Ranma wrote:Puig's problems stem from his taking his spot on the roster for granted. His lack of focus and discipline comes from his heavy dependence on his physical talents and aggressive nature to see him through. I've said before that I want the Dodgers to put him on notice and limit his playing time with the aim to turn the light bulb in his head.
The special treatment he received and lack of enforcement of clubhouse rules and codes he's flouted has come home to roost. In order to reach his full potential, this stallion has to be broken before he can be a worthy racehorse. Yasiel is starting to see it, but he needs to further commit. He continues to make base-running mistake and his approach to the plate continues to lack discipline. Hitting a homerun off a hanging pitch from Aaron Harang, while welcomed, is not really that impressive given his tools.
I'm absolutley fine with giving opportunities to other Dodgers outfielders and implementing a more merit-based system of rewarding playing time for production and conduct.
Mark Saxon, ESPN (8/6/15)A bit less playing time might be something Puig has to get used to, manager Don Mattingly said, because the team would like to get Carl Crawford more playing time and Andre Ethier has provided the most consistent offense from any of the outfielders.
"I think the days off are good for Yasiel, honestly," Mattingly said. "I don’t know if he was just used to playing less games in Cuba, but his focus just seems sharper when he’s getting a day-off-a-week or something like that."
Yasiel Puig Might Get Less Playing Time Now
So the answer is to give him the most random day off and then throw him back in there against Gerrit Cole?
I'm actually a fan of the merit based system and Andre's performance has made stuff like this necessary….but this specific instance was just wack to me.
He started to rack up a couple hits against the Angels. We had a day off between the series. He didn't need a day off yesterday. He needed to see if he was onto something with opening up his stance.