cardinals Cardinals The Cardinals defeated the Orioles by a score of 5-2 - Tue, Sep 12 @ 05:35 PM CDT
Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    I was lucky enough to see him start at Citi Field for his last win. Was starting to worry I may have seen his last professional win and I'm glad I was wrong. Hopefully he can make 200 but if not 199 is pretty fun too.

    1
  • hockey Hockey Blades and Brass (1967) | nfb.ca
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Not sure how I feel about the music direction but the footage is fabulous.

    2
  • asklemmy Asklemmy Every generation has some product/ingredient that they didn’t know was dangerous at the time: tobacco, lead, asbestos, etc. What is that item for this generation?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Yeah Christ, the complaint here is overstimulation and the capitalization/commercialization of peoples' attention spans, a topic which spans far greater breadth than just "colors". What a weird specific aspect to zero in on. I don't disagree that colors attribute to the issue but man, OP needs to take a step back and huff into a paper bag.

    4
  • asklemmy Asklemmy Every generation has some product/ingredient that they didn’t know was dangerous at the time: tobacco, lead, asbestos, etc. What is that item for this generation?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    This is some hyperbolic shit right here.

    7
  • asklemmy Asklemmy Every generation has some product/ingredient that they didn’t know was dangerous at the time: tobacco, lead, asbestos, etc. What is that item for this generation?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Coffee's been around for hundreds of years. You think there's really going to be an about face on it after all this time?

    2
  • cardinals Cardinals Game Thread: Marlins @ Cardinals - Mon, Jul 17 @ 06:45 PM CDT
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Damn, Herrera's batting stance is wild. Must've made a big adjustment from last season. Glad to see him doing well though. Have felt like he'd be nice to have following up Contreras as he slowly moves into the DH over the years, but I guess we'll see if he sticks around.

    2
  • cardinals cardinals Possible upcoming trades
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Hmm, so basically exactly the people you'd expect to be traded. I guess it's a silver lining for this season going so terribly that moving pieces that are actually working for us won't hurt too terribly and we can try to get as much in return as possible without worrying so much of how we'll survive the postseason.

    1
  • startrek Star Trek Why did Vic Fontaine sang entire songs in the later seasons of DS9?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    I don't think anyone has a problem with bottle episodes. It's the bottle episodes specifically starring Vic Fontaine which stretches the premise thin to incredulity that I think people--or at least I--have an issue with. Do another Ferengi or Klingon thing if need be. But attaching such sentiment to a character that the show really really wants you to like doesn't work for me. Again, he's a love him or hate him character. At least Ezri's episodes, while shoehorned, made sense for why they needed to be there if they had to have her as a replacement at all. Vic was just an insert the writers specficially wanted for no good reason.

    1
  • startrek Star Trek Why did Vic Fontaine sang entire songs in the later seasons of DS9?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Most people here are ignoring the main reason: the writers were just a bunch of baseball loving rat pack fans who took their love of those things maybe a little too far. In the case of baseball, we only had Take Me Out to Holosuite to deal with (which is a great episode--provided you like baseball, I suppose). In the case of the rat pack, we inexplicably got Vic Fontaine who you either love or hate. I wouldn't hate Vic Fontaine so much myself if they didn't force him to basically take up the space that Quark's Bar was supposed to be, and for him to be an integral part of the show so late in the series. And yes, the musical numbers take up too much time, if you ask me.

    14
  • hockeyplayers Hockey Players Tape wear always on heel of the blade.
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    If you're getting wear on the heel then a different lie on the stick may help. You'd want a lower lie potentially.

    1
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Absolutely the biggest issue for Lemmy (and any other federated threadlike site). This whole reddit "implosion" business (though it really is doing just fine still) has done wonders for user growth, but it's gonna take at least another few hundred thousand+ people on here before there's enough random distribution to make smaller niche hobby communities viable.

    2
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    It's definitely not old reddit. But absolutely hate the new reddit crowd. So much low effort bullshit that's making this place feel like /r/funny.

    I do agree not enough of the niche stuff I'm into has built up though. Personally enjoy local/regional and hobby stuff. So far, regional communities are big enough to have much discussion or content, and the hobby stuff I'm into hasn't really moved over much other than the various tech stuff which is something, at least.

    The issue is it takes a lot of users to hit a point where enough niche communities can exist. Until then it's just gonna be this lame tryhard shit with people trying to force lemmy memes about beans or some dude who can't poop.

    3
  • nyislanders New York Islanders any word on Ollie
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Yeah I doubt he comes too. Sounds like he really wants to be in Detroit, but Wahlstrom for him--if ithappened--wouldn't be the worst flip. Granted it'd take more than him, and with DeBrincat being so particular it sounds like he wouldn't wanna sign with the Isles long term anyway.

    2
  • nyislanders New York Islanders any word on Ollie
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Last I've seen of him was this article from May.

    Granted depending on this DeBrincat deal or any other trade it's hard to say if he'll be on the roster again.

    2
  • nyislanders
    New York Islanders MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Islanders, Lou Lamoriello get too much criticism for recent long-term deals theathletic.com

    The day before the first round of the NHL Draft last week in Nashville, Islanders general manager Lou Lamoriello shared the realities and frustrations of trying to navigate what has been a nearly flat salary cap for the past half-decade. The recently confirmed upper limit of $83.5 million for the 2023-24 season will be only $2 million higher than what it was five years ago in 2019-20, making it difficult lately for managers throughout the NHL to annually alter their rosters all that much. The blatant inference was some of those contracts agreed to before the pandemic wouldn’t have been done had everyone known what was on the horizon, and the Islanders are no different than just about every other team in that regard. “We’re in this position because of what happened with assumptions, which is a real bad word, of where the cap would be,” Lamoriello said. “So some of the signings that we made three years ago — and I’m talking universally, everyone — we would not have done because in your planning you also know what the progression will be … because of where the revenues are going.” The suggestion seemed to be that because the Islanders didn’t have a ton of salary-cap space heading into free agency, they might be forced to see some of the players they hoped to retain instead depart while having to settle for cheaper (aka lesser) options. Well, no. The club signed Ilya Sorokin, Scott Mayfield, Pierre Engvall and Semyon Varlamov to more than a quarter-century’s worth of new contracts, making the assumption — that “real bad word” — that the cap will significantly rise over the next few years. To recap: Sorokin got an eight-year deal with an $8.25 million AAV; Varlamov, four years with a $2.75 million AAV; Mayfield, seven years with a $3.5 million AAV; and Engvall, seven years, with a $3 million AAV. The salary cap is expected to rise by $4 million to $87.5 million in 2024-25 and could even balloon to $92 million by 2025-26. Lamoriello’s assumption does seem pretty safe. Of course, all long-term contracts have risks. Sorokin came in second place in voting for the Vezina Trophy last season, and his salary beginning in 2024-25 will probably be below market value. But goalies are notoriously unpredictable. Varlamov, too, while a solid backup, is already 35 years old. Engvall and Mayfield were both important cogs in the Islanders’ late-season surge to get into the playoffs, but the former has played only a handful of games on Long Island after he was acquired in March, and the latter is a mostly third-pair defenseman who plays a physical game that could take a toll on his body — and he’s already past 30. All of that led to Lamoriello taking a fair amount of heat in the mediasphere for keeping the Islanders together at all costs. While no one was too critical of the Sorokin deal — after all, he’s still making much less than Sergei Bobrovsky ($10 million) and Andrei Vasilevskiy ($9.5 million) — a case can be made that the others are actually too long. And, yeah, maybe they are. We don’t have a crystal ball here. But let’s take a broader look. In this age of instant analysis, in which there are a handful of models that assert to predict a player’s future and how his contract ages, it’s sometimes easy to overlook how every team’s circumstances are different. That’s not to say that kind of statistical analysis isn’t valuable and insightful; it’s just one of many things to consider. But there are others. When it comes to the four players the Islanders signed, it’s important to remember how each of them fits into what Lamoriello and the organization are trying to achieve. That is, they still believe this is a group that can compete for a Stanley Cup. And is that a truly wild assumption? It’s less than two years since some were picking the Islanders to win a championship. Yes, the roster is a bit older than it was then. But along with the emergence of Sorokin, the team added Bo Horvat and is seemingly looking for another scorer, perhaps even Alex DeBrincat. From Feb. 19 through the end of the 2022-23 regular season, the Islanders’ .652 points percentage was tied for 10th in the league — with the Eastern Conference champion Florida Panthers, who finished eighth to the Islanders’ seventh in the standings. We already went over whether the Islanders and Lamoriello’s philosophy is logical in this age of dynamic offenses and average goalies capturing the Stanley Cup. There’s an argument that the Islanders are trying to win with a brand of hockey that is outdated and was much more successful 20-plus years ago when Martin Brodeur was backstopping the Devils to three championships under the now-Islanders general manager. But it’s not like the Islanders were suddenly going to change course and try and become a team that can keep up offensively with the Colorados and Vegases of the world. That would take a few years, at least. Sorokin, of course, is where their identity now begins. And a recent trend that Lamoriello surely agrees with, that an NHL team needs two goaltenders to succeed, is why Varlamov was retained, as there’s no one else in the organization that is ready for that kind of role. Varlamov surely could have found a landing spot somewhere else, and there’s a strong possibility that he could have gotten a three-year deal for at least a $3 million AAV. The evidence of that is most apparent in the Ottawa Senators giving Joonas Korpisalo a five-year, $20 million contract. Frederik Andersen, 33, got a two-year, $6.8 million extension. Even Mackenzie Blackwood, who may or may not be an NHL-level goalie, got a two-year, $4.7 million contract in San Jose. Jonathan Quick was signed to a cheap deal with the Rangers, but he’s been among the league’s worst goalies in the last five years, at least in terms of save percentage. Sure, four years for a 35-year-old goalie isn’t ideal. But Varlamov isn’t going to be asked to carry the workload — which could keep him fresher for longer — and he’s fine taking a lesser role alongside Sorokin. He said so himself. He fits in with what the team is trying to accomplish in the crease both on and off the ice, and his cost is reasonable. It wasn’t that long ago that 41-year-old Craig Anderson was playing decent hockey at the end of his career in Buffalo, for example. Most of the castigation, though, centered around the pair of seven-year extensions for Engvall and Mayfield. And while that’s a bit more understandable, there needs to be a bit more analysis than just a few numbered charts. The prices for defensemen with Mayfield-like attributes weren’t cheap, either. Luke Schenn — three years older than Mayfield and not as well-rounded — signed a three-year, $8.25 million contract with Nashville. Radko Gudas, also three years older, went to Anaheim on a four-year, $12 million deal. So the difference between Mayfield’s AAV and those two players is almost negligible, and Mayfield should still have some good years in his immediate future. More importantly, though, the Islanders know Mayfield is respected in the dressing room, they know that in big moments he has the ability to step up, and they know that he’s versatile enough that he can play up in the lineup when necessary. And Engvall, too, already meshed well with Brock Nelson and Kyle Palmieri. While the forward lines will, of course, always be fluid, it’s a good bet that Engvall will start with those two on opening night after they drove the bus for the team down the stretch. One comparison, at least statistically to Engvall, is the Kings’ Trevor Moore — who signed a five-year, $21 million deal ($4.2 AAV) in December. And if it’s not working out in four or five years? The buyout cap penalty would be only $1 million — and by then, the salary cap could very well be over $100 million. Will all of it lead to team success next season? Maybe, maybe not. And, yes, some of these contracts could lead to headaches down the road. But had the Islanders and Lamoriello not done what they did Saturday, there would have been a higher chance for a decline next season. There just weren’t enough other options in this landscape.

    4
    0
    gaming Gaming Psychonauts 3 not in development as they works on 'smaller' games
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Honestly based off the documentary it looks like Psychonauts kinda broke the studio. Not surprised they'd try and focus on smaller games now to get away from the scope creep of bigger games.

    1
  • stlouisblues St. Louis Blues Blues take Dalibor Dvorsky with the 10th overall pick
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    From what I've been hearing this sounds like a bit of a steal? I haven't paid much attention many players other than Reinbacher and Leonard, and while I figured it unlikely we'd get them I still held out hope. Still, a new center with potential like his sounds good for the team.

    3
  • privacyguides Privacy Guides Proton Pass is now available
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Probably none, if you're fine with KeePass. Personally I don't want to use anything that's hosted on someone else's server. It's a bit more inconvenient to use the local files of KeePass only, but I'd rather feel a bit safer with that, even if by all account BitWarden/Proton Pass would be fine.

    12
  • stlouisblues
    St. Louis Blues MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Gordo: Acquiring Kevin Hayes proves the Blues are serious about achieving quick turnaround www.stltoday.com

    Blues general manager Doug Armstrong believes the Blues can work back into the playoff chase sooner than later. He sent that message while acquiring veteran forward Kevin Hayes from the Philadelphia Flyers on Tuesday for a sixth-round pick in the 2024 NHL Draft, with the Flyers retaining half of Hayes’ $7.143 million salary cap hit for the next three seasons. Hayes, 31, didn’t fit Armstrong’s description of what he wanted in the trade market. The Blues have been targeting younger veterans, like 27-year-old Flyers defenseman Travis Sanheim, who could slot into the younger nucleus around Robert Thomas and Jordan Kyrou. Armstrong had been willing to spend one of his three first-round picks to swap out 32-year-old defenseman Torey Krug (and his $6.5 million salary cap hit) for Sanheim and Hayes. That would have required taking on Sanheim’s $50 million for the next eight years. The Blues would have paid that price to get a younger D-man with more defensive zone utility. Spending the pick and allocating the cap space for Sanheim would have made sense. But Krug invoked his no-trade protection to remain with the team — for now. So Armstrong made the less ambitious move of acquiring Hayes for a bag of pucks. He couldn’t pass up on that bargain. Hayes will count less than $3.6 million against the Blues’ cap for the next three seasons, assuming that Armstrong doesn’t flip him to another team at some point. Hayes is a big forward (6-foot-5, 216 pounds) who can check, win board battles, and funnel pucks to the net. He checks important boxes for Blues coach Craig Berube. Armstrong will continue exploring trade possibilities as he and his colleagues assemble their roster and solve their salary cap puzzle. All along, Armstrong has aimed for a near-term retooling instead of a long-haul rebuild. But circumstances in the Central Division create an opportunity to move even more quickly than expected. The Colorado Avalanche and Dallas Stars are still the teams to beat in this quarter of the NHL. Both will be loaded again this season. Otherwise, though, the division looks wide open. With Barry Trotz running the Nashville Predators, that Blues rival is embarking on a years-long rebuild. Sending center Ryan Johansen to the Colorado Avalanche in a straight contract dump was just another indicator of that — and you can expect further restructuring. The Winnipeg Jets are trying to avoid a total rebuild, but general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff has had to take bids on four core players with expiring contracts: goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, centers Pierre-Luc Dubois and Mark Scheifele, and winger Blake Wheeler. Dubois was the first to go, in a sign-and-trade deal with the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday for Alex Iafallo, Gabe Vilardi, Rasmus Kupari and a second-round 2024 pick. Cheveldayoff wants near-term assets in exchange for those four players, who are a year removed from unrestricted free agency. But it’s hard to imagine the Jets coming out of this roster churn with a division title contender. The Minnesota Wild will spend two more years in Salary Cap Hell as the full impact of the Zach Parise and Ryan Suter buyouts is felt. That will restrict GM Bill Guerin’s ability to add needed offensive depth. The Arizona Coyotes remain stuck in an undersized interim arena while trying to secure a new venue. For at least one more year, they will keep losing money despite operating on the cheap with younger players. Then there are the Chicago Blackhawks, who will land destined superstar Connor Bedard with the first overall pick Wednesday. But even with the addition of wingers Taylor Hall and Nick Foligno, the Blackhawks could be a year or two away from making the postseason bracket. By adding forwards Jakub Vrana, Kasperi Kapanen and Sammy Blais last season to partially offset the sell-off of forwards Ryan O’Reilly, Vladimir Tarasenko, Ivan Barbashev and Noel Acciari, Armstrong got started on the quick rebound. Armstrong won’t secure instant help in the draft, even if he hangs on to the 10th overall pick to select a future top-six forward or top-four defenseman. And he could hang on to all of his premium picks and load more prospects into the pipeline. But that’s his Plan B. We’ve already seen his Plan A with the addition of Hayes and the bid for Sanheim. Krug could remain in play, despite his no-trade protection. Now that the media spotlight is illuminating Armstrong’s desire to move him, Krug may become willing to start anew elsewhere. Like Krug, Justin Faulk, 31, has four years left on his contract with a $6.5 million cap hit and no-trade protection. But he is the team’s best all-around defenseman, so Armstrong shouldn’t be too eager to move him. Colton Parayko, 30, is under contract until 2030 at that $6.5 million number with no-trade protection. Since he logs the toughest minutes (penalty killing, defensive zone starts, top line matchups), he would be the toughest defenseman to replace. Armstrong doesn’t have much room to work. As history tells us, though, he can pull off big surprises. So stay tuned.

    1
    0
    stlouisblues
    St. Louis Blues MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Who are some potential options for the Blues to take at No. 10 in the NHL draft next week? www.stltoday.com

    When the Blues make their selection at No. 10 on Wednesday night in Nashville, general manager Doug Armstrong and his scouting staff will be looking to land a caliber of player previously unreachable by St. Louis in the last 15 years. It will be the team’s highest pick since 2008. It will be Armstrong’s first time selecting in the top 10 of the draft, and in one of the deepest drafts in recent memory. The Blues have been successful while picking late in the first round, and have built much of their extended period of winning on hitting on players drafted in the 20s. But this one is different. The Blues are not hoping for their first-round pick to turn into a regular NHL player. They are hoping for their first-round pick to turn into a star. Who might that be? They Blues would be fortunate if Matvei Michkov (because of his Russian contract and lack of contact with teams) or Zach Benson (size concerns) fell to them at No. 10. In a deep draft for forwards, the Blues could have the top defenseman (David Reinbacher) reach them. If not, they could have their pick of the next group that includes Dmitri Simashev, Axel Sandin-Pellikka and Tom Willander. Some of those scenarios are optimistic. Here are more realistic ones if the first nine picks go a little closer to plan. Oliver Moore: Moore is perhaps the best skater in the draft, a center whose acceleration and edges help him generate offense. He had 75 points in 61 games last season with the United States National Team Development Program and will be attending the University of Minnesota next season, where he’ll play alongside current Blues prospect Jimmy Snuggerud. Moore is originally from a suburb of Minneapolis, and could be the key to forming a speedy one-two punch down the middle with Robert Thomas. Gabriel Perreault: Perreault is coming off a season in which he broke Auston Matthews’ scoring record with the USNTDP by putting up 132 points on 53 goals and 79 assists. It’s not an apples to apples comparison because Perreault was still a year older than Matthews was at the time of his record, but the point remains that Perreault led the USNTDP in points, outscoring other top draft prospects like Will Smith, Ryan Leonard and Moore. Perreault is a winger, and would not fix the Blues’ depth issues at center and defenseman in their prospect pipeline, but would add another element of scoring punch with high hockey IQ. He will go to Boston College next season. Ryan Leonard: Leonard might be more wishful thinking than anything for the Blues at 10, as many projections have him being gone by that point. He formed a potent line with the USNTDP with Smith and Perreault and projects as a center with an above-average shot to go with his hands. Many scouting publications have Leonard gone in the No. 6-8 range, but a name to keep an eye on just in case. Dalibor Dvorsky: Like Leonard, Dvorsky could be gone by the time the Blues make their selection. Dvorsky is a big center at 6-1 and 201 pounds that is originally from Slovakia but has played the last five seasons in Sweden. Next year, he will make the jump to the SHL with IK Oskarshamn. He makes a living in the interior and pairs that with playmaking ability. Dvorsky would fill a need at center, and would do so with some size. Colby Barlow: Out of Owen Sound in the Ontario Hockey League, Barlow has a little bit of everything in his 6-1, 187-pound package. His shot garners a lot of attention, and for good reason after scoring 46 goals in 59 games during his draft year. Barlow’s curl-and-drag release can be deceptive, and he was the youngest captain in Owen Sound history when he wore the “C” last season. Barlow would be the fifth straight winger the Blues have picked in the first round. Nate Danielson: Danielson is an exciting center with two-way potential who created offense off the rush for Brandon in the Western Hockey League. Like Barlow, Danielson is the captain of his junior team, and posted 78 points in 68 games. Quentin Musty: Musty has the pedigree of a top prospect after he was selected first in the OHL draft in 2021, and he is one of the youngest players in this draft that doesn’t turn 18 until July 6. A left winger, Musty has the 6-2 size that could play in the NHL, and possesses a power forward skillset that helped him to 78 points in 53 games with Sudbury last season.

    4
    0
    gaming Gaming 'The Elder Scrolls VI' is 'likely five-plus years away,' says Xbox chief
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    It's made on the same engine as Skyrim and Fallout 4 so for all intents and purposes this is going to be like any other Bethesda game. So, if people want Fallout 4 in space with procedural worlds and companions then I guess it'll be what they're looking for. But my belief is it's going to feel like a last gen game with a sheen of current gen on top.

    5
  • android Android What's your favorite alternate launcher?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Themeable in that you can change colors and icons and sizing to your liking. But inherently it's just a search bar and an app drawer basically. The screenshots do a bad job of showing the variety of looks you can achieve though. I've been pushing for a custom color hex picker for a while but it hasn't made any releases so far though.

    Here's an example of mine below...

    Can also set favorites to float above the search bar like more traditional if you're into that.

    2
  • main main Can someone help me understand what's going on? Communities look different from different instances.
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Ah I didn't scrutinize the image myself so didn't see the dates. That is probably a glitch in that case... Should definitely be able to see the post that was made on the 19th if you're seeing the post that was made on the 12th. I've noticed some weird glitchiness with midwest.social from lemmy.ml myself, though. Could be something to do with one or the other, but lemmy is still so new I'm guessing it's just kinks that will still exist, unfortunately.

    1
  • stlouisblues St. Louis Blues Blues sign Gaudette to one-year, two-way deal
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Don't know enough about Gaudette myself but consensus seems to be this isn't a bad deal at all. I guess kinda similar to getting Blais this past season, and the return on value he brought with the new scenery.

    2
  • main main Can someone help me understand what's going on? Communities look different from different instances.
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Unfortunately when an instance/community is federated it does not bring any archived posts or comments over. If new posts/comments come in then it'll get those, but otherwise yeah it's a bit of an issue since there's plenty of old posts people will want to be able to peruse when a community is discovered by an instance.

    6
  • mlb Major League Baseball The Athletic - Why MLB players think Nashville is the best city for an expansion team
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    With the Oakland A’s move to Las Vegas becoming incredibly likely, the ranking for potential MLB expansion cities changed. The Athletic polled more than 100 MLB players and asked them which city is best for a new franchise, and Nashville was the overwhelming choice, receiving 69 percent of the vote.

    Montreal (10 percent), Charlotte (5 percent), Austin (5 percent), Portland (4 percent), Vancouver (2 percent) and Salt Lake City (2 percent) also received multiple votes.

    Commissioner Rob Manfred has not hidden his interest in growing the sport to 32 teams. Baseball has not added new franchises since 1998. In the summer of 2018, Manfred listed Nashville, along with Charlotte, Las Vegas, Montreal, Portland and Vancouver as potential options. Despite his zeal for growth, Manfred has attached a caveat to all expansion discussion: The sport will not proceed before finding resolutions to the stadium impasses in Oakland and Tampa Bay.

    Music City Baseball is a group trying to make Major League Baseball in Nashville and the Nashville Stars a reality. The Stars derives its name from the Negro Leagues franchise. The group reached an agreement with Tennessee State University in November to begin assessing a 100-acre site on campus as the potential location for a sports-entertainment complex with a ballpark and concert venues capable of tapping into Nashville’s rich vein of live music. The money for the stadium will have to come from private investors as the group does not expect to receive public subsidies for construction.

    “I think the only issue with them going to Nashville would be, there are so many Cardinals, Braves and Reds fans in that area,” one current MLB player said. “I think it’d be like any other team at first; there’s not gonna be a huge fanbase just at first. But overall, I think of all those cities Nashville for the long run would probably be best.”

    Votes for Montreal seemed to be about the appeal of visiting the city every year, while some votes for Charlotte were more personal. A player who grew up in the area made his case for the city: “I’m biased, I know, but people love baseball in Charlotte. When the Knights built their stadium, it was with the idea of expanding it. They always rank high in attendance. I think a team there would be really successful.”

    In The Athletic’s MLB Player Poll, players also weighed in on the new rules, Shohei Ohtani’s destination in free agency and labor conversations. There was an overall favorable opinion of the new rules — banning the shift, bigger bases and pitch clock — but they would like to see the pitch clock changed for the postseason. The Dodgers were the clear pick for which team Ohtani would be playing for in 2024. And despite the creation of the economic reform committee and chatter about wanting a salary cap, the players said labor discussions are not happening more frequently in clubhouses right now.

    1
  • stlouisblues
    St. Louis Blues MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    GM Doug Armstrong knows Blues are in much different place than last time they missed playoffs in 2018 www.stltoday.com

    Put on your navy, royal and gold sunglasses for a second. Allow yourself to escape reality and dig deep into your optimism reserves. Now that you’ve sufficiently entered a state of blissful delirium, consider this: the last time the Blues missed the playoffs, they won the Stanley Cup the very next year. In 2018, they missed the playoffs by one point. In 2019, they lifted the franchise’s first Cup. This time is a little bit different. In finishing with 81 points last season, the Blues submitted their first losing season in 15 years and missed the playoffs by 14 points. Even the grandest optimists would have trouble pushing aside their delusion to think St. Louis is in position to contend for the Cup next season. Count Blues general manager Doug Armstrong among those who understands the differences between the 2018 offseason and this one, which will ramp up as the draft approaches June 28. “We were different-wise in our cap space,” Armstrong said. “We were different-wise in our maturity. We brought in a lot of new faces that year, a lot of new faces and really good players. We had a young player like Robert Thomas that wasn’t supposed to make our team go on a little bit of a run, too. We’re just not as mature as we were then. We’re not built the same way. “In ’19, a lot of people had picked us to be in the Final, win the division, win the Cup. I don’t think anyone’s doing that next year, and it’s not our time. I think we’re going to be competitive. I think we can fool people.” In 2018, Armstrong swung big to change his roster. The Blues traded for Ryan O’Reilly from Buffalo. They brought back David Perron from his one-year stay in Vegas. They signed Tyler Bozak. They allowed Pat Maroon to come home. This summer? Unless big money comes off the books via a trade (Armstrong already ruled out a buyout), the Blues’ big acquisition could come in the form of a third-line center. Throughout the offseason, Armstrong has toed the line publicly in his statements about the Blues. He’s expressed faith in the roster he built, but he also knows how hard it would be to dissemble it given the contracts on the books. He’s said he doesn’t like the long summer or the high draft pick, and he wants a return to the playoffs, but Armstrong also knows his team is “further away” than just adding one piece. He’s talked about the need for better defense, with hope that better performances from veteran blue liners (and the addition of assistant coach Mike Weber) helps solve the problem. Asked in a recent meeting with reporters what attributes he would like to add, Armstrong wanted better defending but also wanted to build a team that could succeed in both of the NHL’s seasons. “It’s also trying to find the balance between being a good regular season team and a good playoff team,” Armstrong said. “You see they’re different animals. I know one thing, we had zero chance to win the Stanley Cup this year because we didn’t make the playoffs. We’ve got to make sure we find a way to get in the tournament.” Florida’s run to the Stanley Cup Final has given teams hope that simply making the playoffs can allow you to become a contender. But the Panthers were a Presidents’ Trophy team that went through injuries and goaltending issues before becoming healthy and squeaking into the playoffs. The Blues are not in that position. In 10 days, the Blues franchise will change — either in the short-term or the long-term. On the first day of the draft in Nashville on June 28, Armstrong could be the most popular man in hockey outside of Connor Bedard. He’s armed with pick Nos. 10, 25 and 29 and previously has shown a penchant for big trades. If the Blues can turn those picks into a young, controllable asset, Armstrong has expressed a desire to do so. If not, the Blues will have to settle for their highest draft pick since 2008, and their most first-round picks since 2007. As for next year, Armstrong simply wants the Blues to get back to their identity, “which is being a good team, being good teammates and playing a strong, structured game.”

    1
    0
    stlblues
    St. Louis Blues MyopicTopic 1 year ago 78%
    GM Doug Armstrong knows Blues are in much different place than last time they missed playoffs in 2018 www.stltoday.com

    Put on your navy, royal and gold sunglasses for a second. Allow yourself to escape reality and dig deep into your optimism reserves. Now that you’ve sufficiently entered a state of blissful delirium, consider this: the last time the Blues missed the playoffs, they won the Stanley Cup the very next year. In 2018, they missed the playoffs by one point. In 2019, they lifted the franchise’s first Cup. This time is a little bit different. In finishing with 81 points last season, the Blues submitted their first losing season in 15 years and missed the playoffs by 14 points. Even the grandest optimists would have trouble pushing aside their delusion to think St. Louis is in position to contend for the Cup next season. Count Blues general manager Doug Armstrong among those who understands the differences between the 2018 offseason and this one, which will ramp up as the draft approaches June 28. “We were different-wise in our cap space,” Armstrong said. “We were different-wise in our maturity. We brought in a lot of new faces that year, a lot of new faces and really good players. We had a young player like Robert Thomas that wasn’t supposed to make our team go on a little bit of a run, too. We’re just not as mature as we were then. We’re not built the same way. “In ’19, a lot of people had picked us to be in the Final, win the division, win the Cup. I don’t think anyone’s doing that next year, and it’s not our time. I think we’re going to be competitive. I think we can fool people.” In 2018, Armstrong swung big to change his roster. The Blues traded for Ryan O’Reilly from Buffalo. They brought back David Perron from his one-year stay in Vegas. They signed Tyler Bozak. They allowed Pat Maroon to come home. This summer? Unless big money comes off the books via a trade (Armstrong already ruled out a buyout), the Blues’ big acquisition could come in the form of a third-line center. Throughout the offseason, Armstrong has toed the line publicly in his statements about the Blues. He’s expressed faith in the roster he built, but he also knows how hard it would be to dissemble it given the contracts on the books. He’s said he doesn’t like the long summer or the high draft pick, and he wants a return to the playoffs, but Armstrong also knows his team is “further away” than just adding one piece. He’s talked about the need for better defense, with hope that better performances from veteran blue liners (and the addition of assistant coach Mike Weber) helps solve the problem. Asked in a recent meeting with reporters what attributes he would like to add, Armstrong wanted better defending but also wanted to build a team that could succeed in both of the NHL’s seasons. “It’s also trying to find the balance between being a good regular season team and a good playoff team,” Armstrong said. “You see they’re different animals. I know one thing, we had zero chance to win the Stanley Cup this year because we didn’t make the playoffs. We’ve got to make sure we find a way to get in the tournament.” Florida’s run to the Stanley Cup Final has given teams hope that simply making the playoffs can allow you to become a contender. But the Panthers were a Presidents’ Trophy team that went through injuries and goaltending issues before becoming healthy and squeaking into the playoffs. The Blues are not in that position. In 10 days, the Blues franchise will change — either in the short-term or the long-term. On the first day of the draft in Nashville on June 28, Armstrong could be the most popular man in hockey outside of Connor Bedard. He’s armed with pick Nos. 10, 25 and 29 and previously has shown a penchant for big trades. If the Blues can turn those picks into a young, controllable asset, Armstrong has expressed a desire to do so. If not, the Blues will have to settle for their highest draft pick since 2008, and their most first-round picks since 2007. As for next year, Armstrong simply wants the Blues to get back to their identity, “which is being a good team, being good teammates and playing a strong, structured game.”

    8
    0
    stlblues
    St. Louis Blues MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Sweeping changes elsewhere in NHL could create trade opportunities for Blues www.stltoday.com

    The intrigue keeps building in this NHL offseason. The action off the ice has been almost as compelling as what we saw on the ice. One franchise was sold and another fell into limbo. Multiple regime changes changed team priorities. Rebuilding squads didn’t wait for the postseason to end before making blockbuster trades. The coaching carousel spun wildly. Blues general manager Doug Armstrong has had much to monitor ahead of the NHL draft. Tuesday brought news of the long-awaited Ottawa Senators sale, with Montreal Canadiens minority owner Michael Andlauer winning the bidding. This is great for that city, since Andlauer brings a hockey background (from also owning the OHL’s Hamilton Bulldogs), and he has recruited Ottawa businessmen into his group. Holdover general manager Pierre Dorion is running the store for now, and he has plenty on his plate, such as shopping goal-scoring winger Alex DeBrincat. DeBrincat, a restricted free agent, wants to be traded to a favorable location where he can get a new deal for, say, $9 million per year. His leverage makes him a tough fit for the Blues, but that didn’t stop league insider Elliotte Friedman from saying this on his “32 Thoughts” podcast: “I had one guy say to me, ‘That’s a Doug Armstrong player. That’s a guy that Doug Armstrong would want. So, those are some of the teams that people are kind of focusing on. Obviously, I think there’s a ton of interest.” Armstrong must also maintain surveillance on the Arizona Coyotes, a team facing an uncertain future after its latest arena bid failed. Coyotes general manager Bill Armstrong ran the Blues’ scouting operation in his previous job. He wants more prospects and draft picks, and the Blues can offer both. Our Town’s Clayton Keller could want out, given the sorry state of things, and top prospect Logan Cooley declined to sign for next season due to the franchise uncertainty. Either forward could fit the Blues’ quest for a quick turnaround. The Columbus Blue Jackets have been the pre-draft aggressor with former Blues president John Davidson and former Blues draft czar Jarmo Kekalainen driving the market. Kekalainen traded the No. 22 overall pick in this draft and a conditional second-rounder to the Philadelphia Flyers in a three-way trade to land defenseman Ivan Provorov. He sent a third-round pick to New Jersey for defenseman Damon Severson, who got an eight-year, $50 million contract in the sign-and-trade maneuver. Fortifying the Columbus blue line was a priority with Mike Babcock expected to coach the team. And as Justin Faulk, Torey Krug and Colton Parayko will attest, defensemen don’t need to be Norris Trophy candidates to get paid in this league. The Flyers are embarking on an overdue rebuild with new team president Keith Jones and new GM Daniel Briere making big plays with input from taskmaster coach John Tortorella. After offloading Provorov, Briere is listening on just about anybody, with goaltender Carter Hart; forwards Travis Konecny, Kevin Hayes and Scott Laughton; and defenseman Tony DeAngelo generating the most buzz. After getting run out of Toronto, Kyle Dubas relocated to Pittsburgh to oversee the Penguins. Previous GM Ron Hextall clashed with both the team’s ownership, Fenway Sports Group, and coach Mike Sullivan. Dubas is tasked with retooling around Kris Letang, Evgeni Malkin and Sidney Crosby. That could mean trading a top-six forward like Jake Guentzel, Bryan Rust, or Rickard Rakell and buying out Mikael Granlund. Brad Treliving left Calgary and became general manager in Toronto. Signing center Auston Matthews to an extension is his top priority, but he must also decide if there will be enough long-term cap space for forward Michael Nylander, too. Former Blues forward Craig Conroy succeeded Treliving in Calgary and picked assistant coach Ryan Huska to replace sourpuss Darryl Sutter. Now, Conroy must make decisions on forwards Elias Lindholm, Mikael Backlund and Tyler Toffoli and defensemen Noah Hanifin, Nikita Zadorov and Chris Tanev. All six will enter the season with expiring contracts. All six could become unrestricted free agents. All six could become trade chips if they won’t re-sign. Barry Trotz returned to Nashville to replace forever GM David Poile and drive a major overhaul. The Predators were busy before the trade deadline, and Trotz could make additional moves, even putting goaltender Juuse Saros possibly in play. Unlike Doug Armstrong, Trotz is taking the long view of things. The Jets are also hitting the reset button. Center Pierre-Luc Dubois won’t re-sign in Winnipeg as a restricted free agent this summer. He is a year removed from unrestricted free agency, and like DeBrincat, he wants a long-term deal from a team of his choosing. Unlike fellow Jets trade chips Mark Scheifele and Connor Hellebuyck, Dubois would be at least a theoretical fit for the Blues. Armstrong has said he doesn’t expect to be a big player in this market — given his salary cap constraints — but we have come to expect the unexpected from him. And the NHL could offer lots of surprises this summer.

    3
    0
    stlblues
    St. Louis Blues MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Blues Forward Sammy Blais Enters Summer Confident After Strong World Championship Performance www.stltoday.com

    For Sammy Blais, if the best thing in the last year was getting traded back to St. Louis, then perhaps the next best thing was playing for Team Canada in the World Championship. Blais won gold with Canada at last month’s World Championship in Latvia and Finland, and he was one of the best Canadians at the tournament, which also included Canadian teammates Jake Neighbours and Joel Hofer, plus Scott Perunovich (United States) and Kasperi Kapanen (Finland). Blais had eight points in 10 games and scored twice in the gold medal game against Germany. Only two Canadians had more points than Blais did in the tournament, and he formed an effective line with Neighbours and Buffalo’s Peyton Krebs. “At the beginning, it was a little weird playing on a big ice like that, so it was a little adjustment,” Blais said in a phone interview this week. “As the tournament went on, I think I played with confidence and just tried to do anything possible to win. I think that was pretty much our team. We were working really hard, being physical, that’s pretty much why we won. We were wearing other teams down.” The showing was a continuation of Blais’ performance at the end of the season, following his trade back to the Blues as part of the Vladimir Tarasenko and Niko Mikkola deal. In St. Louis, Blais had nine goals and 11 assists in 31 games, which would have put him on pace for about 53 points across a full 82-game season. He was scheduled to be an unrestricted free agent this summer but instead signed a one-year extension worth $1 million in the spring. “I think he’s looking like he has potential to be a regular top-nine player,” said Blues general manager Doug Armstrong, who also was the GM of Team Canada. “Now, to do that, it’s a consistency and it’s a consistency in the details. I saw that at the Worlds. I saw that a little bit more when he got here. “You want the peak as high as it can be, but you want the valley close to the peak. I think he’s understanding that bad games can’t be minus-2 and minus-3, and to push his two-way game. I thought he did a heck of a job when he got him back. I thought he did a heck of a job over there.” While Blais’ career-long production profiles more as a physical fourth-liner, if he can continue to chip in at a higher rate, it could result in a more versatile and deeper bottom six in St. Louis. Toward the end of last season, Blais saw time alongside Pavel Buchnevich and Kapanen, plus players like Robert Thomas and Jakub Vrana. Maybe all it took was for some comfortability and familiarity with the Blues organization. Blais scored in his first game back in St. Louis — his first goal since being traded to New York — and built from there. “After I scored that first goal in my first game back, for sure that gave me confidence and then it just started from there, just building every game,” Blais said. “Playing a little bit more and playing more free, not gripping my stick too hard. It was nice to get it going again and I think the World tournament was big, too, get to play a little bit more than most guys. It was good for me to go there.” On a few different levels, next season is a big one for Blais. It will be the first time he will have had a full summer of working out following a torn ACL suffered while playing for the Rangers. He spent last summer mostly rehabbing the knee, and it still required treatment during last season. Now, Blais said he was “really happy with how my knee is doing,” and that it wasn’t sore during the World Championship. It will be Blais’ first full season back in St. Louis since 2020-21, and that was the COVID-shortened 56-game season. It will also be another contract year for Blais, as he’s scheduled to be a UFA next summer. “I hope he can take advantage of a full summer of training, get himself in top physical condition,” Armstrong said. “Not only does it help the St. Louis Blues, but the salary cap’s going to go up a year from now, and he’s going to be a free agent a year from now. Having motivated players for all the right reasons is going to be good. “One of the reasons is it’s a business and he can make a lot of money if he can parlay what he did when he got here to the World Championship to next year, he could have a good next July.” It may be unrealistic to expect that Blais puts up a 50-point season next year (he only has 64 career points), but the Blues will take any scoring punch they can get from their depth players. Blais went back to Montreal this week and will spend the summer training there, including with Blues defenseman Marco Scandella. He’ll also turn 27 years old Saturday. “I know I can play in this league and be good,” Blais said. “Just going to be enjoying my summer, work hard and come into camp in great shape. Just try to keep the same thing going (with) how my season ended.”

    1
    0
    cardinals cardinals Cardinals: Nolan Arenado sounds like he’s lost all hope in team
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    The players themselves have come out saying they don't believe it's on management. Of course, that doesn't mean much because a team this good on paper really shouldn't be playing so terribly... I do think the turnaround on literally every coach on the team in the offseason wasn't a good sign, but not sure if that's due to dysfunction within the organization or really just coincidence.

    I really don't know if I blame Oli so much, but--the fact that they're near the top of the league in runs scored off the long ball feels like a pretty big shift in hitting philosophy for the club. Basically, if this team can't hit homers then they can't score runs, and with the new hitting coach hire something is clearly off between what he's preaching and what the players are practicing. The question is, how much input does Oli have in these hires? Is he the one pushing for this philosophical change that apparently got Schildt canned? Or is this Mozeliak?

    I think the fact that the Cardinals suck is a bummer but it is what is at this point. The real oddity about the whole situation is that this team is basically the same as if not better than last year's team. To go from 90+ wins to this is just hard to understand how. Others who despise the Cardinals would point to regression and the team finally showing its true colors, but 20 years of sustained success isn't one long lucky streak. And hate him as much as you want, but Mozeliak built a team that did contend for the past decade even if their postseason performance has been shitty. So either this year really is somehow the worst of bad luck, which is as ridiculous as saying the past 20 years were good luck, or the coaching turnover this offseason really hasn't worked out. Or, Yadi really was the key to all this. Which, I'm sure was true to some extent but one man can't lead a team to success year in and year out, can he?

    1
  • stlblues St. Louis Blues New community for all things Blues! F**k the Hawks!
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Still think it's the height of stupidity that the Blues subreddit would go dark without attempting to make anything on Lemmy or Kbin or anywhere other than Discord to have people migrate to. Would like this place to have more discussion but it feels like between this and cardinals@midwest.social it's gonna be pretty dead for the foreseeable future.

    1
  • hockey Hockey Links to Team Communities
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Yeah I tried doing that and still got an error. Or do you have to search the URL in the community search bar? Three years on here and I never figured that out if that's the case.

    1
  • hockey Hockey Links to Team Communities
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Yeah not sure why but lemmy.ml can't access this community. Would happily hop on there.

    1
  • cardinals cardinals Content questiom
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    No reason this can't just be a one stop shop for anything Cardinals news from around the web. Nice to have it all in one place to have some discussion on it.

    2
  • lemmy Lemmy See which instances are blocked more than others
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    384 blocked for beehaw, Jesus Christ. Trying to like build its own world over there?

    8
  • gaming Gaming Fable Teaser
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    What a weird trailer. The British humor of Fable is just a fun extra on top of the core gameplay, not the defining feature... Not really sure what this trailer is conveying exactly, showing off a single character and some kind of Richard Ayoade theme park experience, but I guess we'll see.

    4
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Good ol' Florida. Still want em to win though.

    5
  • hockey Hockey [Game Day Thread] Vegas Golden Knights at Florida Panthers - June 10, 2023
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Man Florida is just plain getting beat right now. Still, ain't gonna count em out til the series is done.

    4
  • asklemmy Asklemmy How to get users for a new instance?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    What provider are you using to host? I've got a hostgator shared plan for a personal site but wasn't sure if I'd specifically need a VPS to do it.

    1
  • lemmy Lemmy If you want to host and manage your own Lemmy instance but are intimidated by the technical requirements, I can help!
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    It's a web hosting service. The plan I have is the baby plan shared hosting on this link.

    But from looking more myself, not sure if this would work. I think I'd need a VPS to actually install and build Lemmy on.

    1
  • cardinals cardinals Community Logo
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Actually this one is nicer if you ask me:

    1
  • cardinals
    cardinals MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Cardinals lefty Jordan Montgomery ached to stop losing streak, so he went looking for change www.stltoday.com

    Usually one to be back in the training room or away from the dugout when the game ends, Jordan Montgomery was there for the late innings Friday night, poised near the railing as he was earlier on the mound. Although, entering the second month of his quest for a win, his decision to be that close to the field for game’s end had nothing to do with his changing his view or changing up his luck. “I was just out there in case we cleared,” Montgomery said. That’s “cleared” as in cleared the dugout. ![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/5fac2ab0-ac0c-45b4-ac48-6fb3c35c3b03.webp) “Cleared” as in cleared to take the field to confront the Reds. In the seventh inning, one inning after Montgomery’s scoreless start ended, Cincinnati starter Ben Lively tagged catcher Willson Contreras with a pitch, right near his pinky. Contreras took issue with the obviousness of the pitch, and it took manager Oliver Marmol two visits to Contreras at first base to make sure his catcher was OK. One was to check the finger and make sure Contreras did not have to leave the game. The second time was to check the jawing to make sure Contreras wasn’t told to leave the game. The whole time, Montgomery returned to the dugout, and that put him there, close to the action, as the longest losing streak of his career came to an end. The Cardinals took an early lead, added to it late, and fended off some rallies for a 7-4 victory Friday against the Reds at Busch Stadium. The Cardinals drew a full house: three Jordans, two Nolans. Montgomery provided a quality start, Jordan Walker hit a two-run homer and Jordan Hicks had a turbulent seventh that tightened the game. Nolan Arenado hit a two-run homer for the first lead, and Nolan Gorman provided welcome cushion after Hicks’ inning with a two-run homer in the bottom of the seventh. ![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/49f06f19-a31f-4b5f-8f16-73fc270ff027.webp) Montgomery (3-7) pitched six scoreless innings to earn his first win since April 8 and quash a run of 10 consecutive starts without a win. He’d lost a career-high seven consecutive decisions, and the Cardinals had gone winless in the lefty’s past 10 starts. The Cardinals lost nine of them by one run or in a shutout, or both. “He’s done a really nice job of giving us a shot for a W often,” Marmol said. “And we haven’t been able to reward him for that with some run support. The guy has given us a shot plenty of times. We just haven’t come through for him.” Earlier this season, Montgomery was asked about run support and rapped his knuckles against the wood of his locker so as not to upset the luck. Asked late Friday night if he was superstitious, Montgomery shrugged. “I’m not superstitious,” he said. “But I’m a little-stitious.” He admitted to be “pretty superstitious,” but he has been leafing through different superstitions in his pursuit of a win. He didn’t remain longer in the dugout — not unless he thought there be some brouhaha — and he didn’t take a different route to the ballpark. He didn’t switch up his workouts, didn’t alter warmup. He kept the same cleats. Same glove. Even the same socks. But a different changeup. The off-speed pitch that spent most of the losing streak misbehaving has settled back into his hand over the past three starts, and it was at its best Friday. Montgomery threw the changeup 29 times, and 10 of them got a swing and a miss. The Reds fouled off five. They did not put a changeup in play. “Montgomery has a plus changeup,” Contreras said. “And it’s not easy to read out of his hand. And when you have a heavy fastball and you can manage it effectively at 90 (mph), 91, 93, 95 — that makes it a lot more difficult.” The catcher added: “It looks like say a slower fastball, but a way slower fastball. It looks like a fastball for sure, like a four-seam changeup. When it’s not good, it looks more like a faded changeup. You can see it out of the hand. It’s really good.” When it wasn’t as effective, the bottom dropped out of it, and it could be ignored as a ball, allowing the hitter to hunt sinker. At other times, Montgomery’s changeup would float on him — up out and away from the zone or up and over the wall. The one changeup he misplaced this past week in Pittsburgh was socked for a home run. Montgomery throws a four-seam, circle change, and during his between-start catch with teammates, he has been searching and shifting, shifting and searching for the right feel. “Just something you’ve got to get extension,” Montgomery said. “When you get extension on it, and it comes out of your hand right and the shape is right, you move it up a little bit. It’s a lot easier for it to be right when you miss down and work up.” Which is what he did Friday. In the opening inning, Montgomery missed with the changeup down. The lefty pitched around a leadoff double and struck out rookie sensation Elly De La Cruz on three pitches to end the first inning. Contreras said it was then that Montgomery made a slight adjustment. He brought his changeup up and into the zone. By the third, he had it defying bats. De La Cruz struck out all three times he faced Montgomery. In the third, with a runner in scoring position, De La Cruz took Montgomery to a full count and then fell for the changeup. That was the second of 11 consecutive batters retired by Montgomery to complete his six innings. The early innings bloated his pitch count, pushing it to 97 by the end of 18 outs. The run of 11 consecutive outs included three groundouts to shortstop Paul DeJong, including one that was a dive to his left to steal a single. Dylan Carlson had two key catches for Montgomery in right field, and one of them in the first inning kept Cincinnati from a sacrifice fly. The inning after Montgomery turned the ball over the bullpen ended with Contreras throwing a runner out at second as the Reds tried a two-out double steal. For the Cardinals’ defense “there were little moments everywhere,” Marmol said. Montgomery fed that with seven groundouts and a sinker that played even better because Cincinnati had to respect the changeup. There would be no reason to clear the dugout in the late innings, no fracas sparked by Lively plunking Contreras. But the possibility put Montgomery in a new spot as the game came to an end and a win went by his name. That was the biggest change of them all. “Hopefully this is a start,” Contreras said. “Where he keeps pitching, we keep scoring.”

    5
    0
    lemmy Lemmy Lemmy is blowing up
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Man, I been waiting for this for years. I thought with the way Mastodon grew it'd eventually grow into a wider growth among the fediverse but it seems to happen in fits and starts. Glad to see people are federating too and not all dumping into just the mainline instance.

    Next I'd like to see major names move off YouTube and Twitch onto decentralized platforms but that's gonna take much more to get there, unfortunately.

    13
  • lemmy Lemmy If you want to host and manage your own Lemmy instance but are intimidated by the technical requirements, I can help!
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Anyone know if setting up an instance via a shared Hostgator server is possible? I already pay for a plan for my personal site so wondered if I could add on a new domain plus a partition to it and take advantage to make my own instance for posting and browsing myself.

    1
  • asklemmy Asklemmy Is there anyway to adjust the UI width?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    FYI kbin.social has a nicer UI than Lemmy, if you ask me. Still federates with any Lemmy instance and even connects with Mastodon too if you're into that. Otherwise yeah, only way to mess with the UI here is with browser hacks unfortunately. I agree it's way too squished.

    3
  • asklemmy Asklemmy Why are communities on Lemmy.ml more full compared to the same on a different Lemmy instance?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Yeah it's still definitely an issue considering there will be plenty of old topics that people will want to search and refer back to, and any new instance or people making their own will be SOL if they come in years later after communities have been posting for a while.

    1
  • asklemmy Asklemmy Why are communities on Lemmy.ml more full compared to the same on a different Lemmy instance?
    Jump
  • MyopicTopic MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%

    Pretty sure it doesn't "take a while" for things to sync up. Once an instance is discovered by another, any posts from that point forward will appear, but anything made before then will not. I have personally seen new instances sync with kbin.social that have less comments than if you look at the main instance's thread. They have added more comments, but only new ones made after it was discovered.

    Whether I'm right or not, I'm not sure. Would have to hear from the devs to know for sure, but from all I've seen there is no syncing of archived or historical postings, just discovery of and acceptance of new data from other instances.

    16
  • lemmy
    Lemmy MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Any way for an individual to block instances?

    Curious, since I know I can block communities of instances. Is instance-wide blocking only available to admins of instances?

    14
    8
    cardinals
    cardinals MyopicTopic 1 year ago 100%
    Community Logo

    Hey all, figured I'd submit a logo for the community and try to beef this place up to look all pretty.

    11
    2