Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Pitching is Back

Game six had all the pitching game five lacked as the Dodgers beat the Astros 3-1. The Dodgers allowed six hits and two walks, while striking out nine. The only run came on a solo home run. The Astros pitchers allowed five hits, walked one, and struck out 12. They also allowed a solo home run. The big difference was that the Dodgers went 1 for 6 and a sacrifice fly with runners in scoring position, while the Astros went 0 for 5.

Game seven tomorrow, the day of no tomorrow.



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Astros in the Ninth

The Dodgers lead the Astros 3-1 going to the top of the ninth. Marwin Gonzalez, Josh Reddick, and the pitcher’s slot are due up as Houston tries to end the series tonight. They face Kenley Jansen.



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Can I Sell You Some Insurance?

Joe Musgrove comes on to pitch in the bottom of the seventh inning. With one out, Joc Pederson takes him deep to extend the Dodgers lead to 3-1 over the Astros. Peterson hit that hard to the opposite field.



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The Wheels Turn

Josh Reddick leads off the top of the seventh inning with a walk. That brings Evan Gattis to the plate, pinch hitting for Justin Verlander. That causes the Dodgers to go to Kenta Maeda in relief. The Dodgers lead the Astros 2-1.



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Dodgers Threat

In the bottom of the sixth inning, the Dodgers put the first two men on with a single and a hit by pitch. Austin Barnes led off with a single, Chase Utley took a ball in the foot. The Astros lead the Dodgers 1-0, with Justin Verlander still on the mound.



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Astros Threat

With two out in the top of the sixth, a single by Yuli Gurriel chases Brandon Morrow. Tony Watson comes on and hits Brian McCann to put runners on first and second for Marwin Gonzalez. The Astros lead the Dodgers 1-0.



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Hill Allowed to Continue

Rich Hill is allowed to come out and pitch in the fifth inning. He gives up a single to Brian McCann. We’ll see if this is a good move or not.

So far, no. Marwin Gonzalez follows with a double smashed down the leftfield line. The Astros have a 1-0 lead on the Dodgers with men on first and second in the top of the fifth.



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I Thought It Never Rained in Southern California

In the top of the fourth inning, there is a light rain falling at Dodger Stadium. The Astros lead the Dodgers 1-0 going to the bottom of the fourth. Rich Hill allowed two hits through four innings, throwing 36 of his 45 pitches for strikes. So far, Hill and Justin Verlander have combined for no walks and eight strikeouts.



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Springer Eternal

With two out in the top of the third inning, George Springer take Rich Hill the other way for a home run, the first run of the game. Springer now has four home runs in the World Series and five in the playoffs. Not bad for a lead-off man.

The Astros lead the Dodgers 1-0 going to the bottom of the third.



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World Series Game Six Underway

The candy is gone, the costumes were great and now it’s time for baseball! Game six of the World Series gets underway with Rich Hill of the Dodgers facing George Springer of the Astros.

Springer goes too far with the bat for strike three, one out.

Update: Alex Bregman singles to left with one out for the first hit and base runner of the game.



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Mont Bleu by Newgen at Coquitlam

Located at the corner of Lougheed and Blue Mountain in the historical French Canadian neighbourhood of Maillardville, comes Mont Bleu. This will be Maillardville’s first high rise in the neighbourhood with easy access to Skytrain and a bundle of local amenities. Commercial units will be on the ground floor facing a public art piece as well as exposure from Lougheed. Mont Bleu will be featuring a 21-storey, 147 units with a mixture of studios, 1, 2 and 3 bedroom homes. The 19th floor of the tower will have a large, south-facing rooftop amenity space for residents. On the 3rd floor, a developer is planning on having a lounge, kitchen and fitness centre.

Mont Bleu will be revealing the gift of Une Belle Vie, ʻA Beautiful Lifeʼ soon.

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Flavelle Mill – Port Moody

Flavelle OceanFront Development

 

The city of Port Moody is planning a major upscaling of its livability with the creation of an oceanfront community that supports a mix of uses, including a range of housing options, along with commercial, light industrial and recreational uses for the benefit of local residents and visitors. As currently envisioned by city planners and developers, the 34-acre Flavelle Lumber Mill will be transformed into a modern urban village that supports a population of about 7,000 residents and adds a wealth of economic, recreational, social, natural and entertainment benefits to Port Moody.

A variety of housing options are being considered for the development, with condominium buildings, street-oriented townhouses, rental housing, and the potential for house boats estimated to lead to the creation of almost 3,400 residential units. The expansive waterfront area will be revitalized and enhanced by the building of about 1.3 kilometres of new recreational trails, a boardwalk along the water’s edge connecting to Rocky Point Park, and the development of four park areas totalling 4.9 acres, and a 1.9-acre public plaza.

The Flavelle Oceanfront Development could lead to the creation of more than 1,000 on-site jobs upon completion, which could generate up to $57 million in annual employment income. Plans call for 99,000 square-feet of office space; 72,000 square feet of retail space, including a grocery store, restaurants and cafes; 103,000 square feet of light-industrial space; a 106,000 square-foot campus of care facility; and 75,000 square feet of live/work space designed for artistry and other creative ventures.

Developers and planners plan to utilize a sustainable approach in the development to ensure energy efficiency and environmental health. By using LEED Principles of design and construction, planners aim to make the development a model for sustainable communities. The site’s location will help in this regard, as it is in walking distance of both the nearby Sky Train Evergreen Line and West Coast Express, which provide easy connections to the rest of Metro Vancouver.

Public consultation has been an integral part of the planning process thus far, and is expected to continue as the planning stage moves through the ongoing permitting process. I will be keeping a close watch on this project going forward, and will provide updates when appropriate. If you have any questions about the Flavelle OceanFront Development project, or any other questions about real estate in Metro Vancouver, register with us today.

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Edgestone by Bold Developments – Port Moody

Edgestone is a new townhouse development by Bold Properties located at 2131 Spring Street in Port Moody.   Once Completed in 2019, Edgestone will consist of 38  2, 3 and 4 Bedroom townhomes ranging in size from 1308 to 1658 square feet.

The expected breakdown of the homes is:

  • 2 Two bedroom + Den residences ranging between 1318 to 1327 square feet
  • 13 Three bedroom residences ranging from 1319 to 1381 square feet
  • 23 Three bedroom + Den residences ranging from 1540 to 1706 square feet

 

Each of the townhomes will be built Certified Green Gold, with Smart living solution including Ring Video Doorbells, Bluetooth enabled Schlage Deadbolt, and USB charging ports throughout the home, plus some more traditional family convenience such as laundry on the upper floor, private garages with overhead storage,  and family sized outdoor patios,  and a great children’s playground.

Located at 2131 Spring Street, Edgestone is centrally located with an easy access to Vancouver via the Barnett and Hastings by car, or if Skytrain is your choice, the Port Moody Centre station is a short walk away.  Other amenities in the neighbourhood include Suterbrook Village with all the shop and services it provides. For nature lovers and dog walkers, Edgestone is convenient located right off the Shoreline trail , which leads to Rocky Point and  Pajos!

Edgestone pricing is expected to start in low 900s with sales to begin by Mid November. If you’re looking for more information on Edgestone and would like to receive additional information such as floor plans, pricing, features and finishes when they are available,  please register with us today!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Jawing with Girardi

Ken Rosenthal writes up an in-depth interview with Joe Girardi, and it’s free today only. My favorite bit:

How difficult was it for you to serve as a buffer between the front office and the players, considering the Yankees’ strong emphasis on analytics in recent years?

Girardi: I don’t think it was difficult. I strongly believe in analytics. My favorite class in school was math. And my favorite math class was calculus. You can’t always take the derivative in baseball and get the answer. But I think it’s extremely important. I used it a lot in managing. I had discussions with our analytical people about how they came up with things, how do we continue to improve this and continue to grow as an organization.

I wonder how many managers know the Calculus?



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It’s Not About What Or How We Sell…..

How we define a problem inevitably constrains our solutions to the problem.  That’s why it’s so important to think about the problem we are trying to solve and defining it in a way that enables us to solve the problem in a meaningful way.

As we address the issue, “How do we drive sales, how do we grow our business, how do we achieve our numbers,” depending on how we frame the issues/problems around revenue growth, we could be seriously constraining the solutions that are available to solve the problem.

Most organizations frame the issue around, “What we sell.”  Inevitably, this leads us down a very company/product centric view of our sales strategies.  It biases all our thinking to what we do and how we sell.  This thinking leads us to a product/solution focused approach to selling, usually, we end up in some variant of, pitching or product centric focus on engaging the customer.

Fewer organizations frame the issue around “How we sell.”  This leads us down very different paths.  When we focus on this, we tend to look the process of how we engage our customers.  This approach may lead us to completely different approaches to selling.  It may be more customer centric, in may be more collaborative, it may be more focused on how we create value with the customers.  Of course, depending on how we look at it, we could come up with some very self centered, inward-out approaches to selling (much of the high volume/high velocity approaches represent the result of this).

But what if we framed the problem a little differently?

What if we started by asking ourselves, “Why do customers buy, how do they buy?”

Instead of focusing on what and how we sell, what if we inverted the process by starting with the thing that creates revenue—it’s customers buying.  How might we change our approaches to selling if we simply started defining the problem in the context of the why and how of what they do, then align all the things that we do around helping them with those processes?

There’s another advantage to changing the way we define and look at solving problems.  If we keep defining them in a single way, for example “what we sell,” we limit the potential solutions.  Inevitably, we revert to past approaches, but if they are no longer as effective as they had been, we don’t do much to change the outcomes.  As many have said,  “If the only tool you use is a hammer, pretty soon everything looks like a nail.”

Reframing the way we look at problems can help us  move forward in tremendous ways.  It can help us look at different solutions and approaches.  It enables us to combine a variety of approaches.  It enables us to overcome challenges we may encounter in our previous approaches.

We need to continue to look at what we sell and how we sell.  But we might be able to move the needle, by expanding our views, reframing how we look at driving revenue growth.  Looking at why and how our customers buy, might drive some new success.

 

 



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Playoffs Today

The Astros are on the verge of their first World Series Championship as they play the Dodgers in Los Angeles. Game six of the series sees Justin Verlander take the hill against Rich Hill.

Verlander could be counted on for staying in the game in this post-season. He lasted at least six innings in each of his four starts, even throwing a complete game. His three home runs allowed in 30 2/3 innings is very good compared to what we’ve seen from some other starters. (The most impressive thing in that table is that Masahiro Tanaka and CC Sabathia combined to pitch 39 innings and allow just one home run.)

The most Hill pitched in a post-season game is six innings. This works, as his last five outings were short but sweet. In that stretch he is only 1-0, but with a 2.08 ERA and 31 strikeouts in 21 2/3 innings. He also allowed 11 walks, so he does not give his defense much work to do.

Both bullpens are a bit burned out at the moment. The day off helps a bit. We will see if Hill is allowed (or capable) of going more than four innings, and if Verlander and stay in the game for seven innings. How long the starter stays in the game may decide this contest.

Enjoy!



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Monday, October 30, 2017

Contact and Power

Travis Sawchik uses game five of the World Series to make an important point about the Astros. They hit for power without striking out much:

Said Astros GM Jeffrey Luhnow of the approach to Tyler Kepner of the New York Times earlier this summer:

“Power’s exciting, power sells tickets and power wins games, at times,” Luhnow said. “But power usually comes at the expense of rally-killing strikeouts in other instances. It’s not a satisfying brand of baseball, and I don’t think it’s a winning brand of baseball, necessarily, to have 30-home run hitters with 200 strikeouts a year.

The Astros added that contact ability without sacrificing power. Said Astros hitting coach Dave Hudgens to the NYT: “I don’t want guys swinging at a pitch unless they can hit a homer.”

I hope this is a lesson Aaron Judge might absorb. If he combines his power with a low strikeout rate, he might hit .400.



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High Times

Given that this comes from Seattle:

Mariners hire their first director of high performance

I assumed they were dealing with legal use of marijuana. Instead:

The Mariners hired Lorena Martin as the club’s first director of high performance Monday.

Martin, who was the director of sports performance analytics for the Los Angeles Lakers, will oversee the organization’s medical, strength and conditioning, nutrition and mental-skills departments.

Cool. I hope she finds a way to keep pitchers healthier.



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More on Maxwell

It appears alcohol may have been involved in Bruce Maxwell‘s gun charge:

When officers got on scene, they detained Maxwell without incident, who allegedly exhibited signs and symptoms of alcohol intoxication.

Police say a “strong odor of intoxicating liquor emanated from his breath” and Maxwell was speaking in an elevated voice, often yelling, was verbally aggressive, using excessive profanities, and making anti-police statements.

Looks like his court date is Nov. 6th. We’ll see what happens then.



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New Cap for Kapler

It is being reported that Gabe Kapler will take over as the Phillies new field manager. Tim Malcolm at Phillies Nation reacts to the report:

Let’s start with the fact that Kapler is not an outside-the-box selection. He’s a former major league player, a fourth outfielder type who won a ring with the 2004 Red Sox. He has previously managed; he was the helm of the 2007 class-A Greenvile Drive, which finished 58-81. Moreover, he’s a white male. If the Phillies went “outside the box,” they would’ve hired a non-white manager, or hell, maybe a woman. But they didn’t do that. A white male former player with managerial experience is not outside the box.

Plus, Kapler isn’t outside the box if you’re looking closely at what the Phillies are becoming. Gone are the days when a general manager was a silent pencil pusher and the manager, instead, was the man leading the boys into battle. Today’s big league environment is such that front offices have much louder input about the day-to-day management of the club. Klentak, a young executive making his first major hire, chose in Kapler someone with aligned thoughts about the direction of the game, a manager who can communicate to players how the organization is educating and evaluating them.

Kapler peaked early, his best years coming in his early 20s. He peaked late as well, with a good season at age 32. He was a good player to have on the bench; he didn’t do anything outstanding, but he didn’t do anything poorly either. He might have very much fit the mold of an average major leaguer (.268/.329/.420 career slash line).



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Still Not Awake

I am glad that this is an off day for the World Series. I’m going to need a day to recover. 🙂

In game five, the Astros hit .500/.562/1.286 with men on base. The Dodgers hit a mere .308/.400/.654. Clearly the difference in the game.

One has to like the Astros chances in game six, with the Astros sending Justin Verlander against Rich Hill. Verlander has gone deep in games this post-season, while the Dodgers don’t seem to trust Hill for more than a few innings.



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Monday Update

The Day by Day Database is up to date.



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How Are You Different?

I’m constantly amazed at the “sameness” of the majority of the prospecting I see.  We inundate our prospects and customers with emails, social media outreaches, and phone calls that are virtually indistinguishable from those sent by everyone else.

We blanket our prospects with one outreach after another.  In most, we are pitching our products or our companies.  We send the same, un-personalized emails, to 1000’s of targets.  We follow them with calls, again focusing on our interests, not the customers.’  We set our email systems to automatically cycle follow ups, usually something as unique as, “did you see my original email?”

When I look at what’s inflicted on our customers, it’s astounding–both the volume and the mind-numbing sameness and predictability of each outreach.

While the products/solutions, and companies may differ, each outreach is virtually the same.

“Industry leaders find our products/solutions help them achieve these goals, more effectively….”

“Google, Microsoft, GE, have gotten great benefit our of implementing our solutions to help them with……”

“(Insert company name) is the market leader in these solutions….”

“Can I arrange time to talk to you about the value you would get from implementing our solutions….”

“Thanks for your interest in our eBook, can we discuss your needs for a new solution….”

Every outreach seems to come from the same playbook—focus on what we sell, talk about industry leaders getting value, talk about your company leadership, ask for a meeting to talk more about your products and solutions….

After receiving dozens of these each day, they all blend together in a mind-numbing mass.

Then there are those that try to be outrageous, seem to use the same play book.  They may make outrageous claims about the product or company, or they may try to provoke a response through some clever sentence daring you to not respond.

In this mass of sameness, every once in a while someone stands out.

It’s not the flashiness in how they write or engage you on the phone.  It’s not the outrageous claims or references.

There are a small number that are different–they are carefully researched, they are about their customers.  Rather than pitching they want to listen and learn.  They say little about their own company or their solutions, perhaps not even talking about them in the first call, instead they focus their attention on learning about their customers’ goals dreams and challenges.

These calls are so rare, they stand out as being refreshing and different.

Guess which calls I remember and respond to.

 

 



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Sunday, October 29, 2017

I am Done

I would love to stay up and watch, but I do need to work tomorrow. If anyone want to comment here on what happens, feel free.

The game is going to the bottom of the tenth tied at 12.

Update: Too bad foul home runs don’t count. Brian McCann does get hit by a pitch after that foul home run. The Astros have a man on first with two out.

Update: George Springer walks. Men on first and second, and the Astros pinch-run for McCann with Derek Fisher.

Update: Bregman singles in Fisher, and the Astros beat the Dodgers 13-12!

What a game, but now I really do need to go to bed.



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The Game that Won’t End

This game reminds me a bit of the 1986 NLCS game six between the Astros and the Mets. The Mets would score in extra innings, and the Astros would come back and tie them.

Maybe the Astros can win this one in the bottom of the ninth, as Kenley Jansen is on with the game tied at 12.

Update: Yuri Gurriel doubles with two out. It was off the wall in left, close to a home run.

Update: Cameron Maybin pinch runs.



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Dodgers in the Ninth

The Dodgers get their lead-off runner on in the ninth as Cody Bellinger walks.

Update: Logan Forsythen strikes out. One down.

Update: Yasiel Puig homers, and the Astros lead the Dodgers 12-11!



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McCann Can

Brian McCann gets the run back with a one-out home run in the bottom of the eighth. The Astros lead the Dodgers 12-9.



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Keeping His Eye on the Ball

Joc Pederson doubles off the wall in leftfield. He admired what he thought was a home run, but still wound up at second base. I suspect he will get a bit of a reprimand for that from his manager.

Chris Taylor gets hit by a pitch to give the Dodgers runners on first and second with one out in the bottom of the eight inning, trailing the Astros 11-8. Will Harris comes on to pitch for Houston.



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There’s Always Brandon Morrow

Brandon Morrow comes in for his fifth straight World Series game. George Springer greets him with a home run, making up for Springer’s mistake in the top of the inning. There was no doubt about that home run.

Alex Bregman follows with a single up the middle, and it looks like Morrow is a bit tired to pitch in this game.

The Dodgers and Astros are tied at eight in the bottom of the seventh inning.



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Turner Doubles

Brad Peacock comes in to pitch the top of the seventh inning, and Justin Turner greets him with a long plate appearance ending in a double off the top of the wall in right center. The Dodgers have a threat, tied with the Astros at seven.

Update: Kike Hernandez tries to sacrifice bunt, but he bunts it hard back to the pitcher. Peacock throws to third to get Turner. One out, man on first. That turned out to be a big waste of an out by the Dodgers.

Update: Another bad defensive play by the Astros in this game. Cody Bellinger hits a line drive to shallow center. George Springer runs in and dives for it, but the ball scoots right by him for a triple. The Dodgers lead the Astros 8-7.



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Another Change

Kenta Maeda walks Evan Gattis with one out in the bottom of the sixth. That’s it for Maeda, who blew the lead in the fifth inning. Tony Watson is on to pitch. He’s given up two unearned runs in this post-season in six innings.



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Kershaw Out of Gas

Clayton Kershaw walks George Springer and Alex Bregman with two out in the fifth. He’s taken out of the game with a the Dodgers leading the Astros 7-4, and Kenta Maeda comes in to face Jose Altuve.

Kershaw threw 94 pitches. He will not get a decision in the game.



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Collin Out of Control

Collin McHugh comes on to pitch the fifth inning for the Astros. He walks the first two batters he faces. The Dodgers and Astros are tied at four.

Update: Kike Hernandez strikes out looking on a poor call by the umpire. The ball looked up and in.



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Astros Threat

A lead-off walk and a one-out single give the Astros their first threat of game five. Carlos Correa gets the first crack at driving in a run against Clayton Kershaw. The Dodgers lead the Astros 4-0.

Update: Correa pulls the ball down the leftfield line and beats the throw for a double. George Springer scores and Jose Altuve goes to third. The Dodgers lead the Astros 4-1.



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Logan’s Run

Logan Forsythe is in the middle of another Dodgers run in the top of the fourth inning. He doubled with one out, and with two outs Austin Barnes singles him home. Forsythe is 2 for 2 with a run and two RBI tonight.

The Dodgers lead the Astros 4-0.

Update: Charlie Culberson hits a ground ball that Jose Altuve dives and stops, but that just prevents the runner on first from going to third. The Dodgers have runners on 1st and 2nd with two out, and Dallas Keuchel leaves the game.

Update: Luke Gregerson comes on in relief.



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There Goes the No-Hitter

Evan Gattis leads off the bottom of the third inning with a single, the first hit off Clayton Kershaw. The Dodgers lead the Astros 3-0. Dallas Keuchel settled down after a rough first inning.

Update: Marwin Gonzalez hits into a 5-4-3 double play. Kershaw is back to facing the minimum number of batters.



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Better First

Clayton Kershaw throws a shut-down inning in the bottom of the first, retiring the Astros in order. The first inning belongs to the Dodgers tonight as they lead the Astros 3-0.



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World Series Game Five Under Way

Chris Taylor of the Dodgers bats against Dallas Keuchel of the Astros as game five of the 2017 World Series gets underway. Taylor grounds the ball hard up the middle for a single. He started game one against Keuchel with a home run.



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City Slickers

There is a claim the World Series balls are slicker than the regular season balls:

Pitchers and coaches from both the Dodgers and Astros complained Saturday night about the World Series baseballs—and this time the controversy is not just about liveliness. They say there is a new problem: the baseballs used in the World Series are slicker than the ones used in the regular season because of a difference in the grain of the leather. The slicker World Series balls particularly make it hard to throw a good slider, they claim.

“We had a well-pitched game tonight from both sides,” Astros pitching coach Brent Strom said after Los Angeles won Game 4, 6-2. “I’m not taking anything away from the players. I just want to know why? Why in the world would the baseballs in the World Series be different? Because you can see the difference. You can feel it. I don’t understand it at all.”

This supposedly hurt Ken Giles and Yu Darvish, who cannot throw a good slider with the ball. The Astros are hitting .241/.313/.420 in the post season. The Dodgers are hitting .242/.339/.457. Both teams are hitting for power, both teams are taking their walks, but they are not crushing balls in general. Strikeouts are very high.

I suppose the ink, gold instead of blue, that is used to stamp the ball doesn’t stick to a rougher surface. Why doesn’t someone in the media just call Rawlings and ask?



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Playoffs Today

World Series game five gets underway at 8:20 PM EDT as the Dodgers send Clayton Kershaw against the Astros and Dallas Keuchel. These two faced off in game one of the World Series, both producing quality starts. Kershaw’s start was of much higher quality, however.

If you examine the average game score of the two teams, they are very close this post-season. The Astros starters are going deeper in games, while the Dodgers are giving up fewer hits and walks. When all is totaled, the Dodgers average comes in at 57.3, the Astros at 57.2.

Enjoy!



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Wade Boggs Was Right!

A message just popped up on my phone that the Nationals signed Dave Martinez to a three-year contract as their manager. Jon Heyman had the story on FanRag:

Martinez will be announced as Washington’s new manager after the World Series. It is believed the announcement is only being delayed out of deference to the Series, and MLB’s wish that teams avoid major announcements during baseball’s showcase.

Martinez, Joe Maddon’s bench coach since 2008, interviewed recently in Washington. Ex-Red Sox manager John Farrell also interviewed.

The Washington Post noted that Martinez had a full-day interview while Farrell’s confab with the team was much briefer.

Of course, Wade Boggs had the story days ago.

According to Chelsea Janes there is also an option:

Congratulations to Dave Martinez. He is going be another in the Mike Scioscia line of managers. The Nationals almost got a child of Scioscia two years ago in Bud Black, and now they have a grand child.



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Small Sample Size Matters

This really does appear to be the post-season of building narratives around small sample sizes. Cody Bellinger was hitless in the World Series:

When Bellinger walked to the plate with one out in the seventh inning, and his drought had extended to 13 at-bats with eight strikeouts, he was facing Astros starter Charlie Morton. The same guy who was pitching the game of his life, retiring 18 of the last 20 batters.

“We weren’t worried,’’ Seager said, “because he’s got no pulse. He doesn’t have a memory, either. Things go away. That’s what you have to do in baseball. You have to forget the past. Forget your last AB, and move onto your next one.’’

Bellinger had been fooled all Series on breaking balls, and jammed on fastballs, so he told himself to take the ball the other way. This is what he focused on during batting practice. This is what he told himself to do with his team down 1-0, and only eight outs away from going down 3-1 in the Series.

Morton quickly got ahead of him, 1-and-2, with Bellinger looking at one curveball for a strike and fouling off the next. Morton then tried to throw a fastball past him, but Bellinger didn’t chase it. He threw another curveball. This one missed too.

Morton came back one more time with a high curveball, and Bellinger pounced on it, hitting it to left field, drifting just to the right of the left field Crawford Boxes, toward the wall, into a crevice. Marwin Gonzalez could not track both the flight of the ball and the narrowing of the opening.

The ball caromed off the wall, and Bellinger had a double.

Very good players go 0 for 13, especially if they are facing a bevy of good pitchers. Managers and other players are aware of this, as Corey Seager‘s comment indicates, as did Dave Roberts refusing to move Bellinger down in the lineup. The Dodgers as a team are not hitting particularly well in this World Series. Bellinger was just the most extreme performance.



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The TTO Post Season

In the year of the three-true outcomes, this is the most three-true outcome post season of recent memory:

Post Season K per 9 IP BB per 9 IP HR per 9 IP TTO per 9 IP
2017 9.35 3.55 1.37 14.27
2016 9.00 2.84 1.01 12.86
2015 8.97 2.76 1.25 12.98
2014 7.29 2.84 0.86 11.00
2013 8.78 2.97 0.74 12.48
2012 8.31 2.79 0.82 11.92
2011 7.77 3.40 1.28 12.45
2010 8.55 2.81 0.92 12.27
2009 7.43 3.65 1.05 12.13
2008 7.85 3.76 1.17 12.77
2007 7.90 3.76 1.13 12.79
2006 6.31 3.23 1.03 10.57
2005 6.21 3.06 0.98 10.25
2004 6.88 3.72 1.42 12.02
2003 7.45 3.37 0.94 11.76
2002 6.72 3.21 1.33 11.26

Note that between 2007 and 2016, the elements varied, but the combination mostly fell int he 12.x range, and in the higher end of the 12.x range. The 2017 season represents a huge jump, as MLB skipped right over the 13.x range into the low 14s. It’s the highest rate of strikeouts and home runs in the study, and near the highest rate of walks. Despite the lack of action from batted balls, it has been a compelling post-season.



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Maxwell’s Silver Howitzer

Oakland catcher Bruce Maxwell was arrested for pointing a gun at a delivery person:

Maxwell was the only player in Major League Baseball this year to take a knee during the national anthem to protest racial injustice.

Scottsdale police said officers went to Maxwell’s home Saturday night after getting a call about a person with a gun. Maxwell was booked on charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and disorderly conduct.

Police said Maxwell was held in custody pending an initial appearance.

Stay tuned. Maxwell reported that he was denied service at a restaurant due to his taking a knee, a story the restaurant denies.



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Sunday Update

The Day by Day Database is up to date.



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Saturday, October 28, 2017

Series Tied

Kenley Jansen comes on for the non-save, and retires the first two Astros batters. Alex Bregman, however, picks up the Astros second hit of the night, a home run out to leftfield. That’s all the Astros get, and the Dodgers beat Astros 6-2.

The teams will play at least six games. Four great games so far, the winner of game fives gains a nice advantage going back to Los Angeles.



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Ninth Inning Drama

The Dodgers and Astros go to the ninth inning tied at one. Corey Seager greets Astros closer Ken Giles with a ground ball single against the shift. The Dodgers have the lead-off man on.

Update: Justin Turner draws a walk to put the go-ahead run in scoring position.



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Morton Done

Charlie Morton gives up a deep double to Cody Bellinger (Bellinger’s first hit of the series) with one out in the seventh, and the Astros go to their bullpen. Morton gave up three hits, no walks, and struck out seven.

The Astros lead the Dodgers 1-0.

Update: Will Harris comes on to pitch. He gets Yasiel Puig to fly out for the second out of the inning.



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Boing Boing

George Springer breaks up the no-hitter and the scoreless game with two out in the bottom of the sixth inning. His home run deep into leftfield gives the Astros a 1-0 lead over the Dodgers. Alex Wood leaves the game having allowed one hit and one run.

Springer now has three home runs this post season.

Update: Brandon Morrow comes in to induce a ground out to end the inning.



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A Man On

Charlie Morton hits Austin Barnes to start the top of the sixth inning. Can the Dodgers turn this into a threat in a scoreless game?

Update: With one out, Kike Hernandez lines a single to right-center, moving Barnes to third. The Dodgers need at least a long fly ball.



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To the Woodshed

Alex Wood retires the Astros in order in the fifth inning, keeping his no-hitter alive. He walked two and faced one batter over the minimum due to a double play. Wood has thrown 73 pitches. The Dodgers and Astros remain scoreless.



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More on Morton

The Dodgers and Astros remain scoreless in the bottom of the fifth inning.



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End of Three

After three innings, the Astros and Dodgers remain scoreless. Alex Wood, the Dodgers starter, allowed two walks, but removed one of the runners with a double play. Charlie Morton allowed a lead-off single, but that runner was erased on a double play, so he has faced the minimum number of batters. Morton struck out three, Wood one as pitching and defense dominate early in the game.



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A Little D

Carlos Correa walks to start the Astros second, but Justin Turner starts a nice double play to remove him, then Logan Forsythe makes a nice diving stop on a grounder by Josh Reddick to end the inning. No score between the Dodgers and Astros at the end of two innings.



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Game Four Underway

Chris Taylor of Los Angeles drives a liner up the middle to start game four between the Dodgers and Astros with a single.



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Reliever Awards

Craig Kimbrel and Kenley Jansen take home reliever of the year honors:

Craig Kimbrel of the Red Sox and Kenley Jansen of the Dodgers threw “immaculate innings” within a week of each other back in May, each striking out the side on nine pitches for only the 78th and 79th occurrences in Major League Baseball history.

Maybe it was a harbinger that they would be side-by-side in late October and accepting the highest honor for a relief pitcher from MLB and presenting sponsor The Hartford before Game 4 at the World Series. Kimbrel received the Mariano Rivera American League Reliever of the Year Award, and Jansen collected his second straight Trevor Hoffman National League Reliever of the Year Award, in a press conference on Saturday night at Minute Maid Park.

They were 1-2 in ERA among pitchers with at least three saves and 50 innings pitched. All three-true outcomes for both were very impressive. I would not be unhappy if Jansen won the NL Cy Young Award.



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Gurriel Suspended

Yuli Gurriel will receive a five game suspension for his disparaging the race of Yu Darvish Friday night. The suspension, however, will be for the first five games of the 2018 season:

Manfred said Gurriel expressed remorse when the two met Friday night and again on Saturday. Gurriel will also meet with Darvish to apologize, Manfred said.

Manfred said he decided to have the suspension be served at the start of the 2018 regular season because it would be unfair to punish the other Astros players.

“We support Major League Baseball’s decision of a five-game suspension for the 2018 season,” Astros’ general manager Jeff Luhnow said in a statement.

Baloney. The penalty should inflict the most pain to discourage this type of behavior in the future. Five games next season costs Guriel about $333,000. Possibly costing your team a World Series victory would make it difficult for him to stay in the club house.



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Playoffs Today

The Dodgers try to even the series with the Astros as Los Angeles sends Alex Wood against Charlie Morton. Wood experienced little post-season success in his career. His control is great, with just two walks and 13 strikeouts in 12 innings, but he allowed five home runs. Three of those came in his last outing after a long layoff. That was ten days ago.

Morton owns a 5.30 ERA in 18 2/3 post-season innings. He did not have a good start until game seven against the Yankees. In his 13 2/3 innings previous to that start, he walked eight batters and allowed three home runs. The Dodgers are hoping that Charlie Morton shows up tonight.

Dave Laurila recently sat down with Morton to discuss baseball and life.

Enjoy!



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Shocked

I am shocked that an Hispanic person, raised in a communist utopia, would make a racially denigrating gesture and remark toward a Japanese-Iranian.

Let’s see if the commissioner mans up and suspends Yuli Gurriel for the rest of the World Series. I assume Dave Roberts, who is American-Japanese, found the gesture rather rude, also.



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Saturday Update

The Day by Day Database is up to date.



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Friday, October 27, 2017

Astros Take Game Three

The Astros once again go against the modern bullpen strategy and use two starting pitchers to beat the Dodgers 5-3. Lance McCullers lasted 5 1/3 innings allowing three runs. Brad Peacock came on and pitched 3 2/3 innings for the save, with no runs charged to him. They combined for five walks and seven strikeouts.

Meanwhile, the offense was relentless, collecting 12 hits and four walks. Five of those hits for extra bases. It seemed they had a threat going every inning. Two Dodgers errors didn’t help. The Astros are now in the drivers seat with a 3-2 lead in the series.



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No Let Up

The Astros load the bases in the bottom of the seventh with two out. A double, an intentional walk, and a single give the Astros another threat as they lead the Dodgers 5-3. Cody Bellinger made a great play on a Josh Reddick popped up bunt, otherwise the Dodgers might be in more trouble.



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Dodgers Threat

Corey Seager walks and Justin Turner follows with a double to give the Dodgers men on second and third with one out in the top of the sixth inning. Lance McCullers, the Houston starter is still in the game as the Dodgers trail 5-1.

Update: Cody Bellinger strikes out on three pitches. One down.

Lance McCullers is leaving the game. Brad Peacock comes on to pitch to Yasiel Puig.

Update: Puig grounds out to second. That drives in a run and moves a runner to third. The Astros lead the Dodgers 5-2.

Update: Peakcock throws a wild pitch. Turner scores, and the Astros lead 5-3.

Update: Chase Utley pops out to end the inning. The Dodgers are still in it.



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The Fifth in the Fifth

The Astros extend their lead over the Dodgers to 5-1 on a poor throw by reliever Tony Watson. He gave up a single to Josh Reddick, the on a ground ball by Evan Gattis, Watson threw the ball down the leftfield line. That allowed Reddick to come around to score.

John Smoltz that the Astros are winning the home plate area. They beat throws to the plate on offense, and cut down runners on defense.



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Too Much Hustle

Yasiel Puig hits a ball off the glove of third baseman Alex Bregman with one out in the top of the fourth. Puig was hustling out of the box and didn’t see that Bregman missed the ball. Puig overran first, thinking there was going to be a throw, and then tried to go to second. He is just thrown out at the base. The Dodgers don’t score in the fourth and trail the Astros 4-1.



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Selective Dodgers

Joc Pederson and Kike Hernandez draw walks to lead-off the top of the third inning for the Dodgers. Base runners are just what the Dodgers need as they trail the Astros 4-0.



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Yuli Tide Cheer

Yuli Gurriel leads off the bottom of the second inning with a home run off Yu Darvish, pulled down the line in leftfield. That was his second hit of the World Series, both for extra bases.

Josh Reddick follows with a double down the leftfield line, as the Astros lead the Dodgers 1-0.

Update: Evan Gattis draws a walk, his fifth of the post season in 27 PA.



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Springer to Life

George Springer leads off the Houston half of the first smacking a double to the gap in right-center. He’s 4 for 10 with two doubles and a home run in the World Series.



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World Series Game Three Underway

Lance McCullers faces Chris Taylor to start game three of the series between the Dodgers and the Astros. Taylor pops out to Jose Altuve in shallow rightfield, and the game is underway.

Update: The shift pays off as a very deep Jose Altuve knocks down a very hard hit ground ball from Corey Seager and throws him out from shallow right.

Update: George Springer runs a long way toward the right-centerfield wall to catch a fly ball by Justin Turner. The Astros are due up with no score after half an inning.



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Martinez to Manage Nationals?

Via Bleacher Nation, Wade Boggs tweets:

Martinez worked on Joe Maddon‘s staff since 2008, so he had a great manager as a role model.

Note that this is not official. It could be the Nationals are going to wait until after the World Series to make an official announcement.



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We Claim To Be Data Driven, Yet We Ignore The Data

Recently, I heard someone say, “We claim to be data driven, yet we ignore the data.”  Nothing could be more true of much of what I see in the practice of sales and marketing.

We are surrounded by data about what drives sales and marketing effectiveness.  Hundreds of market research reports, done by thoughtful researchers provide stunningly depressing news about sales and marketing performance.  Performance data from within our own organizations highlights challenges.

Despite, all this data, too many organizations seem committed to doing the things that don’t work.  Yet doing them at an ever increasing cadence and intensity.

I believe these behaviors are what Einstein referred to as the definition of insanity. (Doing the same thing over and over, expecting a different result.)

Reflect on some of the things that you or your organization does:

  1. We know we are supposed to be customer focused, that customers respond when we engage them, focused on their goals, strategies, and their success.  We know customers can’t stand being “pitched” products.  Survey after survey confirms these, yet the majority of our marketing and prospecting focus on what we sell and the capabilities of our own organizations.
  2. We know our marketing results are better when we segment, target, research, and focus our messages on things specific and relevant to the recipients, yet we continue to focus on quantity/volume of unfocused messages addressed to “occupant or current resident.”
  3. We know customers prefer personalization and things that are relevant to them.  We spend millions on marketing, sales automation, and content tools that enable us to do these things.  Yet we still send the same irrelevant, unresearched, non personalized messages to everyone–focused constantly on upping the volume rather than improving the quality.
  4. We know we have to define our ideal customer profiles, focusing on those customers, yet as we fail to achieve our numbers, we cast wider and wider nets.
  5. We know that coaching drives sales performance improvements consistently, yet the majority of managers spend less than 1 hour a week in all coaching activities.
  6. We know we have to hire people that are nimble, agile, curious, with great problem solving/critical thinking capabilities.  Yet we don’t hereto that profile and we “dumb down” those that have the capability by forcing them to heavily scripted pitches.
  7. We know sales performance (% of people making quota, % of organizations making quota) is plummeting, yet we continue to do the same things at ever increasing rates.
  8. We spend millions in tools to provide us data on improving performance, yet we measure the wrong things or ignore the data we capture.

This list is endless, I’ll stop here.  But the behavior is astounding and ironic.

We continue to look for data, to talk about analytics, to speculate on AI and how all of these things better enable us to achieve our goals–yet the reality is that in our execution we ignore that data, continuing to do what hasn’t worked at ever increasing volumes.

Alternative, we choose the wrong data points to analyze.  We enforce arbitrary and meaningless activity goals without connecting the dots to whether they produce the intended outcomes.

Data is hugely powerful.  We can’t drive performance in the organization unless we have the right data, are measuring the right things, and leveraging that data to improve performance.

Are you paying attention to the data, or are you just doing the same old stuff in ever increasing volumes?

 



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Playoffs Today

Game three of the World Series takes place between the Dodgers and Astros in Houston Friday night, with first pitch time moved to 8:20 PM EDT. Yu Darvish takes on Lance McCullers. Darvish pitched magnificently in the 2017 post-season so far. In 11 1/3 innings he allowed two runs, both on solo homers. He walked one and struck out 14. His control improved since joining the Dodgers, and is on full display here in the post-season.

McCullers turned in marvelous performances in his post-season career as well. He allowed just eight hits in 19 1/3 innings, including a four inning, no-hit relief appearance against the Yankees in game seven of the 2017 ALCS. That compensated for his seven walks allowed.

Watch to see how the managers handle their bullpens tonight. A.J. Hinch appears willing to go longer with this starters than Dave Roberts.

Enjoy!



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What Relief?

Earlier this post-season relief was usage running very high for the second year in a row. Farther into the post-season, and with Dave Roberts getting some flak for pulling his starter early in game two, relief usage is still up from last season, with bullpen innings accounting for 45.2% of total innings. There is one big difference between 2016 and 2017, however. In 2016, starting pitchers allowed 4.03 runs per nine innings, relievers 3.27 R/9 IP. So using relievers in 2016 produced great results. In 2017, starters are allowing 4.25 R/9 IP, relievers 4.24 R/9 IP. Overall, relievers this year performed the same as starters. Instead of 2016 marking a new trend, it might have been a year where the bullpens were particularly good, so going into them early was the right strategy. This season, not so much.



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Thursday, October 26, 2017

Bargument

It appears arguing at a bar now requires a police presence:

Houston Astros manager A.J. Hinch says there was “no altercation” at a hotel in California this week at the World Series after a TMZ Sports report that he argued with bar patrons.

Pasadena police say they responded to a report of a verbal spat between members of Astros management and hotel patrons after Houston lost Game 1 to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Tuesday night.

Here’s the link to the TMZ article.

Maybe a verbal dispute in Los Angeles should be referred to as a SpatuLA.



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Dead Ball

It would appear that a bad call hurt the Nationals in their bid to advance to the NLCS:

The play in question came during a four-run fifth inning against Nationals ace Max Scherzer. The NL Cy Young Award candidate struck out Baez to end the inning, but the ball got past catcher Matt Wieters, allowing Baez to reach first base.

However on Baez’s swing-and-miss he hit Wieters. The MLB rulebook states that if a batter makes contact with a catcher on a pitch of any kind the ball is dead no matter what. So Baez should have been out on the spot. The inning would have been over and the Nationals would have limited the Cubs to two runs in the inning.

The Nationals really had a run of bad luck in their LDS losses. A bad call, a ball a few inches more from a fielder, even possibly a ball called a strike or a strike called a ball and they might have made one or two league championship series.



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Girardi Knew You

The Yankees decided not to bring back Joe Girardi. I thought Girardi did a good job transitioning the team from one era to the next. He also seemed to be someone capable of growth. I remember how he tried to foster more team unity after his first season, improving a weakness.

My guess is he will take some time off, but will manage somewhere in a year or two.



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Arnold Schwarzenegger Pt 3.

The Curse of the Gonzalo

Jason Lisk notes that Dan Shaughnessy blames Adrian Gonzalez for the Dodgers loss in game two.

Since Shaughnessy obviously believes in the supernatural, this should not surprise anyone.

Kevin McReynolds had this type of reputation, too. Maybe it’s something about playing in San Diego.



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Defending Roberts

Dave Cameron defends Dave Roberts bullpen usage.

In the fifth and sixth innings, Verlander showed that riding your dominant starter is no guarantee of success, and that great pitchers give up runs sometimes. It happens. It’s baseball.

But we don’t get to just wave away Verlander’s failures while acting as if Jansen’s were somehow written on tablets the moment Roberts pulled Hill after 18 batters faced. Tonight, both an elite starter and an elite closer blew leads. If anything, the story of tonight’s game is there is no perfect way to manage, and that no matter what you do or what they’ve done previously, no one can be counted on to perform in a certain way every game.

If Roberts sticks with Hill, perhaps he gets another scoreless inning out of him, or perhaps Altuve and Correa hit their monstrous home runs five innings sooner. We’ll never know. We can’t know. And pretending that it was clear that Hill would have rolled through four guys who just destroyed left-handed pitching this year, the best hitters on the best offense in baseball, is silly.

That game is a great reminder of this cartoon.

Randomly, someone is going to have a bad night once in a while. John Smoltz, during the broadcast, pointed out the bigger danger of going to your bullpen early. The more relievers you use, the higher the probability of one of them having a bad night.

Note that A.J. Hinch ran into a similar problem. Ken Giles tired, and Hinch did not pull him fast enough. The big lesson from last night is that it’s much tougher for a closer to get six outs than three.



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Thursday Update

The Day by Day Database is up to date.



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Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Forte by StreetSide Developments at Burnaby Heights

Forte is an exclusive collection of homes in the heart of Burnaby Heights and within close proximity to Brentwood, Metrotown, Lougheed and SFU. This 5-storey mixed use residential and commercial development will feature 3 levels of condominiums atop of neighbourhood friendly retail. Forte is building large 1, 1 + den, 2, and 2+ den bedroom condominiums featuring high end stainless steel appliances, gourmet kitchens, panoramic balconies, underground storage and parking, plus a rooftop owners lounge with communal gardens. Forte will be within walking distances to Burnaby Library, Eileen Dailly Pool, Confederation Park and schools.

The post Forte by StreetSide Developments at Burnaby Heights appeared first on Vancouver New Condos.



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Marquise by Blairmore Group at Cambie and King Ed Blvd

Marquise is a beautifully designed 58 units, concrete, 6-storey building by award-winning GBL Architects. Located just off Cambie Street on tree-lined Kinge Edward Boulevard, it is steps away from King Edward Skytrain with easy access to YVR and the Canada Line. Exterior cladding is built with the highest quality materials, and also features a concrete structure for both the building and the townhomes. Expansive windows and 9′ ceilings heights in the main living area draw light and fresh air inside. Most units will enjoy unobstructed views of downtown and North Shore mountains. Rooftop amenities provide a place to gather, garden and socialize in the open air. Marquise will be LEED Gold Certified and has been built in an utmost sustainable fashion to be exceptionally energy and water efficient, increasing the comfort and durability of the homes while reducing operating costs.

Marquise - Flat - VNC

 

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Playoffs Today

Game two of the 2017 World Series gets underway at 8 PM EDT Wednesday night as Justin Verlander leads Houston against the Dodgers and Rich Hill.

Verlander’s 2017 post-season is shaping up as one for the ages. He holds a 4-0 record in three starts and a relief appearance, accounting for over half the Astros post-season wins. He posted a 1.46 ERA so far, walking six, allowing one home run, and striking out 24 batters in 24 2/3 innings. Opponents are hitting just .200/.258/.294 against him. He induced three ground ball double plays.

Hill has not lasted long in his two post-season starts this year. He prevents hits with a high strikeout rate, collecting 12 K in nine innings. That, however, is balanced by four walks and two home runs allowed. Dave Roberts will not allow Hill to let the game get out of hand.

Enjoy!



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Dumbing Down The Sales Organization

Over the past several months, I’ve been on a bit of a rampage on sales and marketing automation tools.  Some of my friends in those companies might be thinking, “What’s gotten into you Dave?  Why are you turning your back on us?”  Others of you may think I’m from the stone ages, and should just crawl back into some cave and be quiet.

In reality, I’m an advocate for leveraging tools and technology where we can achieve great gains in productivity, effectiveness, and customer engagement.  In the hands of great sales people, these tools have the potential of amplifying top sales performers capabilities tremendously.  We’ve seen sales teams leveraging tools with great impact and amazing results.  All of the vendors can provide case studies reinforcing this.

Unfortunately, the majority of cases I see, are far from this.  Too many of the tools provide marginal or no performance improvement.  Rather than building the capabilities of sales people helping them become better, they become crutches.  Sales people and managers come to rely on the tools as surrogates for developing strong sales capabilities, higher levels of impact and effectiveness, and thoughtful approaches to engaging our customers.

Why improve your ability to capture the customer’s imagination by planning a high impact sales call, when your tools just start dialing, connecting, and all the sales person has to do is read a script?  Why research, target, and understand a prospect, when the tools do that for you, and all you have to do is blindly call a customer saying, “I have a cool product?”

Perhaps, not by design, but in implementation, these tools and new sales enablement capabilities have the effect of “dumbing down the sales person.”  Not long ago, I wrote about how my car now provides many capabilities that dumb me down or make me less attentive as a driver.  It’s clear the automobile industry is driving (so to speak), to a future where cars are autonomous and driverless.  A lot of that makes huge sense (except to those of us who love driving.).  We get far greater utilization and efficiency of highway/road infrastructure, we have far fewer accidents.

If one were cynical, conspiratorial, or even a thoughtful manager — similar thoughts about application of these tools in sales and marketing might come to mind.

What if rather than trying to improve the productivity and efficiency of my sales people, making them better, I could leverage the tools to enable much lower skilled and less expensive people?  What if we can move more of the transactions to the web, eliminating the “human factor?”

In many cases, that world is here, retailing today looks very different because of Amazon and other web based suppliers.  In B2B, many of the simpler transactions have moved to the web, eliminating the need for sales people.

In complex B2B sales, where the human factor is critical in engaging the customer on their buying journey, we have to think about the possible unintended consequences of leveraging these tools improperly.

Are we leveraging these to help reduce complexity and drive simplification–both for our sales people and customers?

Are we leveraging these tools to improve the depth, substance, and quality of the interactions we have with customers?

Are we leveraging these tools to improve the value we create with our customers and prospects?

Or are we instead “dumbing down” the sales person, making them less effective in engaging the customers, but offsetting this with higher volumes of interactions, playing a stupid numbers game?

Are we, instead, using these tools to displace deep interaction and engagement with our customers—even though that’s exactly what builds trust, meaning, and engagement with the customer?

In truly complex B2B sales, our customers are hungry to learn, they are hungry to be engaged.  They struggle to buy, actively seeking help in learning how to buy from suppliers and trusted partners.  It’s this deep engagement that creates great value and differentiation.

Again, if I were cynical, I might say, “I want to implement these tools which promise to make my sales people better.  But instead of making them better, I can leverage lo I want them to be just OK or good enough.  I probably could get away with far cheaper people.”  As a purposeful strategy it makes a lot of sense.  But companies aren’t getting to the cheaper part.  They aren’t dumbing down or downgrading the sales organization, but they’re paying the same, just expecting less performance.

Few vendors have a sales strategy that says, “Buy my tool and dumb down your sales people.”  Most sell their tools to make sales people better.  Yet bad/sloppy implementations, poor leadership end up getting the unintended effect of dumbing down the sales organization.

As managers and leaders, we try to manage the cost of selling.  Usually we focus on improving performance, productivity, efficiency, and effectiveness of our teams.  But a hugely powerful opportunity is to keep the same performance levels at far lower costs, leveraging technology, tools, and far cheaper people.  Any leader that isn’t examining this is missing an opportunity — perhaps.

But then there are our customers, what they need and expect—-yeah, those damn customer just get in the way of all our thinking about sales productivity, costs of selling, and so forth.

Our customers, at least in B2B, are hungry for more, they need insight, they need education, they need provocative thinking about their business, they need help.  Much is written about customer experience (pre and post sales) as being the ultimate differentiator an value delivery system.  To engage our customers and maximize our ability to create value with them, we need smart sales people.

There’s another aspect we overlook.  Even with the all the hype around AI and machine language, we will never be able to anticipate and manage every situation with every customer interaction.  Customers needs, requirements, priorities, attitudes shift throughout their buying process.  In interacting with each other and in their evaluation of alternatives, we must constantly adapt to engage them in high impact ways.  It’s unlikely, for some years, we can automate this.  Instead, we need smart, agile sales people with the capabilities to figure things out and adapt on the fly.

We need to be cautious in our attempts to “automate” the sales process.  Things that free up our sales people to engage customers in powerful, high impact and high value conversations are great.  Those that don’t create a great exposure to our ability to create results.

 



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Tacky Ball

Stephanie Springer researches ways MLB might make baseballs tacky without rubbing mud on them.

But let’s be honest: The inconsistencies and unpredictability behind this longstanding tradition also add to our frustration. The timing of the application and the amount that is applied varies enormously from ballpark to ballpark. This is noticeable both in terms of the appearance of the ball, which has implications in a hitter’s ability to see the ball, and the feel of the ball, which can lead to variance in a pitcher’s control. Underlying this is the concern for safety, as a slick ball slipping out of a pitcher’s hand at a high velocity can have devastating consequences.

A fall out of a consistently tacky ball would be to remove the pine tar from the pitcher’s arsenal. It looks like the pitcher is cheating when he uses pine tar, but it’s just to get a better grip.



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Wednesday Update

The Day by Day Database is up to date.



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Tuesday, October 24, 2017

World Series Underway

George Spring leads off against Clayton Kershaw, and strikes out swinging on four pitches. The World Series between the Astros and Dodgers is underway!



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Another Side of Coppolella

Via BBTF, a scout sends a letter to the media praising disgraced Braves GM John Coppolella:

In all of the criticism he has received for his conduct, which I won’t try to defend or even address as I don’t know nearly enough about them to have an opinion, I thought people should know how good Coppy was to people like me. There are hundreds of people out there who have wanted to get into baseball operations and sent emails to Coppy asking for advice, and each one has a thorough reply from him, with specific suggestions tailored to that person’s background, along inspirational words of encouragement. He took the time to send me an email that was over two full pages long that addressed every little question I had. I’ve run into several other people with similar stories, and am sure there are plenty others who have had email exchanges similar to ours. When I was scouting for the Braves, we had to send an email report to (various Braves officials) after finishing our coverage of a given affiliate, with a one sentence blurb on each player from that team who we thought could play in the MLB. Without fail, within an hour of sending that email, Coppy sent an email back saying thanks, asking about your family, making the extra effort to know how appreciative he was of your hard work.

Fairly or unfairly, the coverage of the scandal has painted Coppy as this heartless cheater, but to kids like me who just loved the game and wanted more than anything to be a part of it, he was a godsend.

I’m sorry, but reading this reminds me of the Bill James essay on Hal Chase in the Historical Baseball Abstract:

With the greatest of effort, personalities cannot be photographed and preserved. Chase’s lost charm is something which can be forever speculated about. When it was alleged that he paid a teammate $25 after the teammate had lost a game, he said it was just a gift. And he made people believe that. Was that how he did it — did he come bearing gifts? He was known as a generous man. Bob Hoie writes that “He apparently would befriend the young players, was one of the few veterans to invite them home to dinner, etc. Many of them were almost worshipful of him. This appeal carried over to his days of outlaw ball in Douglas, Arizona, where men whose wives and girlfriends had been seduced by Chase were still in awe of him 50 years later.”

Beware charming people.



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Playoffs Today

It’s all Ks Tuesday night as the Astros send Dallas Keuchel against the Dodgers and Clayton Kershaw in game one of the 2017 World Series. Keuchel posted great post-season numbers so far, going 4-1 in six appearances with a 2.59 ERA. Even in the loss in his last appearance, he walked one and struck out eight in 4 2/3 innings. Overall, he struck out 39 in 31 1/3 innings with ten walks and two home runs allowed.

Kershaw has not fared as well in the post-season. His 4.40 ERA is mostly to a high home run rate, and a higher walk rate than usual. Even in the last two post-seasons, when he has pitched some gems, he has enough clunkers to keep his ERA over 4.00.

Enjoy!



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3 Ways to Lessen the Stress During Your Toddler’s Bath Time

Content originally published and Shared from http://perfectbath.com

One of the day-to-day struggles of a parent is bathing a child who absolutely hates being in the water. Make bath time less problematic for both you and your baby by following these great tips:

Image Source: Flickr

Ease bath time worries
Lots of kids have legitimate anxieties about having water poured over their heads. If your children usually cry when you wash their hair, this could be an issue you need to be sensitive to. Make sure the water you’re using is a comfortable temperature, and always warn your kids before you start to pour it over their heads. Consider buying a bathtime visor (a special foam hat that protects your kids’ faces while you rinse their hair), which can help minimize the amount of water that gets into their eyes. Source: TheSpruce

Try new methods
There could be various reasons that your child dislikes bathing. For starters you can try changing his bathing time, maybe bathing time is disrupting his play-time or maybe he is just lazy at a particular time. You could try to switch positions in the bathroom, try a different corner instead of the regular one; your child could like a corner better and cooperate while bathing. You could even start bathing your child’s feet first and make your way upwards since many kids dislike washing their face or hair; you could do this in the end and save yourself some crying time. Source: BeingTheParent

Remember to have fun!
By far the best way to make bath time easy is to make it fun! Get some fun bath toys and play with them with your toddler. You can also sing bath time songs, talk to him or her, or just interact in any way you enjoy. Bath time can be fun for both parent and child, and there’s no better way to make any activity easy than by making it enjoyable! Source: MomTricks

We can help you pick a bathtub that your kid will enjoy. Call us today!

 

Contact:
Perfect Bath
Phone: Toll Free 1-866-843-1641
Calgary, Alberta
Email: info@perfectbath.com

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