreads. There are posters who will read what you originally stated, and it will stick in their mind as fact.
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In your post that I originally responded to, you made the following claim: "There have been numerous studies that show that when guys make drastic jumps in the number of innings pitched, they strain their arms and get injured." Are you saying that what you meant is that you don't actually know if there are any such studies, but you just assume there are because of how teams operate?
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Only one of the links you provided deal with innings increases year over year, and that study finds no evidence that increasing innings too quickly causes injury. The relevant findings: "RESULTS: A total of 161 starting MLB pitchers met the inclusion criteria. With the exception of total innings pitched from 2010-2011 being significantly associated with DL placement in 2012 (no DL, 310.5 ± 97.5 innings; DL, 344.7 ± 85.9 innings; P = .040), no other finding for starts, pitch counts, innings, or pitches per start in the cumulative years from 2010-2014 had a significant association with pitcher placement on the DL for any musculoskeletal reason or for an upper extremity reason between 2011 and 2015. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we demonstrate that there is no association between preceding years of cumulative pitches, starts, innings pitched, or average pitches per start and being placed on the DL for any musculoskeletal reason." Again, as far as I'm aware of, and I've looked, there are no studies that show that arbitrary limits on inning increases year over year have any bearing on preventing injury. If Graterol is healthy, he should be allowed to throw as many innings as he is able to until his body tells him it's enough. Not some arbitrary number they decide on beforehand.
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The 42 times they've won by 4 or more runs this season don't count?
- 49 replies
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- randy dobnak
- cody stashak
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If they have a 3 game losing streak against KC and Detroit, with the division on the line, then they don't belong in the postseason.
- 49 replies
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- randy dobnak
- cody stashak
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He actually has better career numbers on normal rest than he does with an extra day of rest. He does have better numbers with 2 or more extra days of rest, so I'm not sure anything is "clear" yet.
- 24 replies
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- kyle gibson
- nelson cruz
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Thanks for posting that Chief. I hadn't seen the play until now. That's inexcusable.
- 72 replies
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- jake odorizzi
- eddie rosario
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