Tim Dillard
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, hey, the sun's out here in Milwaukee, and that's a good sign.
Well, they had really bad storms last night, you know, tornado-type weather that just came through.
So for the sun to be out like this, I mean, that's a great sun, yeah.
Her splits.
Yeah.
Usually righties dominate right-handed batters and lefties dominate left-handed batters.
And that really hasn't maybe been the case, you know, buddy, the young pitcher, Jacob Mizorowski will hit 101 probably on his first couple of pitches and he'll throw plenty in the triple digits.
And when he's really good is when he dials back a little bit and hits his spots.
I think
Um, it's too early to tell after just what three, you know, a handful of starts, uh, to start saying, well, he can only get righties out or he can only get lefties out and that kind of stuff.
But when you do have early numbers like that, if you're the opposing manager, you gotta play into them a little bit may affect, uh, what the lineup's going to look like.
Well, they're trying to be the Brewers of 2025, 2024, a team that is tough to beat.
And the reason they're tough to beat is they put the ball in play, they can run, they can bunt, they play fundamental baseball, they can steal bases, they'll take their walks.
I call it pay-gressive.
They're patiently aggressive.
If you don't throw a strike, they'll get on base by walking.
If you do throw a strike, they're going to put it in play right now.
I would say the ball's not flying their way.
If they hit the ball hard, it's been going right at somebody.
The only runs they scored in the last series against the Washington nationals were balls that went over the fence.