It’s more of a saying than anything. You want your players making it hard on them. This is a sports phrase used in all sports. When trying out for varsity in highschool as a freshman I knew I wasn’t going to make it but the assistant coach told me “make the decision hard on them”.Talkin' Baseball wrote: ↑24 Feb 2026 12:47 pmAgree with Ronnie on this one. The decision has already been made. The aren't sending him from a handful of games at A+ to the majors. Full stop. If he has the kind of spring you describe, perhaps he opens the season at AA. It's ok to disagree (it's a much more enjoyable disagreement than speculating on how long they stick with someone before they pull the plug). We'll see how it pans out.Alex Reyes Cy Young wrote: ↑24 Feb 2026 12:34 pmAgree to disagree. If he blasted 7 hrs and hit for a 1000 ops it would be hard regardless if you agree or not.Ronnie Dobbs wrote: ↑24 Feb 2026 07:19 amThere's zero chance he will not be sent down. Even the most freakishly great spring training performance results in him being sent down. He played in the US for the first time last year, started at the FCL, moved to A ball, and has played all of 4 games at A+.Alex Reyes Cy Young wrote: ↑24 Feb 2026 06:01 amThis is wild. I am hoping he can make it really hard on them to send him down.
Ultimately he’s going back down but it would be “hard”. Whereas if he hit 150 and didn’t do jack it would be “easy”.
If you played high school college sports I think the phrase is understood. I could see a disconnect occurring if you never played a team sport with tryouts etc…