#Scott schebler
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flashlefler · 1 month ago
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CINCINNATI REDS BOBBLEHEAD STADIUM GIVEAWAY SERIES PART TWO.
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BILLY HAMILTON - 2014
KEN GRIFFEY JR. - 2014 RED'S HOF
HOMER BAILEY - 2014 NO HITTERS
AROLDIS CHAPMAN - 2014
MR. REDLEGS - 2014 ALL STAR 2015
JAY BRUCE - 2014 ROBBED HOME RUN
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DEVIN MESORACO - 2015
ROB DIBBLE - 2015 NASTY BOY
RANDY MYERS - 2015 NASTY BOY
NORM CHARLTON - 2015 NASTY BOY
BILLY HAMILTON - 2015
TODD FRAZIER - 2015
BRANDON PHILLIPS - 2015
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PETE ROSE - 2015 QUEEN CITY STARS
J. BENCH - 2015 QUEEN CITY STARS
B. LARKIN - 2015 QUEEN CITY STARS
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EUGENIO SUAREZ - 2016
JOEY VOTTO - 2016 VOTTOMATIC
TODD FRAZIER - 2016
MR. REDLEGS - 2016 STAR WARS X-WING
KEN GRIFFEY JR. 2016 GRIFFEY NIGHT
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ADAM DUVALL - 2017
TUCKER BARNHART - 2017
TONY PEREZ - 2017 PAST AND PRESENT
SEAN CASEY - 2017 PAST AND PRESENT
JOEY VOTTO - 2017 PAST AND PRESENT
BILLY HAMILTON -
RAISEL IGLESIAS - 2017
HOMER BAILEY - 2017 CAMO NIGHT
ANTHONY DESCLAFANI - 2017
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ROSIE RED - 2018
SCOOTER GENNETT - 2018 4 HR GAME
EUGENIO SUAREZ - 2018 FLAGS
TUCKER BARNHART - 2018 GOLD GLOVE
SCOTT SCHEBLER - 2018
ERNIE LOMBARDI - 2019
JOE MORGAN - 2019
BARRY LARKIN - 2019
DAVEY CONCEPTION - 2019
JOHNNY BENCH - 2019
KEN GRIFFEY JR. - 2019
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YASIEL PUIG - 2019 WILD HORSE
BUDDY THE ELF 2019
MR. REDLEGS -2019 150TH SEASON
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SONNY GRAY - 2020
TREVOR BAUER - 2020
MARTY BRENNEMAN - 2020 BOOTH MIC
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TED KLOZZEWSKI - 2021 SLUGGERS
GEORGE FOSTER - 2021 SLUGGERS
EUGENIO SUAREZ - 2021 SLUGGERS
BARRY LARKIN - 2021 30/30 SHORTSTOP
MIKE MOUSTAKAS - 2021
GAPPER - 2021
SHOGO AKIYAMA - 2021
JOEY VOTTO - 2022 JEDI JOEY
JEFF BRANTLEY - 2022 THE COWBOY
MR. REDLEGS - 2022 RETRO REDLEGS
TYLER STEVENSON
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JOEY VOTTO - 2023
BRONSON ARROYO - 2023 HOF PLAQUE
JONATHAN INDIA - 2023
NICK LODOLO - 2023
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baseballin · 6 years ago
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all-star-brad-hand · 7 years ago
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Schebler's sac plates Gennett
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designondeck · 8 years ago
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2017 SPIRIT BOX BREAK - PACK 10
137. Jordan Zimmermann 179. Carson Smith 191. Michael Conforto 299. Stephen Strasburg 89. Arodys Vizcaino 280. Scott Schebler 32. Blake Treinen 96. Sean Doolittle 203. David Dahl (RC) G133. Huston Street TL58 . Rougned Odor - Team Leader (TEX-HRs)
Pitcher-heavy pack. Best card is probably the Dahl rookie.
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goalhofer · 3 years ago
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Top 10 MiLB RBI Leaders: Week 6
10: Scott Schebler, Salt Lake (26)
9: Rangel Ravelo, Oklahoma City (27)
8: Emmanuel Rivera, Omaha (28)
7: Jesús Sánchez, Jacksonville (28)
6: Curtis Terry, Round Rock (29)
5: Luke Raley, Oklahoma City (29)
4: Zach Green, Nashville (30)
3: Wander Franco, Durham (31)
2: Joe Adell, Salt Lake (32)
1: Jose Siri, Sugar Land (32)
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playerswiki · 5 years ago
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"Who is Scott Schebler? How much net worth and salary does Scott Schebler acquire? Is Scott Schebler Single or Married? Who is his girlfriend
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communicationczar · 7 years ago
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BATTERS WITH AN EQUAL NUMBER OF HR AND BB
BATTERS WITH AN EQUAL NUMBER OF HR AND BB #MLB #Dodgers
Nine to Know: Batters with the same number of homers and walks this season Yes, it’s another Cody Bellinger stat  Player HR BB Tm G PA AB Cody Bellinger 21 21 LAD 51 215 193 Scott Schebler 19 19 CIN 65 255 228 Trey Mancini 12 12 BAL 55 202 187 Rougned Odor 12 12 TEX 69 292 275 Chris Iannetta 8 8 ARI 33 112 102 Robinson Chirinos 8 8 TEX 27 97 86 We…
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3oldredsfans · 8 years ago
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majorleaguefantasysports · 8 years ago
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"Hamilton Sound" Buys and Sells
“Hamilton Sound” Buys and Sells
Hello again.   Missed last week due to my son going on the DL with an ankle injury, with visits to several doctors and all.  Speaking of DL, anyone else getting crushed by DL visits this season?  Seems like more teams, with the 10-day-DL, are willing to put guys on said DL.  It is nice because you don’t have injured guys missing a couple of days before the team makes a decision to put that player…
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clevelandsweetspotting · 8 years ago
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From the Field: Scott Schebler, of, Cincinnati Reds
From the Field: Scott Schebler, of, Cincinnati Reds
Bio care of baseball-reference.com Scott Schebler was taken in the 26th round of the 2010 draft by the Reds, out of Des Moines Area Community College. That last season of college ball he hit .446/.529/.877 with 20 HR. Those are strong numbers, and he was ready to transfer to Division 1 Wichita State for the 2011 season, but was snagged by the Dodgers in the 26th round, who convinced him to go…
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rotodbtumblog-birthdays · 6 years ago
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Happy 28th Birthday Scott Schebler (Cincinnati Reds) from @rotodb #HappyBirthday #HBD #Birthday #CakeDay #Sports #Fantasy #FantasySports #MLB #MajorLeagueBaseball #Baseball #FantasyBaseball #RedsCountry #Cincinnati #CincinnatiReds #Reds
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baseballin · 7 years ago
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Reds' 20 (or more) HR squad
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twins2994 · 7 years ago
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Twins Snap 8-Game Losing Streak!!!
Reds 1 Twins 3 W-Odorizzi (2-2) L-Romano (1-3) SV-Rodney (3)
The Minnesota Twins have had a rough week. The offense hasn’t all put it together and the pitching has been horrendous the past week. The team finally returned home last night only to lose a slugfest with the worst team in baseball. This afternoon, the Twins looked a lot better and snapped a long losing streak. The Reds got to work in the second inning. Scott Schebler came up to the plate with two outs and crushed a Jake Odorizzi curveball out to right for a solo blast. This put Cincinnati on top 1-0 after two frames. The Twins offense finally got things going against Sal Romano in the fourth. Eddie Rosario led-off with a single to center and Eduardo Escobar lined a double down the right field line. Rosario was around third and about to slow down when Gene Glynn sent him. Rosario scored and the game was tied at one. Later in the inning, Robbie Grossman hit a sac fly to right and the Twins were up 2-1 after four innings. In the fifth, the Twins got some insurance as Mitch Garver led-off. Garver smoked a Sal Romano fastball out to left for a solo blast and Minnesota was on top 3-1. Meanwhile, Jake Odorizzi threw a nice game with six solid innings. The bullpen did the rest as Zach Duke hurled a clean seventh and Addison Reed help set up Fernando Rodney for the ninth. Rodney walked two guys in the inning, but got out of the jam as the Twins snapped an eight-game losing streak. 
-Final Thoughts- Jake Odorizzi had the Twins best start in what seems like a long time today. He went six innings and allowed a run on five hits with two walks and three strikeouts. Zach Duke struck out one in the seventh, Addison Reed had a hitless eighth, and Fernando Rodney notched his third save of the season. Eddie Rosario and Mitch Garver led the team with two hits. The team hit 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position and left eight men on base. This was finally a good game to watch for the team that was low scoring and well pitched. The Twins have won all four games I’ve been to this season and the streak is at eight games going back to last year. Maybe, I should go to every game. Tomorrow, Tyler Mahle will face Jose Berrios in the rubber game.
-Chris Kreibich- 
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junker-town · 4 years ago
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Dorktown: Scott Schebler’s 2017 was one of the strangest in MLB history
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Not sure there’s ever been a more inexplicable season in the 5 million-year history of baseball
In 2017, whenever Reds right fielder Scott Schebler played on the road, he was constantly crushing doubles, doing so on 8.79% of his 273 road plate appearances. In other words, 24 of ’em. Away from Cincinnati, he was a bona fide doubles machine.
However.
Schebler did not fare quite as well within his home confines of the Great American Ball Park. There he doubled on 0.39% of his 258 home plate appearances … in other words, once:
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To repeat, 2017 Scott Schebler doubled twenty-four (24) times on the road and one (1) time at home. 8.79% vs. 0.39%. Ah, where to begin.
Of the 216 MLB players with at least 400 total plate appearances in 2017, Jose Ramirez had the highest overall doubles rate, smashing one 8.68% of the time. No one else even topped eight percent. Schebler’s teammate, Jose Peraza, had MLB’s lowest doubles rate at … 1.74%. No one else was under two:
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Meaning Scott Schebler on the road was a better doubler than the best doubler, and at home he was a (far) worse doubler than the worst doubler. The dust settles like this when the folks who are just unnecessary clutter from the last chart are removed:
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That’s kinda cheating, of course, because it’s not an apples-to-apples comparison as it uses other players’ overall season rates (as opposed to just isolating the smaller sample home and road portions of Schebler’s). But it’s a decent excuse to get home Schebler and road Schebler on the same chart to provide some perspective as to how each version generally stacks up.
But it’s also not like everyone else’s data reflecting the full season instead of just their home or road splits proves to substantially alter things. The big picture remains the same when everyone’s seasons are broken down in the identical way as Schebler’s.
To craft a comparison that is apples-to-apples in its samples, here are just road doubles rates for those 216 players that had at least 400 total plate appearances:
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The story doesn’t change in any significant way. Schebler’s road rate is still the best, and Ramirez is still the only other guy there above eight percent.
And here are just the home rates:
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Again, the story doesn’t deviate much. Schebler’s rate remains by far the worst; Peraza is still the only other player even under two percent (and even Peraza had three home doubles in fewer plate appearances), and nearly everyone else is up above three percent.
No matter how you slice it, road Schebler was more likely than any big leaguer to hit a double, and home Schebler was less likely than any big leaguer to hit a double.
As you’d imagine, the overwhelming majority of the 7,564 individual 25-double seasons in the live-ball era (since 1920) feature something in the general vicinity of a 50/50 home/road split in terms of where each double was hit. Something in the ballpark of a 1:1 ratio. Schebler’s 24 road doubles against one home double stands out like Elaine on a dance floor:
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But what about the folks at the very bottom there, those that had the biggest discrepancies the other way around? Did, perhaps, someone approach what ’17 Schebler did? In other words, producing a similarly polarizing doubles outcome, just with the home and road elements reversed.
Nope.
Let’s focus on the number 96 for a sec — the percentage of 2017 Schebler’s doubles that he hit on the road. Only 25 of the other 7,563 seasons in our sample entailed as much as 80% coming either at home or on the road:
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Gotta go back to 1959 Frank Malzone before finding someone that even cracked 85%. And while that data is just for those that hit at least 25 doubles, you gotta drop all the way down to 13 doubles for the next-most that have been hit while maintaining such a large home/road discrepancy:
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If you’re perhaps thinking Great American Ball Park may be inherently anti-double, that is not the case, and I’ll cite three pieces of evidence.
First, the non-Schebler Reds hit 224 doubles in 2017: 113 at home, 111 on the road.
Second, through the first 18 years of the Great American Ball Park era, the Reds — with 2017 Schebler exempted — have hit 48.71% of their doubles at home. There is nothing abnormally low about that figure, and in fact 13 of the other 29 teams have a lower such percentage in that time.
And finally, no other Red who’s ever hit 25 doubles in a season in the GABP era has had fewer than 28% of ’em occur at home:
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So nope, his home park provides zero explanation. There simply is no explanation, other than the baseball gods just turning the baseball dial to the max.
There are two more oddities from Schebler’s 2017 season. While they’re not quite as mystifying as 24 road doubles and one home double, the fact that they occurred in conjunction with that is delightful.
One is another bizarre home/road split, though with this one the thing happened mostly at home and barely happened on the road. That thing? Getting hit by pitches.
In 2017, Scott Schebler was hit by 12 pitches, just in Cincinnati. That’d be a relatively high full-season number. In fact only 16 other players were hit that much that season, period. As recently as 2013, being hit by 12 pitches would’ve ranked you in the top-10. So to get hit that much *just at home* was some strong-to-quite-strong work absorbing blows in GABP.
But on the road?
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Two. Conveniently it’s sorta a clean comparison with that doubles split, and it seems a quarter as extreme: 12 home HBP vs. 24 road doubles and two road HBP vs. one home double. Nevertheless, it holds up quite impressively. With apologies to 2002 Jermaine Dye (all 10 HBP occurring on the road) and 2012 Miguel Montero (11 of 12 at home), we’ll focus just on the 340 individual seasons with at least 14 HBP in the live-ball era:
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He’s up at six home HBP per road HBP when only 1952 Minnie Minoso and 2006 Melvin Mora exceeded three. In terms of including those who had polarizing HBP seasons in the opposite way, well, 85.7% of Schebler’s HBPs came at home. Only 13 of the other 339 seasons in our sample entailed as much as 75% coming either at home or on the road:
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The only other player above 80 percent at either location is 2006 Shane Victorino, who had the same 12 and two numbers as ’17 Schebler. It was as though at home Schebler was trying to toughen up for hockey tryouts, and yet on the road the rate at which he was plunked (0.73 percent) was comfortably below the MLB average (0.95 percent). Maybe he was just too busy hitting doubles.
The third eye-catching split from Schebler’s glorious 2017 season was that with both zero and two outs, he homered on over 7 percent of his plate appearances. For perspective, just five players that year homered on 7 percent of their overall plate appearances: Giancarlo Stanton, Aaron Judge, Cody Bellinger, Joey Gallo, and J.D. Martinez. So he was one of the very best home run-hitters in the game if there happened to be zero or two outs. But heaven forbid there should be exactly one out:
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There have been over 1,000 individual 30-homer seasons since 1973, and just 17 others entailed as few as four homers coming with a specific number of outs:
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What a season.
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goalhofer · 4 years ago
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2020 Atlanta Braves Roster
Pitchers
#15 Sean Newcomb (Middleborough, Massachusetts)
#19 Shane Greene (Clermont, Florida)
#30 Kyle Wright (New Market, Alabama)
#32 Col Hamels (San Diego, California)
#33 A.J. Minter (Bullard, Texas)
#34 Felix Hernandez (Valencia, Venezuela)
#36 Mark Melancon (Golden, Colorado)
#37 Pete Kozma (Owasso, Oklahoma)
#38 Josh Tomlin (Whitehouse, Texas)
#40 Mike Soroka (Calgary, Alberta)
#48 Jhoulys Chacin (Maracaibo, Venezuela)
#51 Will Smith (Newnan, Georgia)
#54 Max Fried (Santa Monica, California)
#55 Chris Martin (Arlington, Texas)
#56 Darren O’Day (Jacksonville, Florida)
#62 Dany Toussaint; Jr. (Pembroke Pines, Florida)
#63 Jeremy Walker (Mocksville, North Carolina)
#64 Jacob Webb (Riverside, California)
#67 Philip Pfeifer (Farragut, Tennessee)
#68 Tyler Matzek (Mission Viejo, California)
#75 Grant Dayton (Madison, Alabama)
#77 Luke Jackson (Ft. Lauderdale, Florida)
Catchers
#16 Travis d’Arnaud (Lakewood, California)
#25 Cole Flowers (Roswell, Georgia)
Infielders
#1 Ozie Albies (Willemstad, Curacao)
#5 Freddie Freeman (Orange, California)
#7 James Swanson (Marietta, Georgia)
#8 Charlie Culberson (Calhoun, Georgia)
#17 Johan Camargo (Panama City, Panama)
#18 Matt Adams (Phillipsburg, Pennsylvania)
#24 Adeiny Hechavarria (Santiago De Cuba, Cuba)
#27 Michael Riley (Southaven, Mississippi)
#44 Yonder Alonso (Havana, Cuba)
Outfielders
#11 Ender Inciarte (Maracaibo, Venezuela)
#13 Ronald Acuna; Jr. (La Guaira, Venezuela)
#20 Marcell Ozuna (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
#22 Nick Markakis (Woodstock, Georgia)
#23 Adam Duvall (Louisville, Kentucky)
#45 Scott Schebler (Cedar Rapids, Iowa)
Coaches
Manager Brian Snitker (Macon, Illinois)
Bench coach Walt Weiss (Suffern, New York)
Hitting coach Kevin Seitzer (Leawood, Kansas)
Assistant hitting coach Jose Castro (Miami, Florida)
Pitching coach Rick Kranitz (Glendale, Arizona)
Bullpen coach Marty Reed (Boston, Massachusetts)
Batting practice pitcher Tomas Perez (Barquisimeto, Venezuela)
Bullpen catcher Jimmy Leo (St. Augustine, Florida)
Bullpen catcher Jose Yepez (Carora, Venezuela)
Catching coach Sal Fasano (Hoffman Estates, Illinois)
1st base coach DeMarlo Hale (Chicago, Illinois)
3rd base coach Ron Washington (New Orleans, Louisiana)
Assistant coach Eric Young (New Brunswick, New Jersey)
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3oldredsfans · 8 years ago
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