The breakout continues for Jonathan Villar, who continues to put up monster numbers across the board. Can he sustain this level of performance? Plus, Adrian Gonzalez, Jason Hammel, Tanner Roark, and David Dahl.
In the third of our four walks down BaseballHQ.com memory lane this week, we link to some articles from 2006-2010. Joey Gathright and shortstop—yes, shortstop—Trevor Plouffe both make an appearance.
Productive reinforcements may be tough to find for Bob Melvin's thinned-out everyday lineup, though the rotation could be a different story. SEA's bullpen outlook, HOU's offensive woes part 2, and more.
In the second of our four walks down BaseballHQ.com memory lane this week, we link to some articles from 2001-2005. When Edwin Encarnacion was a Ranger. Really.
We dive into Manny Machado's (mostly) successful encore to 2015's breakout; plus Justin Verlander's revival, Logan Forsythe, Roberto Osuna, and Starlin Castro.
In the first of our four walks down BaseballHQ.com memory lane this week, we link to some articles from 1996-2000. It was a time when Jayson Werth was a catching prospect. Really.
The breakout continues for Jonathan Villar, who continues to put up monster numbers across the board. Can he sustain this level of performance? Plus, Adrian Gonzalez, Jason Hammel, Tanner Roark, and David Dahl.
In the third of our four walks down BaseballHQ.com memory lane this week, we link to some articles from 2006-2010. Joey Gathright and shortstop—yes, shortstop—Trevor Plouffe both make an appearance.
Productive reinforcements may be tough to find for Bob Melvin's thinned-out everyday lineup, though the rotation could be a different story. SEA's bullpen outlook, HOU's offensive woes part 2, and more.
In the second of our four walks down BaseballHQ.com memory lane this week, we link to some articles from 2001-2005. When Edwin Encarnacion was a Ranger. Really.
We dive into Manny Machado's (mostly) successful encore to 2015's breakout; plus Justin Verlander's revival, Logan Forsythe, Roberto Osuna, and Starlin Castro.
In the first of our four walks down BaseballHQ.com memory lane this week, we link to some articles from 1996-2000. It was a time when Jayson Werth was a catching prospect. Really.