JacketBuzz
Georgia Tech Fan
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Danny is among the highest paid assistants in the college game. For whatever reason, he hasn’t been able to elevate our arms to even a mediocre level.
Really surprising.
Really surprising.
Well, this was really just his second year and it was his first year with all of the technology in place, so I'm not going to pass judgment yet. Next year will tell me all I need to know.Danny is among the highest paid assistants in the college game. For whatever reason, he hasn’t been able to elevate our arms to even a mediocre level.
Really surprising.
I am just spitballing here as I have no real knowledge or insight on the program...but I wonder if there may be too much emphasis on development and mechanics vs. results. An analogy that may be similar to this is golf....the object is to get the ball in the hole with as few strokes as possible. That's it. Although many go down the rabbit hole of chasing a "perfect" golf swing.There’s too much good arm talent on these, and now there’s too many resources to utilize to put out results like we saw this year
. With every pitcher on this staff, you can think of an inning or outing where they just dominated and looked like one of "the answers" to out pitching woes. And then the very next inning or game, just got bombed. He's got to figure out a way to ramp up that consistency for the staff.
I get what you're saying, but Arnie and Furyk were excellent at impact.I am just spitballing here as I have no real knowledge or insight on the program...but I wonder if there may be too much emphasis on development and mechanics vs. results. An analogy that may be similar to this is golf....the object is to get the ball in the hole with as few strokes as possible. That's it. Although many go down the rabbit hole of chasing a "perfect" golf swing.
Neither Arnie in a previous era or Jim Furyk (David Feherty once described his swing as looking like "an octupus falling out of a tree") as a more recent example had "good" golf swings according to the "experts"and I wonder if there aren't a lot of modern golf coaches who would not want them to change their swings had these two been under their tutelage. Palmer, of course, is an all-time great and Furyk may end up in the Golf HOF one day. Both of these guys succeeded without classic technique although they were able to repeat their swings which is ultimately the key to achieving success in the sport.
It may be possible to do so (overhaul a swing) in the long run. But, in the short run, almost all golfers regress while correcting (or attempting to correct) mechanics. They cannot repeat their swings as they get stuck between old habits and new. A college baseball career lasts 2-5 years. So, (assuming similarities between the two sports here) there isn't much time to see the fruits of their labor while tinkering with the structure of their pitching mechanics. And it begs the question, is it really worth more than winning games in the short run?
Although to be fair to this guy, we have had similar issues prior to his arrival as I understand things..
I guess I didn't speak with much clarity...the only thing that truly matters is getting the club in the right spot at the moment of impact. How you achieve that isn't really all that important. But that you get it there in the right spot consisently IS crucial. Yes, Freddie Couples and Ernie Els have the swings you admire. But I would be happy to be Furyk and have people scoff at my swing.I get what you're saying, but Arnie and Furyk were excellent at impact.
not that easy. NIL doesn't come from GT but from outside dollars. So cutting his salary has to be used for other coaches, facility enhancements, etc.No, take his salary and split it up between 5-6 pitchers on NIL. (tic)
Roedig had arm problems, shoulder I believe. Mannelly as well, TJ surgery I thought, but the GT site just says battled injuries all season in 2019 and didn't make an appearance in the COVID shortened 2020 season. Bartnicki was never able to get things going this year. Haven't heard about an injury, but wouldn't surprise me. Add to that the loss of development time during 2020 and it's no wonder our pitching had issues. Pitching was down across all of college baseball this year, as evidenced by some of the team records set for HR, high averages, NCAA regional scores etc. Coach Borrell has a lot of his own freshmen recruits coming back next year (with the transfer portal, I hope they're coming back...) that showed a lot of promise, but also inconsistency this year. Especially when ACC play started. We'll see what next year holds.There's clearly difficulty in him switching from the macro view he had with the Yankees where long term outcomes were the focus to the micro, game by game, pitch by pitch view that he needs where it's the current game outcome that is the primary focus.
Like everyone else, I certainly don't have the magic answer on how to fix things. With every pitcher on this staff, you can think of an inning or outing where they just dominated and looked like one of "the answers" to out pitching woes. And then the very next inning or game, just got bombed. He's got to figure out a way to ramp up that consistency for the staff.
I don't have a problem with giving him one more year, but with a lot of returning veteran arms next year, it has to be different or that's it. It is concerning that people like Bartnicki, Roedig, Mannelly were not able to improve at all over the course of their career and really regressed, even with loads of pure talent.
Former Tech alumni here. Technology can't help throw strikes or throw breaking ball strikes in fastball situations. I brought my son to tech 2 summers ago for Danny to view. His spin rates weren't good enough for Tech. He was just names SC 4A state pitcher of the year. All he does is win games. 64IP 108ks 21bb 1.16era this year. He's 6'7 230 and throws 88-91 and can touch 93. Since I didn't play in the big leagues he doesn't get the looks he deserves. I did however have a huge part in winning 2 acc titles.Danny is among the highest paid assistants in the college game. For whatever reason, he hasn’t been able to elevate our arms to even a mediocre level.
Really surprising.
With that kind of size, he seems right up Hall's alley. He as always had a strange love of really tall pitchers.Former Tech alumni here. Technology can't help throw strikes or throw breaking ball strikes in fastball situations. I brought my son to tech 2 summers ago for Danny to view. His spin rates weren't good enough for Tech. He was just names SC 4A state pitcher of the year. All he does is win games. 64IP 108ks 21bb 1.16era this year. He's 6'7 230 and throws 88-91 and can touch 93. Since I didn't play in the big leagues he doesn't get the looks he deserves. I did however have a huge part in winning 2 acc titles.