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Saturday, July 04, 2009

Bill Plaschke: Manny did the time, but what about the crime?

Here’s guessing he won’t be so beloved next month if he’s batting .220 or battling hamstring injuries.

It was hard to tell much from Friday’s four plate appearances and five innings in the field.

The entire night was reminiscent of the constant scene around the San Francisco Giants several years ago.

A player was bigger than the game. A drug issue elicited more responses than the score. The buzz was initially interesting and fun, but later bulky and onerous.

On a night when Manny Ramirez was supposed to return as a shamed drug cheat, he actually created a stir befitting the greatest home run hitter in baseball history.

All you Dodgers fans who secretly coveted Barry Bonds?

You got him.

sigh.

Tripon Posted: July 04, 2009 at 09:46 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: LA DodgersRumorsSteroids

Gehrig, veterans honored this weekend | MLB.com: News

We wish a Happy Fourth of July to everyone! Be safe and have fun!

This year, the Fourth of July is being celebrated at home ballparks in two ways that each empower and enable fans to help an important cause. Today, every home team will conduct a special on-field ceremony to commemorate the 70th anniversary of Lou Gehrig’s farewell speech—in an effort to raise awareness through and financial support for organizations leading the fight against ALS, the disease that claimed his life and bears his name. And all weekend long, players again will wear those red Stars & Stripes caps as part of national fundraising and awareness initiatives for Welcome Back Veterans, a program that addresses the mental health and job needs of returning military veterans.

Jim Furtado Posted: July 04, 2009 at 09:46 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: General

Philadelphia Inquirer/Gonzalez: A Mets fan escapes the nightmare

Steve Bonsignore couldn’t take it anymore. The never-ending stress. The soul-crushing mistakes. The inevitable disappointment. The public humiliation. It wore on him and dragged him down. So he gave it all up for a while.

It’s hard to blame him. You’d need a break, too, if you had it that rough.

Bonsignore, bless his aching heart, is a lifelong Mets fan.

That hasn’t been easy for Bonsignore. Not lately. You think the Phils have given you a headache? The Mets - who come to town to start a series with the Fightin’s tonight - turned June into one long tragic comedy. They finished the month 9-18, their worst stretch since they went 7-19 back in September 2003.

In mid-June, Bonsignore reached what he called his “breaking point” when the Mets lost to the Yankees after a lazy fly ball hit Luis Castillo’s glove and popped out. The highlight was replayed on ESPN for days. Mets fans called it “embarrassing.” Everyone else called it “hilarious.”

“I sat on the couch staring for two minutes,” Bonsignore said. “Then I turned the TV off and said, ‘That’s it. I’m done. That’s enough. I need a break.’ ”

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 04, 2009 at 08:20 AM | 1 comment(s)
  Related News: NY Mets

OC Register: Attack on agent Boras’ vehicle is just wrong

Attorney-bashing is almost an American birthright, but this is taking it too far.

Police said uber-agent Scott Boras’ Land Rover received $2,000 in damage when it was vandalized outside the Bandera Restaurant in Corona del Mar on Monday evening.

According to the coronadelmartoday.com report, it seems Boras was inside the restaurant at the time — which makes this attack cowardly, as well as senseless. I am just glad it was only his windows that were damaged.

All kinds of flip lines occur to me — where was Arte Moreno between 9:15-10:10 p.m., for example — but really, vandalism isn’t funny (not that I have ever had a car anyone would give a second look to, let alone strike with a baseball bat).

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 04, 2009 at 08:12 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralBusiness

Houston Chronicle/Justice: Masters of
 improbable
 at it again

Something amazing has happened to the Astros over the last few weeks, and we may never figure out what it was.

Teams evolve during a six-month season that eventually exposes every weakness. What has happened to the Astros is more dramatic than that.

For 47 games, they were one of baseball’s worst teams. For 30 games since, they had played .633 ball entering Friday‘s game. That’s a 103-victory clip over the course of an entire season.

Is 30 games a small sample? Sure it is. But to go from 19-28 to 19-11 is an indication something significant changed.

We know some of the story. The starting rotation went from being one of baseball’s worst to one of its real solid ones. The bullpen has gone from shaky to steady.

As for the offense, it remains a work in progress. What the Astros have done to make up for the lack of scoring is have great timing.

They haven’t gotten a lot of hits, but they’ve gotten hits at the right time. They’ve come from behind to win 11 of those 19 games.

This is a solid baseball team at the moment. A few weeks ago, it didn’t seem possible someone would be typing those words.

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 04, 2009 at 08:09 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: Houston

NY Post: Turley’s Whistling While He Worked Was Boon For Mantle

Soon after, Turley was sitting on the bench in a spring training game, calling pitches when Mantle asked, “What are you doing?”

Turley explained he could call pitches by studying the mannerisms of the pitcher, something he picked up in his early days with the putrid St. Louis Browns to keep himself occupied. Mantle’s eyes lit up. “Start calling them for me,” he said.

They developed a system based on Turley whistling. Turley told Mickey to assume the first pitch would be a curve, but if he heard the whistle it would be a fastball. If the pitch after that was another fastball, there would be no whistle. If it were going to be a curve, Turley would whistle again. So the pattern went.

“I started calling pitches and he started whacking the heck out of the ball,” Turley said.

He also explained to Mantle how pitchers would tip their pitches, how they would set up on the rubber, for example. Mantle proved to be a good student. Sometimes there was no need to whistle.

Mickey, though, would often forget what the last pitch was, so Turley told Mantle that whenever he forgets, place his hand on his helmet and they would start over again as if a curve ball were coming.

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 04, 2009 at 08:00 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: HistoryHall of FameNY Yankees

MLB: Mark Reynolds vents after Arizona commits three errors

Jackie Earle Haley rulz!

“It seems like we get down one or two runs and no one [cares] anymore ...,” Reynolds said in front of his locker in an otherwise quiet room. “This is the Major Leagues. You can’t go out there and make three errors a night and expect to win a game. We look like the Bad News Bears out there and it’s frustrating. It’s to the point where stuff’s got to change.”

No one could argue with that statement. The D-backs lead the Majors in errors and the only team with a worse record is the Nationals.

How to get things changed, well, that’s less clear. D-backs manager A.J. Hinch has tried meetings—three in a 10-day span—but they have not provided a boost.

“You can give all the rah-rah speeches you want and have all the team meetings you want and yell at guys, but guys have got to [care],” Reynolds said. “I don’t really see it. I know I care. I’m out there busting my tail every night trying to win. Physical errors are fine, but guys loafing, guys not being where they’re supposed to be or guys giving up on ABs, it’s not acceptable at any level.”

...The team is 19-32 since Hinch took over for Bob Melvin on May 8.

“I don’t want to say guys are packing it in, but it sure seems like it and it [upsets] me,” Reynolds said.

Repoz Posted: July 04, 2009 at 05:58 AM | 1 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralArizona

Rafael Palmeiro again denies knowingly taking steroids

“I made a mistake,” Palmeiro told ESPN’s Pedro Gomez on Friday. “I didn’t really understand what I was taking and I paid for it. I paid for it very dearly. Life goes on.”

Palmeiro continues to deny knowingly taking performance enhancing drugs.

“I’ve heard a lot of things out there that are wrong,” he said. “People saying I took drugs all my life, I’ve never touched anything. I worked my butt off my whole career, as a kid, in college, the big leagues, I didn’t need anything, I didn’t have to cheat at the end of my career, for what? What was I going to gain from it? Whatever I took was tainted, had to have been. There’s no other reason unless I got set up.

“What I took was a B-12 [vitamin] that was given to me by a teammate. That’s it. That was it.”

Before the failed test, while testifying before a House committee with other ballplayers in March 2005, Palmeiro had stated: “I have never used steroids. Period. I don’t know how to say it any more clearly than that.”

Palmeiro said he has no regrets about his testimony before Congress because he had never taken anything. He hopes the list of 104 players who tested positive in 2003 is released because, “I’m not on the list.”

685 to go!

Repoz Posted: July 04, 2009 at 05:29 AM | 6 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralTexasSteroids

K.C. Star: Posnanski: Royals take all the fun out of a nice Friday

Depressing. Absolutely. If assigned to come up with just one sentence to explain just why the Royals are playing as badly as they ever have before, I would probably come up with this one: “Tony Peña Jr. and Luis Hernandez are on this team.”

That should explain just how bad this team is. Peña and Hernandez are shortstops. Neither of them can hit. Neither of them can run. Neither of them has any power.

There’s an increasingly popular statistic called OPS+ which measures a players OPS (on-base-plus-slugging percentage) against the league average. All you really need to know is 100 is exactly average — a 100 OPS+ is an average major-league baseball player.

Luis Hernandez came into Friday’s game with an OPS+ of 4.

Tony Peña Jr. came into Friday’s game with an OPS+ of minus-27.

To be perfectly honest with you, I’m not entirely sure how you can even score a negative OPS+.

Easy. Just check with the Leeper Colony of Aints, Joe.

Repoz Posted: July 04, 2009 at 05:22 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralSabermetricsKansas City

NYT: Lawyer Says 2003 Clemens Drug Test Was Negative (RR)

Cool!  Now we’re working backwards to see who’s on the list. 686 to go!

In recent months, Alex Rodriguez and Sammy Sosa have been linked to the list of 100 or so players who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003, the first season such tests were conducted by Major League Baseball. But Roger Clemens is not on that list, says his lead lawyer, Rusty Hardin.

In telephone interviews this week, Hardin described how he obtained Clemens’s test results, then handed them over to Congress. Hardin said that before Clemens testified before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in February 2008, the panel requested the results of his 2003 test; under baseball’s agreement with the players union, those initial tests were supposed to remain anonymous.

Hardin said that after the panel’s request, one of the lawyers on Clemens’s defense team contacted Comprehensive Drug Testing, the company that oversaw the 2003 testing program, and said that Clemens would waive his right to have the results kept private. Hardin said the drug-testing company provided him with the results for Clemens and he then forwarded them to the House committee.

“The results show Roger was negative in every respect, performance-enhancing drugs and masking agents,” Hardin said.

Repoz Posted: July 04, 2009 at 05:05 AM | 3 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralSpecial TopicsRumorsSteroidsNY Yankees

University of Missouri – St. Louis: Symposium on Statistics and Operations Research in Baseball

What would Babe Ruth do if he faced Pedro Martinez?
How would Tony LaRussa have done managing Whitey Herzog’s roster?

Paul Bessire of Fox Sports’ What-if-Sports Unit will demonstrate how he simulates these scenarios.  Paul is among the featured speakers at the Third Symposium on Statistics in Sports. 

The third Symposium on Statistics and Operations Research in Baseball will be another meeting of the baseball, industrial, and academic worlds. The focus is on how Statistics and Operations Research methodology is used within baseball and associated businesses and on how baseball inspires the expansion of the frontiers of Statistics and Operations Research as scientific fields. The theme of this year’s Symposium is “Answering Sports Questions with Rigor.”

Not THE Dr. Rigor!

Repoz Posted: July 04, 2009 at 12:14 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralHistorySabermetricsProjectionsSpecial TopicsBaseball GeeksPrimate Meetups

Wright Hears an Apology From Franco for Criticism (RR)

Yes...but is Franco ever going to apologize for ruining many parties by wearing that stenchy orange-pealed Sanitation Department T-shirt?

David Wright landed in Philadelphia on Thursday night and saw that while he was in the air on the Mets’ charter flight, he had received a message. Upon checking his voice mail, he heard an apology from John Franco.

Franco, the former Mets closer and onetime teammate of Wright’s, had called to apologize for his critical comments about Wright’s leadership, or supposed lack thereof. While still not happy with the comments, Wright said before Friday night’s game against the Phillies that he appreciated the message from Franco and planned to call Franco back.

“Johnny and I have a great relationship,” Wright said. “I’m glad he called and apologized. I’ve always respected his opinion. But he’s not in here on a day-to-day basis, so he can’t really know what’s going on. If it was one of the guys in here that said something like that, it would be one thing. But when it’s someone from the outside, I really don’t feel the need to defend myself. It doesn’t bother me at all.”

Repoz Posted: July 04, 2009 at 12:02 AM | 6 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralNY Mets

Friday, July 03, 2009

Diamond Notes: Bill Plaschke on his feelings on Manny Ramirez today

“I’m even madder now. Are you kidding me? Are you kidding me? Yeah Dodger fans, He’s being as if he’s returning from Iraq or something.

“The club has done nothing during the suspension but coddle him and treat him as if he had suffered some life-threatening disease or something and he was trying to make a valiant comeback.

“Basically the Dodgers and their fans - a lot of their fans, not all of them, but a lot of them - have pretty much accepted steroids in saying, ‘It’s no big deal. Glad to have you back, Manny. Sorry you were gone.’ It’s all that sort of thing. So it’s really kind of disconcerting.

“He’s lost $7 million. I undestand that. Otherwise, it’s been the best summer of Manny Ramirez’s life.

“First time in baseball history that a team will devote a section of its stands for people who want to cheer a drug cheat.”

Tripon Posted: July 03, 2009 at 06:44 PM | 31 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralLA DodgersMediaTelevisionRumorsSteroids

Biz of Baseball: Most Baseball Fans Prepare to Give Manny Ramirez a Nice Big Kiss Upon Return

“Thick wavy hair, a little too long”.. From Shadow Morton to shadow Manny!

In a further sign of interest in the game, Fox’s Prime Ticket will add an extra right-field camera for the event. The RSN will also have a special road edition of the “Dodgers Live” pregame and postgame show to cover Manny’s return. No word on whether Manny will do to the Western Metal Building what he did to the inside of Green Monster scoreboard, but if so, cameras will be at the ready from every angle.

It all is the circus that is Manny being Manny, and you can bet your dreadlock wig that the Dodgers will be the beneficiary of the return at the cash registers, regardless of whether he comes back in mid-season form.

For MLB, it means moving past a potentially embarrassing moment, or rather, a moment that was embarrassing, but had a player with incredible barstool likeability at its center. Baseball surely must be signing in relief knowing that Ramirez won’t be in the All-Star Game, unless Charlie Manuel selects him, a long shot to say the least.

Repoz Posted: July 03, 2009 at 06:25 PM | 6 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralLA DodgersSteroids

MLB.com: Jones gives Bucs lift with big bat: Finishes single shy of cycle

I can honestly say I have never heard of this Garrett Jones before.  He’s almost a year younger than Nyjer Morgan and apparently got 77 at-bats with the Twins two years ago.

“This is what he’s been doing the whole year—driving the ball,” said Andrew McCutchen, who was Jones’ teammates at Triple-A for two months earlier this season. “When they make a mistake, he makes them pay. It’s real good to have someone like that there.”

Jones would then cap his day with a solo homer off Mets reliever Pedro Feliciano in the seventh.

“That’s what we knew Garrett could do,” Russell said. “He can provide some punch in the offense. Offensively, we got him in there and some guys started swinging better. That’s what we’re looking for, what we did today.”

Jones, who said he has never hit for the cycle at any level, had two other at-bats in the game with which to get a single. He nearly got it in the fifth, when he lined out to reliever Brian Stokes. In the ninth, Jones grounded out to second.

Russell has said that he intends to give Jones every opportunity to prove himself as an everyday starter, and Thursday’s performance—one in which he had three extra-base hits for a team that had just four total in the previous three-game series—should go a long way to help.

Pirates home run leaderboard:

12 LaRoche
9 McLouth (traded)
6 Sanchez (sitting out tonight’s game with back pain)
3 Monroe (released)
3 LaRoche
3 Wilson
3 Jaramillo
2 Morgan (traded)
2 Doumit (on DL since April)
2 Young
1 (six players tied, including one who has been traded)

34 MLB home runs this season by the entire active roster.

Crispix Attacks Posted: July 03, 2009 at 06:05 PM | 16 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralMinnesotaPittsburgh

Heyman: If Cleveland’s willing to trade Martinez, Boston’s a likely suitor

Bah...rumors, rumors. Remember when it was rumored that Don Mincher had invented drooping tear-drop eyeglasses? Wasn’t true.

Indians higher-ups say they aren’t likely to trade hitting star Victor Martinez. Not only is Martinez one of the better hitters in baseball, with 14 home runs, 57 RBIs and .313 batting average, but the Indians hold a bargain 2010 club option on Martinez for $7 million.

A trade for Martinez still has to be considered something of a long shot. Yet, within the past day or two the Indians dispatched a scout to check out the progress of Boston’s best prospects, according to a league source. The Indians, a realistic early seller, may only be covering their bases. But of course, it could develop into something more, as Boston’s interest in Martinez is well known.

Red Sox third baseman Mike Lowell’s recurrence of hip trouble has at least temporarily opened first base for Boston (since Kevin Youkilis has switched over to third base). The Red Sox have been seeking offensive aid for months with their protracted winter pursuit of Mark Teixeira and a much shorter try for Hanley Ramirez. Boston is also one of a couple teams that could match up nicely with Cleveland in a Martinez trade, what with three very hot young pitchers—Clay Buchholz, Justin Masterson and Michael Bowden—who just happen to be exactly the sort Cleveland craves.

Repoz Posted: July 03, 2009 at 04:26 PM | 42 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralBostonClevelandRumors

Morris: Kevin Millwood, Rob Neyer, Evan Grant, luck, pitching, and defense

This is a blog post about a post by Evan Grant responding to a blog post by Rob Neyer commenting on a blog post by R.J. Anderson.

That I came across on Facebook...whew!

So this may be a bit meta.

In a nutshell, Grant takes issue with Neyer’s endorsement of Anderson’s point, which is that Kevin Millwood hasn’t really been any better this year than in the past few years.

Evan makes clear his thoughts on Millwood right off the bat:

By almost any evaluation, Millwood has been one of the top five or six pitchers in the AL this season.

I guess the problem is how one defines “top pitcher.” In terms of runs allowed or ERA, absolutely, he’s been one of the top pitchers in the league.

But when we talk about runs allowed or ERA, we mustn’t forget the Tenth Noble Truth of Bill James:

10. A great deal of what is perceived as being pitching is in fact defense.

Repoz Posted: July 03, 2009 at 04:14 PM | 2 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralSabermetricsSpecial TopicsBaseball GeeksTexas

Arizona Republic/Bob Young: Which D-Backs stay; which will go?

• Eric Byrnes - There is no trade market for him, and he’s back on the disabled list. It might be time to consider just eating what’s left on his deal so everybody can move on.

...

• Felipe Lopez - Has been everything the Diamondbacks expected when they signed him to a one-year deal to replace Orlando Hudson. Has some value despite his mental lapses. Atlanta needs help at second base.

...

• Brandon Webb - The ace of the staff hasn’t played since Opening Day. Team has a difficult decision to make about whether to pick up his contract option next season.

...

• Doug Davis - Just the kind of player the buyers will want. Milwaukee and Philadelphia might be interested.

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 03, 2009 at 04:12 PM | 3 comment(s)
  Related News: Arizona

L.A. Times: When it comes to Manny, what would Nietzsche do?

What, you didn’t know Socrates was a baseball junkie?

You thought Plato and Nietzsche were so above it all they didn’t have a favorite National League team?

Yeah, stupid me, I had no idea either.

But this week I paid a visit to my local house of all things psychic: Tattered Glove Palm Reading of Chavez Ravine.

With Manny Ramirez back Friday, L.A. is now confronted with a bulked-up existential question: How should we view those who have cheated the system by using banned substances? What should we think of those who appear willing to do anything to win? How do we forgive?

Searching for answers, I convened an emergency meeting with the spirits of some of the prime shapers of Western thought.

It actually wasn’t hard to get this group together; it’s a little-known fact they have been meeting regularly to philosophize on baseball since the White Sox World Series scandal of 1919.

First up? Socrates (Manny-applicable quote: “An honest man is always a child.").

What, I asked, do we make of this Ramirez mess?

“Well, let me say it is good, my friend, that you’re asking questions. That’s what I’m all about: pondering. The most important question is this: What, exactly, is cheating?”

Just my luck. I go looking for absolutes, all I get is doubt.

Tripon Posted: July 03, 2009 at 02:18 PM | 8 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralLA DodgersRumorsSteroids

Jason Stark: It’s so wrong to celebrate Manny’s return

So instead, the reaction to Manny, from Albuquerque to Ensenada, has been—what else?—downright hero worship. You’d think the guy had spent the past 57 days curing cancer, dousing tensions in Iran and smoothing out plot glitches for the final season of “Lost.”

But why? That’s the question we’ve been struggling with since Manny-mania busted out in Albuquerque last week.

Why is America so ready to forgive this guy, of all guys? Because he has fun hair? Because he has a lovable smile? Because he has a long, not necessarily proud, history as baseball’s foremost goofball?

Why would that be enough to outweigh his disgraceful exit from Boston, his indisputable guilt in this case and the dubious alibi his spin doctors typed up to explain his way out of this mess?

Why? We posed that question to four men who have thought about it a lot themselves: esteemed Columbia School of Journalism professor Sandy Padwe, cerebral journalist/author Robert Lipsyte and two of the most thoughtful players we have ever covered, Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt and a man who has turned into an official New York Times op-ed columnist, Doug Glanville.

Tripon Posted: July 03, 2009 at 01:27 PM | 6 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralLA DodgersMediaOnlineRumorsSteroids

L.A. Times: Baseball’s pharmacy hall of fame

Paul Lo Duca

Position: Catcher

How it went down: On Dec. 13, 2007, Lo Duca was cited in the Mitchell Report as a user of steroids and human growth hormone. He was also accused of referring former Dodgers teammates Eric Gagne and Kevin Brown to his drug supplier. Upon his arrival with the Washington Nationals on Feb. 17, 2008, Lo Duca issued a statement in which he apologized for “mistakes in judgment,” but he did not say what those mistakes entailed.

How he fared on the field: Lo Duca started the 2008 season in Washington as the team’s least productive batter, hitting .200 in 50 at-bats. He then fractured his right hand and went on the disabled list from early May to mid-June. The Nationals released him July 31, 2008, after he batted .230 with no home runs and 12 runs batted in in 139 at-bats. The Florida Marlins picked Lo Duca up in a minor league deal on Aug. 8 and he was called up eight days later, hitting .294 with three RBIs in 34 at-bats. He became a free agent after the season and remains unsigned.

Andy Pettitte

Position: P

How it went down: On Dec. 13, 2007, Pettitte was cited in the Mitchell Report, which attributed a claim from trainer Brian McNamee that he injected Pettitte with human growth hormone while with the New York Yankees in 2002 to treat an elbow injury. Two days later, Pettitte acknowledged using HGH only to heal his elbow.

How he fared on the field: Pettitte had a 14-14 record and a 4.54 earned-run average with the Yankees in 2008, including going 2-7 with a 6.23 ERA in the last two months while suffering a sore left shoulder. This season, he is 8-3 with a 4.25 ERA in 97 1/3 innings.

Tripon Posted: July 03, 2009 at 01:05 PM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralTeamsRumorsSteroids

Deep Left Field: Desparetely seeking David (Norman)

FOUND! Rare footage of Sam actually finding David.

We need David Norman back for eyes-own assessments of minor leaguers. Very few of my business trips take me to Danville or Myrtle Beach. Nonetheless, some notes of interest from the farm.

The Myrtle Beach Sun News confirms that three Pelicans have been promoted to AA-Mississippi. Top of the class is the Braves offensive version of Tommy Hanson. Jason Heyward is only 19 but was tearing up Carolina League pitching to the tune of 296/369/519. That .519 SLG% stands out considering his home park is notoriously pitcher friendly. Heyward projects to relieve Atlanta of our long Frenchified nightmare in RF come 2011. If he fares well in MS this year he could skip AAA-Gwinnett altogether. He’s that good.

Heyward is to Tommy Hanson as Freddie Freeman is to Kris Medlen. Overshadowed and rightly so, Freeman still projects to take over 1B in Atlanta about the same time Casey Kotchman goes free agent (2011.) Freeman posted a better than respectable 302/394/447, again in MB’s power-killing Coastal Field.

Pelican closer Thomas Palica gets the call to MS as well. The 21 year old was striking out a man an inning with decent K/BB rates, continuing his solid relief work from last year (in A-Rome.) With that said, he’s a minor league closer. Nothing projects until he’s striking out a man an inning in AAA, at the least.

Repoz Posted: July 03, 2009 at 12:57 PM | 8 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralMinor LeaguesProspect ReportsScoutingAtlanta

Craig Calcaterra: Francoeur for the All-Star Game

Right field: Jeff Francoeur, Atlanta: Apologies to Justin Upton, but when baseball no longer has a place for the likes of Francoeur, a player so extravagantly talented that he can hold down a major league job despite seemingly having little more idea of what to do with that talent than a tomcat, baseball will no longer be worth watching.

May as well agitate for a contract extension while you’re at it, Tim. Sheesh.

Tripon Posted: July 03, 2009 at 12:53 PM | 15 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralAtlantaMediaOnline

Twinkie Town: Peterson: Runs Batted In: Opportunity vs Execution

Screw Hanley Ramirez...Morneau’s already a top run producer!

Justin Morneau: Elite Run Producer, or lucky to be batting behind Joe Mauer?

Over the past three years, no one on the Minnesota Twins has driven in more runs than the 2006 MVP, Justin Morneau:

2006: 130 RBI

2007: 111 RBI

2008: 129 RBI

That’s a lot of RBIs. Buthow much of this is Morneau the elite run producer, and how much does he take advantage of hitting behind one of the truly elite OBP guys in Joe Mauer? Let’s take a look at the number of RBI opportunities Morneau has had relative to the rest of MLB.

“Expected" Runs Batted In

How do we normalize each batter’s RBI opportunities? First we must create a baseline. I collected data from the entire 2008 and partial 2009 (through 7/1) seasons, counting the total number of RBI for each inning situation (e.g., one out, runner on second base). I used this data to calculate the average number of RBI that one would “expect” a batter to drive in for a given situation. I call this “Expected RBI”, or “eRBI”. Not surprisingly, bases empty, zero or one out (0.028 eRBI) is the least RBI-friendly situation, and one out, bases loaded (0.766 eRBI) is the best situation for driving in runs. I then added up the eRBI for each player across all of his plate appearances during the season. Who were the leaders in expected RBI?

Repoz Posted: July 03, 2009 at 12:13 PM | 1 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralSabermetricsProjectionsMinnesota

Redleg Nation: Thinking about Dusty Baker

Diane, LaVern, Josephine...hell, even Ginger. But Dusty?

For example, I posted the numbers in last night’s game thread that Taveras had led off 16 games where he has failed to get on base even a single time.

The Reds are not only 3-13 in those games, but 5 of those 13 losses are by 2 runs or less. Sure, 3 of those 13 losses were blowouts, so it probably doesn’t matter if we had Bonds leading off, but the Reds could VERY reasonably be in 5-10 more games this year with one SIMPLE SIMPLE change. That’s a potentially HUGE impact.

Think about it, it’s a pretty crazy stat. All you need is 2-3 more runs over those games, which should be SUPER easy because we are talking about replacing 0 (or even NEGATIVE) production.

The Reds have been among the worst teams in baseball for a handful of years now. But a lot of the time, it has been because of a bad GM signing bad players — in particular pitchers — and the Reds manager not having much choice. In this case, Dusty has options…the fault falls squarely on him (not on Willy).

Is this the single worst thing a recent manager has done to hurt the Reds chances of winning?

Repoz Posted: July 03, 2009 at 11:57 AM | 14 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralCincinnati

WaPo--Eig, “The Jerk Who Saved Baseball”

The Jerk Who Saved Baseball

By Jonathan Eig, Washington Post
Sunday, July 5, 2009

Manny Ramirez returned to the majors this weekend, to the delight of Dodgers fans, following a 50-game suspension. Yet, when the news broke in early May that Los Angeles’s star outfielder would be punished for violating Major League Baseball’s drug policy, it was another slugger who called a news conference—Jose Canseco, best-selling author and baseball’s steroidal sage. . . .

Fargo Posted: July 03, 2009 at 11:33 AM | 0 comment(s)
  Related News: General

Russ Adams designated for assignment

The Toronto Blue Jays called up outfielder/designated hitter David Delluci from Triple-A Las Vegas on Friday morning in New York. He is the left-handed bat manager Cito Gaston hopes might add balance to his lineup.

The move had been anticipated since Wednesday when Russ Adams was seen getting handshakes from teammates after Toronto closed out its nine-game home stand at the Rogers Centre. Adams, who hit .238 in eight games with the Blue Jays, was designated for assignment and must be traded, released or re-assigned within 10 days.

Thanks to Geo.

Repoz Posted: July 03, 2009 at 11:23 AM | 9 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralToronto

KansasCity.com/Posnanski: Royals are a terrible base-running team

One thing you can say about these Royals: They are reliable. I went out Thursday night with the tentative idea of writing about the remarkably bad base running they have exhibited this year. And it has been legendarily bad.

But here’s the thing about choosing a column topic before the game — the game has a knack of killing early ideas. I mean: If you go out to write about how well a team is pitching, the starter probably will give up nine runs. If you go out to write about how well a team is fielding, they’ll make three errors. It’s just how things work.

So, I had backup plans if the Royals ran the bases well on this night. I was open to writing something else if the Royals had given me something else. I should not have worried about it. First inning, Willie Bloomquist was on first and he took off on what looked like a hit-and-run play. Billy Butler hit a lazy fly ball to center field … Bloomquist did not see it. “Willie checked and couldn’t pick it up,” Royals manager Trey Hillman said.

White Sox center fielder Brian Anderson caught the pop-up, had plenty of time to set and throw out Bloomquist for the double play. First inning!

Second inning, Mark Teahen on first base, and he took off on what he said was a straight steal. Miguel Olivo hit a lazy fly ball to right field.

“Mark didn’t check,” Hillman said.

White Sox right fielder Jermaine Dye caught the pop-up, had plenty of time to set and throw out Teahen for the double play.

Like I say: These Royals are reliable.

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 03, 2009 at 08:10 AM | 7 comment(s)
  Related News: Kansas City

Boston Herald/Borges: HBO take on Ted Williams simply Splendid

But to be great at such a solitary task a lot of other things had to suffer. As the film points out, those included three wives and as many children. For years, it also included the fans who bellowed his name but also booed it because as great as he was he never beat the Yankees and didn’t deliver in the only World Series he played.

Williams wept after his Series failures against the St. Louis Cardinals in 1946, when he had only five singles and one RBI in 25 at bats, but the fans didn’t. They booed out of frustration and because he often was, like many geniuses, a temperamental cuss so obsessed with one act that there was little room for niceties.

After stroking the ultimate “walkoff” home run in his final at-bat at the age of 41, Williams was sent back to left field. Trotting behind him was his replacement, Carroll Hardy. It was a last chance for his fans to cheer and him to acknowledge them. He didn’t.

According to Pumpsie Green, the shortstop that day and the first black player in Red Sox history, Williams mumbled as he went by, “Isn’t this a crock?”

What wasn’t was that the lion in winter was still no one to be trifled with, as he’d just proven to an upstart named Jack Fisher, who had thrown a fastball Williams missed one pitch before the 521st - and last - home run of his career.

“I was watching Fisher,” Williams recalled, disgust still evident in his voice. “He couldn’t wait to get the ball from the catcher. He thinks he threw it by me! He threw it to the same spot, same speed. . . . I won’t forget that one for sure. Closest I came to tipping my cap after playing for 22 years.”

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 03, 2009 at 08:03 AM | 10 comment(s)
  Related News: HistoryHall of FameBostonTelevision

Plain Dealer: Will the Cleveland Indians lose 100 games for the sixth time in franchise history?

It’s come to this: The Cleveland Indians are off today, but if they lose tomorrow night’s game against the Oakland Athletics at Progressive Field, they’ll reach the season’s halfway point with a 31-50 record. Double that, and it’s 62-100, which would be the sixth 100-loss campaign in the 109-year history of the franchise.

...

1971, 60-102
Besides the eight fielders who started the most games at each position, the other 13 position players combined to hit .204 (302 of 1,484), which is really bad. None of those guys batted above .225. Once-promising pitcher Steve Hargan was 1-13, allowing 200 baserunners in 113 1/3 innings.

Nobody wanted to see this team. The Indians drew 22,036 fans to their last eight games at old Cleveland Municipal Stadium, an average of 2,755. In their final three road games, at Washington against the Senators, a total of 4,512 crazies showed up - an average of 1,504. The Senators moved after the season to Texas, where they remain as the Rangers.

plus, Eric Wedge, Cliff Lee, Victor Martinez: Should they stay or should they go? and Cleveland Indians add yet another bullpen pitcher, acquiring Winston Abreu from Tampa Bay

Coot Veal and Cot Deal, Esq. Posted: July 03, 2009 at 07:54 AM | 23 comment(s)
  Related News: Cleveland

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