eri per curiosità sul Verde Mostro?
Re: Boston Red Sox
- ItalianBlueJay
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Re: Boston Red Sox
jon, anzitutto benvenuto e malvisto :D ...
eri per curiosità sul Verde Mostro?
eri per curiosità sul Verde Mostro?
- ambrogio erri
- Rookie

- Posts: 309
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Re: Boston Red Sox
ormai c'è il
Dustin Pedroia moment of the day:
Scene: The clubhouse at the Player Development Complex.
Pedroia sees rookie shortstop Jose Iglesias across the aisle.
"Hey rookie," he says. "You're supposed to wear a jersey out there. I don't know how it is in Cuba with Fidel, but I'm running this joint."
Iglesias laughed.
"I'm serious," Pedroia said with a straight face before cracking up.
e la contromossa di Tito:
Cameron on choosing No. 23: "..., so I said I'm going back to my minor league number. But Tito told me if you wear No. 23, make sure you don't miss the first ball because [the crowd] will go 'LUUUGO!' It's crazy... I mean it always works out."
Dustin Pedroia moment of the day:
Scene: The clubhouse at the Player Development Complex.
Pedroia sees rookie shortstop Jose Iglesias across the aisle.
"Hey rookie," he says. "You're supposed to wear a jersey out there. I don't know how it is in Cuba with Fidel, but I'm running this joint."
Iglesias laughed.
"I'm serious," Pedroia said with a straight face before cracking up.
e la contromossa di Tito:
Cameron on choosing No. 23: "..., so I said I'm going back to my minor league number. But Tito told me if you wear No. 23, make sure you don't miss the first ball because [the crowd] will go 'LUUUGO!' It's crazy... I mean it always works out."
ambroeus
- jonlester
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Re: Boston Red Sox
Outfield grandstand, molto vicino al green monster.ItalianBlueJay wrote:
eri per curiosità sul Verde Mostro?![]()
Intanto -5 allo spring training
Take me out to the ballgame.....
- joesox
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Re: Boston Red Sox
FORT MYERS, Fla. — It was three weeks after Cito Gaston took over as manager of the Blue Jays where everything changed for Marco Scutaro.
Some might believe Scutaro’s path toward the Red Sox started on June 20, 2008, the day Gaston took over as the Jays’ manager. It was that day the shortstop was placed atop Toronto’s lineup despite having made just 20 plate appearances in the leadoff spot in the previous four years with Oakland.
“That,” Gaston explained, “was out of necessity. We didn’t have anybody else.”
But it was that 21-day mark of Gaston’s tenure as skipper of the Jays which should truly be identified as where it all turned around for Scutaro. It was around that time where the Toronto manager and his hitting coach, Gene Tenace, came to a realization that transformed the former utility player into this season’s Sox’ starting shortstop.
What they found was that Scutaro seemed to be a dramatically better hitter with two strikes. And what the coaches also discovered that the right-handed hitter possessed a significantly different stance during those instances he found himself with two strikes, noticeably widening his stance.
“When I first came over Gene Tenace and I we noticed when Marco got two strikes he would widen his stance and would put a better swing on the ball. So he started doing that and it really helped him,” Gaston said. “Every once in a while I had to remind him that you can get too close, so I would remind him.”
The transformation didn’t happen overnight, with Scutaro experiencing some ups and downs for the remainder of ‘08, finishing with a .274 batting average in the season’s second half after hitting .261 before the All-Star break.
“I used to kind of do that with two strikes but my timing was inconsistent so I didn’t know how to handle it,” Scutaro said. “I didn’t feel like I had any rhythm. Cito started telling me to try and spread out and I started getting in a better rhythm, and I started seeing the ball better and better.
“The reason I hadn’t stuck with it was because I would lose the rhythm. But when Cito kept saying, ‘Man, you look much better when you’re spread out.’ I told him I saw the ball better doing it, but I couldn’t find a rhythm. But then I started working and working and it got better and better.”
By the time Scutaro got to spring training in ‘09 the half-season of implementing the new stance was enough for the shortstop to hit the ground running. In April he hit .281 with a .421 on-base percentage, which was followed with a line of .322/.397 the following month. Since then the 34-year-old hasn’t looked back, all the while keeping a watchful eye on making sure he doesn’t lose the stance that got him to this point.
“It happens to a significant amount of hitters where they discover that they have a pretty successful two-strike approach and they end up using it all the time,” explained Red Sox hitting coach Dave Magadan. “Occasionally it happens the other way around where a guy is successful prior to two strikes and he tries to expand his approach with two strikes and becomes a worse hitter.
“He’s a guy who doesn’t have a huge load when he gets ready to hit, and he stays pretty balanced, keeping his head in between his feet, which is something you look forward to as a hitter. He keeps his body centered pretty well and it just keeps him on the ball longer. He doesn’t have a lot going on with his set-up and his load, so what happens is him making consistent hard contact.”
Some might believe Scutaro’s path toward the Red Sox started on June 20, 2008, the day Gaston took over as the Jays’ manager. It was that day the shortstop was placed atop Toronto’s lineup despite having made just 20 plate appearances in the leadoff spot in the previous four years with Oakland.
“That,” Gaston explained, “was out of necessity. We didn’t have anybody else.”
But it was that 21-day mark of Gaston’s tenure as skipper of the Jays which should truly be identified as where it all turned around for Scutaro. It was around that time where the Toronto manager and his hitting coach, Gene Tenace, came to a realization that transformed the former utility player into this season’s Sox’ starting shortstop.
What they found was that Scutaro seemed to be a dramatically better hitter with two strikes. And what the coaches also discovered that the right-handed hitter possessed a significantly different stance during those instances he found himself with two strikes, noticeably widening his stance.
“When I first came over Gene Tenace and I we noticed when Marco got two strikes he would widen his stance and would put a better swing on the ball. So he started doing that and it really helped him,” Gaston said. “Every once in a while I had to remind him that you can get too close, so I would remind him.”
The transformation didn’t happen overnight, with Scutaro experiencing some ups and downs for the remainder of ‘08, finishing with a .274 batting average in the season’s second half after hitting .261 before the All-Star break.
“I used to kind of do that with two strikes but my timing was inconsistent so I didn’t know how to handle it,” Scutaro said. “I didn’t feel like I had any rhythm. Cito started telling me to try and spread out and I started getting in a better rhythm, and I started seeing the ball better and better.
“The reason I hadn’t stuck with it was because I would lose the rhythm. But when Cito kept saying, ‘Man, you look much better when you’re spread out.’ I told him I saw the ball better doing it, but I couldn’t find a rhythm. But then I started working and working and it got better and better.”
By the time Scutaro got to spring training in ‘09 the half-season of implementing the new stance was enough for the shortstop to hit the ground running. In April he hit .281 with a .421 on-base percentage, which was followed with a line of .322/.397 the following month. Since then the 34-year-old hasn’t looked back, all the while keeping a watchful eye on making sure he doesn’t lose the stance that got him to this point.
“It happens to a significant amount of hitters where they discover that they have a pretty successful two-strike approach and they end up using it all the time,” explained Red Sox hitting coach Dave Magadan. “Occasionally it happens the other way around where a guy is successful prior to two strikes and he tries to expand his approach with two strikes and becomes a worse hitter.
“He’s a guy who doesn’t have a huge load when he gets ready to hit, and he stays pretty balanced, keeping his head in between his feet, which is something you look forward to as a hitter. He keeps his body centered pretty well and it just keeps him on the ball longer. He doesn’t have a lot going on with his set-up and his load, so what happens is him making consistent hard contact.”
The rare occurence of the expected.
- joesox
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- jonlester
- Newbie

- Posts: 7
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Re: Boston Red Sox
E contro i Twins leggo del primo 1-2-3 di pap a chiuderejoesox wrote: Big Papi col primo HR della stagione.
Take me out to the ballgame.....
-
Pepper
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Re: Boston Red Sox
A proposito di Pap, sta mettendo giudizio...
He's got more than a fastball now. Jonathan Papelbon plans to expand his pitch selection this year. He says he got too dependent on his fastball in 2009. According to fangraphs.com (folks who probably don't get much sunshine but compile amazing statistics), 19.7 percent of Papelbon's pitches were split-fingered fastballs in 2006. Last season, he threw splitters on only 9.7 percent of his pitches. His predictability hurt him in the fateful ninth against the Angels. Other than the intentional walk, he threw 16 consecutive fastballs. "I've got some adjustments to make," he said last night.
He's got more than a fastball now. Jonathan Papelbon plans to expand his pitch selection this year. He says he got too dependent on his fastball in 2009. According to fangraphs.com (folks who probably don't get much sunshine but compile amazing statistics), 19.7 percent of Papelbon's pitches were split-fingered fastballs in 2006. Last season, he threw splitters on only 9.7 percent of his pitches. His predictability hurt him in the fateful ninth against the Angels. Other than the intentional walk, he threw 16 consecutive fastballs. "I've got some adjustments to make," he said last night.
-
Jonna79
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Re: Boston Red Sox
ALLELUJA!!!!Pepper wrote: A proposito di Pap, sta mettendo giudizio...
He's got more than a fastball now. Jonathan Papelbon plans to expand his pitch selection this year. He says he got too dependent on his fastball in 2009. According to fangraphs.com (folks who probably don't get much sunshine but compile amazing statistics), 19.7 percent of Papelbon's pitches were split-fingered fastballs in 2006. Last season, he threw splitters on only 9.7 percent of his pitches. His predictability hurt him in the fateful ninth against the Angels. Other than the intentional walk, he threw 16 consecutive fastballs. "I've got some adjustments to make," he said last night.
I was so satisfied
Deep down inside
Like a hand
In a velvet glove
Deep down inside
Like a hand
In a velvet glove
- jonlester
- Newbie

- Posts: 7
- Joined: 24/02/2010, 17:00
Re: Boston Red Sox
Quel terribile nono con gli Angels doveva PER FORZA fargli cambiare qualcosa. Il rinnovo del contratto alle sue condizioni ci fa sperare in una grande stagione. Vorrei sottolineare che comunque la scorsa stagione è stata, a mio parere, molto positiva; se aumenta la varietà di lanci puo' diventare ancora più decisivo.Jonna79 wrote: ALLELUJA!!!!...finalmente l'abbiamo capita!?!?!? ..ormai mi stavo rassegnando al fatto di vedergli lanciare solo fastball.
Take me out to the ballgame.....
- joesox
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Re: Boston Red Sox
Ieri due ottimi inning per John Lackey, Felix Doubront, Michael Bowden e Junichi Tazawa.
---
Per cinque volte i Red Sox hanno vinto quattro partite consecutive in una stessa serie di playoff.
La prima fu nel 1903, quando, sotto per 1-3, con i Pittsburgh Pirates (si giocava al meglio delle nove gare) un gruppo di circa trecento tifosi di Boston chiamati Royal Rooters (guidati da “Nuf Ced”, proprietario della taverna Third Base, e da “Honey Fitz”, nonno di JFK) decisero di andare a Pittsburgh per risollevare le sorti della serie e della squadra.
Scelsero, tra tante, una canzone, “Tessie” (da un musical di Broadway del 1902, The Silver Slipper), e di farne il loro canto per la rimonta. Cantarono, cantarono e cantarono. A squarciagola. In continuazione. La cosa funzionò e i Red Sox vinsero Gara Cinque, Sei e Sette a Pittsburgh. Vinsero Gara Otto (shutout 4-hitter di Dinneen) allo stadio di Huntington Avenue e con un 5-3 si aggiudicarono le prime World Series di sempre.
I Sox usarono tre lanciatori nelle otto partite, Bill Dinneen che lanciò 35 inning, Cy Young, 34 IP e Tom Hughes, 2 IP. Per i Pirates Deacon Phillippe lanciò 44 inning (5 partenze in 13 giorni). Nel 1904 Boston vinse nuovamente l’American League, ma i New York Giants si rifiutarono di giocare le World Series.
I Red Sox si “vendicarono” battendo i New York Giants nel 1912, in una meravigliosa World Series. Vinsero poi nel 1915. Sotto per 0-1 contro i Phillies, rimontarono e vinsero 4-1, con quattro vittorie consecutive. Nel 1916 batterono 4-1 i Brooklyn Dodgers. Nel 1918 a soccombere furono i Chicago Cubs per 4-2 (stagione accorciata per la Guerra, Gara Sei giocata l’11 settembre).
Dopo la stagione 1918 Boston aveva vinto cinque delle quindici World Series disputate. I Royal Rooters continuavano a cantare Tessie, poi nel 1918 smisero.
Il bastardo HF regalò Babe Ruth agli Yankees.
Senza Ruth e senza Tessie i Red Sox smisero di vincere.
Thanksgiving Day 2003 (ed autunno circostante).
Theo Epstein firma Keith Foulke e convince Curt Schilling a venire a Boston. In quell’autunno una banda celtic punk della zona di Boston, i Dropkick Murphys, decide di rivisitare Tessie e ne fa una cover. La nuova versione della canzone esce nel mese di giugno del 2004. In ottobre, sotto per 0-3, contro gli Yankees nelle ALCS, i Red Sox rimontano vincendo quattro partite consecutive per la terza volta nella loro storia e vanno alle World Series. Sia in quelle finali (contro i St. Louis Cardinals) che in quelle del 2007 (contro i Colorado Rockies) vincono 4-0, quarta e quinta volta in cui fanno quattro in fila.
La morale: continuiamo ad ascoltare e cantare Tessie.
2004-2007-2010, io vedo un trend.
Go Red Sox!
---
Due World Series hanno subito interruzioni di almeno una settimana.
In entrambe giocavano Giants ed Athletics.
Credo, a memoria, siano le due uniche World Series con rinvii così lunghi.
So che le World Series del 1975 ebbero lunghi rinvii per pioggia (5 giorni tra Gara Cinque e Gara Sei), ma quelle due furono uniche. Per motivi diversi. Ed inoltre simmetriche rispetto all’anno 1950.
---
Nel 1912, durante le World Series, in meno di sei secondi la notizia di un ball o di uno strike faceva il giro degli Stati Uniti. C’erano tabelloni segnapunti enormi piazzati davanti alle sedi dei giornali o nei parchi pubblici delle città. Era incredibile.
I giornali avevano delle linee telefoniche dedicate al pubblico per dare notizie e risultati delle partite.
Ma le domande sono:
Perchè John McGraw usa Jeff Tesreau, un rookie, per Gara Uno delle World Series del 1912 e non Christy Mathewson?
Dov’era Jake Stahl nel 1911?
Nella storia dei vari Polo Grounds (bruciato, ricostruito, etc.) quante partite di polo si giocarono?
Quanti lanciatori fa riscaldare Stahl prima di Gara Due delle World Series del 1912 e perchè?
Il foul pole di sinistra al Polo Grounds era a 277 piedi dal piatto di casa base.
Ma si poteva battere un HR spedendo la palla a solo 250 piedi.
Come era possibile?
Quale fu la prima partita in assoluto giocata a Fenway Park?
Data, avversari, punteggio.
Quale nave affondò…?
Beh questa è troppo facile…
---
Per cinque volte i Red Sox hanno vinto quattro partite consecutive in una stessa serie di playoff.
La prima fu nel 1903, quando, sotto per 1-3, con i Pittsburgh Pirates (si giocava al meglio delle nove gare) un gruppo di circa trecento tifosi di Boston chiamati Royal Rooters (guidati da “Nuf Ced”, proprietario della taverna Third Base, e da “Honey Fitz”, nonno di JFK) decisero di andare a Pittsburgh per risollevare le sorti della serie e della squadra.
Scelsero, tra tante, una canzone, “Tessie” (da un musical di Broadway del 1902, The Silver Slipper), e di farne il loro canto per la rimonta. Cantarono, cantarono e cantarono. A squarciagola. In continuazione. La cosa funzionò e i Red Sox vinsero Gara Cinque, Sei e Sette a Pittsburgh. Vinsero Gara Otto (shutout 4-hitter di Dinneen) allo stadio di Huntington Avenue e con un 5-3 si aggiudicarono le prime World Series di sempre.
I Sox usarono tre lanciatori nelle otto partite, Bill Dinneen che lanciò 35 inning, Cy Young, 34 IP e Tom Hughes, 2 IP. Per i Pirates Deacon Phillippe lanciò 44 inning (5 partenze in 13 giorni). Nel 1904 Boston vinse nuovamente l’American League, ma i New York Giants si rifiutarono di giocare le World Series.
I Red Sox si “vendicarono” battendo i New York Giants nel 1912, in una meravigliosa World Series. Vinsero poi nel 1915. Sotto per 0-1 contro i Phillies, rimontarono e vinsero 4-1, con quattro vittorie consecutive. Nel 1916 batterono 4-1 i Brooklyn Dodgers. Nel 1918 a soccombere furono i Chicago Cubs per 4-2 (stagione accorciata per la Guerra, Gara Sei giocata l’11 settembre).
Dopo la stagione 1918 Boston aveva vinto cinque delle quindici World Series disputate. I Royal Rooters continuavano a cantare Tessie, poi nel 1918 smisero.
Il bastardo HF regalò Babe Ruth agli Yankees.
Senza Ruth e senza Tessie i Red Sox smisero di vincere.
Thanksgiving Day 2003 (ed autunno circostante).
Theo Epstein firma Keith Foulke e convince Curt Schilling a venire a Boston. In quell’autunno una banda celtic punk della zona di Boston, i Dropkick Murphys, decide di rivisitare Tessie e ne fa una cover. La nuova versione della canzone esce nel mese di giugno del 2004. In ottobre, sotto per 0-3, contro gli Yankees nelle ALCS, i Red Sox rimontano vincendo quattro partite consecutive per la terza volta nella loro storia e vanno alle World Series. Sia in quelle finali (contro i St. Louis Cardinals) che in quelle del 2007 (contro i Colorado Rockies) vincono 4-0, quarta e quinta volta in cui fanno quattro in fila.
La morale: continuiamo ad ascoltare e cantare Tessie.
2004-2007-2010, io vedo un trend.
Go Red Sox!
---
Due World Series hanno subito interruzioni di almeno una settimana.
In entrambe giocavano Giants ed Athletics.
Credo, a memoria, siano le due uniche World Series con rinvii così lunghi.
So che le World Series del 1975 ebbero lunghi rinvii per pioggia (5 giorni tra Gara Cinque e Gara Sei), ma quelle due furono uniche. Per motivi diversi. Ed inoltre simmetriche rispetto all’anno 1950.
---
Nel 1912, durante le World Series, in meno di sei secondi la notizia di un ball o di uno strike faceva il giro degli Stati Uniti. C’erano tabelloni segnapunti enormi piazzati davanti alle sedi dei giornali o nei parchi pubblici delle città. Era incredibile.
I giornali avevano delle linee telefoniche dedicate al pubblico per dare notizie e risultati delle partite.
Ma le domande sono:
Perchè John McGraw usa Jeff Tesreau, un rookie, per Gara Uno delle World Series del 1912 e non Christy Mathewson?
Dov’era Jake Stahl nel 1911?
Nella storia dei vari Polo Grounds (bruciato, ricostruito, etc.) quante partite di polo si giocarono?
Quanti lanciatori fa riscaldare Stahl prima di Gara Due delle World Series del 1912 e perchè?
Il foul pole di sinistra al Polo Grounds era a 277 piedi dal piatto di casa base.
Ma si poteva battere un HR spedendo la palla a solo 250 piedi.
Come era possibile?
Quale fu la prima partita in assoluto giocata a Fenway Park?
Data, avversari, punteggio.
Quale nave affondò…?
Beh questa è troppo facile…
The rare occurence of the expected.
- koper
- Senior

- Posts: 1273
- Joined: 08/06/2009, 11:43
- Location: Chiavari
Re: Boston Red Sox
425,350La morale: continuiamo ad ascoltare e cantare Tessie.
D'altronde il baseball è così: alle volte si vince, alle volte si perde, altre volte...... piove (Cit.P)
Bikinis & statistics show a lot, but not everything (cit.)
Bikinis & statistics show a lot, but not everything (cit.)
- joesox
- Pro

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- MLB Team: Boston Red Sox
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Re: Boston Red Sox
The Red Sox announced that they have agreed to terms on one-year contracts with 13 players: pitchers Daniel Bard, Michael Bowden, Clay Buchholz, Felix Doubront, Ramon A. Ramirez and Dustin Richardson; catchers Dusty Brown and Mark Wagner; infielders Aaron Bates, Tug Hulett and Jed Lowrie; and outfielders Jacoby Ellsbury and Josh Reddick.
With the agreements, all 39 players on Boston’s major league roster are under contract for the 2010 season.
The Red Sox announced the signing of 13 players Monday. The terms of the contracts are as follows: Jacoby Ellsbury - $496,500 (after making $449,500 in 2009); Clay Buchholz - $443,000; Jed Lowrie - $434,000; Daniel Bard - $415,500; Tug Hulett - $403,500; Ramon A. Ramirez - $403,000; Josh Reddick - $403,000 Michael Bowden - $402,000; Dusty Brown - $402,000; Aaron Bates - $401,000; Dustin Richardson - $401,000; Felix Doubront - $400,000; Mark Wagner - $400,000. The highest paid player of the group, Ellsbury, is the only one who will be arbitration-eligible after the 2010 season.
With the agreements, all 39 players on Boston’s major league roster are under contract for the 2010 season.
The Red Sox announced the signing of 13 players Monday. The terms of the contracts are as follows: Jacoby Ellsbury - $496,500 (after making $449,500 in 2009); Clay Buchholz - $443,000; Jed Lowrie - $434,000; Daniel Bard - $415,500; Tug Hulett - $403,500; Ramon A. Ramirez - $403,000; Josh Reddick - $403,000 Michael Bowden - $402,000; Dusty Brown - $402,000; Aaron Bates - $401,000; Dustin Richardson - $401,000; Felix Doubront - $400,000; Mark Wagner - $400,000. The highest paid player of the group, Ellsbury, is the only one who will be arbitration-eligible after the 2010 season.
The rare occurence of the expected.
- joesox
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Re: Boston Red Sox
Sox 7, Cards 6.
Beckett con tre 1-2-3 inning.
HR di Julio Iglesias e tripli di Reddick e JD.
Beckett con tre 1-2-3 inning.
HR di Julio Iglesias e tripli di Reddick e JD.
The rare occurence of the expected.
- joesox
- Pro

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- MLB Team: Boston Red Sox
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Re: Boston Red Sox
FORT MYERS, Fla. - Nomar Garciaparra rejoined the Red Sox for one day and then retired, ending a 14-year career in which he won two batting titles with Boston and was once a beloved player in the city.

The rare occurence of the expected.
-
bambinazo
- Senior

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Re: Boston Red Sox
Nomar 
mi spiace di aver cominciato a seguire i Red Sox quando lui se ne stava anadando
mi spiace di aver cominciato a seguire i Red Sox quando lui se ne stava anadando
"bambinazo, minaccioso, coordinato, ho il piacere di vederlo al piatto ben cinque volte, osservandolo dalla prima o dalla seconda base. Ed ogni volta mi fa avanzare" (joesox)
non sapevate perdere, tantomeno saprete mai vincere
VAI GALLO!
non sapevate perdere, tantomeno saprete mai vincere
VAI GALLO!


