kevin holt

August 15th, 2011 at 4:17 PM ^

Related note, different sport:

Todd Bertuzzi. Hated him. Now I at least trust him as a Wing and a different person. And he was a full 10 years older than Young when his incident occured. The incident was completely different, of course, in a less gentlemanly game and against a player instead of an official. But the part about learning to trust someone is similar, non?

kevin holt

August 15th, 2011 at 4:58 PM ^

Both are still pretty much hotheads, but can be forgiven partly because of the healing effects of time, partly because they get older, wiser, and more in control, and partly because they contribute to the team. When you're winning, it's hard not to forgive people for the past. It helps if they contribute off the field, too, either cooperating or leading with the team.

coldnjl

August 15th, 2011 at 3:53 PM ^

People can change, but you live with your past mistakes and I see no problem with someone thinking he is a dick bc of that...

and I agree...19 is plenty old enough to know not to throw a bat at an ump. Hell, little leaguers know that

chitownblue2

August 15th, 2011 at 4:05 PM ^

he has admittedly not hit anyone with a bat, as far as I know, since he was 19.

He has, however, acquire a pretty terrible reputation independent of that incident. Not of violence, but of just being an ass.

There's a reason why a guy who was the #1 Prospect in all of baseball to every single service (stat-oriented ones like Baseball Prospectus and Scouting-oriented ones like Baseball America) has been given up on by 2 teams at the age of 25.

Tater

August 15th, 2011 at 7:14 PM ^

Young made a mistake while he was young and learned from it.  Since it wasn't a pattern or something that involved a premeditated or prolonged attack on someone, I really don't see holding on to all of that emnity for so long.  

But, hey: if we all thought the same, the world would be a total bore.

MaizeNBlu628

August 15th, 2011 at 5:17 PM ^

You're right they are two different things, but still an example of a player making some terrible decisions, then able to learn from it and be able to come back and excel as a ball player. Hamilton did some hard hard drugs, not like Josh Howard who likes to blaze before games.

chitownblue2

August 15th, 2011 at 3:57 PM ^

His OPS was 17th of the 42 starting AL outfielders.

That's moderately above average.

You're acting as if I have something personally against a player that I've never met, nor followed particularly closely.

He has, at best, been moderately above average. In his other 4 years, he has just been bad. He DOES have a poor reputation for taking coaching. There is a reason he's available to a division rival for peanuts.

chitownblue2

August 15th, 2011 at 4:17 PM ^

Fine. How about WARP?

Last year, he was 2 Wins Above Replacement, 124th in MLB for offensive players. Behind peers such as:

Jim Edmonds

Russell Branyan

Jason Bartlett

Ben Zobrist

Wilson Betemit

Josh Willingham

Pat Burrell

Ryan Raburn

yoopergoblue

August 15th, 2011 at 5:00 PM ^

I will take those numbers over "Singleo" Ordonez anyday with the number he has been putting up this year.  Ordonez has no range whatsoever anymore and is batting like .220 right now.  I think this is a great move to help hold off the Indians and Sox.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

August 15th, 2011 at 3:19 PM ^

I don't know about the rest one way or the other but "approached ok" is selling him ridiculously short, unless you mean "approached ok in a downwards direction because his worst OPS other than this season is .724."  I mean, I can't see how his 2010 season qualifies as "less than ok."

chitownblue2

August 15th, 2011 at 3:30 PM ^

"less than ok" is hyperbolic. He was around average, offensively. People fall in love with that BA, but the power was poor, and the plate discipline non-existent. Now we see what happens when 12-15 fewer ball drop for him.

He was, in reality, about as good as .243 hitting Carlos Quentin last year.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

August 15th, 2011 at 3:40 PM ^

Well, I figured "approaching OK" is the same as "not there yet."  I don't see how I get accused of hyperbole when you're calling his power "poor."  Averaging 15 HR and 36 2B per 162 games is not poor; I mean, it's not like we'd be asking him to replace Cabrera.  Victor Martinez averages 20 and 38 per 162 games, respectively, so what do you want us to trade for, Hank Aaron?

The team the t…

August 15th, 2011 at 4:14 PM ^

when you watch him injure himself trying to catch a routine flyball.   He has a great arm, but is one of the worst fielders I've ever seen.  It's been painful to watch here in Minneapolis.  He has a ton of potential, but I don't see much motivation for him to be more than a .250 avg guy.

bing24

August 15th, 2011 at 3:09 PM ^

Young is having a bad year...But still batting 40 points higher than Fagglio! I'd rather have Demtri Young playing than Mags, he is gosh damn awful on the field and at the plate. My 83 yr old grandmother has more pop at the plate than him. Delmon is also 12 years younger than fagpipes.

I have an unhealthy hatred for mags, hudler, rip hamilton and rafalski...1 down