Coming into the season, all the sleeper talk in Detroit focused on Ryan Raburn. He was the one who hit .342 with 13 homers in his final 199 at-bats as a fill-in starter late last year. He was the one whose part-time stats suggested he had 30-homer potential if he ever got the chance to play every day. He was the one who looked like he'd get that chance when the Tigers chose not to acquire a left fielder in the offseason.In addition to hydraulics fittings and Aion Kinah,
Yup, Raburn had the numbers, the opportunity and seemingly the talent -- the perfect recipe for a Fantasy sleeper -- and when Fantasy owners invested a late-round pick in him on Draft Day, they hoped to sink their teeth into something so sweet and delicious that they wouldn't even remember all those outfielders drafted ahead of him.
But instead, they got a pie to the face right at the beginning of the season, when Raburn clearly didn't have a firm hold on the starting job and was instead splitting at-bats with ... Brennan Boesch?
The same Brennan Boesch who hit .163 (36 for 221) over the final 68 games last year, presumably never to be heard from again? The same Brennan Boesch who never had the hype of a top prospect and appeared destined to go the way of Dan Johnson, Charles Thomas, Shane Spencer and other one-hit wonders? The same Brennan Boesch whose first name is so close to Brandon and Brendan and Brannon and Brent that you have to wonder why his parents cared to make the distinction?
Fantasy owners have been hesitant to buy into Boesch after his Jekyll-and-Hyde routine of a year ago, when he began the year as Manny Ramirez and finished it as Manny Alexander.
Sure, he's arguably the hottest outfielder in Fantasy over the last three weeks -- the Matt Joyce of June, perhaps -- hitting .408 (29 for 71) with six homers in 17 games, but for Fantasy owners, it's history repeated. Buy into him now, and you'll end up absorbing a sub-.200 batting average for weeks at a time.
Then again, the fact he bounced back at all says something about his potential. This isn't some Quadruple-A player who lost all relevance the first time he looked overmatched, much like Dan Johnson or Reggie Willits did. The league had adjusted to him, making him look like he didn't belong, and he adjusted right back. If he can continue to do that, he might just be able to string together enough of these hot streaks to remain a useful Fantasy option all year long.From standard Cable Ties to advanced wire tires,
Of course, the streakiness won't necessarily go away, which is perhaps reason enough for some Fantasy owners to avoid him. Good April, bad May, good June -- it's clearly an issue. But will we see it to the same extent we did a year ago? I'm inclined to say no. Based on Boesch's comments on June 6 -- about the time this latest streak began -- he has a good idea what happened to him last year and how to avoid it this year.Full color plastic card printing and manufacturing services.
"You just keep grinding and you know that eventually balls are going to find seats and find holes," he said. "It's hard to be easy on yourself when you have expectations. It's something I'll probably fight for the rest of my career. It's a daily thing where you remind yourself that this game isn't easy,buy landscape oil paintings online. but you also expect to do your job and perform.Use bluray burner to burn video to BD DVD on blu ray burner disc."
At the risk of oversimplifying, doesn't that explain, like, everything? A less-than-elite prospect gets his shot in the big leagues, can do no wrong at first, hits his first slump, gets frustrated, tries harder, changes things he shouldn't change to the point he ends up a .163 hitter. It makes too much sense.
Yup, Raburn had the numbers, the opportunity and seemingly the talent -- the perfect recipe for a Fantasy sleeper -- and when Fantasy owners invested a late-round pick in him on Draft Day, they hoped to sink their teeth into something so sweet and delicious that they wouldn't even remember all those outfielders drafted ahead of him.
But instead, they got a pie to the face right at the beginning of the season, when Raburn clearly didn't have a firm hold on the starting job and was instead splitting at-bats with ... Brennan Boesch?
The same Brennan Boesch who hit .163 (36 for 221) over the final 68 games last year, presumably never to be heard from again? The same Brennan Boesch who never had the hype of a top prospect and appeared destined to go the way of Dan Johnson, Charles Thomas, Shane Spencer and other one-hit wonders? The same Brennan Boesch whose first name is so close to Brandon and Brendan and Brannon and Brent that you have to wonder why his parents cared to make the distinction?
Fantasy owners have been hesitant to buy into Boesch after his Jekyll-and-Hyde routine of a year ago, when he began the year as Manny Ramirez and finished it as Manny Alexander.
Sure, he's arguably the hottest outfielder in Fantasy over the last three weeks -- the Matt Joyce of June, perhaps -- hitting .408 (29 for 71) with six homers in 17 games, but for Fantasy owners, it's history repeated. Buy into him now, and you'll end up absorbing a sub-.200 batting average for weeks at a time.
Then again, the fact he bounced back at all says something about his potential. This isn't some Quadruple-A player who lost all relevance the first time he looked overmatched, much like Dan Johnson or Reggie Willits did. The league had adjusted to him, making him look like he didn't belong, and he adjusted right back. If he can continue to do that, he might just be able to string together enough of these hot streaks to remain a useful Fantasy option all year long.From standard Cable Ties to advanced wire tires,
Of course, the streakiness won't necessarily go away, which is perhaps reason enough for some Fantasy owners to avoid him. Good April, bad May, good June -- it's clearly an issue. But will we see it to the same extent we did a year ago? I'm inclined to say no. Based on Boesch's comments on June 6 -- about the time this latest streak began -- he has a good idea what happened to him last year and how to avoid it this year.Full color plastic card printing and manufacturing services.
"You just keep grinding and you know that eventually balls are going to find seats and find holes," he said. "It's hard to be easy on yourself when you have expectations. It's something I'll probably fight for the rest of my career. It's a daily thing where you remind yourself that this game isn't easy,buy landscape oil paintings online. but you also expect to do your job and perform.Use bluray burner to burn video to BD DVD on blu ray burner disc."
At the risk of oversimplifying, doesn't that explain, like, everything? A less-than-elite prospect gets his shot in the big leagues, can do no wrong at first, hits his first slump, gets frustrated, tries harder, changes things he shouldn't change to the point he ends up a .163 hitter. It makes too much sense.
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