Its still not good.
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Gaby Sanchez 2010
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Originally posted by Todd View PostHe does have the 2nd lowest ISO of NL 1st baseman, better only than Todd Helton.
adam dunn=.290 ISO
adrian gonzalez=.254 ISO
joey votto=.244 ISO
albert pujols=.238 ISO
aubrey huff=.233 ISO
ryan howard=.214 ISO
troy glaus=.212 ISO
adam laroche=.202 ISO
prince fielder=.192 ISO
ike davis=.178 ISO
derek lee=.156 ISO
lance berkman=.146 ISO
james loney=.143 ISO
jeff clement=.142 ISO
gaby sanchez=.135 ISO
todd helton=.072 ISO
.474 SLG - .299 AVG = .175 ISO
20 out of 27 qualified 1b
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No one is arguing here.
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Originally posted by nny View Postwhere did you get .135?
.474 SLG - .299 AVG = .175 ISO
20 out of 27 qualified 1bAmy Adams, AKA Cinnamon MuffLogan Morrison: "If baseball didn't exist, I would probably be ... like a curler. Or a hairstylist."
Jupiter
39 AB
15 H
0 2B
0 3B
0 HR
0 BB
.385/.385/.385
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Actually my math was wrong and I apologize. I just realized that.Amy Adams, AKA Cinnamon MuffLogan Morrison: "If baseball didn't exist, I would probably be ... like a curler. Or a hairstylist."
Jupiter
39 AB
15 H
0 2B
0 3B
0 HR
0 BB
.385/.385/.385
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SANCHEZ ON FIRE... I asked Gaby Sanchez before Thursday's game if he was going to miss facing American League pitchers. He smiled then shot my theory out of the water.
"I'm just feeling good right now, seeing the ball well, feeling comfortable at the plate," Sanchez said. "I don't feel like its like American League or National League. It's just something that happens. You get into a little groove. I'm feeling good right now."
Sanchez should. With his 3 for 3 effort Thursday night he raised his season average .307, second-best on the team behind Ronny Paulino (.308). He should also acknowledge the fact he feasted on the AL. He went 23 for 67 (.429) in interleague play with a team-leading 15 RBI and 12 runs scored (second only to Chris Coghlan).
Rodriguez, who managed Sanchez in Triple A, said he sees an entirely different player, one he thinks will be with the Marlins for a long time. "The first thing you can see with Gaby Sanchez, the difference, is the way he's been working his body," Rodriguez said. "The talent has always been there. But now, he's taking care of himself more. His body fat went down. His body control, burst strength, endurance, you can see that. He's been very consistent on the field."
Read more: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/fish_...#ixzz0rq4QgUR2
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Gaby Sanchez Does Not Want to be a Placeholder
Gaby Sanchez Does Not Want to be a Placeholder
by Joe Pawlikowski
It can’t be comfortable for a major leaguer to know that he plays the same position as one of his team’s top prospects. Will the team trade him? Bench him? Or will they, to the incumbent’s joy, trade the prospect for an upgrade at another position? This feeling has to grow intensity for a player who just won the position. That appears to be the case for Marlins first baseman Gaby Sanchez. With only 31 plate appearances previously, he’s still a rookie this season, and he’s the Marlins’ starting first baseman. Yet even before the season began he carried an ominous label: placeholder.
The label wasn’t exactly an indictment of Sanchez, per se. Instead, it was a nod to the Marlins’ consensus No. 2 prospect, Logan Morrison. After missing two months last season it was unlikely that he’d break camp with the team, but he seemed like a prime candidate for a mid-season promotion. While Sanchez, who the Marinls drafted 18 rounds ahead of Morrison in 2005, would start the season at first, chances are he’d be displaced at some point. But while Morrison did get a promotion this year, it was from AA to AAA, and not the majors. Sanchez is a big reason for that.
Last night Sanchez went 3 for 3 and hit his 17th double of the season. That raises his season triple slash to .307/.377/.484, a .380 wOBA, one point behind team leader Hanley Ramirez. He’s walking in nearly 10 percent of his plate appearances and is hitting the ball on a line nearly 20 percent of the time. On top of that he’s playing solid defense at first base, a 1.3 UZR in 553 defensive innings. He has made the idea of promotion Morrison to the majors an absurd one. How could the Marlins justify moving one of their three best hitters?
This performance from Sanchez should not come as much of a surprise. A fourth round pick in 2005, he has raked at nearly every minor league level. The only time his SLG fell below .475 was in 2007 when he struggled, just a little, in the class-A Florida State League, not exactly a hitter-friendly league. He followed that up by posting a .411 wOBA the next year in AA, which bought him a cup of coffee later in the season. The next year, at AAA, he posted a .378 wOBA and again racked up a few major league at-bats. It was clearly time for him to take on a more prominent role, and he has responded in kind.
Despite his solid performance to date, Sanchez seemingly can’t shake that placeholder tag. On June 10, when Sanchez was hitting .269/.324/.425 through 146 PA, Kevin Goldstein of Baseball Prospectus reiterated his position on Morrison, saying that perhaps it’s time for Sanchez to “pass the torch.” Since then Sanchez has gone on a tear, hitting .444/.483/.704 in his last 61 PA. That includes 24 hits, seven of which have gone for extra bases. At the same time, Morrison has adjusted well to his promotion. He has gone 14 for 39 with two doubles and a home run in his last 10 games.
This is, of course, a favorable situation for the Marlins. They have one player performing at the major league level, and a top prospect right on his tail. They do have a few options defensively, too. Sanchez has played third base in the minors as recently as last season, when he played 41 games there. It’s not certain, though, that he can play there passably in the majors. The team is also playing Morrison in left field four days a week. That sets up the ideal scenario, in which Logan, Cameron Maybin, and Mike Stanton roam the outfield, with Chris Coghlan moving to second. Dan Uggla has one year remaining of arbitration, and considering his salary, $7.8 million this season, it seems likely that the Marlins will trade him, whether at the deadline or in the off-season.
Keeping Sanchez at first, then, appears to be the best situation for the Marlins. His solid performance to date affords the Marlins the flexibility they need. Chances are they’d trade Uggla and move Coghlan at some point anyway. The difference is that with Sanchez at first and Morrison in left, the Marlins are better positioned offensively. They need a lot of things to break their way, but if they get just a little lucky they could be in a good spot for 2011."You owe it to yourself to find your own unorthodox way of succeeding, or sometimes, just surviving."
- Michael Johnson
J.T. Realmuto .282/.351/.412
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Originally posted by jay576 View PostWhy are we dumping players because the bullpen currently sucks? That is just poor management. Ross, Uggla, Paulino and Hensley all can help this team. Why are we trying to replace them? Helms really he is going net you something of significant value?
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