Not sure you want a closer who’s always hurt, won’t throw strikes and even when healthy, only pitches once a week.If we lose Diaz, given his stamina issues, any one think we move Senga to being the closer and replace him with a starter in FA?
Not sure you want a closer who’s always hurt, won’t throw strikes and even when healthy, only pitches once a week.If we lose Diaz, given his stamina issues, any one think we move Senga to being the closer and replace him with a starter in FA?
Very interesting thought. We cant lose Diaz though but I'd consider moving him to the 7th 8th inning or long deliveyr guyIf we lose Diaz, given his stamina issues, any one think we move Senga to being the closer and replace him with a starter in FA?
If we lose Diaz, given his stamina issues, any one think we move Senga to being the closer and replace him with a starter in FA?
I think Diaz comes back.If we lose Diaz, given his stamina issues, any one think we move Senga to being the closer and replace him with a starter in FA?
The only thing I can think of is they do not want to screw with his arm and build his innings up to become a starter and then change him back to reliever the following season.If we were gonna do that, why not pluck the former all star closer in our rotation?
If we lose Diaz, given his stamina issues, any one think we move Senga to being the closer and replace him with a starter in FA?
The Dodgers got a total of 17 innings out of their two starting pitchers and lead the NLCS 2-0. Would love to see McLean and somebody else be able to do that next season.
I was about to mention the Dodgers starting pitching efforts on the Yankees thread. So nice to see pitchers and aces actually go 8 and 9 innings. Remember when Snell supposedly couldn’t go more than six?The Dodgers got a total of 17 innings out of their two starting pitchers and lead the NLCS 2-0. Would love to see McLean and somebody else be able to do that next season.
Helps when you conveniently only go 61IP in the regular season, lolI was about to mention the Dodgers starting pitching efforts on the Yankees thread. So nice to see pitchers and aces actually go 8 and 9 innings. Remember when Snell supposedly couldn’t go more than six?
Argument could be made just the opposite, that you hadn’t built up enough arm strength and stamina to go that deep.Helps when you conveniently only go 61IP in the regular season, lol
Argument could be made just the opposite, that you hadn’t built up enough arm strength and stamina to go that deep.
I was about to mention the Dodgers starting pitching efforts on the Yankees thread. So nice to see pitchers and aces actually go 8 and 9 innings. Remember when Snell supposedly couldn’t go more than six?
Great they managed Snell but it’s a rarity now for pictured at anytime of the season to be allowed to go past 7 innings in the regular season let alone the post season no matter how many or few innings they pitch. It can be done.![]()
Dodgers' Dave Roberts Admits Blake Snell Probably Could Have Returned Sooner This Year
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts revealed the Dodgers took extra care during starting pitcher Blake Snell's recovery from a left shoulder injury he suffwww.si.com
Meh, seems relatively clear LAD knew what they were doing here and even admitted as such.
Great they managed Snell but it’s a rarity now for pictured at anytime of the season to be allowed to go past 7 innings in the regular season let alone the post season no matter how many or few innings they pitch. It can be done.
Yamamoto’s complete game is the first since Justin Verlander did it against the Yankees in Game 2 of the ALCS in 2017.
My point is, we are too often too quick to pull a starting pitcher.
Yet they are on pitch counts and inning limits and they still get hurt. What they are doing doesn’t appear to have cut down on injuries at all. Part of it could be with all the extra torque and strain being put on the arms trying to increase velocity and spin rate with pitchers doing it as early as little league before there arms fully develop. Some could be because it’s max effort on every pitch even waste pitchers. Others can be because they don’t throw enough to build up the arms trying strength and stretch it out. Pitchers use to long toss in Spring Training and in between starts. They don’t do much of that anymore. I guess the science says that and icing you arm consistently doesn’t work but it doesn’t appear that the load management (limit the number of pitches and innings) isn’t working either.Check out the innings pitched by their pitchers. It's absolutely bonkers how injured they were. I guess that's one way to keep guys fresh. I think baseball is so far behind on load management it's not even funny.