Wednesday's parlays

Terryray

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Dec 6, 2001
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912 Toronto Blue Jays -1? +140 vs Boston Red Sox
R Porcello - R Listed M Buehrle - L Listed

924 Oakland Athletics -163 vs Colorado Rockies
C Bettis - R Listed J Hahn - R Listed

925 Seattle Mariners/San Diego Padres Under 7 -105
T Walker - R Listed J Shields - R Listed


1 unit bet wins 6.56 units....(5 Dimes lines)

evening parlay to be posted later

Goood luck everyone!! :spotting: :clap:


Doutzen Kroes:
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Terryray

Say Parlay
Forum Member
Dec 6, 2001
9,832
2,284
113
Kansas City area for who knows how long....
4 Team Parlay

901 Milwaukee Brewers/Philadelphia Phillies Over 7? -105
K Lohse - R Listed A Harang - R Listed
914 Los Angeles Angels -103 vs New York Yankees
N Eovaldi - R Listed M Shoemaker - R Listed
916 Baltimore Orioles -181 vs Texas Rangers
N Martinez - R Listed W Chen - L Listed
929 Chicago White Sox/St. Louis Cardinals Under 6? -115
J Quintana - L Listed J Lackey - R Listed

1 unit bet wins 10.17 units....(5 Dimes lines)


10 Team Parlay

901 Milwaukee Brewers/Philadelphia Phillies Over 8 +115 (K Lohse - A Harang - R must Start)
903 San Francisco Giants -1? +140 vs Miami Marlins (C Heston - D Haren - R must Start)
905 Washington Nationals/Atlanta Braves Under 7? -120 (D Fister - M Wisler - R must Start)
910 Arizona Diamondbacks +124 vs Los Angeles Dodgers (B Anderson - R Ray - L must Start)
914 Los Angeles Angels -1? +180 vs New York Yankees (N Eovaldi - M Shoemaker - R must Start)
916 Baltimore Orioles -1? +115 vs Texas Rangers (N Martinez - W Chen - L must Start)
918 Tampa Bay Rays +135 vs Cleveland Indians (C Carrasco - A Colome - R must Start)
919 Kansas City Royals +109 vs Houston Astros (E Volquez - V Velasquez - R must Start)
927 Pittsburgh Pirates/Detroit Tigers Over 8? -115 (A Burnett - A Simon - R must Start)
929 Chicago White Sox/St. Louis Cardinals Under 6? -115 (J Quintana -Lackey - R must Start)

1 unit bet wins 2,188.93 units....(5 Dimes lines)



Goood luck everyone!! :firing: :toast:

ripped, cut and pasted, otherwise written by others, from across the internets:



The Cleveland Indians have pounced on the Tampa Bay Rays in this series, taking the first two games to push the Rays? losing streak to three games ? something they have avoided since late May. The Rays have the pitching to avoid the long losing streaks, and I look for them to bounce back today at home behind Alex Colome. Colome?s last start vs. the Tribe resulted in one hit through seven innings with no runs allowed. He has now worked 13.1 innings against them without yielding a single run, and has held the Tribe?s lineup to a .116 average against him. Carlos Carrasco has been durable, but owns a 1-3 record vs. Tampa Bay in five career appearances against them, and Cleveland is just 1-9 in their last 10 following a win, and 5-13 behind Carrasco if he is off a quality start in his previous game. The Rays have taken it to road teams that have a winning road record at 9-3 in their last 12 against them. Take Tampa Bay.


7:00 PM EST. Matt Shoemaker has had seven quality starts in 14 tries but he?s been coming on recently with a solid BB/K split of 4/15 over his last 22 innings. Shoemaker comes in with an unsightly 5.03 ERA. His numbers at home are not pretty either with a 0-5 record to go along with an ERA of 4.82. Shoemaker?s surface stats have him underpriced. This rookie stunner went 16-4 last year with an ERA of 3.04 over 136 innings. Shoemaker has a wicked splitter and he also features five different pitches in his arsenal. Shoemaker?s under the surface stats this year are no worse than last year but the difference in his big ERA discrepancies can be found in his hit and strand rates. Last year his hit%/strand% split was 29%/76% but this year that strand percentage is a very unlucky 62%. Shoemaker?s hit percentage this year is exactly the same as it was in his rookie season. Shoemaker is a prime example of how low strand rates wreak havoc on one?s ERA. This kid is good and with an xERA of 3.29 at home this year, we can almost guarantee some gems are forthcoming. We also like a ?junk? pitcher like Shoemaker versus the Yanks.

Then there?s Nathan Eovaldi, who is perhaps the most puzzling pitcher in the game. Here?s a guy whose fastball velocity is top-notch again (2nd in MLB at 96 mph), but his swing and miss rate and strikeout totals remain pedestrian (60 K?s in 82 frames with a 8% swing and miss rate). Problem with backing Eovaldi is that few starters have been more destructive on a start-to-start basis. He has a horrible 14%/43% dominant start/disaster start split, meaning he?s more likely to blow up than pitch a gem. It really doesn?t matter how hard you throw when your fastball has little movement and major-league hitters know that it?s coming. Mike Trout, Albert Pujols and Kole Calhoun among others will be waiting. Eovaldi still hasn't figured things out and until he does, he remains a big risk. The numbers say so.


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Kansas City Royals vs. Houston Astros


The Kansas City Royals will wrap up their three game series tonight in Houston, Texas. The Astros have taken the first two games of the series behind some stellar pitching from their starting rotation and bullpen. The Astros have held the Royals to 1 measly run over the first two games. The Astros seem to be a team this year that is either scorching hot or fairly cold. As of late, their trend has been either not scoring at all, or scoring in bunches. They come into this matchup having won 6 out of their last 10 games, matching the Royals streak in their last 10. These are the two best teams in the AL with the Royals having the best record at .595 and the Astros not far behind at .575. I expect to see a good game tonight between these two teams as the Astros try to hand the Royals their first 3-game sweep in over a month and a half.

The Royals will send out Edinson Volquez tonight to try and stave off the broom. Volquez has had a very productive year for the Royals going 8-4 with a 3.18 ERA and a 1.18 WHIP. He has struck out 65 batters while walking 32. Vincent Velasquez will take the mound for the Astros and while having limited experience starting in the majors this year, he has not been horrible by any means. He has not earned a win or a loss (no decision) while holding a 3.72 ERA and a 1.47 WHIP. His strikeout/walk ratio sits at 19/11 respectively.

This will be the first time the Royals go up against the young Velasquez, as they have not seen him before. Volquez on the other hand, has held the Astros to a career .257 batting average. The Royals have not been swept in a 3-game series since back in May against the Yankees. In an earlier post, I broke down the statistics on teams going up against a sweep. When looking at these stats, you will find that on average, teams do not get swept that often. This goes for good teams and bad teams. The Royals are a very good team and with an underdog value tonight, I think they are the play. The Royals are 5-1 in their last 6 during game 3 of a series and they are 4-1 in their last 5 games following a loss. The team has gone 5-0 in Volquez?s last 5 road starts and they are 4-1 in Volquez?s last 5 starts against a team with a winning record.

Take the Royals in this one as I expect Volquez to have a solid outing, while their bats finally get going up against a sweep. Good luck.

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Terryray

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Dec 6, 2001
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ripped, cut and pasted, otherwise written by others, from across the internets:


Chris Heston Is the Giants? Latest Find

by Paul Swydan - July 1, 2015

Chris Heston was listed on only two of the six major preseason prospect reports. John Sickels listed him in his ?Others? section at the end of his top-20 list, and FanGraphs? own Kiley McDaniel placed Heston 14th on his list. Kiley called him an ?inventory starter? but did allow for some potential as well. Here was his final sentence on Heston:

"Heston may be one of the small percentage of potential #5 starters that turns into more, but we?ll need to see how he performs his second time through the league."

And here?s what Sickels said:

"There is a mixture of physical upside arms and pitchability talents who could surprise, finesse right-hander Chris Heston being a good example of the latter. If you are looking for a pitcher who could pull a Matt Shoemaker-like out-of-nowhere season in 2015, Heston is as good a candidate as anyone."

Here we are, three months into the season, and Heston is indeed that candidate. If you look at the pitching WAR leaderboard right now, there are certainly surprises, but few pitchers by whom you are just completely blown away.

The Giants seem to specialize in these guys. Last year, Joe Panik didn?t make the top-10 prospect list here at FanGraphs or at Baseball Prospectus. Baseball America had him ninth; Sickels had him 13th and called him a utility player, as did Keith Law ? while noting that Matt Duffy? target=?_blank?>Matt Duffy had a similar profile heading into this season (ninth ranked at BA, #11 at FG, #13 by Sickels, Factor on the Farm at BP). We don?t need to do this for every player, but the point is that the Giants seem to have a habit of turning these guys up. George Kontos, Jean Machi, Ryan Vogelsong, Yusmeiro Petit, a resurgent Jake Peavy ? draft them, trade for them, free them, bring them back from the dead, or maybe make them in some secret fringe-pitcher lab ? the Giants find a way. Heston is just the latest.

This is not meant to diminish Heston in any way, but rather to emphasize the success he?s has relative to his pedigree. He?s already thrown a no-hitter this year, and he did it with minimal pushback from the team he faced, the New York Mets. And Heston is markedly different from most Giants pitchers in at least one way ? he gets ground balls. Yes, San Francisco now has Tim Hudson, but aside from him, the starting pitchers who have pitched most frequently for the Giants in recent years have been a fly-balling bunch, as we?ve discussed here in the past

How is he doing this without hitting 90 mph on a consistent basis? By throwing a lot of sinkers. Only two pitchers ? A.J. Burnett and Hector Santiago ? have derived more value from their sinker so far this year than has Heston, according to PITCHf/x. Only Kyle Hendricks has thrown his sinker more frequently than has Heston. Heston isn?t just a one-note guy though. He complements that sinker, which ranks seventh per 100 pitches, with an above-average curveball that ranks 34th per 100 pitches.

When you don?t throw hard, your roads to success are definitely more limited, but that doesn?t mean you can?t succeed. If you know how to locate the ball, you stand a much better chance. Judging by the very low percentage of ?grooved? pitches Heston has thrown the past two months, he has a pretty decent idea where the ball is going. He is generating lots of ground balls and infield fly balls, and keeping the ball out of the fat part of the strike zone. That approach isn?t going to work everywhere ? he has been tattooed at Coors Field for 12 runs in 11 innings ? but it?s going to work in most places, particularly given the nature of today?s strike zone.

If Heston was pitching in a different organization, you might be tempted chalk this up to luck or something unsustainable, but the Giants have a knack for turning undervalued assets into solid big leaguers. It?s how they stay relevant in most seasons, and Heston is the latest, even though his batted-ball profile doesn?t fit with most of their recent pitchers. That?s a testament to their pro scouting department. You might not have heard of Chris Heston before this season, but he?s probably going to stick around for awhile.

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Robbie Ray, LHP

This post is basically built around one fact. I looked at every pitcher who started at least one game in both 2014 and 2015. For each pitcher, I investigated any potential changes in average fastball velocity. The biggest increase belongs to Juan Nicasio, up almost five mph. But that doesn?t count ? Nicasio?s one start this year lasted two innings and 41 pitches. He started, but he was still a reliever. The next name on the list is Robbie Ray?s. His average fastball has increased nearly three ticks.

Toward the end of last season, Ray had a couple stints in the bullpen, where his velocity played up. This year that?s carried over, even though he?s being asked to throw six innings a start. His bullpen velocity boost has sustained, and now we have his fastball at 93.5 mph. For the sake of reference, we have Clayton Kershaw at 93.6. David Price at 93.8. Ray has a big-league lefty fastball now, and even though this post isn?t about him, Doug Fister is down two ticks, and he?s already been on the disabled list. Ray?s stock is going up. Fister?s stock isn?t.

It?s commonly noted that velocity isn?t everything, and that?s true, because the most important thing is putting your pitches where you want them to be. And on top of that, Ray has adjusted his breaking ball. He?s gone to a slurve with a little more depth, and his breaking-ball whiff rate has more than doubled. But there?s no getting around the fact that velocity is important. Margins of error, and all that stuff. Ray has increased his fastball usage more than 10 percentage points, and the fastball itself is getting more whiffs. So Ray has been having success, even while pitching without so many of his changeups, which were thought to be good, once upon a time.

It?s evident that the fastball is faster. And compared to last year, in the majors, Ray is getting more swings and misses. He?s getting more strikeouts, and issuing fewer walks. He?s having more success against righties. And there was progress in Triple-A, as well. Between 2014 and 2015, in Triple-A, Ray nearly doubled his strikeout rate. There were still walks ? Ray still isn?t a complete starting pitcher ? but those were offset. Ray was getting ahead more often in the minors, and he?s getting ahead more often in the majors. He?s checking off so many of the right boxes.

How do you make a starting pitcher throw harder? I don?t know what Ray has been up to. Maybe he?s changed his diet, or his workout routine. Maybe he?s made a very subtle change to his delivery.

Who knows? Ray?s thrown with a lower slot before. He?s thrown with a higher slot before. It appears like he?s gone from lower to higher to lower again. At the moment, the lower slot is working out. Ray?s having more success than he had before at the game?s highest level.

He still isn?t great yet. He?s not that close, and he might never get there. Ray has work remaining to do, and like so many other pitchers, he might never do it. But, at one point, the Tigers liked Ray?s velocity. Now he?s either rediscovered it or taken it to a new height. He?s establishing himself as a big-league pitcher, in a big-league rotation, and now it?s Doug Fister who?s dealing with his own question marks. Ray?s just busy raising his own ceiling. The point isn?t necessarily that the initial trade was good. Who?s to say what Ray was most likely to be? Who?s to say whether he would?ve found the velocity with Detroit? But that was a trade that people hated. People don?t hate trades so much anymore. They hated that one. And now look. We think we understand how players develop. We do understand ? a little bit.
 
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