Cincinnati views the rookie left-hander as a long-term building block, but maybe he’s in the wrong role.
Ryan Schimpf has 28 homers in 366 at-bats and barely anyone has noticed, maybe because the ball is juiced everywhere.
As more and more teams go heavy into catcher framing, improvements are obvious and the margins are shrinking.
Rockies rookie right-hander Antonio Senzatela is a lot more interesting than the raw numbers would suggest.
The way baseball is played has changed, so it’s time to change the way we treat beanballs.
Maybe The Wizard has some magical ways to make baseball more appealing.
In the middle of his start, a struggling Adam Wainwright began switching sides of the pitching rubber.
Lorenzo Cain has never been a patient hitter, but perhaps his early walk-drawing this season is a sign of change.
Earl Weaver would have a lot of faith in these Cubs.
Freeman’s approach is approaching perfection.
Reds prospect Zach Vincej explains how he changed his hitting approach through tinkering and ignoring cliches.
Chris Archer, Kevin Kiermaier, and the New Rays look to start another winning era in Tampa Bay.
Toronto’s young closer has a potentially dominant cutter, if he can just figure out how to use it.
Falling for the WBC and everything that comes with it.
Traded from the Reds to the Marlins, Dan Straily is an example of how new pitching data can help change a repertoire.