Feeling the Breeze on a Warm September Day

By Blaidd Drwg

The new ‘aggressiveness’ for the Mariners at the plate is really paying off – in terms of inflating the opponents strikeout totals.

Here are the last 7 Mariners games I attended with the gritty details:

Date Opponent Score Mariner Hits Mariners Walks Mariner Strikeouts
9/9 Royals M’s win 7-3 15 2 12
9/10 Royals M’s lose 4-2 2 0 16
9/11 Royals M’s lose 2-1 6 1 12
9/13 Yankees M’s lose 3-2 6 4 17
9/16 Rangers M’s win 4-0 6 2 9
9/17 Rangers M’s lose 7-6 8 1 13
9/18 Rangers M’s lose 3-0 6 2 14

This final stretch of M’s games that I will be at this season started off with a legit 7-3 win. They pounded one of the worst pitching staffs in baseball for 15 hits and 7 runs as they should have, so I could forgive the 12 K’s with only 2 walks. I also got to see Alex Liddi’s first MLB hit and the pitching debut of Steve Delabar, so it was all good. The wheels just came off after that – the next 2 games against the Royals were a disaster, making their mediocre pitching staff look like the Phillies  with the Mariners offense producing just 3 runs on 9 hits, 1 walk (!!!) and 28 strikeouts(!!!!!!).

Things went from bad to worse against the Yankees as the M’s had AJ Burnett on the ropes early, but couldn’t put him away. There was a lot of swinging and missing that night for the Mariners as they managed to strike out more times than I have ever seen one team strike out in a single 9 inning game.  On the flip side, I did get to see Mariano Rivera’s 600th save, so something could be said for that game.

The Rangers series wasn’t as bad, but the one win was ugly (probably would have been a 1-0 game if Ian Kinsler had not made a bad throw on what was a routine ground ball that should have ended the inning or if the routine bouncer up the middle 2 batters later had not bounced off the bag keeping the inning going), but it guaranteed that they would not lose 100 games this season.

This offensively may be the worst seven game stretch I have seen 12 walks and 93 strikeouts is not a winning formula in any way. It also goes a long way to explaining the attendance in some of those games – the game on the 13th against the Yankees had a whopping 18,306 show up while the weekend games against the Mariners drew 22,000 for fan appreciation night on Saturday and 21,000 for kids appreciation day on Sunday, although the Sunday game felt a lot emptier than that.

Punt, Punt, Punt, Rinse, Repeat

by A.J. Coltrane

Yeah, I know I’m belaboring the point about Tavaris Jackson, but, as Peter King from SI writes:

Seattle’s possessions at Pittsburgh. They ended with a punt, punt, punt, end of the half, punt, punt, punt, punt, surrendered on downs, punt. Charlie Whitehurst anyone?

Charlie Whitehurst is the better option. He may even prove to have some value. Hopefully the Seahawks go to plan “Charlie” soon.

Shame on You, Detroit

By Blaidd Drwg

Detroit doesn’t exactly have a reputation as a tourist destination, but the city is really missing out on an opportunity here with old Tiger Stadium Site, something akin to the movie, Field of Dreams.

In case you don’t know the story, here is my really short version:

– Tigers build shiny new ballpark.

– City, not knowing what to do with historic old ballpark, demolishes it.

– Fans come to site of old ballpark to see what is left of it, see the field is still intact (albeit overgrown) and decide to play a pickup game on it.

– Owner of the site threaten fans to get off the property.

– Fans ignore owners and spend their time and money to clean up the field and host regularly scheduled games .

– Owners continue to threaten fans

– A group of Chevy employees offer to volunteer their time and money to maintain the old site as a ball field for youth teams.

– Owners of the property tell them to bugger off.

A couple things you might not know about the old Tiger Stadium Site:

– It is in a lousy part of town
– The city has no idea what to do with it and no money to do anything with it anyway
– There are a lot of abandoned lots in the neighborhood
– People still come to the site to see it, including former ballplayers

Seems like a no-brainer here – you have the opportunity to draw people somewhere that they would not otherwise go, have someone maintain the property for you without you having to put any money into it and you will actually improve the neighborhood. How does this not make sense?

While not the greatest movie, Field of Dreams does provide us with something that I think is appropriate here, spoken by the great James Earl Jones playing Terrance Mann:

Ray, people will come Ray. They’ll come to Iowa for reasons they can’t even fathom. They’ll turn up your driveway not knowing for sure why they’re doing it. They’ll arrive at your door as innocent as children, longing for the past. Of course, we won’t mind if you look around, you’ll say. It’s only $20 per person. They’ll pass over the money without even thinking about it: for it is money they have and peace they lack. And they’ll walk out to the bleachers; sit in shirtsleeves on a perfect afternoon. They’ll find they have reserved seats somewhere along one of the baselines, where they sat when they were children and cheered their heroes. And they’ll watch the game and it’ll be as if they dipped themselves in magic waters. The memories will be so thick they’ll have to brush them away from their faces. People will come Ray. The one constant through all the years, Ray, has been baseball. America has rolled by like an army of steamrollers. It has been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt and erased again. But baseball has marked the time. This field, this game: it’s a part of our past, Ray. It reminds of us of all that once was good and it could be again. Oh… people will come Ray. People will most definitely come.

I for one would come, to play catch on a field that some of the greatest players in the game once roamed; to sit and watch a game at a place I visited many years ago; to hear the echoes of the late, great Ernie Harwell calling one last game.

To the city of Detroit, build it – people are already coming. Do the right thing.

Taking a Trip in the Wayback Machine

by Blaidd Drwg

At the end of the 1971 season, the MLB all-time list for pitcher strikeouts looked like this:

Rank Pitcher Strikeouts
1 Walter Johnson 3,508
2 Jim Bunning 2,855
3 Cy Young 2,803
4 Warren Spahn 2,583
5 Bob Feller 2,581

Here is where those guys rank on the current list:

Rank Pitcher Strikeouts
9 Walter Johnson 3,508
17 Jim Bunning 2,855
20 Cy Young 2,803
25 Warren Spahn 2,583
26 Bob Feller 2,581

It is amazing what a difference 40 years makes. Johnson’s number looked insurmountable for the longest time, then Ryan and Carlton blew past it and eventually Clemens and Randy Johnson also joined the 4,000 K Club.

Raise your hand if you knew Jim Bunning was #2 all-time on the list at the time he retired, or would have even guessed he was in the top 5.

And Down the Stretch They Come…

By Blaidd Drwg

What a difference a week makes – thanks to a 2-8 record by the Red Sox over the last 10 games, paired with a 3 game sweep of the Sox by the Rays and a run by the Angels, we have us a wild card race in the AL.
The standings as of this morning look like this:

Team               W-L      GB
Red Sox         85-61      —
Rays              82-64     3.0
Angels           80-67     5.5

The Angels still have a better shot at winning their division than the Wild Card, but I put them in here because they were on a roll and you never know what will happen in the last couple weeks of the season.
It is still an uphill climb for the Rays. The Sox don’t have an easy schedule to end the season, but they do have 4 left against the Rays, all at Fenway, where the Sox have the best record in the AL, but then again, the Rays don’t exactly have a cakewalk either. Here are the remaining schedules:

Red Sox Rays
Remaining Home Remaining Road Remaining Home Remaining Road
Blue Jays 2 0 3 0
Rays 4 0 0 0
Yankees 0 3 3 4
Orioles 4 3 0 2
Red Sox 0 0 0 4

The interesting part of the remaining schedule for the Rays is that their 10 remaining road games are all over the next 11 days – that is right, they get to play the Red Sox at Fenway for 4 games and then the Yankees for 4 right after that. They do have an off day between the series, but the Yankees games do include a double header on the 21st.

With all of the scheduling craziness and inter-divisional games, it could be a very interesting last 2 and a half weeks of the season in the AL east. Let the games begin.

Epic Failures

By Blaidd Drwg

Eric Wedge did something the other day that frustrated me to no end. Leading 1-0 in the 8th inning against the Angels, Charlie Furbush was cruising; he had given up a couple of hits and had only thrown 82 pitches. Furbush got the first hitter, Mike Trout, to fly out on a drive to center. The next hitter is where the wheels started to come off. To protect against the bunt, Wedge moved 3B Alex Liddi in on the grass and practically right on the line. Eric Aybar hit a shot that would have been a routine ground ball to 3B had Liddi been playing back, but instead it went by him and was fielded by Brendan Ryan, running away from first base, with no chance of getting Aybar.

Then things went really wrong. Maybe Furbush got too preoccupied with the runner, but he suddenly couldn’t find the strike zone. The second pitch to pinch hitter Alberto Callaspo ended up in the dirt and to the backstop because of a half-hearted attempt on a backhand stop by Miguel Olivo (he didn’t even move to try to get his body in front of the ball to block it). Needless to say, two more pitches that were not even close put Callaspo on first. The Mariners had Tom Wilhelmsen ready to go in the pen.

At this point, I probably would have at least sent the pitching coach out there to calm down Furbush – he really missed badly on balls 3 and 4, but the Mariners chose not to. This brought up Macier Izturus. Furbush again missed badly with his first two pitches and at this point he is looking like he had nothing left and I am practically yelling at the TV for Wedge to get out there and talk to him, if not take him out of the game. Heck, Olivo should have gone out there to talk to him. The young kid has just threw 6 pitches in a row that were nowhere close to being strikes and he looked like he was out of gas, so I am sure in his head he was thinking, “I have to throw a strike,” which he did, right down the middle of the plate, which Izturus smacked up the gap for a 2 run double and the lead, ending the night for Charlie Furbush.

I am not saying that going out to the mound would have made a difference, but leaving the kid out there to make the mistake he did was a terrible move by Wedge, and people wonder why this team is 20+ games under .500. My other question for Wedge – why are you playing Brendan Ryan and Willy Mo Pena? At this point, let the kids play and see if you might have some guys who can help next year. Pena and Ryan will probably not even be Mariners next season, so why bother.

On a side note, the Mariners inept offense was held to one hit by Jerome Williams, a 29 year old former prospect who was out of professional baseball for 3 years prior to this season.

$6k On The 6 Horse Please

by A.J. Coltrane

Emerald Downs was relatively quiet this past Labor Day weekend. Saturday was also a beautiful day, so it made the experience doubly enjoyable.

One side effect of a quiet day at Emerald Downs is that a small amount of money wagered can actually impact the odds on each horse. 10 minutes before post time the amount bet (on horses #5, #6, and #7) might look like this:

 

Finish/Horse # #5 #6 #7
Win 2000 2000 2000
Place 1000 1000 1000
Show 800 800 800

Prior to the 4th race the betting was proceeding normally, then somebody did this:

 

Finish/Horse # #5 #6 #7
Win 2000 8000 2000
Place 1000 1000 1000
Show 800 800 800

$6,000 on the #6 horse to win(?!?) The #6 horse immediately dropped from about 2/1 down to 1/9. And it sat there. The other horses went up to numbers like 30/1 and 19/1. Even the other “favorites” went up to 5/1 and 6/1.

By post time there was a total of $32,000 wagered, almost 20% of which was the one big bet on #6 to win. The scramble to bet the 30/1’s and 19/1’s brought all the odds closer in-line — the #6 horse ran as a 1/1, while the longshots ran at about 10/1.

The final order?

Win:  #5

Place: #6

Show: #1

Ouch for him! On the bright side, I hit the 6-5 Exacta, which paid 18.50/1.

It should have paid better though.

The Seahawks Keep Getting Bigger

by A.J. Coltrane

On Monday the Seahawks traded diminuitive CB Kelly Jennings to Cincinnati for 300-pound DT Clinton McDonald.

From the ESPN piece:

Clinton who?: McDonald was a seventh-round choice of the Bengals in 2009. The team had released him previously. He played in eight games last season. McDonald stands just under 6-2 and converted from linebacker in college. Nolan Nawrocki of Pro Football Weekly, writing for his 2009 draft guide, lauded McDonald for possessing toughness and a mean streak. He thought McDonald would project as a three-technique defensive tackle in a one-gap scheme. McDonald was not expected to earn a roster spot in Cincinnati.

The trade continues the Seahawks process of getting bigger.

Jerry Brewer hit it on the head about a month ago:

Their goal is to build a championship team with mostly young, athletic 20-something players who possess prototypical size. They want to be an attacking defense-centered team with a mobile quarterback guiding an offense that makes opponents choke on the running game. And they want to build from within, using the draft as their primary resource and filling out the roster with smart free-agency moves that help them acquire players who still have an upside.

…and that’s why Kelly Jennings didn’t fit in anymore.

Random Thoughts on Ballparks

By Blaidd Drwg

I was looking at the baseball standings today and I noticed that there are currently only 2 teams in baseball who play their home games on a turf field – the Rays and the Blue Jays. It got me thinking about growing up in the era of turf fields and cookie cutter ballparks. If you turn back the clock 20 years, you can see how the game has changed:

• There were only 26 teams – the Rays, Dbacks, Rockies and Marlins did not exist at that point, and one of those teams played in a different country under a different name (Nationals/Expos).

• Of those 26 teams, 12 of them played their home games on artificial turf.

• There were 4 teams playing in true domed stadiums (i.e. non-retractable roofs) 20 years ago. There is only currently 1 dome left in baseball and that one was not in use in 1991 (Tampa Bay).

• Since 1991, 19 of the 26 teams in the league have opened new parks and one went through a complete remodel (Kansas City). On the down side, we lost such old timers as Yankee Stadium, Comiskey Park, Tigers Stadium, the Astrodome and Cleveland Stadium. On the upside, we lost at least 9 relics from the early 70’s cookie cutter era.

• In 1991, there were 8 stadiums built prior to 1960. Currently, there are only 2 – Fenway and Wrigley. Dodger Stadium is the 3rd oldest in baseball at 49 years (opened in 1962). To put that in perspective – Vin Scully has been broadcasting Dodgers games longer than they have been in their current home.

“It ain’t over…”

By Blaidd Drwg

…as Yogi Berra used to say.

After 4 innings in NY today, the A’s lead the Yankees 7 – 2 and didn’t look like they stood much of a chance against Rich Harden and the Yankees starter Phil Hughes was already out of the game. There is a reason they play 9 innings rather than 4 in baseball. Over the next 5 innings, the Yankees managed 15 hits, 13 walks and 20(!!) runs against the A’s pitchers, aided by 3 grand slams, to pull out a 22 – 9 victory today. Nick Swisher managed to go 1 for 4 with 2 runs and 2 walks, making him the only Yankees starter not to drive in a run and Mark Teixeira managed to be the only Yankee starter without a hit despite knocking in 2 runs. Heck only 2 A’s starters failed to get a hit or knock in a run (they both failed to do both) – Coco Crisp and Andy Recker, who has the unfortunate luck of going 0 for 3 with 3 strikeouts in his MLB debut in a game featuring 31 runs and 36 hits. Overall, it was a good day if you had any A’s or Yankees hitters on your fantasy team.