Read More...Carl Pavano’s hopes for a return to baseball have been stalled until at least next year as he continues to recover from a serious injury that required removal of his spleen, his agent, Dave Pepe, said Thursday.
“Carl will not be physically able to play this year as he recovers from his spleen removal and the complications that followed,’’ Pepe said via text. “His hope is that he can give it a try next year.’‘
Pavano, 37, suffered severe bleeding and internal injuries when he ...
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1. DL from MN posted on August 09, 2012 at 11:36 AM # hit 0 | hit 0He's managed to screw up in the field in pretty much every way. Bad decisions throwing, missed grounders, missed popup, forgetting to cover the bag, wrong position for the cutoff. No baserunning errors that I'm aware of but he's only been on base once.
Er, "It isn't OFTEN" I mean....
In this case, it isn't awful either. It's perfectly reasonable.
What I find impossible to understand is how he was able to make it to the Major Leagues, or the Japanese professional league for that matter, if he's really and truly this bad. I mean, some of this stuff seems like Little League clownshoes stuff. How is it possible?
My best guess at this point is that he has become psychologically overwhelmed. Dealing with pressure is obviously part of the job for a big leaguer, and it's not like he has even played in any big games since he came over. Still, he started with a ton of Japanese media attention in spring training last year, and really high hopes from the franchise, then immediately broke his leg on a boneheaded double play turn where he stood like a statue while the runner slid through him. At that point, the media started to trickle away, and he probably felt like he was letting his fans down. It wouldn't surprise me if he started putting more pressure on himself at that time. When your baseline talent is already marginal, expecting yourself to play like a star will get you into a failure spiral pretty quickly. Since then, it has just been disappointment after disappointment, and it may be one of the rare cases where a guy is permanently screwed by losing confidence.
Yesterday was actually a good example of that. After he made the stupid (and pretty unlucky) play of losing the popup in the sun, he compounded the mistake by throwing home when he had NO CHANCE of getting the runner. Routine mistake -> pressing -> bigger mistake -> failure spiral. It's a microcosm of his time with the Twins.
His glove is rotten to the core.
Hasn't really worked out, huh?
Right, the price tag isn't crippling. It seemed like there was good potential at the time. He has just been so mind-bogglingly, maddeningly awful. It is one thing to play like your 10th percentile stat projections (hey, it happens), but another to suddenly not understand fundamental baseball concepts and strategy. That's the part that has made me start guessing about his mindset.
But no, he literally has only been on base once.
Me too; he's completely imploded.
All three were incredibly bad, but Crosby and Church at least looked like washed-up versions of their former selves. Iwamura was more likely to make people say "What is that guy doing out there? Is he even trying? Should they substitute him in the middle of an inning?"
(Nah, it's a good analogy.)
You know, I've often wondered -- what's the line for getting the "super"? Are there any famous people just married to "models"? How does a "model" become a "super model". Is there an induction ceremony? A certain earnings threshold?
I'm always curious about things that will never have any bearing on my life...
A cover for something in the range of SI swimsuit to Vogue.
EDIT: Or their Japanese equivalents I suppose.
I can't tell if Nishioka's wife (Naoko Tokuzawa) is really a SUPERmodel. She doesn't seem to have crossed over from the Japanese market in any way and since I don't know Japanese her Wikipedia page is of limited use. In fact I can't even link to it.
Naoko in action in a car commercial
Naoko in a gum commercial
If you make a couple of SI swimsuit issues or a couple of those Victoria Secret TV fashion shows, you've probably got a good case for the Hall of Supermodels. Having a few threads on who deserves induction there would should be a lot more fun than doing Ichiro or Jack Morris again.
Doing those guys for even the first time is by no means my idea of fun.
But hey, whatever floats your boat.
Tad Iguchi
Kenji Johjima
So Taguchi
Any number of relief pitchers
Taguchi's career is quite odd. Basically it looks like the decline phase (ages 32 to 39) of a really really really good player. I think H. Matsui and Ichiro! are the only other Japanese players to stay in MLB for their whole decline phase, instead of returning home at the first sign of decrepitude.
Does that crap still happen whenever a player from over there comes to the U.S. Just how insanely empty are people's lives in Japan, anyway? My god.
Now this depends on whether you're using "fashion" criteria or not. Fashion/runway modelling is all about the face and height/anorexia; swimsuit/lingerie modelling is much more about the body. Kate Moss was unquestionably a supermodel but they wouldn't have let her near an SI cover while Paris fashion shows aren't rushing to book SI cover models (most of the time).
Or ... fashionistas adore the cheekbones but dudes dig the boobies.
He doesn't have the arm or range for SS. It's 2B or bust in the majors. We're looking at bust right now.
Yeah, how dare they pay a disproportionate amount of attention on baseball?! My god.
Masato Yoshii
Baseball on the other side of the world? I don't. Do you?
To some degree. If the best quality of play was on the other side of the world, I'd certainly pay more attention.
Calling their lives "insanely empty" was a cheap shot, imo.
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