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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Monday, October 06, 2008
Ben Sheets was emotional after the Brewers’ season ended today with Game 4 of the NLDS, and for good reason. Sheets knew he almost certainly had worn a Milwaukee uniform for the last time.
“Never say never,” said Sheets. “Cirillo thought he took it off and came back years later. You don’t know.”
Still, Sheets’ red eyes and solemn words told the story. Sidelined in the playoffs by an elbow injury that capped four injury-plagued seasons, the veteran right-hander probably will be allowed to leave via free agency.
...
Sheets did not deny that the day was emotional for him, however. “It was a little bit,” he said. “It still is, I guess. Uncertainty has nothing to do with it. It’s being here eight years.”
AP: C-ya, CC? Sabathia says more to consider than cash
Actually, despite Cirillo being a Brewers studio commentator, Melvin probably still has to fend off daily calls from Cirillo to don the cleats again.
Heck, if you stick a Brewers uniform (it doesn’t work in other uniforms) on Cirillo, he’d still probably manage a .360ish OBP off the bench.
NTNgod
Posted: October 06, 2008 at 01:16 AM | 90 comment(s)
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1. NTNgod Posted: October 06, 2008 at 01:25 AM (#2970009)?!
The reporter must have mis-heard...this is garbled.
Nor do I think he'll be a Brewer.
Well, the man clearly has been reading too much BeanoCook but he has a point.
As a Giants fan, I'd have to say that it's the godawful yet disturbingly healthy pitcher with an unbenchable contract.
And I say "disturbingly healthy" because at least an injury would provide some hope for future improvement.
"I try to be as less free as possible," Palin said.
In hindsight - if he really likes to hit, and he mentioned in the MLB article that he thought it was cool he got to have a bat yesterday....that kinda stuff might have some pull when he decides where he's going....
This may seem silly, but its a high reward low risk move. If it worked or helped, even if just to make him think a little harder, awesome decision.
If of no impact, then you wasted an out with nobody on and one out in the second inning, which is what likely would've happened with about 70% of any other batters appearances.
Well, I won't bore everyone with the various and sundry details surrounding Ben's time in Milwaukee. But I do think it's important for his next team to understand that Ben is NOT an unknown quantity as some have described him in the press referring to the injury history. Just the opposite. Ben is a very clearly defined quantity.
If a team can work around Ben's limits he can be a positive contributor.
Middle relievers are getting umpteen millions a year for a decent 70 innings. Don't know why Ben shouldn't get the same if not more for a good 160ish. Just have to know that once August 10th rolls around you better have a backup plan. 'Cause he's either going to the DL or gonna stink for a while.
Ben always rebounds in September. If he's still pitching that is. But he always rebounds......
I hope CC holds true to his statements. I think a lot of players truly, genuinely feel that way but the dollar signs hypnotize them (can't say I blame them). And, I know it's easy for me to say, but would you rather spend the next 7 years in a lousy, unpleasant work environment for $200 million or a fun, relaxed, pleasant environment for $120 million? I don't know how I'd answer that but the calculation has to change once you get in those dollar figures. I mean, I'd clearly pick the former if it was for $81 million vs. the latter for $1 million, and perhaps work environment doesn't mean that much to soem. But the idea of being miserable, on a daily basis, for 8 months out of the year when you're working in a profession that you grew up dreaming about seems to be worth a lot of money to avoid. Especially if you're going to be filthy rich in whatever direction you turn.
A player can't control his working environment unless the player negotiates a no-trade clause. If that's off the table, then I have no problem with a player negotiating to the last penny, since that's all that's guaranteed to him.
Any idea is worth exploring. And actually Ben pitched pretty well in the second half this year. Sheets had a strong August and September. The team just didn't score any runs for him.
The issue is that even with time off Ben is built such that something will fly apart, rest or no. So you give him X time off, placing a burden on the rest of the staff/team, and then two starts in Ben pulls a rib muscle. Or gets a blister. Or someone sprays lemon juice in his eye. Or he gets a bat bite.
Well, you have to remember, he's 65 years old.
Did he drop the vegetarian lifestyle already or are you worried about a relapse?
My wife, a vegetarian of 20+ years and accomplished distance runner, said that she was offended by Fielder. I asked how and she said a 25 year old professional athlete should not look like that. I told her he was aware of the problem and adopted a vegetarian lifestyle to combat it. She said he was not vegetarian. When pressed, she admitted it may be technically true that he doesn't eat meat but that he's clearly not eating a healthy diet either.
Now, I'm not as anti-fat as she is (anyone who has met me knows this) but I think she may be on to something. It wouldn't surprise me at all if, in dropping meat, he's made up for it with junk.
Harvey?
bunyon, I feel that Bronson Arroyo did this with the Red Sox, who promptly realized that he was underpaid and had positive trade value because of it and traded him.
A player can't control his working environment unless the player negotiates a no-trade clause. If that's off the table, then I have no problem with a player negotiating to the last penny, since that's all that's guaranteed to him.
Oh, indeed. And knowing what the environment will be 7 years down the road is a stretch at any rate. I'm not saying he should take less money than the best offer, just that the best offer won't necessarily be the one that offers the most guaranteed dollars. Players seem to know this entering negotiations and then forget it. I would absolutely agree that any player considering taking less money to play somewhere they like should definitely demand a full, iron-clad, no-takebacks, no-trade clause.
But, if you're going for "work environment", you also need the right to demand a trade. It's just as likely that the environment could change over a 6-7 period.
No idea other than the club is VERY worried as Prince gained what looked to be 25 lbs or so DURING the season. Who does that?
He showed up lighter at spring training. But as the season passed he heavier and his defense went from bad to awful to buffoonish.
And he became incapable of hitting a good inside fastball as witnessed by how the Phillies pitched him. Seriously, I don't think he could get around his own stomach.
Most disconcerting......
It's doubly concerting because his dad basically ate his way out of baseball as well. Apples, trees, all that.
Neither beer nor doritos contain meat.
I said "he's a big tall black guy, kinda heavy set"
Fielder came up to bat immediately after she asked this and she said
"good lord - you didn't say he was that fat"
he looked huge, tiny elvis.
As a baseball fan, I am offended by your wife.
There is a reason baseball is my favorite game. There is no mold. Last year's AL MVP is 8 inches taller than the Shortstops he grew up watching. This years AL MVP is going to be one of the smallest men in the league.
CC Sabbathia is a really big, huge guy who no one would confuse with a triathlete. His performance down the stretch led many to compare him to another dominating lefty, who some would compare to a triathlete, the uberathletic Sandy Koufax.
There is one way to be a baseball player, if you can swing the bat, if you can throw a curve, you can stick in the show.
And that is why baseball is my favorite sport.
I have not seen the person that made me realize this in years. In this case, I'm certainly glad.
Sure, you can be a vegetarian and drink lots of beer and eat lots of chips but usually those choosing a veg lifestyle don't do that.
Gives an undersized kid some hope and makes him work hard at his sport - even if I was out of organized by, oh, age 12, I never even considered playing football because that door was automatically closed.
This will be my last clarification (see 38) for my first attempt. She was really surprised. Her offended statment was basically that she is being asked to accept a guy's professional behavior and he's clearly not demonstrating it. On that I'm with her. If you won't accept a guy not running hard down the lines or loafing after a ball on defense why is acceptable for the guy to balloon up over the season. Taking offense is too extreme a way to put it, which she agreed with, but saying that baseball allows many different body types to succeed shouldn't excuse such obvious disregard for conditioning. Now, whether that is an unavoidable thing on Prince's part - just a genetic part of him that he's going to be really fat or whether he's actually not taking care of himself, I don't know.
FWIW, kevin, my wife doesn't sound much like your brother. She is really supportive of everyone being active in whatever amount they can do. I do know the type you describe though where distance running is some sort of religion with the better runners being high priests. Annoying gits.
I just wanted on my soapbox, and to remind myself why I love baseball during this very difficult October.
It really was my storytelling that was bad. Most of our discussion (wife's and mine) was about the possibility of his leading what would traditionally be called a veggie lifestyle. To her, and most veggies I know, it is more about "healthy" eating (and/or "not cruel" to animals, of course). I'm not sure where Prince falls on that scale (ha!) but it seems obvious to me that his diet sucks. And I was speculating that if he's always eaten a lot of meat and suddenly stopped that he might have just replaced the calories with junk. I'd say paying a dietician to live with him for a month or something might be a good idea.
But, as I say, I have no idea. Perhaps the poor SOB is really taking care of himself and this is the best he can do. I doubt it, but I have no firsthand knowledge. Nor does my wife, despite her crush on Craig Counsell (which I think she maintains just to piss me off).
There, that should turn you guys well and fully against her.
That or he's dipping every vegetable in chocolate and peanut butter...........
As for Prince Fielder, he may have gotten fatter as the season progressed, but September was his best month in terms of OPS. So maybe it affected him in the Phillies series but he had some good games in September. I don't know. His month by month OPS: .813-.807-.922-.965-.780-.998. Not sure when weight issues started hurting his offense.
True, but Babe didn't get fat until his 30's. He was always a big guy (barrel chest, skiny legs), but not fat until he got old. I also don't think he was ever as fat as Fielder is now. At 40, Ruth was thinner than Fielder is at 24.
Edit: B-Ref has Fielder at 6'0, 260. Wow! Those things are usually understatements, correct? Ruth was 6'2", and I'm pretty sure he never came close to 260; B-Ref has 215, but I'm sure he was bigger than that at the end. I'd guess 235-240.
what on earth that has got to do with "healthy" i do not get. you can be a "vegetarian" eating deep fried vegetables in gravy with boston baked beans and having a couple dozen crispy creems for dessert. and eating cookies and crackers all day. along with bags of doritoes. and pounds of cashews/peanuts/mac nuts
ALL "vegetarian"
i got no idea why refusal to eat meat/chicken/fish/eggs/milk is supposed to be lower calorie. or "healthier"
unless all you really DO eat is green vegetables
- as for prince
i don't guess i see how that particular guy is ever NOT gonna have, um, girth
I dont think he would be crazy to do that, he's just betting on his own good health. And if loses the bet, he still has $50 million guaranteed. If he is healthy and effective for those 2 years he will be able to get a huge contract (long or short) and end up with way more $/per year.
Is this a jest or accusation?
Follow Up:
I expect an answer. Don't wander in here and make that type of comment without being prepared to clarify its intent.
I specifically mentioned his defense in post 30.
And have mentioned his defense in other threads at other times.
And will repeat again, check out the defense.
As for his offense it was highly concentrated even within a month's time. If you break down his season Prince would have 10 games spurts of great output and then go some time with sporadic offense. I have followed his entire career and it was totally out of character for him. And Prince was a VERY predictable guy in not only the expected output for a season but in the manner in which it was achieved.
That'd be "vegan," not just "vegetarian."
He is three bills if I am a day and a half.
Lots of people who drop meat from their diets simply replace it with starches, which is clearly not a positive step for one's health. I've heard people differentiate between "vegetarians" and "starchitarians", with the idea that you aren't a very proper vegetarian if you dont eat some, you know, vegetables. Pasta and grated cheese is not something to try and live on.
As mentioned, you thinking of vegans. I know some vegetarians who don't eat eggs. I personally am not a big fan. Can eat an omelette or cake now and then, but not too much of it.
As a life long vegetarian, and coming from a country which has good vegetarian options, vegetarian food is healthy food is a myth. In fact, for Americans who have "converted", it is even harder as being brought up on a diet of meat, a meal with no meat leaves you slightly empty and makes you eat more. Also, I guess you have to eat more to get your daily intake of vitamins and proteins.
Its very hard to convert. kudos to him if he did, but you don't have to stop eating meat to eat healthy. Though, if anyone wants to, I can help you eat healthy yet tasty vegetarian food!!
Doug Flutie says, "Hello."
(Yes, he's definitely the exception to the rule.)
Understood. Between my time in the service and my primary occupation I have relatives who term me a "murderer". I like to know where I stand with folks.
Being a veggie doesn't mean you eat healthy though for many veg-heads it is a religion so I can see how somebody thinks somebody isn't vegetarian simply because they are not skinny.
Nah, he's frying every vegetable in chocolate and peanut butter, after, coating in it breadcrumbs and batter.
I'm not jumping on your wife, but she really needs to take a look at more athletes than distance runners. Take a look at the superheavyweights in weightlifting, both male and female. Superfically, to a layperson, they don't fit the aesthetic ideal of an athlete. Most of the males typically weigh about 150+ KGs, 330+ pounds. The women are lighter, but still typically around 130 KGs, ~285 pounds. Nearly all have bulging bellies. Yet, besides being extremely strong, they are also (surprisingly) athletic. Shane Hamman, the former US national champion, could dunk standing flatfooted, and also do a backflip.
I'm not saying that Fielder is similar, but physical "shape" with superficial looks can be deceiving.
I agree with this. I especially don't see how being fat, among players, is not only tolerated, but in some cases, "we're not selling jeans here", held up somehow as exploiting a "market inefficiency".
I agree with your wife. C.C. Sabathia qualifies as meat. I read the article, in America's finest investigative reporting newspaper, about Fielder and Sabathia trying to eat each other.
I thought that some contracts had "assignment bonuses" that function similarly, but use one-time payouts (usually small, like 1 MM).
Doug Flutie says, "Hello."
What is he, like 5' 10", 180? His voice alone would crush me. I am a small person.
I'm a vegetarian. From my experience, from myself and vegetarian friends, vegetarian is no animal flesh, and eggs. Whereas vegans don't eat any animal products: flesh, eggs, milk, cheese. I have known some extremists who wouldn't even touch honey.
Being vegetarian probably actually makes it more difficult to eat healthy, especially in modern society; with chips, sugared soft drinks, doritos, various sweet snacks like Ho Hos etc, available in abundance, for most beginner vegetarians, the meat is usually replaced with junk.
Fifth-level vegans don't eat anything that casts a shadow.
A true vegan does not eat any animal products or use any animal products.
The halfwayers generally just eschew red meat.
Being vegetarian probably actually makes it more difficult to eat healthy, especially in modern society;
I would disagree. Sure a novice teenager who simply says "I'm going veggie" is likely to make poor choices. But in today's society it is much much easier to have a well diverse diet and not touch animal products. Try being a vegan in the 80's when the supermarket had iceberg lettuce, tomatoes, cucs, and bell peppers.
No human souls?
It isn't that not eating meat is necessarily healthier, it's that those who choose not to eat meat tend to have health more in mind than those that don't consider their diets at all. It looks pretty clear to me that Prince is an exception to my (admittedly anecdotal) theory.
HSF:
Understood. Between my time in the service and my primary occupation I have relatives who term me a "murderer". I like to know where I stand with folks.
- sigh
you got some seriously nutcase relatives. not that i am throwing stones, mind
unless you made up your whole life for us you are one of the most decent men i ever known
That was me for a while, but I got tired of living on a diet of vampires and ninjas.
what, you don't pocket-mulch?
Whereupon they promptly starve to death before gaining enough experience points to reach 6th level?
Sorry, couldn't resist.
I guess should have clarified what I meant by "modern". I included the 80s in the modern period.
I agree that it's easier to be a vegan now than in the 80s. But it still doesn't change the fact that a vegetarian, and a vegan especially, needs to drastically alter his / her diet, unless (s)he was already eating a diet based on tofu, vegetables, soy derived products like veggie burgers, legumes, etc.
And while there are more healthy vegan / vegetarian food choices now compared to the 80s, that still doesn't change the fact that unhealthy food choices are much more easily available, and cheaper, than healthy food choices. And that most people are already used to eating chips / doritos, Ho Hos, Butterfingers etc, and not veggieburgers / tofu.
Nah, he's frying every vegetable in chocolate and peanut butter, after, coating in it breadcrumbs and batter.
Is this the wrong time to pimp my home countries national dish: Deep-fried Mars Bars?
William "The Refrigerator" Perry could dunk a basketball. He could also do a standing high jump up onto a three-foot desk. He was IIRC 6'2" and a sloppy 325#.
Whereupon they promptly starve to death before gaining enough experience points to reach 6th level?
No; at fifth level you acquire the spell "Transparent Beets". It's not pleasant, but you get by.
I said Yankees after the trade. Still see it as the most likely outcome.
Is it safe to say that the Dodgers and Angels are out of the running? He's always said that he'd like to play in LA.
No need--I find veggies quite tasty thank you very much!
The key (with a lot of them) is don't cook them--it takes away all the flavour.
I did vegetarian for awhile (and still eat very little meat) when I had some heart issues and there are a lot of soybean products that help with the ol' meat cravings.
Best Regards
John
Despite that, NBA fat guys still have skills. Past and present include Ledell Eackles, John "Hot Plate" Williams, Oliver Miller, Baron Davis. (I'm excluding the guys who got fat in their 30s, like Shaq.) I'm probably forgetting a few others.
Derrick Rose once begged out of practice with a tummy-ache. According his Memphis teammates his diet consists mainly of gummy bears.
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