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ASTROS WIN!!!!!!!!
Oct 20, 2019 00:20:03   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
In a game featuring a little of everything, my home-town Houston Astros beat the New York Yankees, 6-4!

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Oct 20, 2019 00:21:37   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
slatten49 wrote:
In a game featuring a little of everything, my home-town Houston Astros beat the New York Yankees, 6-4!


Congrats Slat

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Oct 20, 2019 00:29:58   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Congrats Slat


CD, in 1962, I watched the first major-league game in Houston when they started out as the Colt 45s. In 1965, I later saw the first game in the Astrodome with Mickey Mantle hitting the first HR in the Dome. Along with my brothers and all other native Houstonians, we waited over 50 years for our home team to win it all two years ago in the 2017 World Series. Now, we're going back

I couldn't be happier, unless the Astros win it again and Texans make it to the Super Bowl, also this year.

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Oct 20, 2019 03:49:23   #
crazylibertarian Loc: Florida by way of New York & Rhode Island
 
I'm a Yankee fan but was impressed with the Astros performances, especially their pitching.

I was hoping the 20 teens would not become the second decade since the 1920s without a Yankee World Championship but that has happened. Houston deserves to win it all and I always back the AL team.

But, for wh**ever it's worth, MSN has a list of the best fan bases; Houston was among the worst and the Yankees among the best. The Cardinals were #1. The Astros deserve better.

OOPS! I just rechecked it and Houston is #8 with the Yankees #4,

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Oct 20, 2019 05:35:30   #
Tug484
 
slatten49 wrote:
In a game featuring a little of everything, my home-town Houston Astros beat the New York Yankees, 6-4!


Good.

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Oct 20, 2019 08:20:25   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mlb/these-astros-are-everything-the-yankees-and-dodgers-wish-they-were/ar-AAJ3rA1?ocid=spartandhp

These Astros are everything the Yankees and Dodgers wish they were

By design, the Yankees and Dodgers are assembled differently than they once were.

The gargantuans that once relied on raiding the free-agent market and struggling teams burdened by one or two large contracts have modernized to be sleek, intelligent franchises proficient at accumulating and developing players before they reach their peaks. There is still plenty of money thrown around, of course, but that is no longer where their souls reside.

Despite those shifts, they have not evolved into the smartest or best organizations in baseball. They are instead second-tier chasers of the Astros, now the clear model of contemporary success and the ability to strike the ideal balance between internal maximization of young talent and acquisition of expensive, win-now contributors.

Houston, historically far from baseball royalty, is everything New York and Los Angeles wish they were. A third straight ALCS appearance and second World Series showing (clinched by a walk-off 6-4 win over the Yankees on Saturday) in three years underlines that point, as do the recent failures of its top rivals.

The Astros have struck at the right moments in recent years to stack the deck in their favor come October, while the Yankees and Dodgers have repeatedly disappointed in that regard.

New York has not signed or traded for a Tier 1 starting pitcher during its current contention window with several being available — including Justin Verlander, Gerrit Cole and Zack Greinke, each of whom Houston pounced on when others hesitated. Brian Cashman in the process has neglected to sell high on prospects such as Clint Frazier, Chance Adams and Estevan Florial. He is now feeling the fallout of his hoarding, the team receiving subpar starts in Game 2 and Game 3 of the ALCS against an opponent loaded with front-end starters, and more importantly, its tired bullpen being forced to stretch itself to the max in Game 6. Even if the Yankees had somehow managed to pull out that elimination contest, they would have been completely gassed for Game 7.

Los Angeles, meanwhile, did not add an elite relief pitcher before this year’s trade deadline despite its bullpen being an obvious flaw given the decline of Kenley Jansen. It had plenty of prospect ammo from which to deal. It did nothing. In Game 5 of the NLDS, its bullpen melted down, sending it out of the postseason two rounds earlier than in 2017 and 2018.

In addition to acquiring its trio of aces, Houston traded for right-hander Ryan Pressly last July and signed outfielder Michael Brantley this past offseason. Pressly was huge in the clutch against the Yankees, while Brantley consistently put together solid at-bats and made one of the defensive plays of the postseason in Game 6.

The Astros have received widespread praise for the trades and signings they did make, but they should also be lauded for the deals they walked away from. The White Sox reportedly asked for then-prospect Alex Bregman in exchange for Chris Sale in 2016, and Bregman’s name was reportedly also floated around in talks surrounding Tigers right-hander Michael Fulmer. Houston held onto Bregman, now an MVP candidate, who at 25 is one of the game’s most prominent stars.

The Astros’ management and in-house development has ensured, at least to the greatest extent anything can be ensured in baseball, that correct moves spawn intended results.

There have not been stunning managerial mistakes like the ones Dave Roberts made in the NLDS this season. There have not been inexplicable mid-career declines such as Sonny Gray in New York that were made to look bad by success elsewhere. Rather, most players have improved upon joining the Astros.
The Yankees and Dodgers, given their esteemed histories, are expected to do what it takes to be a step ahead of the league. They are not at that level right now.

Instead, it's the Astros once again in the World Series and at the top of the sport, leaving more established names behind.

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Oct 21, 2019 11:01:55   #
Fit2BTied Loc: Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
In a game featuring a little of everything, my home-town Houston Astros beat the New York Yankees, 6-4!
Kudos to Houston. My Yankees weren't up to it. I'll be rootin for Houston, but the Nats are playing lights out right now. Should be one of the best pitched series in a really long time.

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Oct 21, 2019 11:05:40   #
Fit2BTied Loc: Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mlb/these-astros-are-everything-the-yankees-and-dodgers-wish-they-were/ar-AAJ3rA1?ocid=spartandhp

These Astros are everything the Yankees and Dodgers wish they were

By design, the Yankees and Dodgers are assembled differently than they once were.

The gargantuans that once relied on raiding the free-agent market and struggling teams burdened by one or two large contracts have modernized to be sleek, intelligent franchises proficient at accumulating and developing players before they reach their peaks. There is still plenty of money thrown around, of course, but that is no longer where their souls reside.

Despite those shifts, they have not evolved into the smartest or best organizations in baseball. They are instead second-tier chasers of the Astros, now the clear model of contemporary success and the ability to strike the ideal balance between internal maximization of young talent and acquisition of expensive, win-now contributors.

Houston, historically far from baseball royalty, is everything New York and Los Angeles wish they were. A third straight ALCS appearance and second World Series showing (clinched by a walk-off 6-4 win over the Yankees on Saturday) in three years underlines that point, as do the recent failures of its top rivals.

The Astros have struck at the right moments in recent years to stack the deck in their favor come October, while the Yankees and Dodgers have repeatedly disappointed in that regard.

New York has not signed or traded for a Tier 1 starting pitcher during its current contention window with several being available — including Justin Verlander, Gerrit Cole and Zack Greinke, each of whom Houston pounced on when others hesitated. Brian Cashman in the process has neglected to sell high on prospects such as Clint Frazier, Chance Adams and Estevan Florial. He is now feeling the fallout of his hoarding, the team receiving subpar starts in Game 2 and Game 3 of the ALCS against an opponent loaded with front-end starters, and more importantly, its tired bullpen being forced to stretch itself to the max in Game 6. Even if the Yankees had somehow managed to pull out that elimination contest, they would have been completely gassed for Game 7.

Los Angeles, meanwhile, did not add an elite relief pitcher before this year’s trade deadline despite its bullpen being an obvious flaw given the decline of Kenley Jansen. It had plenty of prospect ammo from which to deal. It did nothing. In Game 5 of the NLDS, its bullpen melted down, sending it out of the postseason two rounds earlier than in 2017 and 2018.

In addition to acquiring its trio of aces, Houston traded for right-hander Ryan Pressly last July and signed outfielder Michael Brantley this past offseason. Pressly was huge in the clutch against the Yankees, while Brantley consistently put together solid at-bats and made one of the defensive plays of the postseason in Game 6.

The Astros have received widespread praise for the trades and signings they did make, but they should also be lauded for the deals they walked away from. The White Sox reportedly asked for then-prospect Alex Bregman in exchange for Chris Sale in 2016, and Bregman’s name was reportedly also floated around in talks surrounding Tigers right-hander Michael Fulmer. Houston held onto Bregman, now an MVP candidate, who at 25 is one of the game’s most prominent stars.

The Astros’ management and in-house development has ensured, at least to the greatest extent anything can be ensured in baseball, that correct moves spawn intended results.

There have not been stunning managerial mistakes like the ones Dave Roberts made in the NLDS this season. There have not been inexplicable mid-career declines such as Sonny Gray in New York that were made to look bad by success elsewhere. Rather, most players have improved upon joining the Astros.
The Yankees and Dodgers, given their esteemed histories, are expected to do what it takes to be a step ahead of the league. They are not at that level right now.

Instead, it's the Astros once again in the World Series and at the top of the sport, leaving more established names behind.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mlb/these-astros-... (show quote)
You're not naming names as far as who is responsible for what's going on in Houston, and that's cool because the organization is sound top to bottom, but I've said it before and I'll say it again...wherever Nolan Ryan goes, good things seem to happen.

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Oct 23, 2019 10:34:42   #
Y360AZ
 
Of course the Astros are better than the Yankees. They were born in the National League.

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