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Posted


Edgy MD wrote:

https://www.milb.com/st-lucie/fans/audio-listen-liveListen live!



Alvarez catching and batting third. Backup catcher Matt Dyer playing first. Fourteen hundred fans = sellout!


I ordered tix online last night and think I got the last three. I tried to buy five, then four, and three went through. Last seats in the last row in the bleachers. Park is 21 percent capacity allowed.


Posted


Double by Sherwyn Newton and a ground single by Alvarez and the Mets have runners on the corners with one out.


Posted


DOUBLE BY ZACK ASHFORD! NEWTON SCORES!! HERE COMES ALVAREZ!!!!



OUT AT THE PLATE!!



WHAT'S GOING ON?!!! A FIRST-INNING LEAD FOR deGROM??!!


Posted


Soft grounder on a 1-2 pitch. Throw misplayed by Dyer at first.



deGrom will be pitching from the stretch.



Runner steals on first pitch.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


41 pitches (30 strikes) that could have been thrown tonight in Miami but whatever.



Old-Timey Member
Posted


Especially in these days of using an opener and bullpen games why not let him throw his 40-50

pitches in a real game? It's like a 100 miles between Port St Lucie and Miami.


Old-Timey Member
Posted



It's looking like Tuesday at Citi against the Rockies for deGrom's MLB return.



https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/jacob-degrom-expected-to-rejoin-mets-rotation-ahead-of-tuesday-start-vs-rockies/https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/jacob-degrom-expected-to-rejoin-mets-rotation-ahead-of-tuesday-start-vs-rockies/


Nice to see they are easing him back into things, following a start in A-Ball with a start against a AA lineup.


Posted


Jake back on the mound for the New York (not St. Lucie or Syracuse) Mets Tuesday night.


  • 2 weeks later...
Posted


Joe Posnanski on the incomparable Jacob deGrom:


He has allowed four earned runs in eight starts … and he has allowed three home runs, which suggests your best shot against him is to close your eyes and swing as hard as you can.
Posted


I want to measure him against history with regards to his ration of runs allowed to RBI, but it's hard to find a site that''ll allow you do a database query producing pitching stats side-by-side with hitting stats for all qualifying pitchers in history, season by season. Also, the 19th century had a lot more hybrid Ohtani types who were pitchers and everyday players at the same time.


Posted


For what it's worth, here's deGrom 2021 alongside the top RBI/ER seasons of Walter Johnson and Bob Gibson (two of the best pitchers ever who were also very good hitters) as well as Don Drysdale and Carlos Zambrano (two of the best hitting pitchers ever who were also All-Star pitchers).






[th]Pitcher[/th][th]Season[/th][th]PA[/th][th]RBI[/th][th]IP[/th][th]ER[/th][th]RBI/ER Ratio[/th]
deGrom202120351.0040.75
=#FF0000]Johnson191816718326.00460.39
=#FF0000]Johnson191215820369.00570.35
=#FF0000]Johnson191314414346.00440.32
=#FF0000]Johnson191516117336.67580.29
=#FF0000]Johnson192510720229.00780.26
=#BF0000]Gibson196310020254.67960.21
=#BF0000]Drysdale196513819308.33950.20
=#BF0000]Gibson196511919299.001020.19
=#BF0000]Gibson197012419294.001020.19
=#000080]Zambrano20088514188.67820.17
=#BF0000]Gibson19681106304.67380.16
=#000080]Zambrano197210612278.00760.16
=#000080]Zambrano20097211169.33710.15
=#BF0000]Drysdale196212614314.33990.14
=#000080]Zambrano20068011214.00810.14
=#BF0000]Drysdale19587212211.67980.12
=#BF0000]Drysdale19619512244.001000.12
=#BF0000]Drysdale195910412270.671040.12
=#000080]Zambrano2003806214.00740.08




So, putting aside that I just selected a handful of guys based on rep, and the table is miles from conclusive, your takeaway might be that, historically, by this measure, no one sniffs Walter Johnson.



And so far, no Walter Johnson season sniffs Jacob deGrom.


Posted


I suspect it's been more than a few years since a pitcher has topped 100 ABs in a season now that we're in the era of 30 or fewer starts/year and 3 or fewer ABs/per


Posted


And interleague play creating two or three starts per season where a pitcher doesn't come to the plate.



Anybody want to guess the last pitcher in baseball to clear 100 plate appearances in a season, and what season that was?


Posted


Edgy MD wrote:

Anybody want to guess the last pitcher in baseball to clear 100 plate appearances in a season, and what season that was?


Is it Seaver '77?


Posted


Since the Mets will have passed the one-third mark of the season by the next game that deGrom starts, this is a convenient point to project his accomplishments for the next two-thirds of 2021. Specifically, what will he need to do to break Bob Gibson's ERA record of 1.12?



A quick, back-of-the-envelope answer is simply to take his current distance from that mark (1.12 minus .61 equals .51) and cut that figure in half (about .25) and add that to 1.12.



That figure (1.37) represents the ERA that deGrom would have to reach, given an equal number of innings to his current pace) over the last two-thirds of the season in order to match Gibson's 1.12.



In other words, he is way ahead of Gibson's ERA, but would have to maintain a spectacular 1.37 ERA for nearly four more months, just to tie Gibson. No one has posted an ERA nearly as low as 1.37 since Gibson did it in 1968. The best anyone has done is Gooden's 1.53 in 1985.



So deGrom would still need to beat Gooden's Met record by a sixth of an earned run per nine innings from here on out just to tie Gibson's mark. It's still a very heavy lift.



We could compute this number more precisely, but of course precision is nearly impossible in such matters: deGrom's 2021 numbers—innings pitched, games started, earned runs—will rely on his luck and his health in addition to his skill. I think the figure of 1.37 is close enough to the mark, given all the unknown variables, that further precision is futile.



Of course, there is no way that he will come close to tying Gibson's number of innings pitched in 1968, so if he matches, or even beats, the 1.12 mark, there will be those who will credit Gibson with having accomplished a much harder task, and it's hard to argue with that point.



Multiplying his current stats by 3, he's on pace to go 15-6, with 174 IP in 27 games.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


Edgy MD wrote:

No, a single 21st Century pitcher came to the plate 100 times in a single season.


All NIght Dwight aka Doc?


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