Monday, October 31, 2016

Account Management, The Challenges Of Incumbency

Account Based Everything is a huge topic these days.  Everyone is account focused, they want to grow their relationships, increase penetration and grow revenue.

Developing our accounts is a huge opportunity.  There’s huge amounts of data outlining the differences in sales time and cost between growing an existing relationship and acquiring net new logos.  Growing our existing accounts is a hands down winner!

Intuitively, it makes sense to leverage our current accounts.  We know them, they know us.  We can leverage our existing position to grow the relationship.  We have a bit of an “insider” or incumbency advantage with these accounts.

To defend our position in these accounts, some even adopt a strategy, “Make the pain of change far greater than the pain of staying the same (with the incumbent.”  A 180 degree reversal of what we try to do with new logos.

Of course, there’ are other perspectives–“familiarity breeds contempt,” or “the grass is greener…”  (Which both we and people in the accounts we serve may have)

OK, maybe I’m overstating it a little, but no relationship is ever perfect.  There are always going to be problems, the customer is, at times going to be dissatisfied and unhappy.  There are going to be differences of opinion and some periodic contention in the relationship.

Yet we still are driven to expand the relationship.

Incumbency creates a different set of problems with our accounts.  The familiarity with each other is, often, a challenge.  The customer knows us, knows our products—warts and all.  A competitor is new and different.  Yes, they have their own warts and problems, but our customer doesn’t know them, for our customer, it’s all new.  We become the base of comparison, with the competitor claiming they can do better.

Yes, there is some level of safety in inertia and why change.  Yes, there may be some switching costs.  But our position is changed, we are the target to be displaced.

Alternatively, incumbency may lock our relationships with certain people or functions within the organization.  However those people and functions are perceived by others in the organization is also how we are perceived.

A great example of the incumbency challenge is IT.  For technology companies, in many cases our principal focus is with the CIO and the IT organization.

They are naturally reluctant to have us running out to the end users selling them more—-it adds to IT’s workload.  Our sponsors in IT don’t want us going out and drumming up more work, challenges, and headaches for them.  Yet our competition doesn’t have the same constraints.  They are starting with IT–they start with the end users, inciting them to change, at least if they are doing their jobs correctly.

Even worse, if IT is perceived poorly by the end users, we are also viewed poorly by association.  We carry a burden our competitors don’t bear.

Yet if we are to develop our accounts to their fullest potential (Again, I’m the guy that believes it’s our God-given right to 100% share of account.), we have to overcome the challenges and leverage the benefits of incumbency.

From the very inception of our account based relationships, we need to be cognizant of the mixed blessings of incumbency.  We need to build our relationship recognizing these challenges.

We have to be particularly focused on customer experience and managing expectations.  There will be problems–but generally customers recognize this, they may even recognize they may be the source of some of the problems.  However, building a culture and process around how we respond and manage those problems is critical.  Helping define expectations and the problem management process at the very beginning of the relationship is critical to our shared success.

Value realization is perhaps the very most important.  Regardless how well things may be going, even if there is never a problem that we have to fix, if we aren’t producing the results the customer expects–and that we committed to, the relationship will be destroyed.  Too often, we don’t set the expectations at the inception of the relationship and we don’t follow through to make sure we are delivering to expectation.

From the very beginning, broaden the relationships as much as you can.  Recognize over the life of the relationship you will want to have wide and deep coverage of the account.  Don’t get yourself trapped into just one part of the organization, but from day one seek to build a strong support base across all of the account.

Finally, developing a collaborative governance structure is critical to long term account development, helping both the account and us keep the relationship as “important” and managing the challenges of incumbency.

Afterword:  Thanks to Tom Burland for a fascinating conversation to help flesh out these ideas.



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The Old and the New

The last living player from the 1948 Cleveland Indians championship team, Eddie Robinson will be on hand at Progressive Field for game six of the World Series:

The 95-year-old Robinson was the starting first baseman on the `48 team, which featured Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Feller, Larry Doby, who broke the AL color barrier, shortstop/manager Lou Boudreau and pitcher Bob Lemon.

Robinson is making the trip from Fort Worth, Texas, to see the Indians try to close out the Chicago Cubs.

He would have his best years for the White Sox in 1951 and 1952.



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Hawthorne by Pennyfarthing

Pennyfarthing Homes brings a stunning new development to Vancouver’s West side. This amazing development will consist of 1-3 bedroom residences ranging from 680 sq ft to 1,433 sq ft over 7 storeys.

The Hawthorne is situated next to the lovely Queen Elizabeth park and just a short walk along Cambie will bring you to the Oakridge mall where you will satisfy all you shopping and dinning needs.

Pricing has not yet been determined.  Please register and join our VIP list to be one of the first to receive information

 

The post Hawthorne by Pennyfarthing appeared first on Vancouver New Condos.



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Latest Probabilities

Assuming the probability of the Cubs defeating the Indians in any single game is 0.614, here are the probabilities of the various outcomes:

  • Indians win in six: 0.386
  • Indians win in seven: 0.237
  • Cubs win in seven: 0.379

The Indians have a 62.3% chance of winning the series. Note that if the teams were evenly matched, that would be 75%.

Note, too, that by this method, the Indians came into the series with a 25% chance of winning. From running prediction models for Beat the Streak this year, the best hitters on any given day had about a 75% of getting a hit, or a 25% chance of failure. It was not unusual for them to fail.

Maybe I’m underestimating the Indians. The way Terry Francona uses the bullpen may have moved the team closer to even, but Cleveland is still using their four and five starting pitchers. I think the probability is right, but Cleveland is on the verge to beating the odds.



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Short Starts Continue

Earlier in the playoffs I noted that starters were pitching less than five innings at a very high rate. That continues, as 26 of the 66 starts made in the post-season saw starters pulled before they reached fifteen outs recorded. That’s 39.4%, the highest in the 15 years of data in the Day by Day Database. The next closest is 2007, when short starts were made in 19 of 56 games, 33.9%. That was a year with games at Coors Field. Teams are depending on their bullpens more than ever.



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Monday Update

The Day by Day Database is up to date.



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Sunday, October 30, 2016

Sales Success Starts With Your Mindset

There are all sorts of books and articles that talk about the attributes of high performance sales people or high performance teams.

There are statistics, data points, research, that identify all sorts of characteristics:  Aptitude, comfort in talking about money, ability to handle rejection, listening skills, self discipline, time management capability, industry knowledge, market knowledge, competitiveness, goal orientation….. The lists go on and on and on.

All valid, all helpful, but somehow something is missing.

It was a conversation with Mitch Little and Hendre Coetzee that created the “Aha” moment for me.

Sales success, whether individual or organizational is simply about mindset!

Everything else flows from the mindsets we have about what we do as sales professionals.

To really get this, you need to read Carol Dweck’s Mindset.  It’s a masterpiece and has changed my life.

But to simplify things, we can have fixed or growth oriented mindsets.

Fixed mindsets are all about limitations.  People with fixed mindset believe they are born with certain capabilities, their potential is fixed and never changeable (hence the name “fixed.”)  They may have tremendous capabilities, they may have achieved great levels of success, but ultimately there is a “ceiling.”  They max out, they can’t go forward.  There is someone or some organization better (they may also have a fixed mindset, they just have greater capability).

People and organizations with fixed mindsets are all about winning or losing, proving yourself to be the best.  They treat the customer as an opponent, something to overcome.  They measure themselves on what they’ve won, comparing themselves to others, hoping to be better than everyone else.

When they lose, it’s usually someone or something else that’s to blame, “the customer didn’t get it, the competition has better products, our products are too expensive.”  Fixed mindsets are a zero-sum game.  They are never about discovery, learning, improving.

We see fixed mindsets in their recruiting, coaching, and development, “you have it or you don’t.”  They miss the opportunity to “develop it.”

As leaders, people with fixed mindsets tend to be in tell or criticism mode.  Since learning, growth, discovery are foreign to them, they are limited in their abilities to develop people and their organizations.

We see it in their customer engagement, qualification, and deal strategies.

We see it in their overall growth strategies–how they view customers, the markets, their competition, how they learn, and how we view future opportunities.

They tend to miss opportunities that fall outside their vision or world of experience.

We see promising people and promising companies fail because they have a fixed mindset and cannot adapt to change.

People and organizations with fixed mindsets ultimately give up–they never achieve their full potential.  They hit a ceiling or brick wall and can’t get past it.

Growth oriented mindsets are simply about that–growing, as individuals and organizations.  They are  about learning, improving, adapting, figuring out how to get better.

The best with growth oriented mindsets are obsessed with learning, growing, improving.

They approach everything differently, whether it’s how they engage a customer, solving a problem, or approach their daily work.

Since they always see possibilities in themselves, they tend to see possibilities in other people, the organization, and their customers.

Like people with fixed mindsets, they may lose, they may fail, but they are hungry to learn from those situations, improve and grow.

They may find they don’t have certain critical capabilities, but rather than seeing that as a limitation, they try to overcome them, they experiment, learn, improve.

We see this every day.  People who by background, experience, training, (and assessments), should never be in the role they are in, should never have achieved what they have achieved–yet they have defied all conventional wisdom and have overcome (or are in the process of overcoming)

The good news (and the bad news), we can change our mindsets!  Our mindsets can be a choice, we can move from a fixed mindset to a growth mindset, likewise, sometimes we shut down and move from a growth to fixed mindsets.

We can look to build organizations of people with growth mindsets—think of what that would look like, how it would change internal collaboration and your ability to engage customers!

Rather than looking only at traditional criteria in recruiting and developing our people, what if we started assessing people based on fixed and growth mindsets.  We know upfront, recruits with a fixed mindset will reach a limit—perhaps they already have.  We know people with a growth mindset will be driven to figure out and learn what they need to learn–we just have to point them in the right directions, give them the right development, training, coaching and reinforcement.

This “simple” change can profoundly change our organizations and our abilities to help our customer succeed, in turn succeeding ourselves.  But it starts with each of us, we can only succeed in doing this by adapting growth mindsets in everything we do.



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Cubs Win!

Aroldis Chapman gets a grounder, a fly, and a strikeout to retire the Indians in order in the ninth inning. The Cubs win the game 3-2, and force a game six in Cleveland on Tuesday. Chapman recorded eight outs for the save, four of them on strikeouts.

The Cubs score all three runs in the fourth inning as they combined power with some well placed balls in play.

It’s another well pitched game in these playoffs. The Indians now get the chance to win a series in front of their home fans, while the Cubs will try to continue their comeback.



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Chapman Bats

With Jason Heyward on second base and two out, the Cubs allow Aroldis Chapman to bat. He strikes out after a steal of third by Heyward. It appears the Cubs thought they had a better chance of winning with Chapman pitching than letting Kyle Schwarber bat and potentially drive in a run.

The Indians go to the ninth needing at least one run as they trail the Cubs 3-2.



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Chapman Statue

With one out in the top of the eighth, Rajai Davis hits a shot down the first base line. Anthony Rizzo makes a nice play to smother it, but Aroldis Chapman did not break off the mound immediately, and fails to cover first base. Davis is on with one out. The Cubs lead the Indians 3-2.

Update: Chapman is worrying too much about Davis at first. He steals second anyway.



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Cleveland Closer

The Indians go to their closer, Cody Allen, with one out in the bottom of the seventh and the bases empty. It looks like Francona expects him to go the distance. The may be the longest pitching assignments for two closers in a game since the early 1980s.

The Cubs lead the Indians by a score of 3-2.

Update: Allen hits Dexter Fowler with the first pitch. The Cubs have a runner on first.



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Lester Done

The Cubs change the battery in the top of the seventh inning. Carl Edwards comes in to pitch, and Willson Contreras comes in to catch. Lester gave up two runs, walked none, and struck out five. Aroldis Chapman is warming up in the bullpen. Good.

Mike Napoli singles to start the seventh.



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Lindor Comes Through

In the top of the sixth inning, Rajai Davis singles with one out and steals second easily. With two out, Francisco Lindor continued his hot hitting with a single to center just out of the reach of Dexter Fowler. Davis scores to cut the Cubs lead over the Indians to 3-2.

Lindor runs, and David Ross throws him out. The Indians cut into the lead, but give away an out.



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Cleveland Battles

Carlos Santana leads off the top of the fifth with a double to right-center, going the opposite way against Jon Lester. The Cubs lead the Indians 3-1 after scoring two runs in the bottom of the fourth inning.

Update: Jose Ramirez hits a slow roller to shortstop, and Santana is off and running and advances to third on the out. That sets up Brandon Guyer for an RBI.



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Bryant Ties It

Kris Bryant leads off the bottom of the fourth inning with a no-doubt home run, and the Indians and Cubs are tied at one. Anthony Rizzo hits the next pitch into the Ivy in the rightfield corner for a double. The Cubs are on the verge of a big inning.

Update: Ben Zobrist lines a single to rightfield to give the Cubs runners on first and third with no one out.



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Three Innings Done

The Indians lead the Cubs 1-0 at the end of three innings in game five of the World Series. Jose Ramirez‘s home run represents the lone run of the game. Both teams have one hit and no walks. Jon Lester struck out three batters so far, Trevor Bauer five. The Cubs made three excellent defensive plays, but there is no defense against the home run. The Indians are 18 outs away from their first World Championship since 1948.



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Ole Jose!

Jose Ramirez takes John Lester deep to the leftfield seats to give the Indians a 1-0 lead in the top of the second inning. His two out home run puts the first nail in the Cubs coffin.

The Cubs did make two nice defensive plays in the inning. David Ross bobbled a foul pop, but Anthony Rizzo was there to catch it. Then, Kris Bryant made a Brooks Robinson/Graig Nettles type play to end the inning.



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Game Five Underway

Jon Lester starts game five of the 2016 World Series with a strikeout of Rajai Davis.

Update: Jason Kipnis strikes out on three pitches.

Update: Francisco Lindor strikes out on four pitches. Lester threw 13 pitches in the inning, ten for strikes. The Cubs are coming up in the bottom of the first.



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Vote for MVP

MLB is conducting fan voting to help pick the World Series MVP:

The fan vote will count for 20 percent of the official determination of the World Series MVP Award winner, with the other 80 percent coming on location from the three broadcast rightsholders (FOX Sports, ESPN Radio and MLB International) and the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.

You can start voting in the sixth inning of tonight’s game at MLB.com/vote. If the series is not decided, the voting resets and starts in the sixth inning of the next clinching game.

I think this is great, and encourage everyone to vote!



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Playoffs Today

With a three games to one lead in the best of seven series, the probability of the Indians winning the series stands at 77%. That is assuming the Cubs have a 61.4% chance of winning any individual game. The Indians winning this series might very well be their revenge for 1954. That year, the Indians went 111-43, a .721 winning percentage, while the Giants came in at 97-57, .630. A Log5 analysis shows that the Indians would have been expected to score 3.69 runs per game against the Giants, and the Giants 3.52 R/G against the Indians. That would give Cleveland a .523 probability of winning any game, and a .55 probability of winning the World Series. The Giants swept the Indians.

The teams were closer than the standings indicated. The Giants were right on their Pythagorean win estimate, while the Indians were seven games better than their estimate. This season, the Cubs were -4, while the Indians were +3, so again, there is a seven game swing in the standings in favor of the Indians. That’s another reason they were such long shots.

Maybe it is the manager and the coaching staff. Terry Francona certainly threw the book out for the post season. Joe Maddon, however, is just as innovative, and just as good managing his personnel as he is managing at a personal level. I suppose Maddon could have used Aroldis Chapman in the fifth inning Saturday night to keep the game closer.

Sunday night, Cleveland sends “Pinky” Trevor Bauer to the mound against Cubs ace John Lester. Bauer’s stats have been as ugly as his lacerated pinky since the injury, with four walks and six hits in 4 1/3 innings. I will be impressed if he goes five innings in game five. Lester pitched great overall in his four post-season starts this year. He was a bit wild against Cleveland in game one, which cost the Cubs the win. I like this match-up for the Cubs.

If it’s any solace to Cubs fans, this series reminds me of the 1996 NLCS between the Cardinals and the Braves. The Cardinals got out to a three games to one lead on the Braves. I remember looking at the remaining pitching matchups, John Smoltz versus Todd Stottlemyre, Greg Maddux versus Alan Benes, and Tom Glavine versus Donovan Osborne and thinking, “The Braves have the Cardinals right where they want them.” I like Lester, Jake Arrieta, and Kyle Hendricks on my side if I need a three game sweep.

Enjoy! This could be a very big night for Cleveland.



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Sunday Update

The Day by Day Database is up to date.



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Saturday, October 29, 2016

Indians Win Game Four

The Cubs get a hit in the ninth, but nothing else as Cleveland takes game four of the 2016 World Series 7-2. The Indians worked well on both sides of the ball. Corey Kluber went six innings, walking one and striking out six. The bullpen walked none, struck out two, and allowed the first Cubs home run of the World Series.

On offense, the keystone combination came through, with Jason Kipnis and Francisco Lindor combining to go five for nine, Kipnis with a double and a home run. Carlos Santana got the start at first over Mike Napoli. The move payed off as Santana went three for four with a home run.

The Indians now have three cames to win one, two of those at home if needed. I do not count out the Cubs, but they played poor infield defense in game four, and didn’t show selectivity at the plate. We’ll see if that changes in game five.



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Fowler Flies

The Cubs finally hit a home run in the World Series as Dexter Fowler takes Andrew Miller deep leading off the bottom of the eighth. That’s the first run Andrew Miller allowed in the post season. The Indians lead the Cubs 7-2.

I’m surprised Miller is still pitching in such a blow out.

Update: Miller gets out of the inning with no more damage. The Indians are three outs away from a commanding 3-1 lead in the World Series.



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Things are Looking Grimm

Justin Grimm gives up a double to Coco Crips leading off the seventh. Crisp was batting for Corey Kluber, who is done after six strong innings. Grimm then throws two pitches inside to Rajai Davis. The first is a wild pitch, allowing Crisp to go to third, the second hits Davis. That’s it for Grimm as Travis Wood comes on to try to get out of the jam.



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Look at Me, I’m Travis Lee

Anthony Rizzo leads off the bottom of the sixth, hitting a deep fly ball to leftfield. The wind keeps it in the park, and but it also made the ball tough to catch. Brandon Guyer, who just came in the game, did not make the catch, and Rizzo gets a double.

The Indians lead the Cubs 4-1.

Update: Kluber gets a fly, a K and a grounder to leave Rizzo on base. Cubs are now 1 for 7 in the game with runners in scoring position.



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Lackey Done

Mike Montgomery starts the sixth inning on the mound for the Cubs, replacing John Lackey. Lackey walked one and struck out five, allowing a solo home run. He gave up just four hits, but two of those came with runners in scoring position, so he’s losing 3-1.

The Indians get the first two batters on in the sixth on a walk and a line drive single by Carlos Santana that took off Montgomery’s glove.

Update: Force at second puts runners on first and third with one out.



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Cubs Threat

With two out in the bottom of the third inning, Kris Bryant draws a 3-2 walk, and Anthony Rizzo gets hit by a pitch. The Cubs have two on for Ben Zobrist. The Indians lead the Cubs 3-1.



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Double Trouble

The Cubs don’t score in the second, and Jason Kipnis leads off the Indians third inning with a double into the rightfield corner. The Indians are set up for another run.

Update: Francisco Lindor continues his hot hitting, driving a liner to right-center for an RBI single. The Indians lead the Cubs 3-1.



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Santana Slams

Carlos Santana plays first tonight instead of Mike Napoli. Santana leads off the second inning for the Indians and hammers a pitch into the wind. He kept the trajectory low enough that it leaves the park, and the Indians tie the Cubs at one. That was Santana’s first hit of the World Series.

Update: With one out, Kris Bryant makes a nice pick but a poor throw off the bat of Lonnie Chisenhall. The error gives the Indians a runner at first.



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Slicing His Way On

Dexter Fowler slices a two-strike pitch to leftfield. Rajai Davis just has the ball go off his glove on a dive, and Fowler leads off the bottom of the first with a double. Now the big hitters in the Cubs lineup get a chance to drive him home.



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Game Four Underway

John Lackey strikes out two of the three batters he faces as the Indians go down 1-2-3 in the first. The Cubs are coming to bat for the first time. The Indians lead the best of seven series two games to one.



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Miller Time

It appears Andrew Miller is about to set the single post-season record for total strikeouts as a reliever.



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Drunk and High

Jose Fernandez did more than drink the night his boat crashed:

Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez had cocaine and alcohol in his system when his boat crashed into a Miami Beach jetty last month, according to toxicology reports released Saturday.

It is not clear whether Fernandez, 24, was steering the boat at the time of the crash on Sept. 25, which killed him and two of his friends. Fernandez had a blood-alcohol level of 0.147, well above Florida’s legal limit of 0.08, according to autopsy reports released by the Miami-Dade County medical examiner’s office.

Kenneth Hutchins, an associate medical examiner, listed the cause of death as “boat crash” for Fernandez and his friends Emilio Jesus Macias, 27, and Eduardo Rivero, 25.

His friends did not as high a level of alcohol in their systems. I suppose it’s possible one of them took over the ship and just made a huge mistake on the jetty. Then again, it’s often difficult to convince an intoxicated person not to drive.



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Playoffs Today

Corey Kluber returns to the mound for the Indians against John Lackey and the Cubs in game four of the 2016 World Series. The Indians lead the series two games to one.

Kluber pitched outstanding ball so far in his first post season. His three-true outcomes are all excellent, with 29 strikeouts, seven walks, and one home run allowed in 24 1/3 innings. Note that the way Terry Francona manages the pitching staff in post season precludes Kluber from going deep in games and getting in trouble. In three of his four starts, he did not allow a run. His two runs allowed, his shortest outing, and (obviously) the only home run came when he started on short rest against the Blue Jays. It was by no means a bad start, but given the great pitching by both teams, giving up two runs may be enough to earn a loss.

Kluber did not walk a batter in his first start, and the Cubs drew just two walks in that game. They drew one walk in game three, so when the Indians limit base on balls, they take away an important Chicago weapon.

Lackey makes his third start of the 2016 post season, pitching just four innings in each of the first two starts. He walked five batters in those eight inning, and along with 10 hits opponents scored five runs. During the regular season he was much better at limiting walks than home runs, but he hasn’t allowed a long ball yet in the 2016 post-season. Note that against Terry Francona managed teams in the post-season, Lackey owns a 2.67 ERA, but a 1-2 record. Those Red Sox squads did a great job of putting the ball in play against Lackey, as they only struck out 14 times in 27 innings.

Enjoy!



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Latest Probabilities

The Indians going up two games to one in the series makes them very slight favorites to win the series. Based on the Cubs probability of .614 of winning any individual game, The Cubs have a 0.499 chance of winning three of the last four games, while the Indians have a .501 chance of winning two. The Cubs were down 2-1 to the Dodgers and won the series in six games. Cleveland only lost two games this entire post-season.

I am somewhat surprised that Ryan Merritt is not getting a start in this series, given the injury to and struggles of Trevor Bauer. Like Josh Tomlin, Merritt walks very few batters (in fact, none at the major league level), and that is a very good strength against the Cubs. Of course, Merritt could be the first pitcher out of the pen if a starter blows up early, but the game may be over by then.



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By Crom! A Conan King Pledge Unboxing

This week, a year after the expected shipping window, Monolith delivered their Conan board game Kickstarter. I'm not really a board game person - the only other one that I have backed and received so far is Loka, River Horse's 4 way elemental chess game - so the sheer scale of the content is a little overwhelming. Still, that won't stop me taking pictures of everything!

King pledge - Main box, Stretch Goal box with little add-on boxes to the left.


I was initially a little concerned when it arrived, as it appeared to have been ripped open after being drowned somewhere between France and my house.


I was able to peel away individual layers of the cardboard box thanks to the moisture level.

What follows is now an attempt to see how far I can stretch Blogger's photo limits. It'll also mostly be pictures. I'm not likely to get a game of Conan soon, having played one game of anything this calendar year, so can't really review much in the way of rules and cards. What I can say is that there are a lot of concerns regarding these and the translations made from French to English, which can be found in the Board Game Geek forum, here.

The main box - Cassius for scale - it's huge!


The rules - one for the bad guy, one for the heroes.

Hero cards, used by the players.



Gems!

Item cards and the dice requried.

Giant Snake

Thog - it's a monster alright.




King Conan's Lion, one of the less detailed minis


Bad guy cards and tokens



More important stuff



the game boards - 2 double sided boards - 4 maps




The Core minis. Good guys in white, bad guys in grey


The Book of Skelos, the Overlord's tray

Minions!

The man himself - Conan


The white plastic on the heroes doesn't help the detail, but on most figures, it is there.
King Conan


Shevatas


Hadrathus


N'Gora


Belit


Lots of the female minis have softer facial features which really don't come out well on the light plastic.
Zelata

Valeria


Perhaps thanks to how they are packed, some models have qutie a forward slant on them.

Princess/Thalis


Zelata's Wolf


Zaporavo


Khosatral Khel


Captain


Zogar Sag


Outer Dark Demon


Thak


Dark Demon



Skuthus



Hyena - 5 in the box


Bossonian Guard - 15 in the box


Belit's Guard - 5 in the box


Pirates - 15 in the box


Mummy - 10 in the box


Pict Hunter - 15 in the box


Skeleton - 15 in the box



Bossonian Archer - 5 in the box


And thus ends the core box. Onto the stretch goal box!



Scenario booklets - One French, One English

Character cards for the new playable characters

A Map!



Dice Bag

Additional Dice, spell cards and artifact cards (double the cards as in both languages)
Thaug (giant water monster)







More cards


A third double sided map


The rest of the miniatures



Another Conan


Olgerd


Warlord Conan


Conan the Wanderer



Pallantides


Conan the General


Amboola


Taurus


Kothian Archer


Savage Belit



Kerim Shah



Balthus & Slasher (below) - Robert E Howard tribute minis



Pelias


A Mythic Battles Promo Spartan - Mythic Battles is Monolith's next KS


The Trusty Camel


Khemsa


Ageera


Kyperborean Primitive


Constantius


Warlock


Akivasha


Gitara


Natohk


Giant Scorpian


Giant Spider


Man-ape


Swamp Demon


Bone Golem



Forest Demon



A shot for scale - the monsters are larger than Conan, so tower over most other characters
Sarcophagus

Bookshelf

Torch Stands

Chests

Crates

Tables, Stools and Benches

Piles of skulls - always handy

Tentacles - 10 in the box


More guards - 5 to be exact


Pict Archers - 5 in the box


Pict Warriors - 5 in the box


Pirates - 5 in the box

Mummies - 5 of this design.


5 more Skeletons


And another 5 like this.


The last 5 Mummies look like this.


If you're still here, congratulations. That's the end of the King pledge - pretty hefty! Lots of the minis have a large amount of detail and others will hopefully look better with some primer and paint on them.

The journey isn't over yet, for the add-ons are to come below!

I'm a sucker for Dragons.

The dragon comes with an Overlord tile in both languages.

The dragon's price on the KS was $33 with a retail of $40, which indicated he might be a little bigger than he actually is.




Cassius for scale again, so he's roughly a space marine tall. Not particularly large, but that's the risk with Kickstarter.
Vanir Valkyrie

Overlord tiles and hero cards allow for dual use.

Possibly the most disappointing mini of the lot, particularly as she was an add-on so extra was paid for her.

Even focused in, it's hard to make out any detail on her face

That textured fur cloak on the box art appears to have lost all its texture - the occasional downside of digital sculpting.
Lovely artwork on all three of the guest boxes


Conan and Belit, complete with extra equipment cards and hero cards
Conan the Thief


Belit - more soft details that are hard to make out





King Conan and Belit the Princess



The only male mini I noticed that was slightly harder to get the camera focused on face wise







No more Conans in the Paolo Parente box - Salome and Valeria

There is also a hero card for Taramis, who uses Salome's model

Salome



Valeria

It took me a while to work out what was on her face - it's the chain shown in the artwork on her card.



Phew! That's a lot of photos taken and edited. Overall I was pleasently surprised by the quality of the majority of the miniatures - a select few are lacking in detail in places or need weapons straightened but on the whole I'm happy with the investment.

Now I just need to get all two hundred and something miniatures added to my inventory list and find somewhere to put the boxes as my cupboard is full!


from Noobs and their paintbrush http://ift.tt/2fqoKSq