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Lou E Ville

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Posts posted by Lou E Ville

  1. Bottom line...the scheduling in any league is supposed to be as fair as possible. When the Angels get stuck with the Dodgers, the Mets get stuck with the Yankees, and then someone gets the Padres or Phillies every year, that's correctible. I'm not from L.A., so I can't answer whether the fans would complain if the natural rivalries were done away with. I just want to see Trout in the playoffs. Hamilton screwed up the first go round.

  2. Who was your favorite player at every position?

    C Bob Boone
    1B Wally Joyner or Darin Erstad
    2B Bobby Grich
    SS Rick Burleson
    3B Doug DeCinces
    LF Brian Downing
    CF Mike Trout
    RF Tim Salmon
    DH Don Baylor

    SP Chuck Finley
    SP Mike Witt
    SP Jered Weaver
    SP Bert Blyleven
    SP Nolan Ryan
    RP Troy Percival
    RP Frankie
    RP Huston Street

     

  3. 4 hours ago, Rico said:

    Best WAR year with the team.

    Pujols 2012: 30 HR / 105 RBI / .285 / .343 / .516 / 4.8 WAR  (50 doubles)

    Carew 1982: 3 HR / 44 RBI / .319 / .396 / .403 / 4.7 WAR

    Joyner 1987: 34 HR / 117 RBI / .285 / .366 / .528 / 4.1 WAR

     

    Carew was an RBI machine. My friends used to call him 4-0-2-0. No runs. No ribbies.

  4. I put Garret in left because he played that position and isn't he the all-time leader in half our offensive categories? Not to mention his three-run double in Game Seven.

    I knew Fregosi would be in there, just didn't know what position he played (started following the team in 78). I like Carew at first and Grich at second. DeCinces was a beast in 82 but so was Glaus in a couple seasons.

    Salmon was my all-time favorite Angel until Trout came along. I wanted to put him in the outfield but Vlad was better and honestly, so was Garret, probably. Garret was the silent assassin.

     

     

  5. 6 hours ago, vladdy#27 said:

    CF Mike Trout (2013) .323/.432/.557 27 HR 33 SB 10.5 WAR

    LF Darin Erstad (2000) .355/.409/.541 25 HR 28 SB 8.7 WAR

    DH Tim Salmon (1995) .330/.429/.594 34 HR 5.8 WAR

    3B Troy Glaus (2000) .284/.404/.604 47 HR 8.2 WAR

    RF Vladimir Guerrero (2004) .327/.391/.598 39 HR 15 SB 5.9 WAR

    2B Bobby Grich (1979) .294/.365/.537 30 HR 5.6 WAR

    C Brian Downing (1982) .281/.368/.482 28 HR 5.4 WAR

    1B Rod Carew (1982) .319/.396/.403 4.3 WAR

    SS Jim Fregosi (1964) .277/.369/.463 18 HR 7.0 WAR

    Downing played LF in 1982. I loved that team. I updated their stats every time I got a boxscore (no internet back then).

  6. You and I can't just learn how to throw a knuckleball, but professional pitchers can. It's a difficult pitch to master, but it's not rocket science. It's the same distance to the catcher's mitt. If he tries it and he can't get it down, what harm was done? It's not like it's going to hurt his arm.

     

    I covered a AAA team here in Louisville and the longtime catcher learned how to throw it and he would pitch the ninth whenever the team's bullpen was depleted. And he never embarrassed himself or the team.  

     

    I'm not suggesting Madison Baumgardner try it. I'm suggesting a guy who has lost 15 mph off his fastball give it a shot. Will he learn it in two weeks? No. But if you have all winter what harm can it do to try?     

  7. who lose so much velocity but still know how to pitch....why don't they learn how to throw a knuckleball? Is it a pride thing? An 80 mph fastball would work if you throw a 50 mph knuckler, which are supposed to be more effective the slower they are.

     

    I mean if it works, you add three to six years to the end of your career, and all the money that comes with it. If it doesn't, you weren't going to get anyone out the way you were accustomed to.

  8. At first I hated it. Now I really like it. He's putting other studs around Trout. Making us more like Kansas City.

     

    I still resent Aybar for the failed suicide bunt at Boston.

     

    Who knows what Newcombe could have been. I remember a long line of Angels prospects 10 years ago that never panned out. Remember when we turned down a trade for Miguel Cabrera because we liked Howie so much?

  9. Gene Mauch gave the best answer to this topic. The Angels led the league in sacrifice bunts by a wide margin in 1982. Someone asked Mauch why he was such a bunt-happy manager. He said that it was a misunderstanding. His philosophy was only to bunt when facing a top notch pitcher. Get that run across because chances are you aren't getting a big inning off of the other team's 1 or 2 starter. But if it was a 3, 4 or 5 starter, let er rip. And it should be noted that Mauch had the team to pull it off. Veterans at every position. Bob Boone and Tim Foli were masters at it.

  10. The craziness of this postseason is reminding me of 1986. I was telling someone about the Angels-Red Sox series and I got to thinking. How many people know that the Angels won Game Four that year going into the ninth trailing 3-0? All they remember is Game Five.

  11. I don't know what Utley said after the game, but here's what he should have said....

     

    "I went into the slide thinking one thing and one thing only...break up the double play so we can tie this game. It's the playoffs and we can't go to New York down 2-0. After watching the replay, it's obvious I came in too high and slid too late. I apologize to Tejada and the Mets. My only intention was to get that run home."

     

    Everyone can relate to that. If he tries to deny that it was too late or too high, he opens himself up to more criticism.

  12. At least I don't have to witness the inevitable meltdown that was bound to occur at Yankee Stadium. No way these relievers (minus Street) would survive in that shithole with those shithole fans and shithole umps. We could lead 5-0 going into the eighth and to me it would feel like a 1-0 lead.

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