HoF [REDACTED] v2.0: FUCK...We suck again!

Discussion in 'The Mainboard' started by One Man Wolfpack, Jul 2, 2016.

  1. Gaknight

    Gaknight Well-Known Member
    Donor TMB OG
    UCF KnightsAtlanta HawksAtlanta FalconsAtlanta United

    Do we face Ryu this week? If so we will really test the power of the wristbands
     
  2. ashy larry

    ashy larry from ashy to classy
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesWu-tang

    ERA: 3.67 FIP: 3.57 xFIP: 2.97 doesn’t scream extreme misfortune imo.
     
    Sterling A likes this.
  3. Gaknight

    Gaknight Well-Known Member
    Donor TMB OG
    UCF KnightsAtlanta HawksAtlanta FalconsAtlanta United

    Nice out minors is loaded with hitters but we have like the 4 worst hitting guys in the majors playing regularly.
     
  4. Degausser

    Degausser #NewProfilePic
    Donor
    Georgia BulldogsAtlanta Braves

    The collective power of the wristbands outweigh thread titles.
     
  5. Degausser

    Degausser #NewProfilePic
    Donor
    Georgia BulldogsAtlanta Braves

    He goes against Folty on Saturday, so it's perfect timing for the wristbands to do work.
     
    clemsontyger04 and Room 15 like this.
  6. jrmy

    jrmy For bookings contact Morgan at 702-374-3735
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesDallas CowboysNational LeagueAvengersBarAndGrill

    Of all the pitchers with at least 50 IP, he has the second highest BABIP of them all (Melancon is now 3rd and Max Fried 14th btw) and his batting average against is 59 points higher than his xBA tracked by BaseballSavant based on the contact hitters make against him.

    He has absolute shit luck and our defense may be the most overrated in baseball this year
     
  7. Drown ‘Em

    Drown ‘Em The Candy Man
    Donor
    Alabama Crimson TideAtlanta BravesNational League

  8. ashy larry

    ashy larry from ashy to classy
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesWu-tang

    well jer i guess it’s my stats v ur stats and im more familiar with xfip so im pretty dug in
     
  9. Louis Holth

    Louis Holth but we also just might be those motherfuckers
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesCarolina PanthersTottenham Hotspur

  10. Clown Baby

    Clown Baby Daddy’s #1 Candy Baby
    Donor

    Maybe it’ll be a Samson scenario where he loses his power to suck
     
  11. Stone Cold Steve Austin

    Stone Cold Steve Austin Tickler Extraordinaire
    Donor
    Alabama Crimson TideAtlanta Braves

    82A8FEE5-5625-4BD4-8B02-3B4682446623.gif
     
  12. Louis Holth

    Louis Holth but we also just might be those motherfuckers
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesCarolina PanthersTottenham Hotspur

    SCSA were all here for you in your difficult time
     
  13. Stone Cold Steve Austin

    Stone Cold Steve Austin Tickler Extraordinaire
    Donor
    Alabama Crimson TideAtlanta Braves

    If the mustache is still there I will be ok.

    Ty for your comforting words.
     
    Louis Holth likes this.
  14. jrmy

    jrmy For bookings contact Morgan at 702-374-3735
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesDallas CowboysNational LeagueAvengersBarAndGrill

    RIP Luke’s Neckbeard
    Gone too soon, but not forgotten

    [​IMG]

     
    BlazingRebel and One Two like this.
  15. Baby Boy

    Baby Boy Well-Known Member
    Donor
    Clemson TigersAtlanta BravesCarolina Panthers

    Add it to the list of RIPs. There's a lot of sacrificing going on rn around this team.
     
    #83716 Baby Boy, Aug 12, 2019
    Last edited: Aug 12, 2019
    One Two likes this.
  16. jrmy

    jrmy For bookings contact Morgan at 702-374-3735
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesDallas CowboysNational LeagueAvengersBarAndGrill

    It hasn’t been Reds 1-0 since T1
     
    Where Eagles Dare likes this.
  17. Baby Boy

    Baby Boy Well-Known Member
    Donor
    Clemson TigersAtlanta BravesCarolina Panthers

    Yeah I typed that a long time ago and never meant to send it because the Nats scored 3 in the first. Forgot to erase it before my last message.

    Nats win 7-6. Nearly blew a 7-2 lead the last two innings.
     
  18. Clown Baby

    Clown Baby Daddy’s #1 Candy Baby
    Donor

    Yeah, he can come back to AAA Gwinnett hiyooo
     
  19. Sterling A

    Sterling A Well-Known Member





    [​IMG]

    21. Atlanta Braves: 2.08
    -Chip Caray (play by play)
    -Jeff Francoeur (analyst)
    -Tom Glavine (analyst)
    -Joe Simpson (analyst)

    Previous rankings: 21 (2014), 13 (2016), 23 (2017), 20 (2018)
    Previous grades: 2.06 (2014), 2.41 (2016), 1.91 (2017), 2.24 (2018)

    Most popular grade: B (27.08% of votes)

    Analysis: Joe Simpson has been shifted to a more limited role this season, and I expected the Braves to tick up in the rankings a bit this year. That hasn’t happened, even though the booth is less angry and more loose than in prior years with Simpson on the prowl. Weirdly, the shift has also made Simpson more likable both on the radio and on TV. But for better or worse, Chip Caray is still Chip Caray, and Jeff Francoeur is still young and polishing his broadcasting chops.
     
  20. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    chip is essentially a war criminal.
     
  21. jrmy

    jrmy For bookings contact Morgan at 702-374-3735
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesDallas CowboysNational LeagueAvengersBarAndGrill

    Vaughn Grissom went 2 for 3 with a walk yesterday and is hitting .324/.395/.473 since 7/13
    Backstrom went 1 for 4 with a double and is hitting .333/.400/.500 in the 12 games since he signed. He's still 17 until October.

    This Rome batting lineup is a lot of fun now:
    Justin Dean 1 for 4 with a walk. .284/.396/.448 on the year.
    Greg Cullen 3 for 4 with a walk and his 9th homer. He's at .268/.399/.413 on the year in Rome.
    Shewmake was 2 for 4 with 2 doubles and a walk. .323/.394/.481 in 48 games at Rome.
    Shea Langeliers was 1 for 3 with 2 walks. He has not been very good in the box yet but I'm willing to blame it on fatigue.
    Bryce "Cody Bellinger 2.0/Future Braves DH" Ball was 3 for 5 with a double in his Rome debut.
    Michael Harris 1 for 5 with a double
     
  22. bstaple12

    bstaple12 Nole World Order
    Atlanta BravesAtlanta FalconsFlorida State Seminoles

    Sitting in the Delta Club tonight . Look for the guy pounding millers and ice cream sandwiches
     
    PAHokie, Buzz, BlazingRebel and 5 others like this.
  23. Sterling A

    Sterling A Well-Known Member


    someone pls post
     
    BlazingRebel and One Two like this.
  24. Louis Holth

    Louis Holth but we also just might be those motherfuckers
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesCarolina PanthersTottenham Hotspur

    Dodgers flipping May and Kershaw. We now will miss Buehler and Kershaw but still face Ryu.
     
    Buzz, One Two, clemsontyger04 and 5 others like this.
  25. jrmy

    jrmy For bookings contact Morgan at 702-374-3735
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesDallas CowboysNational LeagueAvengersBarAndGrill

    Oh no now we have to face Gingergaard
     
  26. Sterling A

    Sterling A Well-Known Member

    Ozzie Albies has grown into one of the league’s absolute best second basemen

    The Braves have had a lot of offensive standouts, but one in particularly has pretty quietly become one of the absolute best at his position.

    By Eric Cole@leprekhan Aug 13, 2019

    [​IMG]

    The Braves have had a lot to be excited about this season, particularly on the offensive side of the ball. Freddie Freeman has been his usual awesome self and continues to an (underappreciated) MVP candidate who is just a consistent offensive force in the middle of the Braves lineup. Ronald Acuna Jr. has been really good all year and his latest surge has him threatening a 40/40 season with 30/30 all but a lock as he closes in on a 6-7 WAR season. Josh Donaldson, despite his detractors earlier in the season, has been exactly as advertised as a power bat who walks a ton, plays really solid defense at third, and and hits dingers.

    However, amidst all of that production, one player who has not gotten the credit he deserves has been second baseman Ozzie Albies. We all remember what Ozzie did in the first half last season. While batting .281 and posting a 120 wRC+ while connecting for a surprising 20 home runs, Ozzie earned an All-Star nod and appeared to be primed for a truly great season. However, fatigue and adjustments from opposing pitchers set in and Ozzie, to put it nicely, fell off in the second half of 2018 as he batted just .226 with four homers and a pretty abysmal 67 wRC+. Right-handed pitching in particular gave him fits as he batted just .231 with an 84 wRC+ that actually looks better than it was for a good chunk of the season thanks to the aforementioned early season power boost.

    Flash forward to 2019 and things for Ozzie have changed pretty significantly. He has remained a good defender at second base and had a really nice first half of the season in 2019. While he was denied a trip to the All-Star game thanks to some really strong competition from Ketel Marte and others, he still batted .290 with 14 homers and a perfectly respectable 113 wRC+. He saw his walk rate climb to 8% which was a positive development given his almost stubborn refusal to draw a walk last season. Overall, the type of production one would want from a cornerstone stud second baseman.

    One would have been excused if they were skeptical that that level of production who continue given what we saw last season. However, instead of falling off and struggling with the adjustments the league continues to make against him, Ozzie has flourished in the second half. Since the All-Star break, Albies is batting .339 as of this writing with a 145 wRC+ and has even see his power uptick in the second half with a .248 ISO compared to a still impressive .196 in the first half.


    Add all of that production together and you have one of the best second basemen in baseball. Here are his current ranks amongst his qualified second base peers across the league (as of 8/11).


    fWAR - 3rd (3rd)

    wRC+ - 4th (121)

    Home Runs - 7th (18)

    wOBA - 4th (.360)


    Given what the Braves saw in the second half this season combined with the extremely team friendly contract extension the team signed him Ozzie to this season (a $35 million extension through 2027 still seems crazy to...well, almost everyone), all parties involved have to be thrilled with Ozzie’s progress. He has even gotten significantly better against righties (.269 batting average and 99 wRC+ in 2019) to go along with his absolute dominance against left-handers.

    In short, Ozzie Albies is quickly fashioning himself into one of the better second basemen in all of baseball with speed, power, and a hit tool that is showing much more this season. There are second basemen this year that are having better seasons than him and there are Braves position players that are having better seasons than him...there is no question about either of those things. That does not mean that what he has done and how he has grown should be ignored.
     
    bcuga, BlazingRebel and One Two like this.
  27. Drown ‘Em

    Drown ‘Em The Candy Man
    Donor
    Alabama Crimson TideAtlanta BravesNational League

    By David O'Brien Aug 11, 2019[​IMG] [​IMG]
    MIAMI — From a most eventful Braves trip that included three four-hit games from Ozzie Albies, two walk-off losses and other assorted misadventures from the revamped-but-still-woeful Atlanta bullpen, a series win against one of the American League’s best teams and a series split with one of the National League’s worst, what ultimately stood out was the phenom.

    Ronald Acuña Jr.

    “I don’t know what more to say about him,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said after Acuña’s two-homer game Friday at Miami, which gave him five homers during a four-game streak and seven in eight games.

    Then he hit another home run Sunday in 5-4 win that gave the Braves a four-game split and a 4-3 record on their seven-game trip to Minnesota and Miami. That gave Acuña 33 homers to go with his NL-leading 28 stolen bases.

    The 21-year-old Venezuelan is poised to become the fourth and youngest player in franchise history to record at least 30 homers and 30 stolen bases in a season. And given his recent paces — majors-leading eight homers in August, majors-leading 15 stolen bases since the All-Star break — Acuña has a legitimate chance to join one of baseball’s most exclusive fraternities, the 40-40 club, which has but four members.

    “We all knew he could steal bases, but it’s not what we expected, stealing every game,” Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman said, smiling. “I always thought he was going to be the Mike Trout of the National League, and he’s right there doing what he was doing at his age. I mean, it doesn’t surprise any of us in this clubhouse, because we know how talented he is, how good he is, how much better he’s going to get.”

    With just two more stolen bases, Acuña will join Trout as the only players to have 30-30 seasons before their 22nd birthday.

    If Snitker is running out of things to say about Acuña — he’s praised him at every opportunity since 2018 spring training — Freeman and many others are ready to expound on the preternatural talents of the 2018 Rookie of the Year.

    The charismatic kid with the energized, playful personality — Acuña recently was seen dancing briefly after reaching second base — and a penchant for admiring home runs before a trot around the bases that includes a stutter step at third base is so good and works so hard to get better that all of his this-generation style has been embraced by even old-school teammates and coaches.

    “I love everything about him,” said catcher Brian McCann, a 15-year veteran who thought about Acuña for a moment, smiled and said, “If I were … I wish I was him. I wish I was him. Twenty-one years old and to have that ability — you don’t see it. You just don’t see it. And I truly believe he’s only scratching the surface. Which is scary.”

    “He’s only getting better,” said Martin Prado, the Marlins veteran and longtime former Brave who has been a mentor to Acuña, talking to his young countryman during every series between the teams. “He has ability to do stuff on the field that I’ve never seen before. The last guy I saw like that was Andruw Jones, and I think he’s better than Andruw. It’s early to say that, but he’s got better tools than Andruw.

    “I’m just hoping that God gives him a lot of good health for years to come, and we’ll see what he can become. This is only the beginning. When he gets older and he gets mature and he gets better and better information and knowing the league, watch out.”

    Before the series opener Friday, Prado, 35, and Acuña stood near the batting cage and talked for about 10 minutes without interruption from anyone else. Acuña leaned with one hand on a bat, listening intently.

    “We’re always talking about little details and stuff to get better at,” Prado said. “He listens, man. He listens to me. I know his dad; I played with his dad. And we’ve got a very good relationship.”

    The only players to have at least 40 homers and 40 steals in a season were Jose Canseco (1988), Barry Bonds (1996), Alex Rodriguez (1998) and Alfonso Soriano (2006). None of the four was as young in his 40-40 season as Acuña, who won’t turn 22 until December.

    After hitting .293 with a .366 on-base percentage, 26 home runs, 64 RBIs, 78 runs and 16 stolen bases in 111 games as a rookie, Acuña is hitting .298 in 118 games this season with a .378 OBP, 33 home runs, 80 RBIs and league-leading totals in runs (99) and stolen bases.

    “I’ve said since day one when I met him, he’s going to be a special player, and he’s showing it,” said second baseman Albies, 22, Acuña’s best friend and former minor-league roommate. “And it’s great. It’s not surprised me, because I know what he can do. When he’s locked in, he’s going. He can do whatever he wants.”

    “I don’t try to give it much thought, to be honest,” Acuña said through a translator. “I just try to keep playing hard. And like I said, I just want to play.”

    And play he does, with the joy of a kid who lives for summer and Little League. He and Albies are almost constantly smiling, joking around with each other and any teammates within earshot, which means everyone when the Braves are in the dugout. Acuña’s voice can be heard shouting from the dugout as much as venerable former manager Bobby Cox’s once did, although Acuña is usually teasing friends and others on his or the opposing team.

    “I love it,” McCann said. “He loves the game of baseball. This team, we have such a great clubhouse, and we’ve got a perfect mix of young guys, guys in the middle of their careers, and guys at the back end. Everybody gets along. We all show up with one thing on our mind, that’s winning.”

    Freeman said of Acuña’s fun-loving demeanor, “Well, this is a game. That’s another reason why he’s so good. I don’t even think they understand we’re in first place, fighting to make the playoffs. They’re just playing baseball they’ve played their whole lives. It’s just that they’re in the highest level now. I’ve always said with him and Ozzie, it doesn’t matter if they’re 0-for-4, they’re still the same person as if they’re 4-for-4. It’s how they act and who they are. And that’s what makes them so good.”

    When asked about being mentioned in the same sentence as the likes of Trout, the consensus greatest player in the game during the past decade, Acuña said, “It’s absolutely a privilege and an honor to be compared to players like that. And for me, honestly, it’s kind of a motivator and a means to stay humble. Because when you’re compared to a player like that, that’s great company.”

    Snitker has been asked about Acuña virtually every day since spring training began six months ago, either by Atlanta media or out-of-down writers. But he never seems to tire of answering the questions, nor do any of Acuña’s teammates.

    “We’re watching somebody that falls into that once-a-generation-player category,” said McCann, who has played with some of the greatest position players of the past two decades. “There’s a couple of them around the league now. To be that young, that dynamic … there’s nothing he can’t do on a baseball field. I’ve been impressed with him from Day 1.”

    Braves reliever Luke Jackson said, “We all talk in the bullpen, and all the new guys are like, ‘Yeah, that’s the best player I’ve ever seen play the game.’ Any time he’s at-bat, he’s got a chance to change the game. Unbelievable speed. Power. Good defense. He’s got the whole package. Great teammate. I don’t know what else — you don’t expect anything else now.

    “It’s like, 490-foot homer to right-center? ‘Yeah, might as well mix that in there.'”

    Acuña is one of the few bona fide “five-tool” players in the game, with outstanding skills in hitting for average, hitting for power, fielding, running and throwing. A recent move to right field, after Nick Markakis went on the injured list with a broken wrist, has allowed Acuña to better use his defensive skills, particularly his strong and accurate arm.

    “He’s legit five tools,” Freeman said. “It’s hard to put anybody in Trout’s category, but he’s well on his way. He’s only been in the big leagues a year-and-a-half, and he’s already doing special things. About to get 30-30.”

    Freeman smiled, wanting to get past one threshold with Acuña before taking on the next. “Forty-forty is a ridiculous club,” he said. “But let’s just get to 30-30 first. He’s special. He really is. And he’s only 21, which is the really insane thing. He’s mature, and his approach to this game … he can start off a game with three strikeouts and end it with two hits. That’s what separates players, in my opinion, is he doesn’t give up. He grinds his at-bats and gets on base twice. You’re thinking, ‘Man, he’s a little off tonight.’ And then all of a sudden it’s 2-for-4. And the next day he homers, and it’s three hits and three stolen bases.

    “That’s what separates the great players, is when you’re 0-for-3, and you get that hit in the eighth inning. When you easily just throw that at-bat away and try to hit a home run. He grinds it out. That’s the separation between those Mike Trouts and other great players. When you’re 0-for going into the eighth or ninth inning and even if you’re winning by a lot or losing by a lot, you still have the same concentration. … He’s already doing it at a young age. We’ll be up by eight, nine runs, and he’s grinding ABs.”

    Acuña has made several recent throws to second base or third base from right field that left jaws agape, and he made one to first base in a crucial situation in the ninth inning Sunday. With the Braves nursing a one-run lead and their beleaguered bullpen trying to finish strong in what has been a troublesome trip, Jackson gave up a leadoff single to right field by Isan Diaz. When Diaz made the mistake of rounding first and going a few steps too many toward second base, Acuña alertly fired a throw to Freeman for the out as Diaz scrambled in vain to get back.

    Jackson gave up a pair of two-out singles — one an infield hit — before Harold Ramirez flied out to center fielder Ender Inciarte, who had a three-run homer in the fourth inning and covered a lot of ground for a game-ending catch that the three-time Gold Glover made look far easier than it was.

    Discussing Acuña’s arm Saturday, Jackson said, “Absolute cannon. We’re all, like, sitting here talking about (Marlins right fielder) Brian Anderson’s arm all the time, and Acuña has just as good an arm. He has an absolute cannon out there. Shows it off when he needs to. I think it plays better in right field, where he can really bait people into going to second and throw people out at third. I mean, it’s fun to watch.”

    Jackson is not alone in that belief that Acuña is better suited to right field, which had been his regular spot, or center, where he has filled in when Inciarte has been hurt or otherwise out of the lineup.

    “I really like him (in right field),” Snitker said. “I just watch him out there playing, and that looks like the spot where he needs to be. … He’s done a real good job in center field and left field, but I just feel that arm really plays in right field. I mean, and he’s confident in it. It’s a weapon. Strong and accurate. Very accurate.”

    Braves pitcher Julio Teheran, like Freeman, has seen Acuña’s development since he first was brought over from minor-league camp for some Grapefruit League games as a 19-year-old.

    “I mean, he’s just getting better every day,” Teheran said. “I feel like he comes here every day and he just wants to be our guy. And he’s one of our guys. I’m so proud of him, the way he’s been carrying the team, obviously. Every time he gets to the plate it’s like we’re expecting something big that he’s going to do. I think he knows that, and that’s when you get motivated. But I’m really happy for him.

    “We’ve got Ozzie, too. Ozzie’s doing great. He’s been hitting; he’s been carrying the team. I’m just happy for them. They’ve been carrying the team.”

    Acuña has nine homers, 22 RBIs and an OPS over 1.100 in his past 17 games, and on the just-completed trip to Minnesota and Miami, he went 13-for-31 with six home runs, 10 RBIs, 12 runs and three stolen bases in seven games.

    “He’s in a zone,” Braves hitting coach Kevin Seitzer said Saturday after Acuña homered twice the night before against Miami starter Caleb Smith and reliever Austin Brice. “When he’s in this place, it’s amazing. … The one off of Brice, the breaking ball that he just flicked over the right-field wall, was the one that I was most excited about. Because he has a tendency to try to hit the ball 12 miles. That proved to him right there that all you’ve got to do is touch it and it’s got a chance to go out.

    “So, he’s in a good place. Ozzie, too. It’s pretty cool watching those two guys go.”

    Snitker was asked about the historic achievements Acuña was closing in on and whether there was anything that he needed to tell him with so much attention being focused on the young slugger.

    “I think we all know that his talent is rare,” Snitker said. “I think the biggest thing in that situation is the guy’s got to go out and just continue to play his game. Not play for stats. Play to help your team win, do what you can in that game. And you’ve got to be careful shooting for goals. Just play the game. It’ll come to you. You’ll get everything that you’re searching for if you just play the game the right way, just take every day as a separate entity and work and not look too far ahead. Because it’s just a lot of things you can’t control in this game.

    “So I think if you just stay in the present, things will have a way of working out.”

    Does he do a good job doing that?

    “Yeah, I think he does,” Snitker said. “I think he enjoys playing every day. I know he does. I just — you’re human, and when you start looking ahead, you have to guard against that a little bit, and just play your game. And those things are going to take care of themselves.”

    When the Marlins were dangling Christian Yelich in trade discussions two years ago, they asked the Braves for a prospect package led by Acuña. The Braves said no way. Freeman was reminded of that this weekend, then was asked if there was any major-league player he would rather have, with the possible exception of Mike Trout, during the next 10 years.

    In other words, would he trade Acuña for anyone else?

    “No. No. No,” Freeman said.

    No one?

    “No,” he said. “Ronald stays.”
     
    chuckles and Sterling A like this.
  28. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    lol at it taking this long for snit to figure out ronnie is a better option in right because of his arm

    really dumb guy
     
    clemsontyger04, Keef, One Two and 2 others like this.
  29. Drown ‘Em

    Drown ‘Em The Candy Man
    Donor
    Alabama Crimson TideAtlanta BravesNational League

    Dumb and loyal is a dangerous combo.
     
  30. Louis Holth

    Louis Holth but we also just might be those motherfuckers
    Donor
    South Carolina GamecocksAtlanta BravesCarolina PanthersTottenham Hotspur

    That’s the Braves way
     
  31. Stone Cold Steve Austin

    Stone Cold Steve Austin Tickler Extraordinaire
    Donor
    Alabama Crimson TideAtlanta Braves

    Having a HoFer and former GG and all star in right can cloud judgement.
     
  32. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    if he won a gold glove as a right fielder, just think how elite he’d be in left. prime andruw level tbh
     
  33. SC

    SC I’m boring and I’m bored
    Donor TMB OG
    Atlanta BravesTennisMississippi Rebels

    Well this is irritating.
     
  34. Room 15

    Room 15 Mi equipo esta Los Tigres
    Donor
    Auburn TigersAtlanta BravesAtlanta FalconsUnited States Men's National Soccer Team

    Two weeks ago would you have wanted Kennedy over Greene?
     
  35. SC

    SC I’m boring and I’m bored
    Donor TMB OG
    Atlanta BravesTennisMississippi Rebels

    Yeah. More premium stuff from a velocity standpoint.
     
  36. It'sAlwaysSunnyInAthens

    It'sAlwaysSunnyInAthens Well-Known Member
    Donor

    Greene sucks at baseball. Hope I'm wrong.
     
  37. Baby Boy

    Baby Boy Well-Known Member
    Donor
    Clemson TigersAtlanta BravesCarolina Panthers

    Joyce getting the start in LF and Culberson at SS.

     
    Louis Holth likes this.
  38. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    would rather start johan in left. joyce stinks

    (pls credit me when joyce has a great game tonight)
     
    clemsontyger04 and One Two like this.
  39. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    2 of 3 is good enough for me but i would love to end this mets delusion with a sweep
     
  40. Baby Boy

    Baby Boy Well-Known Member
    Donor
    Clemson TigersAtlanta BravesCarolina Panthers

  41. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    has pretty decent stats in AAA fuck it why not
     
  42. Festus McBadass

    Festus McBadass Cool ass dog and 5 star recruit
    Donor
    Georgia BulldogsAtlanta BravesAtlanta FalconsAtlanta United

    Quien?
     
    Room 15 likes this.
  43. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    goddammit snit

     
  44. Where Eagles Dare

    Where Eagles Dare The Specialist Show On Earth
    Donor
    Auburn TigersAtlanta BravesWashington Football TeamAtlanta United

    They all suck
     
  45. Where Eagles Dare

    Where Eagles Dare The Specialist Show On Earth
    Donor
    Auburn TigersAtlanta BravesWashington Football TeamAtlanta United

    He's such a fucking moron

    It's astonishing
     
  46. Festus McBadass

    Festus McBadass Cool ass dog and 5 star recruit
    Donor
    Georgia BulldogsAtlanta BravesAtlanta FalconsAtlanta United

    You can’t make this shit up
     
  47. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
    Donor
    North Carolina TarheelsAtlanta BravesCharlotte HornetsNew York GiantsManchester CityNational LeagueBarAndGrill

    he's truly beyond parody