Thursday, October 23, 2008

Raysing the stadium issue

I'm not calling this piece great journalism, because it certainly isn't that, but it does bring up a good question: can the Rays postseason run help their chances at a new stadium.

A new stadium proposal fell through earlier this year, but that doesn't mean a new one can't surface.
Baseball leaders say Tropicana Field in the long run just won't produce enough revenue to keep the team competitive.

The Rays temporarily suspended their public push for a downtown St. Petersburg waterfront stadium earlier this year.

Still, a group of community and civic leaders have continued meeting twice a month to discuss the issue. The group hopes to have a new stadium plan within the next two years.

TSN managers of the year

Notorious in elections, Florida is grade-A when it comes to baseball managers. The Sporting News leaves no hanging chads in selection Joe Maddon (Rays) and Fredi Gonzalez (Marlins) as MLB skippers of the year.

I like the Maddon selection, but Lou Piniella, Joe Torre and Tony La Russa are more deserving than Gonzalez in the National League. I like Fredi, and I think he did a great job with Florida this year, but consider what these other three managers accomplished:

Piniella: best record in the N.L., back-to-back N.L. Central division titles
Torre: first place in N.L. West, lifting the Dodgers over Arizona late in the year
La Russa: With a decimated pitching staff, kept Cardinals in race until September

Jeffress dead arm

Brewers top pick of 2006 Jeremy Jeffress is experiencing shoulder fatigue. The 21-year-old is know to touch 100 mph on the radar gun, but those numbers have been slipping.

I guess this means he would've fit right into the Brewers achy staff of Ben Sheets, Eric Gagne, David Riske, et al, but shoulder fatigue is not uncommon for a relatively young player who threw the most innings (94) of his career. They'll probably shut him down for a while and see if it just needs rest.

Process this

An interesting commentary comes from ConsumerReports.org on MLB's postseason ticket policy. It's a complicated story, but it boils down to this: at least some tickets for postseason games come with a processing fee that goes to MLB, even if the game isn't played. So, if you buy a ticket for game seven, and the series ends in six, you can get your money back except for the processing fee, which baseball pockets.
I was surprised, to say the least. If I wanted a refund credited to my charge card, I’d have to apply for it within seven days of the final game of the series. No problem there. But the $20 “order-processing fee” was another matter. This fee amounted to half the price of the ticket, in the cheap seats where I had a chance of sitting. And it was not refundable, even if the game never happened!

Now that was a problem.

“Are you kidding?” I asked a telephone service representative for the Phillies. “How can you justify a charging a fee if the game wasn’t played?

“We have nothing to do with it,” the rep said. “Major League Baseball makes us do it. The money goes to them.”
That is outrageous. Anyone else run into this problem?

Higher education

The Phillies and Rays are made up of a total of 22 players who played college baseball. It's split right down the middle, 11 and 11. That means nearly half their rosters did their thing with aluminum before heading to the minors.

The guy with the least likely path to the majors? The Rays' Ben Zobrist, who played his college ball at Dallas Baptist.

If it rains

Baseball is making the right move if game three is postponed due to expected rain in Philadelphia on Saturday. MLB would move game three to Sunday, and rather than push everything back a day, they'll drop the day off between games four and five.

There are already too many days off in the postseason schedule, and its the right move to keep the series going, especially if the teams end up with back-to-back days off Friday and Saturday.

The rub on Tampa's rubber

Daisuke Matsuzaka's chatter about the Tampa Bay pitching mound led to an investigation that the Rays had moved the rubber to accomodate James Shields. MLB said there was nothing wrong with the hill at Tropicana Field, but the Rays were still miffed.
"It's a ludicrous accusation," Rays executive vice president Andrew Friedman said. "It's crazy."

The story was first reported in Japan, then in the New York Post. The theory was that Shields likes to set up on the first-base side of the rubber and the adjustment would give him a better angle for outside pitches.

Phillies GM Pat Gillick said his team was not aware of any issues.
Yeah, like the Rays needed any more advantage at the Trop. They had the best home record in baseball. Then again, maybe they did doctor the mound!

Hamels reaching for postseason milestone

Globe on Baseball lauds Cole Hamels' game one pitching performance and makes this observation:
No starter has ever won five games in a single post-season, something Hamels could accomplish in his next start on Monday in Game 5 – provided the Phillies haven't won it all by then.
That Hamels is only 24 makes it that much more remarkable. He's really figured it out over the past year or two, and looks to be the dominant left hander of the next decade.

Not Harmon

I, too, once heard that Harmon Killebrew was the silhouette for the MLB logo. Not true, according to this Wall Street Journal article on the logo's designer.
His son once heard a radio broadcaster say that Minnesota Twins slugger Harmon Killebrew served as his model for the logo. Mr. Dior's response: "That's completely untrue. It's not Harmon Killebrew. It's not anyone in particular."
It's a good read, so check it out.

M's new GM

No big announcements are allowed during the World Series, but the Mariners made a splash just hours before game one, hiring Jack Zduriencik as general manager. Zduriencik has an interesting background, having coached both baseball and football at a high level.
The 57-year-old Zduriencik, known for his skill in drafting players, replaces Bill Bavasi, who was fired in June, and takes over for interim GM Lee Pelekoudas.

Since he arrived in Milwaukee in 1999, the team has drafted Prince Fielder, Rickie Weeks, J.J Hardy and 2007 NL Rookie of the Year Ryan Braun - the young foundation of Milwaukee's playoff team this season.
If he's going to build the Mariners through the draft, it's going to be a five-year plan in Seattle!

Phils win game one

A fairly well-played World Series opener goes to the Phillies, 3-2. I'm impressed with Chase Utley and Carl Crawford, lefties hitting home runs against tough left-handed pitchers.

As Eric Young said on ESPN, "Cole Hamels was dealin'." He allowed just five hits and two earned runs in seven innings, striking out five on his way to victory. Scott Kazmir gave up one more run and threw eight more pitches in one fewer inning of work. It was Hamels domination of the Rays that earned Philly the victory.

Brad Lidge continued his dominance in the Phillies closer role, whiffing Carlos Pena and Evan Longoria to start the 9th, and then getting Crawford to foul out to third. He was dealin', too.