Now Doubleheaders are reduced to 7 innings. The Little League Rules MLB has been incorporating suck. A guy on 2nd to start extra innings is anything but professional.
That being said. There have been some heroic pitching performances early on. Saw the Mets Jacob DeGrom struck out 14 Rockies in a Win Saturday. That's impressive.
Yes, Vogelbach has potential as an everyday power hitter. Coming into today's game he had a career OPS of .731. If you are above .700, the manager is going to keep calling your number.I was watching highlights of the Pirates-Brewers game and a mutant named Daniel Vogelbach hit two homers for Milwaukee. According to Baseball Reference he's 6'0" and 270 pounds! That's well beyond Greg Luzinski sized.
He hit 30 HRs for Seattle in '19, but other than that looks like he's been a bench player, including playing for three different teams last year. Does he have any potential as a everyday power hitter? His lifetime BA is .203 with a lot of strikeouts, so maybe I just answered my own question.
That sucks @Flint. Dang.
And yes, for me, in baseball, it’s the globalist “replace Americans with foreigners” agenda that really bothers me. It’s why I didn’t count Suarez for the Reds, but am fine with, say, Madrigal, Rendon, and Yelich (who are all just as American as we are). Glad everyone here knows the difference between race and ethnicity too. Not being xenophobic at all (for the lurkers), just prefer to support fellow Americans and prefer we get our chances first in this US-based league.
Anyway, the Reds are on somewhat of a skid after the red hot start but still plenty of time to rebound. The bullpen needs help. Still lots of fun to watch. The logjam of Naquin, Senzel, Winker, and Castellanos in the OF is a great problem to have!
Gary Sheffield is not a big fan of today's modern baseball. He explains why in an article for Fox Sports.
https://www.foxnews.com/sports/gary-sheffield-rips-mlb-never-watches-baseball-changed-game-so-much
Babe Ruth hit 60 homeruns in 1927, his high water mark for a season which for a long time seemed unbreakable. Then thirty-four years later Roger Maris came out of nowhere and hit 61 homers in 1961, the only time in his career he hit as many as 40. Maris hit just 275 homers in his 12 year career.
Mickey Mantle smashed 54 homers in '61, his best total, and he dueled with Maris for most of that season. 1961 was also the year in which the AL expanded from 8 to 10 teams, and the two new expansion teams accounted in part for the home run explosion that season.
Now it's 60 years later and is Maris still the all-time leader for home runs in a season? He was eclipsed by Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds, but all three were cheaters and none will make it to Cooperstown. Apparently Maris still is the record holder when it comes to accomplishing the record legitimately, but even he faced controversy as '61 was the year MLB increased the traditional 154 game season to 162 games. The pathetic fact that baseball doesn't even have a clear-cut holder of its most hallowed record -- homeruns in a season -- is just one of many reasons why America's long-time national pastime is now but a hollow corporate/woke shell of what it long was. Baseball symbolized the essence of America for a very long time, now it's close to nothing.
Roger Maris, Mickey Mantle and Tony Kubek in July 1961, a time when White men dominated sports and everything else: