|
Post by rizzuto on Oct 1, 2022 10:29:03 GMT -5
Perfect day for Judge to hit #62. Roger Maris Jr. said that with all the odd numerical associations, he expected Judge to do it on October 1. Roger Maris was listed as 6'0" tall. Seeing his son speaking to Aaron Judge, Maris Jr. has to be around 6'4". Both of Maris' boys have athletic builds, too. The one trait they seem to have certainly inherited from their dad is humility. They appear to be good guys. Certain things you'll never hear me say: 1. Roger Maris, Jr. is too showy for my taste. 2. I just don't care for Aaron Judge's demeanor. 3. I try to follow the wisdom and sound viewpoints of Curt Schilling. 4. Why is Barry Bonds' humanity not mentioned in the same breath with Roberto Clemente? 5. Carlos Beltran in the booth is the second coming of Vin Scully. 6. I'll have the same thing Inger ordered.
|
|
|
Post by domeplease on Oct 1, 2022 18:13:37 GMT -5
Hoping Judge gets his 62nd plus more soon.
The best I can figure: The FOUR Teams that will be all in on Judge this off-season = will be Naturally the Yankees, Mets, Giants, Dodgers (with the Cardinals a Dark Horse...).
Given his age PLUS looking at the a number of Long-Term Contracts for Players 30 Plus, that have been Regretted by Owners in hindsight, etc.
If I was a Owner I would offer the following:
--5 Years at $55m/year ($275m) plus a Team Option Year for $60m for year six. Equals a total of $335m.
The benefits for the team = they do not get stuck with a 7-10 year contract player where as he ages like the vast majority of these players get more injuries, decreaed in performance numbers, etc. etc. etc.
The Benefits for Judge are: If he stays healthy and has 5 great years he picks up another $65m & than can hit the FA Market again.
Plus he becomes very rich in the meantime:
$55m a year after taxes, agents, etc. leaves him round $20m TAX FREE a year. I used 65% for taxes etc.(way too High, but for the sake of argunments...)
This gives Judge $1.6m a month Tax Free or $55,000 a day Tax Free.
I DID NOT include any income for ADS, Endorsements, Appearances, etc. etc. etc.
Nor, did I lower his Tax Rate by the 50% OF the cash he might give to Charities (he looks/acts like a Charitable type guy). Nor did, I lower his taxes by so MANY Legal Ways he can loweer his Tax Rate like so many others do in his income bracket.
Plus he can BRAG (not like Judge) that he is the highest paid MLB Player ever.
I hope WE keep/resign Judge to a Reasonable/Common Sense win-win contract. If we go over 6-years just think Stanton, etc. etc. etc.
Shit we got Cole for like on a 8-9 year contract. If he doesn't opt out in 2024 -- I think we might have regrets. Sadly for the Vast Majority of MLB Players (Like 98%) = The older you get the worst you get (there are just a few exceptions...).
|
|
|
Post by anthonyd46 on Oct 2, 2022 21:40:56 GMT -5
Annoying he hasn't gotten it yet. Again no on is saying throw a meatball over the plate but like 90% of the pitches in the dirt is just not being competitive.
|
|
|
Post by domeplease on Oct 4, 2022 16:05:40 GMT -5
JUDGE MVP or OHTANI???
...Which is too bad, because for as excellent as Judge has been this year, the two-way sensation is the correct choice.
Here is the part where, before defending Ohtani as the more deserving MVP selection, I laud Judge for his accomplishments, which is easy to do because he has so many. He leads the majors with a 212 OPS+, which is the highest in a full-length season since Barry Bonds in 2004, when he put up a laughable 263. Judge’s ’22 mark stands as the 24th-highest in MLB history. Oh, and he’s an impressive 16-for-19 in stolen base attempts while starting more games in center field than right field, his natural position, because until Harrison Bader returned from injury last month—after the Yankees traded for him in early August—New York had no true center fielder.
Judge has a 22-homer lead on Mike Trout, who ranks second in the AL, and if Judge maintains that lead, he’ll be the first player since Babe Ruth in 1928 to win the home run crown by so great a margin. He has an uphill climb to catch Twins infielder Luis Arraez for the AL batting title (Arraez is hitting .315 compared to Judge’s .311), but if he’s able to surpass him, he’d nab the 13th Triple Crown since RBIs became an official stat in 1920. He would also, of course, be the only Triple Crown winner with at least 60 home runs.
Again, Judge’s performance in 2022 is remarkable. But it’s not in the same ballpark as what Ohtani has pulled off for the second consecutive year.
Every year, hitters aspire to do what Judge did this season. And every once in a decade, or three, they succeed—maybe not with the home run totals, but at least in terms of overall production. But nobody even attempts to do what Ohtani is doing, and has done, for two consecutive years. His feats are so rare that there is truly only one name to compare him to, and even invoking the Sultan of Swat doesn’t do justice to Ohtani’s accomplishments.
After he completes one inning on the mound in Wednesday’s season finale against the A’s, Ohtani will become the first player ever to qualify for both batting and pitching statistical categories. Ruth came close twice, logging 381 plate appearances with 166 1/3 innings on the mound in 1918, with 11 home runs and a 2.22 ERA. He followed that up with 543 plate appearances and 133 1/3 innings in ’19, bashing 29 homers with a 2.97 ERA before switching exclusively to hitting. Ohtani is a two-way player in the truest sense of the term, turning the world’s foremost baseball association into his own personal Little League.
Ohtani’s adjusted OPS (147) ranks fourth in the AL; his adjusted ERA (169) also ranks fourth. He’s the fastest runner from home to first in the league. Along with adjusted OPS and ERA, Ohtani ranks in the top five in the AL in the following categories: home runs (fourth), triples (fourth), OPS (fourth), total bases (fourth), extra-base hits (third), ERA (fourth), wins (fourth), strikeout rate (first), strikeouts (third) and FIP (second). Among AL pitchers, he has the most games with 10 or more strikeouts (10), and currently has MLB’s longest active hitting streak, which climbed to 18 games on Monday night.
Ohtani is the first player ever with 10 or more pitching wins and 30 or more home runs in a season. The only other player with 10 of each in the same season is Ruth, who won 13 games and hit 11 homers in the aforementioned 1918 campaign. A day after Judge tied Roger Maris’s AL single-season record of 61 home runs, Ohtani took a no-hit bid into the eighth inning against Oakland. He also went 2-for-4 at the plate, adding as many hits himself as he allowed to A’s hitters.
Aside from focus on the AL’s home run record and a potential Triple Crown win, there are two primary talking points I’ve observed in support of a win for Judge. The first is that Judge’s accomplishments helped bolster a winning team, and thus were more valuable than Ohtani’s, which were wasted on yet another disappointing Angels season. In my view, the MVP award—which has a definition left intentionally ambiguous, and, to me, puts an unnecessary strain on voters to draw arbitrary lines in the sand—is meant to go to the best individual player.
The best player is the most valuable, simply by being the best. Holding the Angels’ ineptitude against Ohtani is an unfair demerit, though there are certainly voters who feel that Judge’s production came under more pressure than Ohtani’s by virtue of his team’s place in the standings, and thus is more impressive. On that front, there might be nothing more to say other than, “Agree to disagree.”
The second notion that gets touted as a pseudo trump card is the idea that, when the 2022 season is viewed in hindsight, Judge will be the first name that comes to mind, and that the story of the season is his story. That feels both wildly speculative and, in a way, self-fulfilling, when those who are positing Judge as the story of the season are the very authors of that story. And besides, it should come as no surprise that the best player on the most popular team gets more attention than one whose club spent nearly the entire year under .500 and out of the national spotlight.
Ohtani has made what had for a century been accepted as impossible into commonplace, and effectively hindered his 2022 MVP chances with his breakthrough ’21 performance that, in comparison, was somehow less impressive than the sequel—by his own assessment.
Back in July, Tom compared Ohtani’s two-way feats to “watching someone juggling chainsaws.” This year, he’s lit one of the chainsaws on fire while balancing atop a highwire on one leg. It’s the most breathtaking individual showing the game has ever seen, even if—like his team’s inconsequential third-place finish—it ultimately goes unrewarded.
|
|
|
Post by kaybli on Oct 4, 2022 19:15:55 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by kaybli on Oct 4, 2022 19:19:29 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by kaybli on Oct 4, 2022 19:29:02 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by acuraman on Oct 4, 2022 22:29:32 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by inger on Oct 4, 2022 22:35:39 GMT -5
He hit a tiny hamburger for a home run? …
|
|
|
Post by anthonyd46 on Oct 5, 2022 0:34:24 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by anthonyd46 on Oct 5, 2022 0:38:45 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by kaybli on Oct 5, 2022 3:09:19 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by pippsheadache on Oct 5, 2022 6:38:51 GMT -5
My two favorite tweets on this came from 1) Roger Maris Jr., who after praising Judge for the class he has shown added that for the majority of fans we now have a new clean home run King and 2) Fresno State Football, which tweeted "still curious how it would have turned out in football, but this is pretty cool too."
|
|
|
Post by kaybli on Oct 5, 2022 13:05:05 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by domeplease on Oct 5, 2022 17:23:55 GMT -5
HUGE BRAVO TO JUDGE!!!
Tequila thinks there will be a THREE-WAY tie for A.L. MVP = Judge naturally being one of the Players./
|
|