Good
morning.
Let’s
welcome Sal Aguilar, Reese Havens, Charles O’Brien,
Erik Turgeon, and Rajai Davis to our
family of readers.
I saw
there was a survey taken and two thirds of the respondents said they would not
return to a sports stadium until a cure for Covid is found.
I can
see this.
I can
not see American owners being very happy with the results of this survey. A
stadium ‘filled’ with less than 15,000 fans is a revenue disaster for every
team in the league. The cost of operating the facility doesn’t change nor does
travel expenses. And what happens if one player in league tests positive?
More
fuel for shutting down the entire season.
It was
announced yesterday morning that al New York City schools will now close for
the entire year. Here’s a question… how can you still consider playing baseball
when you will not even allow kids to attend their classes?
Daniel Kim 대니얼 김 - @DanielKimW
Another positive day for Korea. Only 27 new COVID-19 cases
were reported today by Korea’s CDC. First time in 50 days since daily positives
were in the 20’s. Meanwhile in Busan, Lotte Giants played 1st night game which
was televised nationally.
David Lennon - @DPLennon
Korea now has baseball because of a very early, aggressive
testing program and monitoring process - for a much smaller country than US
obviously.
We don’t have anywhere near that type of handle on COVID yet.
Hopefully we get there, and then we’ll get baseball, too.
JJ Cooper - @jjcoop36
If you're going to split to Arizona
and Florida, it makes more sense to split AL to one state and NL to the other.
Less radical change that accomplishes the same goal. The only difference is
teams would have to play in other team's parks. Same effect, less change.
Bob Nightengale - @BNightengale
MLB considering
radical realignment as one of their options for 2020 season: Grapefruit and
Cactus leagues . USA Today
Northwell Health Foundation
- @GiveToNorthwell
Thank
you to the New York Mets and dunkin donuts
for fueling our #healthcareheros at
North Shore University Hospital with a special breakfast. Thank you for your
support of @NorthwellHealth
Emily Waldon - @EmilyCWaldon
Spoke
to a minor leaguer tonight who told me he has had two teammates living with him
since they were sent home from Spring Training.
Reason
being, the players have elderly parents and they didn’t want to risk carrying
something home from camp.
Last
year, J.D. Davis slashed 307/369/527 with a 136
wRC+ in 453 plate appearances. To put that in perspective Braves superstar
Ronald Acuna Jr. slashed .280/.365/.518 last year with a 126 wRC+. Obviously,
Acuna is better because of his defense superiority and larger sample size of
success, but if Davis can hit like he did last year he will be one of the best
hitters in the NL East.
However,
many Mets fans doubt that his breakout is sustainable. Davis had a 35 wRC+ in
113 plate appearances with the Astros in 2018, and his .355 BABIP in 2019 is
concerning. The most compelling and logical argument against Davis’ breakout is
his high BABIP, or “batting average on balls in play.” The purpose of the stat
is to spot players who may have gotten lucky or unlucky. The idea is that a
player with a high BABIP might’ve been lucky by having an unusual percentage of
his balls in play result in hits and that the player’s BABIP will eventually
regress to league average or his career average, consequently bringing down his
batting average and offensive production. However, for some players having a
high BABIP is a skill. The past 2 years, there have been 5 players with at
least 1000 plate appearances and a BABIP above .350. In my opinion, Davis is
one of the players who can sustain a high BABIP.
We always extend a warm welcome to anyone named Reese.
ReplyDeleteI think fans will flock to ballparks the day they are lied to that the virus is over. People are indeed sick of being stuck at home and a ballpark is a venue of normalcy. Few will take the precautions necessary to protect themselves, hence the widespread proliferation of the disease.
Davis had a monster more-or-less rookie season. He reminds me of a more musclebound Wilmer Flores who could certainly hit the ball but was a bit of liability no matter where you tried to hide him on the field.
My hopes is Davis worked hard on his defensive game in the off season, both in the corners on third and left.
ReplyDeleteThe virus is exploding across Florida due to late shutdown. I don't see it being safe to play there.
ReplyDeleteAnother interesting article I read yesterday indicates that people walking, running, biking, etc. Need to be given more space (up to 65 feet) as not to spread the disease.
Not a good formula for starting up games.
Bob W.
One of the groups of teams could play in...South Korea instead of FLorida.
ReplyDeleteI do not like the idea of shifting teams between FLorida and Arizona due to league affiliation. If you did spring training in Arizona, you have first hand knowledge of Arizona...so when risk is high, familiarity reduces risk.
JD Davis was hitting the ball HARD. I expect him to hit like, oh, Justin Turner.
Corona, Queens has the highest positive test rate in the country. SEVENTY EIGHT % POSITIVE RESULTS. Amazing, right?
Well, Corona also has a huge number of illegals, as do other high test positive neighborhoods. NYC’s population density, poverty, and foolish sanctuary policies will make it hugely difficult to get NYC METRO to homogenous Korea’s low levels of virus positives. Testing capacity is drastically too low still. NYC is out of control, Long Island bad too.
In other words, NYC METRO is in BIG trouble. What a mess. I truly hope I am wrong.