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Ringolsby: Why the sky is not falling for the Colorado Rockies

Tracy Ringolsby
Tracy Ringolsby
May 17, 2018
Ringolsby: Why the sky is not falling for the Colorado Rockies

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Tracy Ringolsby

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BCreasman

BCreasman

May 17, 2018

Very well said!

Jambron

Jambron

May 17, 2018

While I definitely agree that the Rockies’ offense is likely to be bolstered by Coors Field, and that advanced “park adjusted” stats are somewhat misleading at this time frame because they assume a 50/50 road/home split (which the Rockies have not had. Therefore, the advanced stats are over penalizing the Rockies offense more than they should given the early number of road games). I don’t see anything in this article that gives me much hope.

How is the fact that Evan Longoria or Andrew McCuthcen are struggling going to bolster the Rockies offense? Okay, other NL West teams have the same production problem as the Rockies: bad offenses and declining production from household names. However, that has zero impact on the struggles of Desmond, Cargo, Parra, and Ianetta this season.

I don’t give one rip about the Giants struggling offense or the Dodgers struggling offense. I want to know what hope there is for Desmond to hit his weight? Or, what it is going to take for Cargo to be league average at hitting?

Are there reasons to expect their BABIP should go up? Have they been getting unlucky? Are they dealing with injury? These would be reasons for optimism. Yet, there is little evidence Cargo, Parra, or Desmond are going to turn it on. They have been these players for the past few seasons (sometimes longer). The track record of them being below replacement level is there. Sure, they’ll get a slight bump from Coors Field, but I see nothing in this article that constitutes optimism for our offense.

Sure other NL West teams have crappy offense production too, but why shouldn’t the Rockies bench Desmond for McMahon or play Cargo and Parra less? What is the reason to believe the offense will get better outside a nominal Coors Field bump?

Yes, the Rockies are built different this year and they don’t need to rely on their offense to win them 85% of their games. However, that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try to improve our offense. That doesn’t mean giving Ian Desmond or Cargo a pass because Evan Longoria can’t hit this year either. It’s time for some changes and stop giving the offense a free pass.

Ugh…the premise of this article infuriates me:

The Rockies offense is bad, but other NL west teams also have bad offenses and terrible players/contracts, so we are fine. What a crock!

Jambron Replying to Jambron

May 20, 2018

I think the article was meant more to provide optimism that the season is not lost and that we are still in this thing, not to reassure that we’ll get better. He was explaining that the season is not lost and that despite subpar play we are towards the top of the division still.

ziggity187

ziggity187

May 19, 2018

They need to start winning more at home for sure.

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