Perhaps the hitting coach helped, but not because of that Sesame St reasoning. "We let him be free" It doesn't get more free than allowing UNLIMITED flying helmets, baserunning outs, and defensive miscues. That crap explanation really means.... "Rangers got lucky".
Oh look, 3-run homer for Gomer, bat flip included. Good to know he didn't forget how to play baseball (but did in Houston apparently).
Per Rangers GM... Rangers made Gomez feel "free" to shorten his swing This situation is just another log on the Houston 50-year dumpster fire. Even worse news, thus far Carlos' career has not shown playoff shrinkage. He'll likely do well. _______ Rangers were only 1 out from already winning one..... we'll see what happens.
Rangers take the Astros for a joke. Dominate us on the field on a routine basis, steal our worst players and then turn him into a good one in the middle of the season. If I were a Rangers fan, I would dismiss everything that the Astros did, I wouldn't even consider them a rival team. The Astros are so far beneath the Rangers it's hilarious.
God that sucks. Has to be some blame on Houston because it is very hard to believe that it's purely coincidence that he went from being a star player, to sucking while with Houston, back to being badass as soon as he leaves Houston. Had he been a 3 WAR player as he's been since joining the Rangers, Houston is probably in the playoffs. Not to mention they get a draft pick after this season. Instead they get nothing and their rival benefits. Fml.
Pallilo was saying yesterday the Astros haven't developed any hitters... I assume he meant, besides Altuve. JD Martinez, Villar, Grossman, Gomez have all moved on and had success. Castro, Springer, and Tucker haven't improved. Charlie also said coaching shouldn't get any credit for Correa or Bregman, as they were top picks. Bright spot..... Valbuena was easily having his best season before DLing.
How the Rangers have helped Carlos Gomez revive his previously-stalled career ARLINGTON - The Rangers routed Houston during the season series, winning 15 of 19 games. Now, the Rangers are rubbing it in on the Astros by fixing a broken player they kicked to the curb: outfielder Carlos Gomez. Released by Houston in August, Gomez is reviving his stalled career with the Rangers. He continued the recovery process on Tuesday night with a three-run homer during a 6-4 comeback victory against Milwaukee at Globe Life Park. “It feels like for 10 years, I was blind,” Gomez said. “I’ve learned something I never knew.” In Houston, the Astros have to be shaking their heads in amazement. In parts of two disappointing seasons with the Astros, Gomez had only nine homers and 42 RBIs in 444 at-bats. Houston gave up on Gomez. In five weeks with the Rangers, Gomez has seven homers and 21 RBIs in 106 at-bats. The change started with hitting coaches Anthony Iapoce and Justin Mashore. They made mechanical changes in Gomez’s swing that give him a firmer back side and allow him to use his hands. That allows Gomez to be on time for more pitches. In the past, he was late on many pitches and tried to catch up with big swings that usually ended with flailing misses and the batting helmet flying off his head. Iapoce and Mashore also have Gomez thinking more like a hitter than a slugger. He is batting .366 in his last 41 at-bats. “You’ve got to hit before you slug,” Banister said. “He’s allowing himself a better chance to hit. With that, the confidence grows. ... We’ve seen him get to some balls that the big boys hit a long ways, and he’s done that. “He’s in a pretty good place now. We like what we see.” Gomez said the Rangers have repaired his damaged confidence with constant encouragement. His only regret is that it took so long to get into this situation. “I cannot imagine what I can do in 162 games with what I have now,” Gomez said.
Oh please. There's an entire organization with hundreds of people dedicated to realizing their investment in this player. He switches to a different organization and he's back to playing like an all-star.
Sometimes it's a change of scenery. A mental shift / clearing of the mind. Gomez seems like someone who lets failure get in his head. Seems very plausible that it was all him. I'd also love to see if this performance continues, given that he had a slight uptick last season as well before going back in the tank
It might be that he sabotaged himself on purpose in Houston so he could up his chances of being moved elsewhere. I think its by mutual agreement the scenery here didn't suite him.
Luhnow will hire a stats coach next year. Some egg head from MIT that will teach our guys how to bat.
That's all non sense. This is on Carlos Gomez and Gomez alone. He needed to hit rock bottom for anyone to get his attention. He'd been doing the same thing successfully for a long long time and was willing to make some changes when a team said they'd rather cut him for nothing than let him be on the roster.