Jump to content
Jays Centre
  • Create Account

o2cui2i

Community Moderator
  • Posts

    15,411
  • Joined

  • Last visited

 Content Type 

Profiles

Toronto Blue Jays Videos

2025 Toronto Blue Jays Top Prospects Ranking

Toronto Blue Jays Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

Guides & Resources

2025 Toronto Blue Jays Draft Pick Tracker

News

Forums

Blogs

Events

Store

Downloads

Gallery

Everything posted by o2cui2i

  1. http://cricfree.sx/sportsnet-ontario-live-stream
  2. the time stamp should be for the time where you are.... your last post here says 07:55PM for me.
  3. LaCava interim gm
  4. will someone have a link??
  5. only 7 weeks left until the shortest day of the year and then we turn the corner and head in the right direction. 109 days, 23 hours, until spring training. http://www.springtrainingcountdown.com/#sthash.tHsIBtPG.idBgnGZf.dpbs
  6. William Henry Keeler (March 3, 1872 – January 1, 1923), nicknamed "Wee Willie", was a right fielder in Major League Baseball who played from 1892 to 1910, primarily for the Baltimore Orioles and Brooklyn Superbas in the National League, and the New York Highlanders in the American League. Keeler, one of the best hitters of his time, was elected into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Career Keeler's advice to hitters was "Keep your eye clear, and hit 'em where they ain't"—"they" being the opposing fielders. His .385 career batting average after the 1898 season is the highest average in history at season's end for a player with more than 1,000 hits (1,147 hits).[1] He compiled a .341 batting average over his career, currently 14th all time. He hit over .300 16 times in 19 seasons, and hit over .400 once. He twice led his league in batting average and three times in hits. Keeler had an amazing 206 singles during the 1898 season, a record that stood for more than 100 years until broken by Ichiro Suzuki. Additionally, Keeler had an on-base percentage of greater than .400 for seven straight seasons. When Keeler retired in 1910, he was third all-time in hits with 2,932, behind only Cap Anson and Jake Beckley.
  7. I would argue with that and say that they review umpire in NY had a larger impact because this guys impact should have been removed from the equation because the review shows his gloves hitting onto front of the wall with the ball in it?
  8. it really shouldn't have worked... but it definitely has worked very well for them.
  9. the jays runs started in the mid 80s and they spent money like it was going out of style back then. Jays were on of the, if not the biggest, spending team back then.
  10. seriously? he's had quite a few hits on balls he had no right getting to METS IMPLODE
  11. at the end of the day the players do what they do... you can make all the right decisions and the players suck moose or you can go against all the numbers and the team still wins. xSHITHAPPENS is an undervalued stat.
  12. Toronto has so many options vying for people's cash. Die hards will watch through painful times and go nuts during years like this where we fielded a top team, but there are a large number who are only there for the party. I don't think attendance will drop off too much if the Jays are in a run all the way to the end of the season, but if they are out of things in August the sept numbers will be really bad.
  13. AA said he didn't like the idea of including Hoffman during the off season talks but I guess Reyes was so bad AA felt it was worth Hoffman to get rid of Reyes mid season.
  14. his base stealing disappeared after he came to Toronto because Gibbons told him not to steal. mathematical metrics are useless if you don't put real life factors into them.
  15. royals won't be able to slap hit their way out of this one.
  16. carrying the extra weight of the long hair would wear on the innings Harvey should pitch, so I don't think his agent would allow it.
  17. nice to see the Mets show up.
  18. I'm sure most here throw up reading that.... you troll. lol
  19. apparently the answer is no. close the thread and move the discussion into the new ones?
  20. beeston= MBA with bad hair Shapiro= legit baseball guy who believes in a advanced stats ?
  21. he's been trying to post since the last series ended but it took this long for his mom's dialup to log into the forum. hard to troll the internet from a trailer park in Wichita
  22. nope... he truly thought he was smarter than everyone. He wasn't smart enough to do it intentionally. I do believe he is packaging screws now, He set up and ran a full day of the most expensive parts we ran and all of it had to be thrown away. I had run the same program 2 days earlier, did 40% more parts for my day and they were all correctly made..... union was the only thing that saved his job. CEO and production chief wanted him fired. His coworkers just wanted him gone whatever it took.
  23. worked with a guy who ruined the mood and effectiveness of an entire division in the factory. This idiot couldn't just set up the NC machines to run parts without changing the programs. He thought he was smarter than everyone and if things didn't work it was someone else's fault, so he'd manually change a fully functioning program to make up for his inadequacies. If the program worked before then it should work now. If you are setting it up and it isn't producing parts they way it should then ITS YOUR f***ING FAULT: you change YOUR mistakes and leave the program alone. trust me.... one cancer can kill it for a whole group of professionals.
×
×
  • Create New...