User Comments, Suggestions, or Complaints | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertising
Buy MLB playoff tickets, plus 2011 World Series, 2011 ALCS tickets and NLCS game tickets. We also have Texas Rangers playoff schedule, tickets to Red Sox games and Yankees game tickets. Plus, buy Phillies baseball tickets, Tigers playoff tickets and the biggies like ALDS baseball tickets and 2011 NLDS tickets. |
Demarini, Easton and TPX Baseball Bats
|
AllianceTickets.com has cheap MLB Tickets. Get all your Colorado Rockies Tickets, Seattle Mariners Tickets, San Francisco Giants Tickets and all your favorite baseball tickets here. We also carry cheap Denver Broncos Tickets, Seattle Seahawks Tickets and Denver Nuggets Tickets. |
Page rendered in 0.2390 seconds
55 querie(s) executed

Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
1. philly Posted: February 25, 2008 at 12:00 AM (#2698868)If none of the teams with gaping holes in the rotation were willing to pony up to sign him, it's hard to imagine he has much left.
Is it possible the Sox are generating a reputation within baseball for excellent rehab and shoulder maintenance programs such that a pitcher in Colon's position would be drawn to the organization?
How likely is it that he's better today than Devern Hansack? Seems like at best a 20% chance to me. I almost wonder if this is really a shot in the dark for August, in case by some chance he's able to rehab his way back to a 94 MPH fastball, rather than for April, where he is nearly certain to be awful.
Have pitchers who rehabbed with the Sox been really successful in recent years? Matt Clement got hurt in 2006 and did make it back at all in 2007 but I am not familiar with the Sox system to say much more than that. Wade Miller didn't do that well either. Have their young starting prospects been especially healthy?
Publicly, it would mostly be based on the shoulder strngthening program and periodic monnitoring system set up to keep Papelbon healthy last year. A similar programn was used subsequently to shut down Buchholz as a pre-caution. Will Carroll in his last chat or maybe the health report referred to other things the Sox do that aren't as public, but probably get talked about amongst players and agents and whatnot.
There is not a long track record of success, but there appears to be a sentiment that the Sox are making progress in terms of keeping pitchers healthy.
Their minor league pitchers have been very healthy. One HS arm came up sore pretty much as soon as he signed and later had TJS, but there hasn't been many other injuries in the minors.
There have been several stories - this one about Papelbon, this one on Buchholz - that discuss or allude to the new system the Red Sox have developed for testing, strengthening, and resting pitchers' shoulders. Whether it will be effective is completely open, but it does appear to be legitimately new, different, and interesting.
I will say that it probably doesn't apply to Colon - for the most part, the Red Sox have been trying to keep healthy shoulders healthy, rather than trying to heal injured shoulders. It seems likely to me that the two are quite divergent problems.
if he's in the mid-80s like he was the last 2 years he won't be back, unless he learns how to pitch with different stuff which doesn't seem likely.
Maybe they ought to clam up about it, in case it does work? Theo was discussing it on WEEI the other day--it can be heard in the audio archives.
He was in the mid 80's, reportedly, in winter ball. When he was able to pitch this year he was generally in the 90's and sometimes in the upper 90's.
He was at his best in April.
Wasn't Boston very close to getting Colon before? I seem to recall back on '02 or '03 the team being very close to acquiring him. Well at least the team didn't have to give up Grady Sizemore to get him. Hell, they didn't even have to give up Rocky Biddle.
The rumor was Colon for Shea Hillenbrand and Casey Fossum. The Sox ended up getting Byung Hyun Kim for Shea Hillenbrand and used Casey Fossum to get Schilling so they would not have been able to get Schilling if they had made that trade.
I wonder how recent history is different if the Sox make that trade. They might have won the World Series considering how good Colon was with the White Sox in 2003 (242 IP, 119 ERA+). Colon probably signs an extension to stay with the Sox.
or at least Pawtucket.
The problem Boston seems to have had in the past few years is not in rehabbing pitchers from known injuries; rather, it's in correctly diagnosing the injury in the first place. By taking a flier on another team's player, they're getting a built-in second opinion (first opinion, really) from other diagnoses*. To the extent that they have a shoulder-rehab specialty, this might not be a bad move.
* I'm not sure, given he's a free agent, that Colon's medical records with other teams are available. But there's enough general medical info about his injury available in the media; I'm not sure how much detail they need beyond that for a second opinion.
IIRC, Okajima was shut down at various points late in the season after the testing indicated he had a lot of arm fatigue. I suspect this happens more often than the public realizes. The Red Sox will internally designate a pitcher as "not available" because of a strength test but won't disclose this to the media or the opposition -- or to Game Chatter, causing the Chatterers to scream at Tito for the tactical blunder of not using the pitcher.
So, speed is out, but location is good.
Translation: "Hey, this could work! But it's early."
I guess I missed the details on the contract on the first go-around. I knew it was an incentive-laden minor-league deal, but had no idea of the max value. I also read somewhere else that he can opt out of the contract if he's not on the MLB roster by May 1, but I'm not sure if that matters.
OK, to sum up from above... It's early, but he seems to have command of his pitches. Velocity is about where it was observed (mid- to high-80s) in winter league.
That last part may or may not be a problem. As with any changeup he needs to have enough separation in velocity from his fastball for it to work. Same, I suppose, goes for his slider. If he doesn't get that separation, it'll be easier for hitters to sit on the fastball. Control is great, but he needs more than that.
I'm starting to see the upside on this as the Bret Saberhagen Reclamation Project, with ERA+ wavering between 70 and 170 from a pitcher who gets by on control rather than velocity and has a spotty health record. To get that from Colon would be good and bad - good in that I wouldn't have expected Colon to have that kind of upside, but bad in that he'd take up a roster spot from someone who might be able to do better.
OK, so there's not much meat there, but I bolded the part that caught my eye.
There's a lot of ways to take this quote. One is what I've suspected for a long time: for health reasons, the team takes the act of warming up into account when they consider a pitcher's availability. (It's not often considered in Game Chatter, from what I remember...) Another way to take it - and I think this is clearer - is that they are (or will be in Okajima's case) hesitant to warm someone up, preferring to have someone come into the game on a short warmup than to have them warm up unnecessarily.
This kind of thing intrigues me. If they're going to do shorter warmups, will they lose any effectiveness? Will being less loose in a game situation produce more (or different) injuries than the ones prevented? Given how many relievers are brought in to start an inning, how big of an impact will this have?
There are secondary impacts as well. If they can increase availability by better managing warmups, can they carry fewer relievers? If so, what's the best use of the additional roster spot(s)? And who do they cut?
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.
<< Back to main