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1. NTNgod Posted: July 25, 2008 at 05:43 AM (#2872371)Yup... about 0:22 is when you see him wing the ball into the stands.
In addition to Ryne Sandberg being the Peoria manager (luckily not present for the brawl), the Dayton Dragons hitting coach is Darren Bragg. If there are any Darren Bragg fans out there, let us know if he was involved in the brawl, because that could be the last straw that gets him kicked off my fantasy teams.
The reversal came after the Reds and Cubs — parent teams of the Dayton Dragons and Peoria Chiefs — indicated they didn't want pitchers playing in the outfield, which is what each team would have needed in two spots.
Too effing bad. Then one of the teams should have had to forfeit.
That's an absolute disgrace, no place at all in professional baseball. The clip didn't have sound for me, but it seemed like the coach/manager of away team that was jawing was the one most culpable for getting the thing escalated as he was the one who insisted on poking his head around the umpire to continue his verbal barrage. 20 year-old kids will act like 20 year-old kids, but you'd expect a grown man to display a bit more maturity on the field.
Especially considering that it was the home team's player that got beaned... I'm not sure why the away team manager was so upset, as it was his pitcher that beaned the guy in the guy.
Regardless, total and utter disgrace. Unless Castillo is some uberstud pitching prospect, his days in American professional baseball are numbered.
Also, according to the Dayton Daily News article, Peoria's 2B suffered a broken leg in the melee.
Again, just an absolute disgrace.
No.
Carmelo Martinez.
I think he had a rep for his temper back as a Padre, IIRC.
Castillo's stats do not peg him as an uberprospect, and he's never been written up as such. But he's still young for the Midwest League. Ah, well...
I think he had a rep for his temper back as a Padre, IIRC.
I presume that if his nickname really was "Mellow Carmelo", it was ironic?
I'm not joking.
You probably enjoy bear baiting too.
Nowhere in the rules of baseball is there a provision for fighting.
I watch this fight and think "wow, this is kind of ridiculous," but I *don't* watch it and think, "This is an outrage! This is a disgrace!" The fight, mind you. A pitcher firing the ball towards innocent fans, that *is* an outrage and a disgrace. The fight itself, no.
I'm not joking.
That's ridiculous. Rob Dibble did the same thing, serving only a suspension.
I would NOT want to pick a fight with Darren Bragg, if he's in anything like his playing shape.
"A pitcher firing the ball towards innocent fans, that *is* an outrage and a disgrace."
Unfortunate, maybe, but a disgrace? It's not like he was aiming for the fan...
Um... yes. That was quite thoroughly reckless.
Deep breaths...
What doesn't make sense is why he would be charged with felony assault. Felony assault falls by the wayside once an offensive physical contact occurs. If Castillo actually hit a guy with that ball, as the report says, then the charge should be aggravated (felony) battery: he intended to hit the player in the dugout with the ball (which is obviously being classified as a "deadly weapon" for these purposes, however questionable a call), and even though he missed that player, the intent transfers to the fan in the stands. He could conceivably be brought up on an additional charge of aggravated (felony) assault for tossing the ball at the player, however.
Either way, he ###### up big time.
Getting pissed off and winging a 90 MPH pitch into the stands for no good reason? Reckless to me.
Not only that, but it looks like he didn't just throw it in the stands, he pitched it and had a followthrough, like he intended to aim for someone.
But I am offended at the sight of grown men fighting. Even if it is consensual. But I see that others aren't. I'm not going to fight about because I hate ironic fights.
Yeah, I can see how he might be a bit wild.
Didn't he fire the ball into the stands from several hundred feet away?
Regardless, Albert Belle intentionally drilled a fan in the stands with a thrown ball, and if he got suspended, it wasn't for very long. I just wish his arm had been that accurate during actual games.
I could swear I saw Shawon Dunston fire one of his trademark missiles 20 rows into the stands on an "errant" relay..
Does anybody know whether Castillo is considered a prospect? If he's not, I would suspect his career would be over. If he is, well, talent cures all sins, unless your name is Barry Bonds.
Belle was being specifically taunted by that fan, however. Not a defense, of course, but it's likely to make it different than Castillo, who injured an innocent bystander. (Comparing this to Dibble is silly; Dibble heaved a ball from the mound into the outfield stands, not at someone.)
(*) This ain't legal advice, yadayadayada. I'm not admitted in Ohio; I'm just reading the ORC.
The case may hinge on the condition of the injured party. Either way, Castillo should see an Artest-type suspension at the very least.
If this wasn't grounds for a double forfeit, what is? Putting those players back on the field was absolutely silly.
Box score
How many times are we going to tolerate grown men acting like thugs and pass it off as simply boys being boys. Professional baseball's tacit approval of these behaviors creates an environment where Julio Castillo feels emboldened to do what he did. Same for Shawn Chacon. Same for Frankie Francisco.
What's the problem with holding baseball players to the same expectations as you would any other person?
For some reason, after Castillo threw the ball and the fight wore down, Castillo (I think it is - couldn't fully make out the uni number) was escorted over to his dugout, and after he's getting jeered hardcore, picks up a bat off-camera and appears to possibly be brandishing it at someone who is off-camera (a fan?) as he's getting held back by a coach.
#5 on the Dragons seems to score a couple of takedowns.
WARNING: LANGUAGE NFSW!
Very shaky YouTube footage of the brawl
So we severely punish Julio Castillo for doing what he did. We're adults; we can draw a line. Fight with other players, that's not cool; you receive a light penalty (suspension for a week, give or take). Recklessly endanger the safety of innocent fans, that's completely unacceptable; you receive a severe penalty.
Suspension for the remainder of 2008 is the penalty I lean toward. Anything more than that--say a calendar year, the Artest penalty--sends the message strongly, which is good, but for a prospect, that's pretty close to a death sentence on his career because of lost development. I wouldn't complain if the guy got banned for life, but it's harsher than I'd choose. I'd rather see the draconian banned for life than the wristslap suspended for 10 games.
If it's a knuckleball, it's okay. He actually could have been throwing that towards home plate. If Jamie Moyer does this it's just a misdemeanor as the fan probably could throw it back harder.
I agree with this. I only wish that when there is a baseball brawl, someone would throw those prop bottles and chairs they use in Westerns onto the field to give it all a little oomph.
"Chicago Cubs Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg will return to the Wrigley Field dugout as a minor league manager on Tuesday, July 29 when his Single-A Peoria Chiefs host the Kane County Cougars in an official Midwest League contest. The game will begin at 7:05 p.m. and is believed to be the first minor league contest in the ballpark's 94-year history."
Juan Castillo will throw out the first pitch.
Castillo will probably never play in organized ball again.
FWIW, Ryno wasn't in the dugout for this game as he's in Cooperstown for HoF weekend...
I assumed he was being suspended again. I know he had at least one 3-game suspension and I heard he has been kicked out of other games. I don't remember him ever being tossed in a major league game.
This is pretty much my stance on the whole matter, too. Just a few threads up, there's a thread about a commentator calling on the pitcher to throw at Reyes' neck. There are hardly ever severe punishments handed out, and violance on the pitch is not just tolerated it's often encouraged. Honestly, how do you expect players to behave, if that is the example you are setting...
Unless I'm just not seeing everyone's tongue firmly in cheek, much ado about nothing.
Baseball is nowhere near as beanball, spikes high, take-out-the-catcher, anything's legal if the umps not watching as it used to be.
I'm not defending this brouhaha, but people act like there's some sort of epidemic of brawls happening, completely forgetting that our digital age simply makes the fewer number of brawls more prominent.
Young athletes occasionally get in fights. Sometimes those fights get out of hand. Punish accordingly, but it's hardly something I'm wringing my hands over.
The previous day, 3 Peiora batters get hit.
In the top of the first, Lotzkar hits a Peiora batter.
OK, so Peiora want payback.
Bottom of the first:
Castillo hits Cozart in the head - Cozart leaves game.
Castillo collides with Guzman (his own teammate) - Guzman leaves game with broken leg.
Castillo gets tagged for four runs.
Castillo hits Cabrera.
Cabrera slides "hard" into Samson.
Castillo nearly hits Menchaca.
Scott complains to umpires (presumably saying Castillo should be ejected).
Martinez comes on to field (presumably saying Dayton have brought this on themselves with their own actions).
Martinez and Scott go at it, Castillo is standing around on the mound.
Both teams presumably furious and aggrieved.
At this point I assume someone on the Dayton bench shouts something uncomplimentary at Castillo.
Castillo throws the ball at the Dayton bench (unforgiveable). Misses, hits fan.
All hell breaks loose.
QFT.
Look at the sequence of events. Maybe Castillo is a lunatic, but both teams are just following the "unwritten rules." Four Peiora batters get hit - payback! But now Cozart gets hit in the head - payback! But now a fielder gets hurt and the pitcher is getting slapped around - payback! But now the batting team aren't going to take being hit again - more payback! But how dare you slide in hard on our fielders - payback for the payback! But you're going to hit another of our batters? It just gets fiercer and fiercer at every stage. And the teams play each other several days in a row and so the bad blood keeps running. And there is no way for either side to back down without losing their machismo, which is what this was all about.
Both managers and both sets of players will feel they are in the right - "I was just protecting my teammates." That's what makes it the inevitable result of the beanball culture. Castillo deserves a lengthy suspension, sure, but both organisations need to be heavily fined, and I would be considering suspensions for the managers too.
Insert your own punch line.
Does that count yesterday's game?
I'd make the one for Martinez a heck of a lot longer. He instigated contact while the other manager was arguing with the ump.
Do they have to refund tickets if they do that? No way they'd ever put themselves in that position.
The thing that annoys me, is that 8 out of 10 times, these things can be avoided with a few timely ejections. What some of the players did was just plain dumb, and I am in no way trying to excuse their actions.
But I guarantee that everybody in the stadium could see that this situation was likely going to get out of hand. So why didn't the umpires decide to do something before it did?
True story. First year of pro ball for me, 1992 with the Helena Brewers (NDFA) in the Pioneer League. We have a double header at the friendly confines of the Butte Copper Kings (the Rangers affiliate, the Butte Rangers, I can't make this up). They played at Montana State, a beautiful area but an awful baseball facility, even back then. I pitch the first game of two seven inning contests and miracously get at least one future major league out (Rich Aurilla) although Desi Wilson (http://www.thebaseballcube.com/players/W/Desi-Wilson.shtml) takes me deep and get my second professional win. Helena wins like 7-1, 7-2. There's no clubhouse, so you just sit on the dugout bench as the trainer works on you. We get the standard 30 minutes between games and I get iced down once our trainer gets someone else taped up for the next game.
The Rangers start some lanky Latin kid (Madrigal) in the 2nd game and the first 5-6 guys for Helena score, culminated with a grand slam home run. The kid proceeds to throw a pitch over Danny Perez's (http://www.thebaseballcube.com/players/P/Danny-Perez.shtml) head, which prompts Danny, who was always ready to go a little nuts, to head out to meet him before the ball hits the back stop. The benches clear, and I've still got ice on my shoulder and elbow as I run out on the field thinking, "I've never been in a bench clearing fight...not in college, not in high school...NEVER". And now I'm running out here half dressed with one arm. And to be honest I was pretty nervous. People are throwing lots of punches at people, including some very strong people like Kenny Felder. But here I go, running out there and Aurilla, the Copper Kings starting SS, gets thrown out of the scrum on the mound very quickly right into me, so I grab him. He's smaller than me, I'm helping out, "keeping" him from getting onvolved. He laughs and says, "Cool. Just stand here." I laugh, relieved, because I've just met someone who wants to do exactly what I can do here...and just as he relaxes one of our relievers, my roommate TJ Schenbeck http://www.thebaseballcube.com/players/S/Tommy-Schenbeck.shtml) de-cleats with a tackle after taking a 70 yard sprint from the bullpen which was all the way down in the rightfield corner. I was literally standing there holding air as TJ proceeded to drill poor young Rich Aurilla. They finally calmed everyone down, ejecting Madigral, Perez, and a couple other players.
TJ later told me he thought Aurilla was going after me and with one arm and I couldn't protect myself. He was exactly right. Poor Rich, thank god for friends like TJ.
But I think this story emphasizes some important points.
1) Minor league fights are real, unstaged, and the mojority of the combatants may not know what they are doing
2) The combatants who grew up a little tougher, whether because of socioeconomic circumstances or because they had a cruel older sibling (TJ), are way ahead of the majority of the rest of the "dancers" or pitchers who aren't stupid or directly involved in the fracas.
3) It's good to be friends with the #2 guys.
4) In a bench clearing brawl, always look for middle infielders if you aren't emotionally involved. They are smaller, are easier to intimidate by just size, and make good dance partners.
Despite this pathetic first participation, I redeemed myself years later coming out of bullpen and Shenbecking a guy "going after" one my our middle infielders. He had our guy by the shoulders, was at least 4 inches taller, and "looked like" he had evil intent.
I will say this. We had a pretty good team, but as a bunch of guys thrown together this "first fight" seemed to bring the team a little closer together. I'm not advocating it as a solution to any problem but that can be the "good" that comes out of it, if any.
Now a pitcher throwing a ball in the stands....that guy is going away. Look at his stats; if he was a prospect he might have survived that (see Frankie Francisco), but his team will release him the first chance it can and get him out of the country.
Exactly what I was thinking. Not only is Castillo's career over, but the umps who worked that game ain't long for the business, either.
Thanks for the story. I'd love for more ex-pros to jump in on the site and give us their perspective. Good stuff.
You are right, current Chicago Tribune headline "President Bush plays Peoria"
It is not clear if Bush is coming to congratulate them or take them on in an iron cage death match.
What is it with the Cubs and psycho pitchers? Christensen, Castillo, and didn't they have that guy that killed a bird intentionally? Maybe instead of psychos they should get guys that can throw strikes.
Really, Castillo couldn't hit the freaking dugout? IT'S HUGE!
Jae Kuk Ryu.
"You're not gonna hit me, meat, because you're thinking about. About how it would look to miss in front of all these people. Show me that million dollar arm, cause I've got a pretty good idea about that 5-cent head."
Comedian Greg Warren and One-Star People
About halfway, he starts talking about fighting the american way.
BTW, does this mean I have to update my Dayton reports? Luckily, I don't have Peoria or I'd have to adjust Castillo's "command" grade, among other things...
CONCUR.
The most alarming thing about that story was that the Butte Copper Kings didn't have a clubhouse at their ballpark. ! An A-ball affiliate is less well equipped than a random high school team?
That's what it says.
EDIT: whoops, didn't see CBW had already posted. My joke isn't funny now.
One thing to add:
Unless you really, really enjoy fighting for fighting's sake, I found it to be tough to build up the necessary hate that you would need to attack a guy that had nothing to do with it. In those parks where the bullpens are next to each other, one minute you're shootin' the breeze with the opponents' relievers and next minute you are supposed to go get him? Come on....
Hence, why I (and many others) preferred to "dance around" in a "peacekeeping" capacity
I'd be lying if I didn't think of his "intent" to throw and his arm action when I saw it.
Exactly.
There were 3 Peoria HBPs in the previous night's game, and one in the top of the first in this game. It should have been obvious to Messrs. Wilson and Amaral what was happening when Cozart got hit in the head. Wilson probably should have bounced Castillo then (the umpires have the leeway to toss a guy without a warning if they believe he's throwing at a hitter) and absolutely should have issued a warning to both benches then and there, which would have led to ejections when the second guy was hit.
-- MWE
Torn_cuff, are you David England, Andy Paul, or Rafael Torrez? (I think those three guys are the only candidates from the information you provided.) Great story.
Castillo chucks the ball, then stands there for a second staring or something and then you see Menchaca come from off the screen - already in midair - and tackle him. It was awesome.
Too bad Menchaca can't hit (.174), he sure could in college (.395/.458/.786 with 28-30 SBs as a soph)
It's funny (in a sad way) that the Big League precedent for this stuff is a slap on the wrist, and the consensus here is that this Castillo kid is done in baseball, ought to be prosecuted as a felon, and might lose his visa/get deported.
But yeah-- I agree-- you can't just fire a fastball into the stands.
Too bad this whole thing went down the way it did, too, because that crazed act of chucking the ball into the stands was the only thing that made this brawl anything more than the garden variety baseball non-fight playing at a minor-league ballpark near you. The kind that should have that Benny Hill music playing in the background as 98% of the guys on the field pretend to care as much as the two or three hotheads that caused the whole thing.
That's not my experience. At least half the time it seems to make things worse by feeding a weird sense of persecution. By and large when things get to the brawl stages you're talking about people who aren't in their right mind.
OK, my experience is reffing high level touch football, but there are plenty of ugly situations with weekend warriors.
The only thing that worked at all for me in terms of diffusing ugly situations was to allow the guy with a grievance to vent briefly. Comes with no guarantee but it did work often enough that at one point I was routinely assigned games where they were expecting trouble.
Between this and the Sexson thing from earlier in the year, you could consider the mid-brawl hurling of objects to be the differentiator between dangerous brawls and "bench-clearing brawls."
Besides, you can't outlaw evolution.
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