Results tagged ‘ Writers ’
The Prince Of New York’s Sunday Lightning, 12.14.2008
How many trades, signings or possibilities are floated during every hot stove season that common sense would dictate have little or no chance of coming to pass? How many different scenarios are said to be “close” or “near completion” or any other adjective to describe where certain things stand only to see them scatter to the winds and be conveniently forgotten as if they’ve never happened? On Jake Peavy alone, we’ve had more than our fill of deals that were on, then off; on, then off; on, on, on, off, off, on, off, onoff, onononononoffoffoffoff; over and over again and it’s not only tiresome, but
instead of drawing interest to baseball’s off season, it creates a culture of doubt in what’s really happening, and mistrust for those that are supposed to be getting the information directly from the participants.
A few days ago, in addition to the story of C.C. Sabathia signing with the Yankees, Rotoworld.com reported that the Yankees were also close to signing Derek Lowe to a long term contract. It’s
known by now that Lowe is still out there and the Yankees actually came to terms with A.J. Burnett instead of Lowe. Burnett, who was said to be preparing to sign with the Braves, jumped on the Yankees more lucrative offer. This isn’t to pick on Rotoworld alone because the other sports outlets—-ESPN.com; Fox Sports; Sports Illustrated—-have come up with stories detailing what’s going on with various franchises only to see their reports either proven to be
completely erroneous or missing crucial details.
For every reporter who’s accurate (Fox’s Ken Rosenthal’s been on the money; SI’s Jon Heyman’s pretty good), there are dozens of things floating around about which team executives act bewildered when they hear of them. It’s fun when these rumors start to pop up and get fans excited, but how many of them actually come to pass? How many of those deal that were “90% done” are forgotten and disappear moments after the story is published.
There are the tedious (Jake Peavy’s ongoing soap opera with the clueless Padres); the
premature (Yankees trade Melky Cabrera to the Brewers for Mike Cameron); agent-created (Scott Boras should try his hand at unambiguous fiction); and the absurd (Manny Ramirez ponders retirement
if his contract demands aren’t met—-”I’ll show you!!!”—-holding his breath like a spoiled child). It’s very easy to start a rumor and have people run with it and most are coming from the supposed “insiders” who have access to what teams are trying to do. This creates demand for more information, but the continuously inaccurate reports are doing the exact opposite because after awhile, those that are hungry for the latest rumors get tired of the runaround and just ignore everything until they see a press conference with the relevant players standing in front of the logo for their new team as they put on the hat, try on the uniform and pose for pictures with their new bosses.
A good strategy is one that I’ve specifically gotten away from: I don’t believe a deal is done until I see the press conference; unless that happens, I avert my eyes with the thought in mind that if I look at them for too long, the inaccurate rumors are going to turn me to stone.
- Phillies and Jamie Moyer are both wrong in their haggling over money:
The Phillies are right in being reticent to commit a large amount of money for a pitcher
who’s 46-years-old even if said pitcher went 16-7 for a World Series winner. Jamie Moyer’s right to say that his age shouldn’t have anything to do with the Phillies doling out a comparable contract to other pitchers who’ve put up numbers similar to Moyer’s in recent years. Where this is going to lead is anyone’s guess.
On the surface, it’s likely that Moyer is going to want to return to the Phillies to pitch in his home state on a team with a good bullpen and lineup in an atmosphere where he’s liked and respected; but that doesn’t mean a deal’s going to get done. If Moyer were ten years younger and put up the
numbers he did in his time with the Phillies, how much would he get on an open market where guys like Oliver Perez are asking for $15 million a year?
Perez—-who is either as dominant as Sandy Koufax or as wild as Rick Ankiel in his last, lost days as a pitcher—-is probably going to get nearly double what Moyer’s going to get based on nothing more than Moyer’s age and that he gets by on a “fast” ball that goes so slowly that it looks like a Bugs Bunny cartoon (1-2-3 strikes, you’re out; 1-2-3 strikes you’re out—-all three swings coming on the same pitch). If the Phillies are thinking that Moyer is going to be made into a sap because of his age and the benefits he receives for being with a team with such a good supporting cast, they may be making a big mistake.
In looking at his gamelogs, wh
ile he’s not a 220-inning guy, Moyer was effective enough
that he could realistically have won six more games and ended with over 20 wins. While it’s true that veteran pitchers tend to hit a wall at a certain point no matter how smart they’ve been (I’m thinking of Orel Hershiser in his last season with the Dodgers), Moyer hasn’t slowed down; with the way he pitches using intelligence, varying pitches and control, there’s no reason to believe that he won’t be effective for at least 2009. Another important aspect of Moyer is that he’s a quiet leader in the clubhouse with a surprising feistiness that translate into his knocking hitters back with that 80 mph fastball, and he’s been a great influence on the Phillies young pitchers, especially Cole Hamels.
If the Phillies think they’re going to get Moyer back simply because he’s from the area,
they may be making a similar mistake as the Twins made with Jack
Morris in 1991. Morris signed a one-year deal with his hometown team and observers acted as if it was this heartwarming story of a pitcher returning home; winning 18 games; a World Series; and a World Series MVP with his heroic and historic 10-inning performance in game seven of that classic series. That heartwarming story turned out to be a business decision for both sides as Morris parlayed his season with the Twins into a lucrative two-year contract with a team about as far from Minnesota as a guy could get in another country entirely with the Toronto Blue Jays.
As for the Phillies, they do have a right to ask for a bit of a discount on what Moyer would get if he were ten years younger and was shopping his wares on the open market. His age is what it is and there is that possibility that his body will start to break down due to that age
regardless of how conscientious he is about staying in shape.
Moyer should be in demand from teams who want everything he has to offer on and off the field and because he’d be a short-term investment. The Cardinals, Mets, Marlins and Braves off the top of my head come to mind as teams that would want to bring Moyer onboard. If the Phillies keep messing around, they may lose a key part of their championship team and live to regret it, even if he is 46-years-old.
- Where does the objective analysis end and the self-justification and retribution begin?
As far as the ESPN bloggers go, Keith Law comes up with useful tidbits much of the time. He’s a bit heavy on the stats and his analysis of players gets a bit technical (to the point of making me wonder whether he’s ever picked up a baseball or has just memorized certain
buzzwords like “bars his arm” or pitches “breaking on two planes”, etc.); and his endless scouting reports on minor league players occasionally sound like he’s regurgitating stuff he’s accumulated from other sources; but that’s neither here nor there. My biggest issue is the blurred line of where his analysis ends and his self-interest begins.
When A.J. Burnett signed with the Yankees, Law wrote the following blog, entitled, While a bit of a risk, Burnett has a huge upside:
Burnett has No. 1 starter stuff — sitting in the mid-90s with a hammer
curve, a plus changeup he should use more, and a cutter he just started
using in the last year or so to give hitters another thing to worry
about. He has no major weaknesses on the mound. He’s not prone to the
long ball, not too wild, he gets hitters on both sides of the plate out
and he misses a ton of bats.
There are two major drawbacks to a Burnett signing of more than one
year. One is that
he doesn’t always pitch up to his stuff; last year,
he had a 4.96 ERA at the All-Star break, and over three years with
Toronto he didn’t post a single-season ERA under 3.75. Yet he finished
his three years in Toronto on a tear, with a 2.72 ERA, 105 strikeouts
against 29 walks in 94 1/3 innings, and dominant outings against the
Yankees (four starts, 32 1/3 innings, five earned runs), Rays (two
starts) and White Sox (one start) after the 2008 All-Star break. If he
pitches like that over a full season, he will be a Cy Young contender.
But he hasn’t pitched like that over a full season at any point in his
career, and he has only pitched like that in years when he had a
significant financial incentive to do so (his walk years and his last
pre-arbitration year).
The other is the frequency with which he takes the mound.
Burnett has, with some reason, earned a reputation as a pitcher who
will only pitch if his arm feels 100 percent, even though most pitchers
pitch from time to time with some soreness or mild discomfort. Burnett
has had only one serious arm injury in his pro career — the blown
elbow ligament that cost him most of the 2003 season — but has missed
time with “minor” arm problems that never required surgery. As a
result, he has thrown only 200 innings in a season three times (the
aforementioned years when there was money at stake), and has only made
30 starts in a season twice. An optimistic forecast would only give him
125 or so starts across the five years of this contract with the
Yankees.
A.J. Burnett is far more than a “bit” of a risk at $82.5 million over five-years. He’s a major
risk at that amount of money and with his history. The fact that Burnett has had “only one serious arm injury in his pro career” only makes his frequent trips to the disabled list seem all the worse because his amping up his performance and durability when there’s a lot of money at stake indicates that with a guaranteed amount of money that he’d never been able to spend in five lifetimes, he might find even more reason to sit on the DL for months at a time.
I’m not a fan of questioning another person’s pain threshold. As much as Carl Pavano was ridiculed for how he got injured and the nature of his injuries (bruised buttocks for example); and the disinterested way in which he went about his rehab until this past year, I don’t know if anyone could say that there was nothing wrong with Pavano and that he was making things up to stay off the mound and go to the beach. Other players might have gone on and tried to perform with Pavano’s issues, but that depends on the individual.
Personally, I don’t think that Burnett is going to even come close to fulfilling that contract and what the Yankees are expecting from such a talented, highly-paid pitcher. His history is there for everyone to see and to think that he’s going to suddenly—-at the ages 32-37—-become Steve Carlton in terms of durability, is insane. Add in that players can no longer use “little” helpers like amphetamines; or “big” helpers like PEDs and what they’re going to get out of Burnett is an open and legitimate question from beginning to end of the contract. My main issue with Law is what I read between the lines of what he writes and says.
Law was with the Toronto Blue Jays as a Special Assistant to GM J.P. Ricciardi when they signed Burnett to a five-year, $55 million contract after the 2005 season; one would assume that since Law is such a supporter of Burnett, part of the reason he thinks he’s a “bit
of an injury risk” is an attempt to save face for the first two underwhelming, injury-plagued years Burnett spent in Toronto. Also, whenever the subject of Ricciardi is broached, you can almost feel the underlying sniping from Law toward his former boss. It’s hard to find what exactly happened between Law and the Blue Jays, but it’s obvious reading between the lines that it wasn’t an amicable parting.
I’m not claiming to be above partisan politics here. Everyone knows I’m a Mets fan; that I can’t stand this over reliance on statistics above all; that there are certain people in positions of power in baseball who have proven to have neither the aptitude nor the intelligence to be in those positions, but I at least try to stay objective and do a good enough job (I think). Do you think I want to be giving constructive advice to the Braves, Phillies and Yankees as to what they should do to improve their teams? Of course not, but I do it anyway.
It’d be the easiest thing in the world to suggest to the Braves, “Yeah, you should bring Tom
Glavine back; yeah, it’s smart to gut the farm system for Jake Peavy; oh no, why wouldn’t you spend a chunk of cash on Burnett since he’s finally figured it all out,” but that would diminish whatever credibility I think I have. And if the Padres make a smart move in trading
Peavy—-as much as I can’t stand what they represent from Sandy Alderson on down or the embarrassingly inept way they run their franchise—-I’ll be the first to credit them because it’s required to swallow crap once in awhile to maintain loyalty and any semblance of credibility.
Is Law able to do this? Given the obvious nature of his antipathy toward the Blue Jays, I can’t help but wonder where the objective analysis ends. And given the mess Ricciardi’s made, does Law even need to find ways to dig at his former boss? I don’t think so.
- The Mets bullpen could be “Devastation Inc.” with J.J. Putz, Francisco (K-Rod) Rodriguez and…Billy Wagner?
No one’s mentioning it as a possibility because Billy Wagner’s Mets career is believed to
be over, but what happens if his rehab goes as well as B.J. Ryan’s did as he returned from Tommy John-surgery eleven months later? Wagner had his surgery in September and given the fact that the Mets have acquired not one, but two closers in the past week, who’s to say that Wagner won’t be able to return in time to be activated in September of 2009 and potentially be on the post-season roster* (*if applicable, these are the Mets we’re talking about) to give the Mets a trio of closers to pitch in the playoffs and possibly shorten the game to six innings?
After the disappointing way everything turned out with his injury essentially costing the Mets a playoff spot and his failures in 2006 and 2007, perhaps the idea of helping the team and closing out his career in 2009 (or p
erhaps getting another lucrative contract elsewhere) will inspire Wagner to push his rehab the way Ryan did and come back in time to be a part of a Mets team that is going to be in the thick of the playoff race; if he can contribute anything at all, he could be the difference between winning a championship or coming up short yet again.
Stuff That Makes My Eyes Roll In My Head (The Clean Version)
- Buster Olney suggests the World Series moves to a neutral site:
Does Buster Olney think before he posts? I’m not going into a point-by-point refutation of his silly
suggestion that a “neutral site” for the World Series is a good idea, but here’s the main paragraph advocating such a move:
If baseball ever takes this step, season-ticket holders initially will
create an enormous backlash because they will feel as if something has
been stripped from them. As anyone who attends postseason games knows,
however, the high cost of the World Series generally outruns the
budgets of many who go to regular-season games, anyway. The postseason
crowds have a very different feel because a lot of the die-hards are
left to watch on television.
With a neutral site, baseball could give season-ticket holders
a first option to buy tickets to the World Series. In fact, it could
prearrange airfare and hotel packages as part of the event.
And there’s no doubt that Major League Baseball could make the
World Series into an incredible event because it could plan and stack
up a wide array of options for fans, Super Bowl-style. Say, for
example, that the neutral site were to be Phoenix in 2011. The World
Series could begin on a Wednesday and go seven games in seven days.
That would greater reflect how Major League Baseball is played during
the regular season, with no off days and the depth of the rosters and
rotations tested.
Along the way, MLB could arrange for Hall of Famers to attend
daily fan-fest functions, panels and autograph-signing sessions and
seminars. The general managers could hold their annual meetings during
that week, and the GMs could break away from their hotel to hold
town-hall-style talks with fans about their teams as their managers are
in town. The baseball writers could announce, day by day, the winners
of the major awards — rookies of the year on the first day, managers
of the year on the second day, Cy Young winners on the third day and
the MVPs on the last day.
The Hall of Fame could announce its induction class for the
following summer. In a place like Phoenix or San Diego, there could be
daily charity golf tournaments, and
fans could be part of the scramble.
MLB could feature the John Smoltz Desert Classic on the first day, the Jeff Francoeur Invitational the second day and so on.
Best of all, the games would be played in conditions best suited for
the best baseball. Pitchers wouldn’t have to worry whether they’d be
able to grip their breaking ball (I wonder whether that was a factor in
the pivotal double that Pat Burrell hit off J.P. Howell),
baserunners wouldn’t have to hydroplane into bases, and hitters
wouldn’t have to blink through raindrops and their own clouds of
breath.
I wish postseason baseball were played like it was when I was a
kid. But it’s not. So it’s time to move on to the next-best thing.
WRONG!!! WRONG!!!! WRONG!!!!
First point: Because so many season ticket holders are left out of their team’s World Series festivities, that has to be made worse by sending the game to a warm weather site for absurd, game-distracting,
Super Bowl-level hype?
Second point: People who can barely afford the World Series tickets when the games are played in their home park (in addition to the parking, souvenirs, food and whatever else they get gouged for) are supposed to start paying for packages to travel away from home? Some people you know, work, but they’re able to make it to a World Series game if it’s within a reasonable travel distance from their home and still make it to work
the next day.
Third point, the “fan-fest” and Hall of Famers and all that other stuff would probably have some appeal for fans, but they’re already paying out a load of money to go to the thing to begin with; none of these players and former players do much of anything for free, so right there it’s another bill to enter into the tents in which they’d be stationed; to partake in the little events that are staged; to get autographs; to do this; to do that, etc. etc. It would be seen as a way to squeeze even more money from fans who can barely afford it and turn into a mingling zone for corporate types who have a load of money and don’t even understand who 75-90% of the Hall of Famers are, nor know or care much about baseball. This is not football; even a chunk of the rabid fans aren’t going to start
paying and traveling to go to the games and partake in the festivities and we’re talking about a possible seven games in which people would have to pay and pay and pay and pay.
Final point, frankly I don’t care if the pitchers are having trouble gripping their breaking pitches. That’s what separates a guy like Brad Lidge (who didn’t seem to be having a problem throwing his slider) and a guy like J.P. Howell. Part of the appeal of the post-season is the chilly weather (which within reason actually strengthens players because they’re not having their energy sapped by the hot and humid weather); and is it lost on Olney that almost every
Super Bowl is a blowout? What would happen if the site is neutral and the conditions are perfect and the field is flawless and certain teams tailor their teams to suit their ballparks? The Red Sox, Yankees, Dodgers, Cubs among many other teams build their clubs based on home ballpark conditions; all of a sudden that’s going to be taken away with them with the insipid idea of a “neutral site”?
Not only is it not feasible and would detract from the World Series; it’s bottom line stupid and the reasons Olney gives only make the idea worse than it is on the surface because they only prove how dumb the idea is from the start.
- Several moves by the Brewers:
Dale Sveum is returning as the hitting coach in a move that I think is a mistake if Sveum has designs on being a full time manager. It’d be one thing if he were to be new manager Ken
Macha’s bench coach, but hitting coach is sort of a double-demotion past the manager; past the bench coach and down to hitting coach. Sveum did well as the Brewers manager strategically, temperamentally, and because he steered the team from their tailspin. If I were advising him, I’d look for a bench coach job elsewhere and since there are plenty of teams who are going to be in the market for a good bench coach, Sveum’s selling himself and his managing future short by staying in Milwaukee and accepting the demotion.
Mike Cameron’s $10 million option was exercised and it’s a smart move.
Had the Brewers declined the option, Cameron would probably end up a Yankee. Cameron’s a popular player in the clubhouse; will hit his 25-30 homers; and play great defense. Clearly the Brewers aren’t enamored of Tony Gwynn Jr. being able to fill the spot and for that money, they’re better off keeping Cameron. Macha will have to make sure to get Cameron on his side given the gregarious outfielder’s sway with the other players.
GM Doug Melvin has said that an offer to C.C. Sabathia was “imminent” since late last week when they named Macha the manager. It’s been days since then and “imminent” could mean anything from today until whenever. When are they going to present this offer to the pitcher? After he comes to a handshake agreement with the Yankees? When he’s holding the pen and about to sign the contract to make it official? When he’s on the team’s caravan? When he’s warming up for his opening day start? Or when he’s about to throw the first pitch?
Whoops!! They made the bid over the weekend and it posted on ESPN.com—-ESPN Story—-just now. It doesn’t matter. He ain’t stayin’ in no Milwaukee.
- From the files of the Prince’s exasperated reaction of, “Oh, for <bleep> sake!“
Rob Neyer links to the blog of our old friend Paul DePodesta—-Link—-with more alibis
trying to make it look like there’s some kind of plan i
n place with the Padres. Nothing’s ever anyone’s fault over there and no one gets fired; with the weather and the low standards, it must be a pretty pleasant place to work. I love it when guys have stats, charts, graphs and detailed plans, yet fail at every turn. DePodesta’s got a detailed track record at least. He rode Billy Beane’s genius into a GM job; demolished the Dodgers in twenty months; and the Padres are awful thanks in large part to Paul DePodesta. Such skill; such brains; such a nightmare.
From The Worldwide Leaders In Sports!!!
Here’s the headline of the ESPN Story about the Rays:
Rays sell out first two home games of NLDS
Um, okay. Let’s see if I can explain this. Either it took moving the Rays to the other league to
get some sellouts for the playoffs, or this is an unconscionable mistake from the “worldwide leader in sports”. You be the judge. <Whispering> They’re in the American League; therefore, they’ll be playing in the ALDS.
The Mets Miss The Lincecum Memo And Other Stories
- Mets 7-Giants 0:
While they said all the right things about being impressed with Tim Lincecum’s stuff and how bright the
diminutive righty’s future is, the Mets apparently missed last week’s issue of Sports Illustrated because they knocked him around pretty good on the field. Carlos Delgado sending one of Lincecum’s fastballs deep into the Flushing Meadows night was impressive in and of itself considering how Delgado’s had such trouble catching up to power fastballs this year; I would hesitate to think this is a renaissance for Delgado because the pitch was up and out over the plate; he still can’t get around on a power inside fastball at all which indicates a location mistake on the part of Lincecum. Mike Pelfrey and his reliance on his power sinker is starting to make him look like a young Kevin Brown.
- Yankees 5-Rays 0:
Andy Pettitte was masterful against a hot hitting and tough lineup in the Rays. In looking at Pettitte’s numbers—-stats—-if he hangs around for two or three more years and can win between 13-15 games each year in addition to this
year’s likely 16 wins, he’s going to make the Hall of Fame. A winner; a gutty innings-eater; honest about his brief PED usage; and a post-season record of 18-7 (as of now) plus around 240 wins will make Pettitte more of a no-brainer for the Hall than Curt Schilling. Another thing about Pettitte that many people may not know is that he wasn’t even drafted; the Yankees signed him as an undrafted free agent in 1991. That’s some pretty good scouting, luck or both.
- Did the Dodgers owner nix a deal for C.C. Sabathia?
The Pasadena Star-News reported on Monday that Dodgers owner Frank McCourt nixed a deal that would have brought C.C. Sabathia, Casey Blake and Jamey Carroll to the Dodgers for a package of youngsters—-Story—-the main reason is implied to be financial. McCourt may receive criticism for this after the fact especially if Sabathia pitches the Brewers into the
playoffs, but McCourt has every right to do what I see as the right thing for his franchise by stopping his GM from mortgaging a big chunk of his team’s loaded farm system to win right now.
Dodgers GM Ned Colletti is already under fire for the team’s underachieving and the huge money contracts he doled out to Andruw Jones and Jason Schmidt with literally no return. If the Indians, a smart organization that knows how to scout prospects, were trading three players with expiring contracts who are in demand, there would probably have been at least five prospects going to Cleveland including the likes of Matt Kemp, Andy
LaRoche and lots of young pitching. The Dodgers are getting their injured players back and with manager Joe Torre’s history of hot second half finishes, along with the way the NL West is looking like it might only take 85 wins to take the division, why make such a desperation move? Add in that McCourt may be keeping an eye on the Brian Cashman/Yankees situation with the possibility that Torre and Cashman will be reunited on the West Coast after the season and there was no reason to allow Colletti to make this move.
Despite McCourt’s attempts to win within a budget and create a clone of the Oakland Athletics when he hired Paul DePodesta to disastrous results, he’s spent a load of money and allowed Colletti to be very aggressive in trying to win immediately over the past three years; he shouldn’t receive criticism when he finally says enough’s enough.
- Is there an agenda in place here?
I don’t know the circumstances with Keith Law’s departure from the Blue Jays in 2006, but reading between the lines in the comment about Chad Gaudin in the Rich Harden trade, and
you have to wonder if there’s a bit of sniping going on underneath what masks itself as an opinion:
Chad Gaudin is an outstanding second player — hate to call him
a “throw-in” here — for the Cubs, as a short reliever who could be
dominant in that role in the NL. His fastball/slider combo has produced
over 300 innings of above-average pitching since Toronto discarded him
after a grand total of two big league starts, and his career-long
vulnerability against left-handed batters has vanished this year, in
large part because of his improved control.
If Law’s letting personal biases enter into his judgments (intentionally or not), he should try and put them aside if he intends to be a credible media voice. For the record, I wouldn’t have touched Rich Harden unless I was getting him for nothing because he’s completely unreliable health-wise from one day to the next.
The New NY Times Sunday Baseball Column And Other Stories
- The New NY Times Sunday Baseball Column:
Last week I mentioned my brief indignation, then “whatever” shrug about the ouster of Murray Chass as the baseball columnist for Sunday’s NY Times. I’m not pining for Chass, but if they were going to force him out, they should have replaced him with people who were ready to hit the ground running and after today’s column—-NY Times Story—-they haven’t. Not to nitpick, but they’re twisting things to fit either space constraints or for convenience.
First they mention Braves manager Bobby Cox’s decision to put Chris Resop in the outfield in order to use Royce Ring to pitch to Adam LaRoche and, as context, mention Braves pitching coach Roger McDowell’s turn in the outfield in 1986 for the Mets. They neglect to mention that the Mets had no choice but to alternate their two closers, McDowell and Jesse Orosco, because they were out of position players as a result of so many ejections because of a fistfight they’d had with the Cincinnati Reds that night. It wasn’t any strategic decision on the part of Mets manager Davey Johnson; he did it because he had to do it.
Later, when discussing statistics, they mentions that Royals outfielder Joey Gathright is leading the league in stolen bases with six and hadn’t stolen 20 or more since 2005. (It was actually 2006, but that’s beside the point as well.) While it’s true that Gathright hasn’t stolen 20 bases since then, nor has he been an everyday player since then. In 2006, he played in a combined 134 games for the Devil Rays and Royals; last year he played in 74 games. Did it occur to them that he might be stealing more bases because he’s playing more?
I’m truly not into nitpicking to such an extent, but when people are being paid, shouldn’t they at least try to be accurate? It took me a few seconds to do the necessary research about Gathright and I remembered the Mets-Reds incident because I saw it happen. If this is what the NY Times is going to pass off as Chass’s replacement, then they should be ashamed of themselves. (I’m willing to listen to job offers if anyone’s interested.)
- Looking Devine; Athletics 7-Indians 3:
The Braves are going to rue the day they traded Joey Devine. Yes, he’s wild; but he’s also![]()
24-years-old. He has a power fastball and a motion reminiscent to![]()
that of David Cone with his short stature, bulky legs and powerful leg drive. Some of the pitches he threw were so unhittable that Babe Ruth himself would’ve been made to look foolish. If Devine harnesses that ability, he’s going to be devastating; the Athletics have a habit of giving young and talented players a chance to get themselves together and Devine’s going to be a star if he cuts down on the walks.
- Scrutinizing Girardi; Red Sox 4-Yankees 3:
We’re probably going to hear non-stop criticism of Joe Girardi for leaving Mike Mussina in![]()
the game to pitch to Manny Ramirez (who had already homered) with two
outs and runners on second and third in the sixth inning and a one-run lead. I don’t have much of a problem with it considering Girardi’s options. He could have walked Manny and pitched to Kevin Youkilis, but Youkilis has seriously cut down on his strikeouts this season, has a great eye and works the count; he could have yanked Mussina and brought in one of the question marks from the Yankees bullpen (Brian Bruney was warming up); or he could have banked on Mussina’s experience to get him through. He picked the last option and lost.
- White Sox 7-Tigers 0; The Worst Team Money Could Buy, Part Duex?
I picked the Tigers to win their division and still have confidence that they’re going to right the ship, but there are also ominous similarities to another team that had a drastic makeover with splashy acquisitions in the off-season, but turned out to be a disaster. I’m referring to the 1992 New York Mets. The Mets were coming off a disappointing 1991 season after years of championship contention and remade the entire team acquiring Bret Saberhagen, Bobby Bonilla and Eddie Murray, among others. The results were documented in the book The Worst Team Money Could Buy by Bob Klapisch and John Harper. (The book is flawed, arrogantly presented and self-indulgent.)
There are some major differences between the two teams—-the Mets GM was the inexperienced Al Harazin, the Tigers Dave Dombrowski is a top-flight GM; the Mets manager![]()
was the inept Jeff Torborg (right), the Tigers manager is Jim Leyland—-but I’m wondering if there are any of the similar signs from the Tigers of 2008 that there were from the Mets in 1992; the idea that the players are wide-eyed and confused saying, “This can’t happen to us. Look how good we are,” and every day things are getting worse. Strangely everyone thought that the bullpen was going to be the problem, but it’s been the lineup. I’m still going to believe that the Tigers are going to pull out of this; their lineup is too good not to hit.
- My Book:
Please check out and purchase my book The Prince Of New York’s 2008 Baseball Guide also available on Amazon.com and BN.com. Jeff at Red State Blue State digs it (see comments from my previous blog) and he’s a Fulbright scholar. I must be doing something right with the book since I’m only a Halfwit scholar.
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