Peter Abraham: Taker of Globe Sunday Baseball Notes Mantle

joe dokes

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SoSH Member
Jul 18, 2005
30,243
Seemed fine last couple of weeks. Nothing that made me stop and say, "I wonder if anyone posted in the thread about this...."
He has opinions. He will likely support them with something approaching facts.
 

Granite Sox

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SoSH Member
Feb 6, 2003
5,056
The Granite State
He’s pretty thin-skinned, especially on Twitter, so it will be interesting to see how long he refrains from making or limits his snotty little remarks in the column. I typically enjoyed his periodic Beat Writer’s Notebook. If he sticks to baseball, he’ll be fine. And please, no Springsteen references.
 

John Marzano Olympic Hero

has fancy plans, and pants to match
Dope
SoSH Member
Apr 12, 2001
24,548
I think that the last two weeks have been pretty good, I don't have any complaints. But I like Peter Abraham, I think that he gets a bad rap around here sometimes.
 

Van Everyman

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Apr 30, 2009
26,993
Newton
So, Pete seems almost perpetually salty these days. There seemed to be an uptick last year when he blew a gasket over the Vazquez trade (which I think worked out ok) and took what was admittedly a down and confounding year almost personally.

His latest column has just tons of jabs at the Sox – the owner avoids pressers, Casas is arrogant about his poor defensive play (using a quote I read as humor as evidence), Rich Hill has thrown more innings than any Sox starter, they have no All-Star players, they should just release Dalbec or trade him, Kike has sucked, etc.

It’s not the substance of what he’s saying is wrong so much as the kind of relentlessness of it all. I still think Pete is a talented writer but I had high hopes for him taking over the Cafardo role (tho obviously not the way he did). At times now I almost get the sense that as a columnist now he feels some obligation to always be looking at the glass half empty, for hypocrisy, discontent and failure. Which is fine if you are covering, say, the White House. But this is baseball.

Admittedly he’s finding plenty right now to be disappointed with but @Chad Finn and Alex Speier do as well. They just don’t seem to revel in the failure quite the way Pete does. And that’s a little disappointing given that I think he’s a solid writer (as evidenced by the Cohen stuff in this column), a believer in advanced metrics and seems to legitimately love and understand the modern game.