I do like that we have the 4th most wins in the National League. We have become accustomed to excellence. It's a good place to be as a fan.Pain…
I do like that we have the 4th most wins in the National League. We have become accustomed to excellence. It's a good place to be as a fan.
I think it’s in their heads and hearts. I see no passion in that team. I suppose winning so much has its mental and emotional downside. At some point you just get satisfied with what you’ve done. As is often said, the widest front door to complacency is success. It’s called resting on your laurels. Last night was the first game I’ve seen since Bally and Comcast had their falling out (I’ve cut the cable and gone to fiber). That team played with no heart.At what point does a slump turn into what we should expect? I understand regression was expected, but this is downright awful. Our offense looks completely outmatched and that should be unacceptable. I get the Acuña injury and the Strider injury, but we won a WS without Acuña. Somebody has got to step up and be the leader in the clubhouse and light a fire underneath the boys. Rattle off a nice 5 or 6 game win streak and get some swagger back. There are far too many great players on this team for them to be such a mediocre ball club.
I saw that the Braves are 1st in hard-hit percentage but 27th in WRC and 28th in runs since May 1. It’s hard to know what to adjust when the analytics say you’re just being unlucky but the results remain poor.
I think it’s a new ball that we need to adjust to but that doesn’t explain anomalies like last night, or why every other team with a high hard-hit rate (Orioles, Dodgers, Yankees, Mariners, Phillies) are finding offensive success.
I am guessing the real problem is their strike out rate. Too many guys left on 3rd with less than 2 outs.The Braves also aren’t clutch, leaving too many ROB. They are making contact, for sure. What’s their FO/GO ratio, anyone know?
It’s not losing to the Orioles that’s the issue, it’s losing to the Nats. To me, the team just has no heart anymore. I get it… two of your beat players are gone for the season, but there was a time they would reach back for a little more. It’s no linger there, it seems.
You’re not the first person I have heard say this. Losing either EYJ or Wash would have been a big loss. Losing both at the same time was a huge loss.Them running it back may have made them too comfortable.
I'm thinking losing Young and the 3rd base coach (name escapes me) may have hurt more than we know, behind the scenes.
Guy from mlbradio/espn, Eduardo Perez(?), said months ago that losing Young was a big loss w.r.t. Acuna. Apparently credited him with helping Acuna take steps as a pro in his prep, approach to the game, etc.
It's possible that loss is being felt by others.
Agree. I think Snit has adopted the role of being the encouraging father to the guys. Wash and EYJ had the fire.Wash would 'get in that arse' for a lack of better phrasing. I think Snit and others are just too chill.
Wash would 'get in that arse' for a lack of better phrasing. I think Snit and others are just too chill.