![]() |
Quote:
Its pretty much "thanks for the help but dont let the door hit ya". It will be interesting how they treat Papi as his time is fast approaching. |
Quote:
|
LOL...They got Vin Scully giving out Manny's stat's while a video of Manny is playing. He is happy as can be in the video(waving to the camera.) Pretty funny.
|
Quote:
By the way your GM is the worst in the league, hands down....so I'm gonna guess this deal will work out like his others...BAD! |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Let's see I have been a fan of Boston sports teams since about 1963-64. My first hero was probably Yaz. 326-121-44 if you speak the lingo. The man left a saint when he retired and I still think he was the best fielding left fielder to EVER play Fenway. I never saw Teddy Ballgame. Fred Lynn, Jim Rice, Tony C all left without pissing off the masses by loafing, quitting and beating on old men. Even Clemens left town without forcing the issue by refusing to take the field. Dewey Evans and the 25 cabs for 25 players dance was a true event but to describe the last 4 decades as typical of Mannytime is just untrue. The Pats and Celts are another story for another day...... Manny was great while he actually played, clutch, productive and beyond consistent but the BS that went on this year at the end warrants the current condemnation of his exit which will fade with time. Bill Buckner was embraced this year.....on second thought maybe we were all doomed because of this last one... |
Quote:
" On the hands, and so Andruw Jones strikes out on three pitches to go 0 for 3 tonite" - V Scully (tonite, but it could be most any night.) We have 1 run tonite. Who do you think would of possibly helped us score more runs? Roach,or Manny? We have won how many playoff games in 20 years, and you want us to keep waiting for guys to learn to hit? Diamondback youngins can hit. Drew doesn't need to keep learnin' to hit. Too many excuses. Roach had plenty opportunities. He killed many a rally for us. G' BYE ANDY YA NO HIT'N ROACH. We have more than paid our dues waiting for kids to come around. BTW , the Diamondback position playing kids are better than ours. So, it really is paying off huh? We don't have luck with young hitters. We have luck with young pitchers. That's the way it just always is. They refuse to hit for power here. Is this not obvious? I KNOW HOW DIFFICULT IT IS TO GET PEOPLE THAT REALLY CAN HIT. We have had pitifully few do it. We don't have any quality hitters. That's been a 20 year problem(atleast.) You think waiting for more miracle youngins is gunna work? It hasn't ever worked here. We've never had any of these Hall of Fame hitters. This is yet another nite of getting 1 fkn run etc. Why don't you go through that before you tell us we're impatient? We have been patient. We have waited , and waited, and waited. Our fkn kids just lost to go 2 games back. These kids can't hit good pitching. They scored 1 run. No, I am not in favor of waiting for guys like roach to start hitting. FCK THAT.WE HAVE DONE THIS. DOESN'T WORK. THEY DON'T HIT. You just don't understand that prospects don't hit for this organization. They don't. They hit Washington, and the Giants. So what. Yeah, just hang on to the roach, and stand pat. Then lose the division by 7 games, and of course next year the kids will do miracles. Our kids can hit Frisco, cincy, Washington Houston. They can't hit against good teams. Simple as that. Can't you see this? The prospects aren't getting past this level. Not for us. They can't hit Webb, Zambrano. SABATHIA, HERRON. We've waited, They aren't gunna do it. Again tonite. They can't do it. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Bay 538 78 133 25 2 21 84 59 9 141 4 1 .247 .327 .418 .745 Matsui 547 100 156 28 4 25 103 73 73 4 2 .285 .367 .488 .855 Its not really close. Matsui hit for more power, struck out at half the rate and batted 40 pts higher. As a matter of fact, he was better in every category. This year, matsui has been injured, but he still batting 323. |
Quote:
Naturally you chose to use Bays worst season by far as his first three seasons were very good and he is playing well this year. And with the news that Matsui's doctor has urged him to have seaon ending surgery which he refuses to do I would assume that Nady/Damon will be your left fielder and Matsui the DH until he is placed back on the DL. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
From Baseball prospectus
"Sent LF-R Manny Ramirez to the Dodgers; sent OF-L Brandon Moss and RHP Craig Hansen to the Pirates; acquired OF-R Jason Bay from the Pirates. [7/31] However much this wound up being a hail mary or an anticlimax, for the Red Sox, it's a straightforward good move. As improbable as it may or may not be that Bay outproduces Ramirez for the balance of the year—as he has already this season, with an EqA of .319 to Manny's .306—and as much chemistry gets either washed out or restocked or put in the right beakers or whatever metaphor you can torture on behalf of clubhouse amity, this can be seen as a straightforward case of addition by addition. Bay's six and a half years younger and as productive right now, as PECOTA's MORP projections for both men reflect, and in the immediate future there's every reason to expect Bay to be worth what you'd wind up paying and fulfill what you need from a mid-lineup bopper in left; Manny, not so much. As great as Manny's past was, does anyone think he's going to slug .600 again? Because if he doesn't do that, you've got a player doing a lot of the same things Bay does, only with considerably more drama and expense, and with considerably worse defense, however much Red Sox Nation might have been inclined to trot out the standard "but he plays the Wall well" defense that has been a prop for bad-fielding Red Sox left fielders for decades. That last element matters that much more with David Ortiz back from the DL, because whatever the personality issues in play, the Sox can no longer hide Manny's being Manny in left once their starting DH was back in the lineup. Add in the open question of how enthusiastically Manny would be Manny with a glove on one hand, and you can understand how Theo Epstein and company decided it would be best to just get the entire mess out of their hair with a certain celerity. If not with an assist from the Marlins to swap out Jason Bay, then enlist the Dodgers, but for any god's sake, just get it done already. The financial benefits of the exchange cannot be understated. Bay's already locked in at $7.5 million for 2009, and will even then be a year short of eligibility as a free agent, meaning that the Sox have him under control in his age-30 and age-31 seasons, at which point they can probably afford to let him go wherever he wishes. Although they're paying Manny to be a Dodger for the remainder of 2008, that's a commitment already made, so in terms of expense, they're only taking on the balance of Bay's salary this season, and against that they're no longer in the position of having to decide whether or not to pick up Ramirez's $20 million options in each of the next two seasons. In terms of what they save, even if the Sox are out roughly $2 million still owed to Bay this year, add that to Bay's salary and they're realizing a savings of at least $10 million for 2009, and perhaps that much again if Bay only costs them roughly that much because of arbitration in 2010. That's a lot of money saved, and add in the $17 million coming off the books because of the expiration of the deals with Curt Schilling and Jason Varitek, and I think it's safe to say that not only did the Sox make a move that doesn't affect their status as players in the playoff picture this year, this trade helps make them even bigger players in this winter's free agency market. This could prove especially important because, whoever else is available, if Yu Darvish gets posted, the more money you have to bring to that auction, the better. So, in short, Theo Epstein and company did it. The "prospects" they surrendered were filler players in danger of being crowded out of the 40-man, and Manny was the thorn in the franchise's side who'd long since become infectious. As this proposition goes—lancing that wound, saving perhaps more than $20 million over the next two years, not hurting the lineup now while almost certainly helping it in the next season or two to come—taken together the benefits of the trade provide a range of outcomes to keep everyone happy: fans, statheads, bean-counters, and even player-development types worried about the Rule 5 draft. Consider this nothing short of a brilliant achievement, and the product of an inspired effort." |
Quote:
PITTSBURGH PIRATES "Traded OF-R Jason Bay to the Red Sox; acquired 3B-R Andy LaRoche and RHP Bryan Morris from the Dodgers; acquired RHP Craig Hansen and 1B/OF-L Brandon Moss from the Red Sox; assigned Morris to Low-A Hickory; optioned MI-R Brian Bixler to Indianapolis (Triple-A); designated CF-L Chris Duffy and RHP Franquelis Osoria for assignment. [7/31] If the trade with the Yankees was a tentative sort of thing involving the exchange of veteran mediocrities for an off-blue, chambray sort of blue-chipper and three nondescript upper-level hurlers, and the sort of thing that might have caused alarm, Pirates fans can take solace in this deal. This time, Neal Huntington and company got two much better prospects, better than anything they got from the Yankees, not to mention a pair of useful-enough filler types for an organization that needs bodies in every shape and size. While it cost them Bay, it brought them their new best player on the team, because LaRoche will be an All-Star-caliber hitter at third base now that he's free of a Dodgers organization that wasn't treating him at all fairly. Morris is a nifty add as well, a 2006 first-rounder coming back from a 2007 Tommy John surgery who's done good work with the Loons in Low-A, flashing low- to mid-90s heat, a new sinker, an improved change, and a nasty curve. He's been on a workload almost as monitored and structured as Clayton Kershaw's in his comeback, averaging less than five innings per start, but with 72 strikeouts and 31 walks in 81 2/3 IP and a GB/FB ratio of 1.7, he's flashing a live arm, and as a 21-year-old stripling, that's something to take an interest in. The ballast from the Red Sox doesn't hurt, either. Hansen throws hard and heavy, and maybe an escape from the franchise that promoted him too aggressively will get the former St. John's closer his best shot at carving out a career for himself. Moss should make a nice enough fourth outfielder type on a team that should now be promoting Andrew McCutchen to take over in center, providing the pitching staff with the added benefit of getting a quality center fielder in place while shunting Nate McLouth to a corner and the defensive chores he's better equipped to deal with. Again, to recap, if getting Tabata was a matter of taking a chance, then getting LaRoche is a case of swapping out an expensive, aging outfielder for a quality everyday player just at the start of his big-league career at a position of organizational need. Morris may well be the second-best prospect he acquired between the two deals, they added some elements of cost control by shedding Bay's contract, and perhaps more fundamentally they addressed their defensive inadequacies by bringing in a better third baseman and making room for a better center fielder (once McCutchen's up). That's the sort of broad-stroke improvements you have to tip your cap to when they're achieved. Huntington warned people off about his not making deals just to make them over the winter—having made this trade, it was clearly worth the wait." |
Manny being Manny.
Watch him turn triples into singles...as a hitter---not an outfielder. Watch him turn singles into triples...as an outfielder---not a hitter. Watch him whizz.....in the outfield....not the clubhouse. Watch him look like a vacuum cleaner...in the clubhouse---not the outfield. e |
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/column...son&id=3513865
From Espn: The eviction of Ramirez is a story with so many levels that it's impossible to sum them all up with a one-word label such as "winner" or "loser." We recognize that. There's also a value to subtracting a selfish, disruptive, divisive knucklehead like Manny from an otherwise-harmonious, purposeful clubhouse. We recognize that, too. And Jason Bay is a heck of a player, one who can stick around and patrol left field in Fenway next year, too. We recognize all of that. Honestly, if the Red Sox went out now and won another World Series, it wouldn't shock us a bit. [+] EnlargeOtto Greule Jr/Getty Images The Dodgers, second-to-last in the NL in homers, could use Ramirez's bat. But they still find themselves dumped into the Losers column of this opus because this trade marks the end of a special era in the life of their team. They have a different aura now than they had a week ago. And the reaction of folks all over their division to Manny's unceremonious exit -- an exit subsidized with $7 million of those hard-earned Red Sox dollars, we should note -- told us all we needed to know: It felt like Mardi Gras for the rest of the AL East. "Don't get me wrong," said an executive of one AL East club. "The Red Sox do a great job. They utilize every advantage they have, and they use all their resources as well as anyone. But sometimes, I don't think even they realized what they had in Manny. When Manny comes up, you feel like you have to pass out ex-lax to your whole team because everybody gets a sick feeling in their stomach -- especially when he had [David] Ortiz there in the middle with him. "Look, Jason Bay is a great player. But he's not Manny. You're talking about one of the greatest right-handed hitters in the history of the game. I've seen so many situations where you'd think you've got a game, and then all of a sudden that guy came up and everything changed. I've seen what he does to pitchers. I've seen how he changes games. They'll miss that. That's all I can say." |
As a Sox fan, we cant win with him so how much worse can it be w/o him? I mean whats our record been since the all star game? Terrible. We've lost 8 of 9, 6 in a row to the Angels. Too many to the Yankees.
At least he goes to a team I can root for. I'm as sick of this story as I am of the Brett Favre thing. Both need to go away. |
Quote:
Everyone is losing to the angels. The yanks just lost at home to the halos in blowout fashion...do you think they would consider trading jeter? |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:24 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.