Re: General Discussion

10713
From Zach Meisel -

There are 30 teams in Major League Baseball. Here are the Indians' offensive (in a literal sense) ranks.

Batting average: 30th
On-base %: 25th
Slugging %: 29th
wRC+: 30th
Home runs: 27th
Strikeout rate: 27th

Keep in mind, pitchers bat for half of the league's teams.

- - -

And from Mandy Bell (new Indians beat reporter for MLB.com) -

Through 34 games, the Indians are hitting a combined .212. That is their worst team average through their first 34 games since 1910, when they hit .197 in that span.

Re: General Discussion

10715
I do think, in retrospect of course, they knew they were cutting it thin offensively.

So you mix in the injury to Lindor, the slow start by JRam continuing, and now injuries to the vaunted rotation and you have recipe for a disaster.....errr.....rebuild year.

Because the Twins are good enough to capitalize.

Kudos to them because they saw an opportunity and they added on - and got some breaks to make it work out for them. It's on all right.

The Indians came in with a lack of margin for error - it all had to work. But their margin for error was compromised by the Lindor situation and JRam meltdown for a month+ at this point. Oh, and the fact that they HAD competition this year in the Central.

Derek Falvey must be pretty encouraged right about now.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: General Discussion

10717
They are but their starting pitching still is not proven over the long haul.

Jake Odorizzi and Martin Perez have shown good stuff over the years, but they have not been consistent. Jose Berrios is a stud, period.

So my point is that IF Odorizzi and Perez have broken through and tapped that potential they have shown in the past, then it will be a very long season.

But that is far from established yet. Obviously their team on the field is better than ours, but then again it is better than most. They actually lead the league in SLG. and are 2nd in .OPS. There is no comparison in hitting.

Add that to their top 3 rotation guys and you have a team that's clicking. But what clicks can come unclicked and though I think their hitting will stay good I do think the jury is out on those 2 starters in particular. (Kyle Gibson had a solid year last year too but has started slowly.)

Here is that sortable hitting stat page again for reference.

http://www.espn.com/mlb/stats/team/_/st ... order/true
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: General Discussion

10718
TFIR wrote:They are but their starting pitching still is not proven over the long haul.

Jake Odorizzi and Martin Perez have shown good stuff over the years, but they have not been consistent. Jose Berrios is a stud, period.

So my point is that IF Odorizzi and Perez have broken through and tapped that potential they have shown in the past, then it will be a very long season.

But that is far from established yet. Obviously their team on the field is better than ours, but then again it is better than most. They actually lead the league in SLG. and are 2nd in .OPS. There is no comparison in hitting.

Add that to their top 3 rotation guys and you have a team that's clicking. But what clicks can come unclicked and though I think their hitting will stay good I do think the jury is out on those 2 starters in particular. (Kyle Gibson had a solid year last year too but has started slowly.)

Here is that sortable hitting stat page again for reference.

http://www.espn.com/mlb/stats/team/_/st ... order/true
Here is the Twins' pitching stats:

http://www.espn.com/mlb/team/stats/_/ty ... asontype/2
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain