That’s the only condition to his success: be healthy enough for 26+ starts, he fucking dominates.

It’s actually remarkable:

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I know you didn’t look so here’s a screenshot.

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I’m not bullshitting you.

Squint away and you will find brilliance.

Look even harder and you’ll realize he’s on the Atlanta Braves this season.

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Yes, baseball fans are well aware.

Casual sports fans, however, need reminding about this stuff.

And those two groups of people are completely different.

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Consider this for the latter crowd.

Chris Sale is still very good.

There’s a lot of opinions over the last couple years that are absolute dogshit.

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A lot of people trashed him for being a looney bin in rehab starts.

Then the same people were surprised he wasn’t retiring.

More surprised the Braves wanted him.

And now those same filthy stupid motherfuckers will vote him comeback player of the year.

All those guys can suck brick.

Chris Sale is awesome because he is a crazy person.

That’s a primary-commonality amongst great pitchers.

Show me a great pitcher, I’ll show you unhinged in all shapes and sizes.

There aint no regular Joes slinging plus plus stuff on the big stage.

Now the reason that matters is because a lot of them take everything very personally.

Like to an overwhelming extent.

And again, Chris Sale is no different.

He has something to prove to himself: he can strikeout whoever, whenever.

Ergo - the last couple years have been rock bottom.

Hurt or in-process of being hurt.

Being weak and incapable.

Not the guy who finishes top 5 in the Cy Young every year.

Carrying a plus 6 October ERA into his late 30’s.

Just a whole bunch of mental stuff that could rip a guy to shreds inside.

So then go back to him being a psychopath.

A lot of guys stop long before they get to Chris Sale’s level.

And ergo, again, that’s what makes Chris Sale great.

I feel like Chet Steadman

But that’s truth.

That’s something nobody talks about because so few can understand.

Even whatever I’m saying now is at best secondhand.

In that regard, may I recommend Joe Posnaski’s Top 100?

I assure you in this regard, my opinion of Chris Sale’s mental approach is vetted and verified.

He’ll stab you with a pair of kitchen scissors if you take him out too early.

That’s not a joke.

Specifically, last night he struck out 9 in seven scoreless, 2-hit innings against my Cubs.

It was both frustrating and beautiful to watch.

If you dig statcast data, you’ll see not much has changed on pitch usage or velocity.

He’s been a fastball/slider guy for a long time with a filthy change.

So you won’t find a sweeper or split or something new in the advanced stuff.

I’ve done the research for you so I’ll keep it easy.

He’s throwing more strikes more often early in the count.

He’s being aggressive, which is a sign that he’s healthy.

It’s nothing fancy or overly special.

Just a matter of having the strength to be confident and go back to basics.

The results are crazy.

Everything is up and yet nothing has really changed on paper.

Which alas goes back to Chris Sale, the competitor.

The sumbitch who wants it more than you, me and everyone reading this.

He could have retired a long time ago and everyone would have started a HOF debate anyways.

Arguably the best strikeout LHP since Randy Johnson, no?

He’s back and he looks extra pissed off.

This is not a blog that needs a visual of one good pitch or dominant strikeout.

it’s possible for you to use your imagination, I’m sure.

That’s awesome, and if he’s using steroids, even fuckin better.

Which reminds me to circle back with you guys later.

I think that would be an interesting wrinkle.

Do you go bullpen or power hitting?

Use it on a minor leaguer or a veteran.

You get 3 guys, who are you picking?

I’m taking Chris Sale and pumping him full of everything.

But again that’s a different blog.

For now just enjoy that he’s back.

There’s nobody else like him.