
Chicken Little reporting in. Good morning fellow Philly fans.
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Embiid P wrote:Iverson Armband wrote:Embiid P wrote:Choke job complete.
This team lacks speedy but patient small ball players the way AZ does. That's what did them in last year in the WS. Dombrowski has lots of work to do in the offseason.
They also have about 2 reliable pitchers.
True, but with the exception of the one bad inning by Nola in Game 6, their starting pitching was quite good this series. It was their hitting (or lack thereof) that killed them in games 3, 6, and 7. Kimbrel not coming back pretty much goes without saying. Fortunately, they'll have Painter healthy next season to potentially replace Nola if he leaves. If I'm Dombrowski, I'd try my hardest to bring back Suarez next season who has shown that he can turn it up a notch in the playoffs.
Would also like to see us move on from Hoskins (not his fault he got injured before the season but IMO he's the most expendable of their power hitters) and Bohm.
Embiid P wrote:Choke job complete.
This team lacks speedy but patient small ball players the way AZ does. That's what did them in last year in the WS. Dombrowski has lots of work to do in the offseason.
mjkvol wrote:Embiid P wrote:Choke job complete.
This team lacks speedy but patient small ball players the way AZ does. That's what did them in last year in the WS. Dombrowski has lots of work to do in the offseason.
Why does it always have to be a "choke job"? Baseball is the ultimate game of variance and streaks, it's not a game of momentum like football or basketball. In baseball, momentum lasts until the next batter.
The Phils lived and died with the long ball, as all those solo homers showed. Kimbrel was bad, but he is also the easy culprit. Anyone looking at the alarming number of runners left on base could see the primary reason for this, and it started even in a couple of the games the Phils won. They had few big innings that didn't involve multiple homers, and failed to put away game 2 (where they held on) and game 4 (where it came back to bite them) because of leaving runners stranded.
I hate the blame game, but if you're going to point to anyone it is the big money hitters all going ice cold at the same time, especially Turner and Castellanos. A few timely hits would have put this series away before they returned to Philly. It's baseball, schiit happens. They gave us a great ride, and will contend again next year.
Embiid P wrote:mjkvol wrote:Embiid P wrote:Choke job complete.
This team lacks speedy but patient small ball players the way AZ does. That's what did them in last year in the WS. Dombrowski has lots of work to do in the offseason.
Why does it always have to be a "choke job"? Baseball is the ultimate game of variance and streaks, it's not a game of momentum like football or basketball. In baseball, momentum lasts until the next batter.
The Phils lived and died with the long ball, as all those solo homers showed. Kimbrel was bad, but he is also the easy culprit. Anyone looking at the alarming number of runners left on base could see the primary reason for this, and it started even in a couple of the games the Phils won. They had few big innings that didn't involve multiple homers, and failed to put away game 2 (where they held on) and game 4 (where it came back to bite them) because of leaving runners stranded.
I hate the blame game, but if you're going to point to anyone it is the big money hitters all going ice cold at the same time, especially Turner and Castellanos. A few timely hits would have put this series away before they returned to Philly. It's baseball, schiit happens. They gave us a great ride, and will contend again next year.
Obviously we know about Kimbrel but rather than a matter of "hot vs. cold" I see it as Arizona making adjustments in games 6 and 7 and the Phillies failing to make adjustments in turn. Merrill Kelly himself said the quiet part out loud: they weren't gonna let Harper, Turner, Schwarber, Castellanos, etc. beat them by giving them good pitches to hit. What does that tell you? I want to believe that this team learns how to be more patient at the plate and play small ball next season, but I'll believe it when I see it. To quote Ben Simmons, I fear that they are who they are at this point. And judging by his postgame interviews, Thomson doesn't sound too eager to get them to change their ways.
Kobblehead wrote:This team hit a ton of solo homeruns and stranded a ton of runners on base. That speaks volumes. Their approach is trash. Nobody taking what is given to them. Especially in clutch situations. Every player in the lineup can't be a choke artist. Which leads me to believe that their hitting coach just sucks and these guys are adopting a bad plate approach.
Embiid P wrote:Kobblehead wrote:This team hit a ton of solo homeruns and stranded a ton of runners on base. That speaks volumes. Their approach is trash. Nobody taking what is given to them. Especially in clutch situations. Every player in the lineup can't be a choke artist. Which leads me to believe that their hitting coach just sucks and these guys are adopting a bad plate approach.
FWIW they are supposedly making changes to their bullpen and hitting staffs. Dombrowski also said during his end-of-the-season presser that they need a more balanced offense which presumably means that they'll be looking to move one of their power hitters (most likely Castellanos) for a contact hitter who can easily get on and steal bases.
the_process wrote:Embiid P wrote:Kobblehead wrote:This team hit a ton of solo homeruns and stranded a ton of runners on base. That speaks volumes. Their approach is trash. Nobody taking what is given to them. Especially in clutch situations. Every player in the lineup can't be a choke artist. Which leads me to believe that their hitting coach just sucks and these guys are adopting a bad plate approach.
FWIW they are supposedly making changes to their bullpen and hitting staffs. Dombrowski also said during his end-of-the-season presser that they need a more balanced offense which presumably means that they'll be looking to move one of their power hitters (most likely Castellanos) for a contact hitter who can easily get on and steal bases.
They should look to move Schwarber before Castellanos. One trick ponies don’t cut it anymore.
mjkvol wrote:Moving either Schwarber or Castellanos for more versatile hitting and speed makes a ton of sense, but I'm not sure there would be a market for Schwarber, who at this point is pretty much exclusively a DH who hits homers or strikes out. They need bullpen arms that will throw strikes, as the walks flat out cost them game 4.
the_process wrote:mjkvol wrote:Moving either Schwarber or Castellanos for more versatile hitting and speed makes a ton of sense, but I'm not sure there would be a market for Schwarber, who at this point is pretty much exclusively a DH who hits homers or strikes out. They need bullpen arms that will throw strikes, as the walks flat out cost them game 4.
Maybe if they eat half his salary? I've really seen enough of Dave Kingman Jr.