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1. The Essex Snead Posted: June 15, 2009 at 12:26 PM (#3219633)Yeah, it's great that Murray gets to now publish pointless ad-hominem nonsense like his mini-tirade against the Tampa Bay FO without someone useless & incompetent telling him that writing such stuff makes him look like a complete buffoon.
"Longoria’s delayed arrival didn’t hurt the Rays last season, but you have to wonder where they would be this season if Price had been in their staring rotation from the start of the season instead of joining them seven weeks into the season."
Does anyone else see a contradiction in these two quotations from Chass? Unless of course he is implying that the Rays would be worse off had Price started the year in the majors, a reasonable viewpoint but one I doubt he is suggesting.
Why are they so vague about the form this preparation takes? RTA, and it's not entirely clear what Hoffman is doing in terms of 'preparation'. I think we should be told!
See - no basement blogger would have worked that one out. It takes newsroom experience!
Of course not. But if he cares about the blogger writing "did not return my phone call" then perhaps he should. But I don't see why the GM would care about this.
I've worked with editors on some of my THT pieces and have been happy with the process. I think they made the articles better than they otherwise would have been. But for a guy like Chass, I can see it being pointless, he probably knows a lot more about writing than whoever a paper or website can find to edit him.
I kind of like what he's doing here. The Rays are manipulating service, everybody knows it, yet they can't come out and admit to it. It's not a good situation, and hopefully bringing attention to it can eventually lead to an improved system.
I love the way Chass considers his article to be of such vital importance -- and of such urgency -- that Friedman should have been interrupted from draft preparations to take his call.
Neither did Tampa Bay, right away.
He didn't return the e-mail I once sent him.
This sort of thing sounds pedantic, but my company (for instance) has an iron-clad "only Communications folk may talk to the media" for a lot of instances. If Friedman's hands were tied from above, I have no real issue with pushing this phone conversation off to someone else.
Rick Vaughn: I'm out?
Umpire: Yes you are!
Rick Vaughn: Hey, c'mon. That's an accident!
Umpire: You threw at him intentionally!
Rick Vaughn: Oh, kiss my ass!
Umpire: You're gone.
Rick Vaughn: You're full of ####! #### you!
Umpire: Get outta here rookie.
Rick Vaughn: Oh! Why don't you blow me ump!
It's because they are PEOPLE PERSONS! THEY ARE GOOD DEALING WITH PEOPLE! CAN'T YOU PEOPLE SEE THAT?
Possibly because Tom Haudricourt had an article out Saturday about exactly that?
It has been my experience that good writers are always happy to work with editors. It's the bad writers who have a problem with it.
Didn't Bill James prefer to work without an editorial net?
Absolutely. For Maury to hold his position after so many years is quite damning, as far as I'm concerned.
As AROM wrote, the Rays are clearly gaming the system. They may be smart to do so, but Chass is right in this case to call it what it is. They didn't talk to him. Fine, that's their right. But to call and whine after the fact that he wrote they didn't call back is petty and foolish.
The snark here about Chass thinking his blog posts are so important doesn't make sense. The complaint from the Rays shows that his posts are important to them (I don't know why but that's a different question.)
More than anything about Chass, this seems to me to illustrate the expectations that the Rays had for journalists. That even if the Rays don't defend themselves, the journalists to be objective insert a balancing defense of the Rays' behavior, even if the journalist thinks such a defense is ridiculous. That way the Rays get their side out without subjecting themselves to questions. They're smart to pursue that strategy, but I for one am glad Chass didn't live up to his end of the "bargain." A crank may yell about the kids in the yard and the buzz of planes overhead, but every once in a while a crank may say something on point.
I was originally going to make a similar claim, tho in a more profane & classless fashion.
Does he really not call it a blog?
I don't believe it, but let's for the moment assume that it is true that the Rays held back Price purely to stall his arbitration clock and that it had nothing to do with baseball reasons -- namely, that Price needed (still needs) to work on developing a better changeup. Let's also assume that they also held back Longoria to stall his arbitration clock -- never mind the fact that they called him up on April 11 last year and he spent the rest of the season in the big leagues except for going on the DL.
So what? Do they Rays (or any other team) have the right to make these decisions for business reasons?
Alternatively, do teams owe a duty to call up prospects at the earliest time they may be ready -- never mind the business implications or veterans on the MLB roster who may be blocking their way?
It seems to me that if one goes to the step of saying that teams have a duty to call people up, there is a really slippery slope that follows from that.
How does Chass know that the Rays position is ridiculous if he put out his column without learning what that position was?
However, I consider Chass a blogger, and, yeah, go ahead and put it in your blog.
Wait a second. They probably did nothing to stall his arbitration clock. He'll be a super-two anyway. But they gain a year extra before he's a free agent. That happened when he missed opening day. The fact that he spend the rest of the season in the big leagues actually enforces the idea that the Rays thought he was ready.
Your point stands about it being a good business decision and if the players don't like it they can do something about in the next CBA.
Point taken. Thanks for clearing that up.
Your point stands about it being a good business decision and if the players don't like it they can do something about in the next CBA.
What can they do? I'm not really trying to argue, but it seems to me that even if the players don't like it, there is very little they can do. Even if all parties agreed (MLB and MLBPA alike), how does one craft an enforceable provision in the CBA that isn't hopelessly vague and overbroad?
"All teams with rookies deemed to be MLB ready (by whom?) cannot unduly delay (what is delay and what is unduly?) such players in being promoted to the major leagues for reasons not related to that player's development."
What if a team had a player that could play for some teams, but still had a few things he could work on while the team has a solid producing veteran at the position?
What if calling up the player (pursuant to such a provision) meant that he'd do nothing but sit on an MLB bench and/or be treated like a Rule 5 pick. Does this really do anyone any good, other that to give the kid service time?
Chass sounds like such a whiner. And to say that he finds editors, useless, wow.
I don't know, either, but I'm not a labor lawyer. I'm sure that they can come up with something.
They could try to make free agent eligibility more like super-two, where keeping a guy down for one game at the start of his career wouldn't cost him that year for the free agency clock. Would the Rays have waited until June to call up Longoria? I don't know.
Someone in another thread suggested that a player could become a free agent 8 years after signing his first contract, or age 28, whichever is later. Personally, I'd choose whichever came first, but either way, if the date of free agency is set for a given player, then the team wouldn't have that particular reason to keep a player down.
They didn't -- they called him up in April.
I know. It was worth it for them to delay his free agency by a year, but not worth it to try to delay his arbitration. So to delay free agency for a whole year, they just had to do without him for a week. If free agency rules were like super-two, then they would have had to wait until June if they wanted to delay his free agency. Would they have done that?
Yes, no editor could help Murray improve upon scintillating drool like that. I was panting in excitement at the prospect that Murry might clue me in on the secret of what he does when working on a column late at night.
If the toilet seat is up I will pee normally. If it's down I will pee normally except that I will usually splatter the seat with urine. I will not lift up the toilet seat on my own as a principle, because lifting toilet seats is beneath a writer, it's something bloggers are forced to do by their landlord mothers. I seldom explain why I refuse to lift the toilet seat. I used to do that, but my explanation caused friction with my wife. Now when she sees or feels the urine I left on the seat I just tell her "cataracts", and that I will be peeing on the toilet seat again, and it is her perogative whether she chooses to lift the toilet seat, or just wipe it off with the toilet paper kept handy in a roll by the seat, except when it's empty, which should not be a problem because she knows where to find the refills. I do not refill toilet paper rolls, again I am a writer, not a blogger.
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