On the 26th episode of the DFA podcast, Bryan and R.J. are talking about the two most prolific home run hitters of the past month: Rhys Hoskins and Giancarlo Stanton. Will Hoskins be Kevin Maas or Aaron Judge? (Or neither?) Will Stanton break 60 dingers? (Or 70?) Plus much, much more.
Tom Koehler joins the Blue Jays, Rajai Davis fills in for Jackie Bradley Jr. in Boston, and Fernando Salas and Cesar Puello cross on the transaction wire.
Think injuries have killed your favorite team? Well, you’re not alone.
On the 25th episode of the DFA podcast, Bryan is joined by Rob Mains to talk about the AL Wild Card race and how a recent spate of injuries could change the playing field. Then it’s on to … more injuries to pitchers! And … more injuries to pitchers! Yuck!
Mike Trout is better than everyone at everything, even failure.
Kate rekindles some ballpark missed connections, Emma gazes at Michael Martinez and the Indians, while Trevor matches up Eric Young Jr. and destiny.
Jason shares the wealth, Matt shares the fate of an old friend, and Nathan reviews Baseball Highlights 2045.
The lion, the fox, the jackal, and the wolf, with the Yankees starring as the lion.
Keynan Middleton vs. Byron Buxton, and the camera angles that showed it.
On the 10th episode of DFA, Bryan and R.J. reflect on the downgrade in Anaheim from Mike Trout to Eric Young Jr. Across Los Angeles, Brandon Morrow returns to the Dodgers’ bullpen, and the guys marvel over the players they didn’t know were still in the league. Plus much, much more!
Doug Fister joins the rotation-starved Angels and the Mets pick up more depth than they expected to need.
On the eighth episode of DFA, R.J. gets his revenge and kicks Bryan to the curb in favor of BP’s Meg Rowley. They discuss the Cardinals trading Matt Adams to the Braves, the Angels signing Doug Fister, and of course a little Mariners talk. Plus much, much more!
Teams have smartened up about sacrifice bunts, but every once in a while managers just can’t help themselves.
The framing advantage is shrinking, but Martin Maldonado is a perfect fit with the Angels and that isn’t an accident.
Is the middle season in a three-year span a baseball sandwich or a baseball hotdog?