Archive for March, 2007

Phun with trade rumors

March 30, 2007

**UPDATE 3:55 pm: Never mind. The Cardinals cut Rincon on Friday. Two years, $2.9 million, 3.1 innings, 10.80 ERA. That was money well spent.**

The last few days of spring training often move the slowest, as Opening Day is so tantalizingly close yet so agonizingly far away.

So the obsessive Internet nerds while away their anxieties by inventing trade scenarios. I ran across an interesting one at The Phanatic Magazine:

A source told The Phanatic Magazine Thursday that talk around the league has the Phillies entered into discussions with the St. Louis Cardinals about the possibility of a Chris Coste-Ricardo Rincon swap.

Sure, Ricardo Rincon is a likely trade candidate, but for Chris Coste? You might remember him as a feel-good story from last year: After 11 seasons in the Northern League and various affiliated minor-league locales, Coste finally made the majors is 2006, hitting .328/.376/.505 in 98 games.

Great. But he’s a catcher. The Cardinals are set at the major-league level and have options in Eli Marrero and Michel Hernandez should anything happen to Yadier Molina and Gary Bennett.

Coste just doesn’t make sense for the Cardinals as a trade target. But one of his Phillies teammates might.

The Cardinals, as you’ve read, are thin in the outfield ranks, especially after having banished John Rodriguez to the Memphis bench. And the Phillies are thin in the bullpen, as The Phanatic mentioned.

So it makes better sense to me to send Rincon, Rodriguez and cash to the Phillies for Jayson Werth and and a low-level relief prospect. Here’s why:

  • Rincon would slide into the Phillies bullpen at least as their top lefty, and possibly into setup role.
  • Rodriguez could replace Werth as the Phillies’ fourth outfielder.
  • With Juan Encarnacion out and Jim Edmonds recuperating, Werth can fill in anywhere in the outfield and also knows how to use his glove.
  • Best of all, acquiring Werth would obviate the need for Preston Wilson and/or So Taguchi.

I’ve been on the Werth bandwagon for some time now. He does have some injury concerns, but he’s finally healthy after two troubling seasons and is swinging the bat fairly well this spring.

Astros ignore Jimmy Dugan’s advice

March 29, 2007

Instead of avoiding it, as the manager of the Rockford Peaches urged, Astros minor leaguers will be dealing with the Clapp this season.

I’m talking about Stubby Clapp, of course, who is the new hitting coach for Houston’s rookie league team in Greeneville, Tenn.

You remember Stubby, don’t you? He captured the heart of Cardinal Nation with his Hustle, Grit and Scrappiness. He was Bo Hart before Bo Hart was Bo Hart.

Baseball Prospectus has complex formulae such as Speed and Stuff; certainly they can come up with one called Scrap.

Logjammin’

March 28, 2007

With the national media seemingly focused on the Cardinals’ rotation, I find the outfield situation much more vexing.

Even when at full health, the starting troika has its flaws. But with one, and possibly two, starters slated to open the season on the disabled list, a spot or two could open up for the multitude of fourth/fifth outfielders still in camp.

Juan Encarnacion is a near-lock to kick off 2007 on the D.L., a distinction that Jim Edmonds was supposed to share. But Edmonds got three innings Sunday in his first Grapefruit League action and played Monday and Tuesday as well. Even if he’s not swinging the bat well, he can contribute by taking his walks and playing his usual nifty defense.

So let’s just assume that just one free spot will open. And in Encarnacion’s absence, Scott Spiezio will get the bulk of the time in right field, which means after Aaron Miles and Gary Bennett, there will be three bench spots left. Here’s who should get in:

  • John Rodriguez. J-Rod apparently has taken up residence in the John Gall Memorial Tony La Russa Doghouse. Sure, Rodriguez hasn’t gotten a hit since St. Patrick’s Day, but that’s also the last time he got more than two plate appearances in a game. Maybe his power surge in 2005 was a fluke, but he has shown an ability to get on base, a quality that doesn’t exist in this lineup beyond the No. 5 hole.
  • Skip “Jared” Schumaker. The Skipster is slugging .568 so far this spring, but the bulk of that is from his two-homer game March 7. His defense is what is going to book his trip to St. Louis. Think of him as So Taguchi, only a decade younger and not Japanese.
  • So Taguchi. Yes, carrying Schumaker and SoTags is an exercise in redundancy. But Preston Wilson has been terrible this spring, and you know TLR couldn’t start the season without his beloved Taguchi. P-Dub, thanks for your help last season. Now pack up your trash and get out.

So who gets whacked once Encarnacion comes back? Logic dictates that it would be Taguchi, but his is a charmed existence under La Russa. The smart money is on Rodriguez, unfortunately. Even more unfortunately, there’s no room in the Memphis outfield, either. He can be a useful part-time contributor at the major-league level. If he can’t do it in St. Louis, make a deal with a team who can make room for him.

Sometimes stuff happens

March 26, 2007


Today, Monday, is the 10th anniversary of one of the greatest brawls in NHL history. While Peter Forsberg of the Avalanche and Igor Larionov of the Red Wings were having a go, Red Wings’ grinder Darren McCarty seized an opportunity to avenge a dirty hit that the gutless Claude Lemieux laid on McCarty’s teammate Kris Draper in the previous season’s playoffs.

McCarty pummeled Coward Claude, who turtled after the first blow. Then things really got interesting, as you can see in the video.

************

Fast-forward to Friday. In the eighth inning of a 15-1 blowout Reds minor leaguer Wes Wilkerson twice threw at the head of Devil Rays catcher Shawn Riggans, a major transgression in baseball. What happened next warmed the cockles of Riggans’ heart:

As I got up off the ground and looked around and all the guys were there, it made me feel really good to know they had my back.

After the second time Riggans got knocked on his ass, Devil Rays players took exception, then took to the field, ready to defend their teammate. Thankfully, nothing happened and the game finished quietly.

Afterward, Rays manager Joe Maddon was glad to see his players stick up for one another:

The way our guys came out of the dugout, I loved that part of it. That was spectacular.

Right on, man. While bench-clearing brawls are never a good thing, it’s good to see a team unite in defense of a player who was wronged in the course of a game, whether by an inexcusably dirty hit in hockey or a headhunting pitcher, or even a post-homerun showboater (Kenny Lofton, I’m looking in your direction).

Not letting players take care of such incidents themselves leads to ugly brawls such as the one 10 years ago today.

Ringing in the new season

March 25, 2007


(STLToday.com)

That’s actually not too bad looking. It’s not overly tacky as far as championship rings go. Probably the best part about it is what Bill DeWitt had to say:

We wanted to fit the modern player and still have that bling factor.

“Bling factor.” As the kids say, of course.

Kip on keeping on

March 25, 2007


(Julie Jacobson/The Associated Press)

Kip Wells has further cemented his status as the 2007 Dave Duncan Pound Puppy after going five innings Saturday against the Washington Nationals, allowing two runs and striking out six.

In 17 spring innings, he’s fashioned a 1.06 ERA while striking out 15 and has yet to allow a home run. If he keeps this up, he’ll provide a reasonable facsimile of a No. 4 pitcher out of the No. 2 hole spot in the rotation.

My biggest concern with him is his uniform number. I just hope it’s not jinxed; the last two guys to wear No. 21 were chased out of town by angry, pitchfork-wielding mobs.

Cardinals officials imPerezed by reliever

March 24, 2007

After being drafted in the first supplemental round last June, Chris Perez more or less dominated Midwest League hitters in 25 appearances.

And according to Kary Booher of the Springfield (Mo.) News-Leader, Perez this spring has picked up where he left off:

Initially and conservatively penciled in to close for High-A Palm Beach this season, Perez is blowtorching his way through spring training at such a dizzying pace, St. Louis’ minor league personnel are beginning to question whether the original plan ought to be scrapped.

Now it appears he could break camp as the anchor of the Springfield Cardinals bullpen…

Taking a page out of Erik’s book, Perez’s cheese sits in the low to mid-90s, while his slider, rated by Baseball America as the organization’s best, is death to right-handers. Portsiders, though, were less impressed by it, as evidenced by Perez’s generous walk rate to lefties.

If he does start the season in Double-A and can figure out a way to solve lefties, we could see Perez enjoying a delicious cup of fair-trade coffee with the big club in September. He then could be setting up for Jason Isringhausen in 2008, unless the club declines Izzy’s $8 million option…

While I do find it implausible that the club would give Perez the keys to the ninth inning in 2008 (that’ll happen in 2009), it does highlight what I think is a better, cheaper way to construct a bullpen.

Instead of paying retail for an “established closer,” it would be much more cost-effective to grow your own power arms to put in that role. Take Isringhausen’s contracts, for example. His first, signed in 2002 was for four years at an average yearly value of $6.75M. The extension he signed before 2005 to replace the final two years of the first deal was for three years with an $8.583 AYV.

But a player such as Perez would earn about $1.5M his first three seasons combined. For a guy who’s going to pitch about 70-75 innings per season, the choice seems obvious, in theory.

Of course, the real world can blow such theories to hell. The Cardinals basically had to sign an “established closer” back in 2002 because Dave Veres wasn’t getting the job done and because there were no internal options (where have you gone, Jimmy Journell and Scotty Layfield?). Before that, the ninth inning was given to the likes of Ricky F. Bottalico, Juan Acevedo and Jeff Brantley. Getting Isringhausen was like getting a used BMW after years of driving a busted-ass 1987 Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera.

But now, having a guy like Chris Perez potentially gives you the flexibility to allocate precious payroll space away from the bullpen and into higher-value areas.

Whither the whiffs?

March 22, 2007

Opening Day is 10 days away, which means its time to start fretting about the various Cardinals shortcomings.

Some folks are whispering about Albert Pujols’ slow spring. Through Wednesday’s games, your pal and mine is batting a pedestrian .260/.302/.380 with exactly zero home runs in 17 games. Call me crazy, but I’m not worried about it. I think he’s earned the occasional rough patch, don’t you think?

What is bugging me, though, is the starting rotation. Don’t get me wrong; the results have been brilliant: Through 78.1 spring innings, the likely five starters have compiled a 1.83 ERA and given up only two homers.

What I’m concerned about is how those excellent results are being achieved. Specifically, where are the strikeouts? Here are the starting five’s innings pitched and K/9 rates:

  • Adam Wainwright: 21.2 IP, 3.73 K/9
  • Anthony Reyes: 16, 3.94
  • Chris Carpenter: 14.2, 4.91
  • Braden Looper: 14, 3.86
  • Kip Wells: 12, 6.75

Granted, those are small sample sizes taken individually, but total the numbers up and you get a 4.48 K/9 rate for those 78.1 IP. You sure can’t argue with the results, but it’s hard to sustain them with such a low strikeout rate and a BABIP of roughly .237.

Yes, it’s still only spring training, and the bulk of those innings pitched can be credited to just getting back into playing shape. But we’re now deep enough into spring that the starters are getting stretched out to 6-plus innings each time they take the bump. If the low strikeout rate continues into these longer starts, then there should be some legitimate concern.

UPDATE: Carpenter has whiffed six Marlins through six innings during Thursday’s tilt. Thanks for smashing my whole argument to pieces, Chris.

If you build it, they will come

March 22, 2007

This week, Micah and John, the namesakes of the Just Two Guys blog, each promoted the idea of building a new baseball-playing-and-spectating facility in our hometown.

Back in the late 1970s, Springfield was home to the Cardinals’ Triple-A American Association farm club. Our town got to see such players as Tom Herr, Ken Oberkfell, Glenn Brummer, John Stuper and Tito Landrum, all of whom would go on to play for the Cardinals’ 1982 World Champion team. Even Bob Sykes, the man who was traded for the legendary Willie McGee, once played in Springfield.

After the 1981 season, the Redbirds were spirited away to Louisville, and in came the Single-A Midwest League Cardinals. Guys like Ray Lankford, Bernard Gilkey, Todd Zeile, Dmitri Young and Taylorville native Pat Perry were kids playing in the Land of Lincoln. That franchise lasted through the 1993 season.

Replacing the Cardinals were the Sultans, a Padres MWL affiliate. They left after 1994, were replaced by the Royals’ affiliate in 1995, and then in 1996 followed by the Capitals (which featured a then-unknown Jason Simontacchi), an independent Frontier League franchise, which lasted until 2000.

All those teams played at Robin Roberts Stadium at Lanphier Park, which by modern standards is obsolete. Named after Springfield’s greatest ballplayer, the playing surface there is great, but the facility surrounding it is woefully inadequate. If my memory serves, there was one concession stand, and it also housed the lone souvenir outlet. I believe there was one restroom per gender, and you needn’t ask about luxury boxes, because there were none.

In order to be financially viable, a team today needs things like luxury boxes and multiple concession stands, souvenir stands and bathrooms. Which is why Springfield needs a new stadium.

But where to build it?

Micah and John both advocate a new stadium be built downtown, something I’m enthusiastically in favor of as well. A downtown ballpark would greatly increase the foot traffic in the city center. People could make an evening out of it: They could head downtown before the game and grab a bite and a beer, go watch the game and then maybe grab another bite and hit a bar with their buddies before catching a bus or cab home.

It doesn’t just have to be the hot-dog-and-beer crowd, either. A family could come to the ballpark early with picnic basket in hand, have their meal in a special area similar to those of the Quad Cities‘ and many other ballparks. A well-built minor-league park would cater to families with young children with such picnic areas and playgroundy-type amenities.

If a downtown park isn’t feasible, I think the next-best location would be adjacent to what will be called “Legacy Pointe,” the so-called lifestyle center planned for the area between Wabash Avenue and Interstate 72 along the extended MacArthur Boulevard. A park there would have the same effect as it would downtown: increasing foot traffic, this time in a high-density, more-or-less upscale retail area, rife with various shops and restaurants.

But to be absolutely certain, a downtown location would be best.

Sounds great. What about the team?

Yes. You need a baseball team to get people to come to a baseball park. As I mentioned before, Springfield is the hometown of Hall-of-Fame pitcher Robin Roberts, who enjoyed his best years with the Phillies during the 1950s. With his permission, of course, you could base the whole team concept around Mr. Roberts and his connection to Springfield and the Phillies.

First, and most obvious, the team would be a farm club for Phillies. The nickname? The Springfield Robins, of course. Uniforms could be based upon the style that Roberts wore during his time with the Phillies, such as this one, or possibly this one.

The stadium itself could evoke the grandeur of old Shibe Park, where Roberts played during his tenure with the Phillies. Something similar to this:

The historical connections wouldn’t have to be limited to Roberts and the Phillies, either. Many other accomplished major-leaguers have hailed from Springfield and the surrounding area: Ducky and Dick Schofield, Kevin Seitzer, Jeff Fassero, Tim Hulett, et al. You’ve heard of Pesky’s Pole at Fenway Park? Well, perhaps the rightfield fair pole in our new stadium could be Ducky’s Pole.

Baseball, more than any other sport, reveres its history, and Springfield would be doing itself a favor by keeping its own baseball history alive in such a fashion.

This is a Cards-Cubs town. Why the Phillies?

I’ll tell you why. To be successful, a baseball team would need more than just a local historical connection. It would need to unite the community behind it, to serve as a rallying point.

But it is well known that this is Cardinals and Cubs country. If a minor-league affiliate of either of those teams were to come to town, people who hold the opposite rooting interest might not want to support such a team.

But a neutral team such as the Phillies would not come with such baggage, and everyone can root freely.

All of this, however, is going to take much more than the online bleatings of a couple of bloggers. People are going to want to have a baseball team come back to town. And after bad experiences with the last couple of teams, I don’t blame anyone for being apprehensive.

It’s also going to take a boatload of money. But the days of A. Ray Smith are long past. There will have to be a local ownership group formed, one with extremely deep pockets. Deep enough not only to be able to get a team, but also to get a stadium built. Using public monies to benefit private business interests is something to which I’m philosophically opposed. The only possible way to get away with that is to make the city or whichever governmental entity foots the bill the owner of the stadium.

It’s been more than a decade since affiliated minor-league baseball has been played in Springfield. It’s not like this town is too small to support a Single-A franchise; Springfield would sit roughly in the middle population-wise with other Midwest League cities. Comparable cities include South Bend, Ind., Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and the Quad Cities. And small Wisconsin towns such as Beloit and Appleton have had Midwest League franchises dating back to before our own Springfield Cardinals.

We can do this. All it takes is people who want to make it happen. Count me in.

For your information, the Supreme Court has roundly rejected prior restraint

March 1, 2007

It is with a heavy heart that I announce that The 26th Man is on hiatus.

I don’t know for how long. It might be permanently. It might be a few months, a few weeks or a few days, in which case this becomes a pathetic plea for attention.

In the meantime, I would like to profusely thank everyone who visited and read what I had to say, everyone who left comments and everyone who linked here. Thankyouthankyouthankyou for making my blogging experience so enjoyable.

Yours in red,

Jeff

“When I was young
life was fun.
Now that I’m older
life’s a bitch
or just the son of one.”