translated from Spanish: The unexpected heroes of playoffs

UNINVITED.- This year will not be the foreseeable in major leagues, not at least, apparently, in playoffs. Big names have disappeared from the map by work and grace perhaps from the pandemic. Somehow, the big, rhyming characters, whether pitchers or frame players, have come out of focus. This is how in the playoffs we will be seeing perhaps the emergence and presence of those who until recently were unthinkably heroes of their own team and baseball in general. Notice how the Washington Nationals won’t be in the postseason, and so Max Scherzer, who had been the star of the big establishment, is out of focus. Just as examples, if we tie up to “classic” models, that Clayton Kershaw now looks in October, or Aaron Judge is healthy and connects home runs. So this would stick a little more to the traditional script.
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But this year, the atypical one, seems to show us little-seen faces, poorly pronounced names and performances that have to be revered even if there is no lack of the intentions of asterisks because of the unusualness of the campaign. For example, knowing that American MVP José Ramirez is the burning ballerlist of the Cleveland Indians, that the Chicago White Sox Cuban cauda are real protagonists of the baseball fall, that the New San Diego Padres bake light up, or that oakland’s low-paid take the chestnuts out of the fire. What we see is that there is a whole pool of possible unexpected heroes in the playoffs, names that may be thrown to starvation this October that looms and leave behind what was expected, which seemed logical and that apparently the coronavirus was carried between the legs. RAMOS.- Remarkable season that of Roberto Ramos in Korean baseball, reaching to today 38 home units, leading the department, and showing the good sorceress that moved to its sale by the Colorado Rockies. There will be no need in the pen flight analysis to say that what Ramos has done so far challenges his move to Asian baseball and that he questions that the Denver-based squadron has sold it. There is a doubt, it goes, to think of it as a potential major leaguer, so that your current achievements have been realized in a baseball very similar to that of the triple A of the United States, precisely its source of origin before its arrival in Korea.It will have to be held before the proverbial “the gringos are rarely wrong” to understand the sale of Ramos and the apparent little patience that the Rockies had. More than anything, we should keep in mind that baseball is first and for all a business and that if there’s one thing league clubs know about it, it’s how to make wool through their assets. Good for Ramos, excellent 2020 campaign and welcome your achievements. Imagining his future with an eventual return to America sounds for now far from achievable. Returning from Korea to play in minor leagues is not the best of the scenarios.



Original source in Spanish

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