Instead another loss and 3 ER allowed ... all because of a dropped ball on a "should've" inning-ending DP in the first. A few of Giles early disasters were similar circumstances. Bad defense hurts a lot sometimes.

Happens every day to every fantasy team. As the wisest man on these boards has stated over and over, no one cares.KJ Duke wrote:Gio has pitched poorly the last few times out. Tonight he could've had a 7-inning shutout Win with 10 Ks.
Instead another loss and 3 ER allowed ... all because of a dropped ball on a "should've" inning-ending DP in the first. A few of Giles early disasters were similar circumstances. Bad defense hurts a lot sometimes.
Money wrote: Happens every day to every fantasy team.
And now they care....KJ Duke wrote:Money wrote: Happens every day to every fantasy team.
That's exactly my point, jackass. Try reading the thread title and put one and one together.
I appreciated the insight. Rostered him on one team and his last 2 starts were miserable. Had to consider whether it was worth another bad start or to look elsewhere. I was happy to see the 10 K's, but feel better knowing that the 3ER were suspect.Driver Love wrote:For the record, I would not say no one cares. I care. I did not know he pitched well and got thumbed by some bad breaks. I do not have him rostered so he isn't a pitcher I follow but in a home league, maybe I would consider trading for a guy who via a few bad breaks has numbers that looks worse than they should be. Of course it happens to everyone. That is stating the obvious. The title of the thread was things we don't see in the box score. Then things we do not see in the box score that impact the box score were posted. Not sure why that would need to be mocked.
I started a "venting misery" thread in past and it was relatively active. Sometimes bitching about bad fantasy sports fortune is therapeutic. Not sure why that would bother anyone.
We must consider the source of the "no one cares" comment. In this case, its a comment from someone who cannot be taken seriously and only looking into stirring the pot. Carry on...Driver Love wrote:For the record, I would not say no one cares. I care. I did not know he pitched well and got thumbed by some bad breaks. I do not have him rostered so he isn't a pitcher I follow but in a home league, maybe I would consider trading for a guy who via a few bad breaks has numbers that looks worse than they should be. Of course it happens to everyone. That is stating the obvious. The title of the thread was things we don't see in the box score. Then things we do not see in the box score that impact the box score were posted. Not sure why that would need to be mocked.
I started a "venting misery" thread in past and it was relatively active. Sometimes bitching about bad fantasy sports fortune is therapeutic. Not sure why that would bother anyone.
Or pretty much every time Bartolo Colon starts. I have no idea how he makes it through. Sometimes it's the plays the pitcher makes himself that is the difference between a great start and a 4 inning 6 run start. Bartolo makes so many plays that don't show up in the box score and then magic.. 7 innings 1 run.KJ Duke wrote:The catalyst for this thread are the rotoworld-type commentaries like "this guy twirled a gem", or "this guy got pounded", etc, knowing that a lot of times those comments are coming from someone that just glanced at a box score ..... when in reality when you watch games rather than just box scores you sometimes get a different picture.
Counter to the Gio example, there are plenty of instances of good pitcher lines where the guy pitched to a bunch of line drives that went at someone, or a great defensive play or plays helped avoid a disastrous inning/outing ... and these are things to bank when deciding who to start next time around.
Yeah he did get hit hard in the first, but with adequate defense he still gets out of it unscathed.The Mighty Men wrote:I was at the Nats/Sox game, about 20 rows behind home plate. I thought Gio's command was very poor in the first inning. He even received a trip to the mound from the pitching coach. He pitched pretty well after that, but he deserved the loss.
What kills me is seeing my pitcher get squeezed on what should have been strike three with men on base. The odds of the hitter blooping in a basehit on the next pitch seem to go up for some reason.KJ Duke wrote:The catalyst for this thread are the rotoworld-type commentaries like "this guy twirled a gem", or "this guy got pounded", etc, knowing that a lot of times those comments are coming from someone that just glanced at a box score ..... when in reality when you watch games rather than just box scores you sometimes get a different picture.
Counter to the Gio example, there are plenty of instances of good pitcher lines where the guy pitched to a bunch of line drives that went at someone, or a great defensive play or plays helped avoid a disastrous inning/outing ... and these are things to bank when deciding who to start next time around.