GT_ATL
Georgia Tech Fan
- Messages
- 34
I've only been following college baseball for a couple of years (starting with the Farmer/Palka/Evans team a few years ago) and keep having the same couple of questions about the sport nag at me.
1. Why aren't midweek games particularly high-scoring?
You'd think games that feature a high-powered conference team hitting off a meh mid-major's bullpen would be a festive affair, but they don't seem to be any more high scoring than a typical Saturday or Sunday game. Why? How do mid majors have the pitching depth to keep a program like GT from rolling over them? Case in point: Ohio brought out TEN pitchers against GT, and presumably none of them were their main starters, and gave up 7 runs in 12 innings. How did GT's starters not put up like 30 runs on these surely-marginal pitchers?
2. Does anyone have any idea who will make it to the big leagues/who is a legitimate pro prospect?
I guess my question is, *when* did people know that Teixeira/Blackmon/Weiters/etc were something special? Did they come in right in with a lot of hype and dominate from day one, or were they fairly normal players at first? Without the hype machine that follows college basketball and football it's hard to get a feel for when a guy has a chance to be a pro player. Good example of my question is Buck Farmer- he was presumably just a normal player, did midweek games as a freshman/soph, etc etc and then by his senior year he was dominant and then a year later he was starting games for Detroit. Did Farmer have a lot of hype? Is a guy like Kel Johnson considered a sure thing to at least make it to AA or AAA, for example?
1. Why aren't midweek games particularly high-scoring?
You'd think games that feature a high-powered conference team hitting off a meh mid-major's bullpen would be a festive affair, but they don't seem to be any more high scoring than a typical Saturday or Sunday game. Why? How do mid majors have the pitching depth to keep a program like GT from rolling over them? Case in point: Ohio brought out TEN pitchers against GT, and presumably none of them were their main starters, and gave up 7 runs in 12 innings. How did GT's starters not put up like 30 runs on these surely-marginal pitchers?
2. Does anyone have any idea who will make it to the big leagues/who is a legitimate pro prospect?
I guess my question is, *when* did people know that Teixeira/Blackmon/Weiters/etc were something special? Did they come in right in with a lot of hype and dominate from day one, or were they fairly normal players at first? Without the hype machine that follows college basketball and football it's hard to get a feel for when a guy has a chance to be a pro player. Good example of my question is Buck Farmer- he was presumably just a normal player, did midweek games as a freshman/soph, etc etc and then by his senior year he was dominant and then a year later he was starting games for Detroit. Did Farmer have a lot of hype? Is a guy like Kel Johnson considered a sure thing to at least make it to AA or AAA, for example?