SportFlite FYI Episode 40
Wild, Irresponsible Speculations on the Mitchell Report
Former Senator George Mitchell released his long-awaited report on the
use of performance enhancing drugs in major league baseball a week
ago, and it's been met by an odd combination of outrage, righteous
indignation, and yawns.
On the one hand, Senator Mitchell's assignment was colossal, to sum up
the problem of PEDs in MLB and recommend a course of action. On the
other hand, he was given almost no power at all with which to
accomplish this assignment, whech means that the only cooperation he
got was from people who had nothing to lose: Ex-major leaguers,
ex-minor leaguers, long-banished clubhouse attendants and trainers,
who had been labeled pariahs in MLB anyway, and of course, people from
the Commissioner's office. Which assigned this task, as you'll recall.
Not surprisingly, then, there were, well, not many surprises in the
report. Sure, Andy Pettitte's name was a bit of a shock, but only the
most naieve among us would have assumed that it was just the
difference in his workout after Clemens joined the Yankees in 1999
that got him back on track. Slap hitters like Fernando Vina and Nook
Logan seem like a bit of a surprise because they don't "fit the
profile" of a steroid user, but then we learned from the Jason
Grimsley situation that you don't have to actually be any good to be
using.
Much of the report consists of re-hashing and detailing events about
which we already know: The BALCO scandal, the US government hearings
in 2005, drugs being found that seemingly belonged to Manny Alexander,
Juan Gonzalez, Ricky Bones, Alex Cabrera, and others. These incidents
were uses as springboards to try to conduct other interviews, though
the people who would make the biggest splash, i.e. the star players
themselves, made little or no effort to cooperate with Mitchell in his
investigation. So they didn't. In fact, the players were practically
advised by their Union NOT to talk to Mitchell or his associates. In
addition, because the Players' Union has beaten the Commissioner's
office into submission, even some of the names that Mitchell and
company were given during the investigation could not be provided in
this report.
The really interesting thing about the reports is not the names in it
(there are 86 players named in it, despite their general lack of
cooperation) but the names that are not. Jose Canseco said he was
suprised to hear that Alex Rodriguez was not named, an accusation
which A-Rod vehemently denied. Almost everybody was surprised to see
that Sammy Sosa was not implicated. But there are other names, hidden
names, if you will, that nobody had really discussed yet:
For example, on page 99 of the report, the arrest of Luis Perez, a
former bullpen catcher for the Florida Marlins and Montreal Expos is
detailed, including how he turned stool pidgeon on a number of his
former customers. In his deposition,
According to [MLB security chief Kevin] Hallinan's memo, Perez told
baseball officials "...that virtually every player on the Marlins
was `doing something' ranging from steroids and greenies, to
marijuana, etc. He also claimed that every pitcher in Montreal's
bullpen was on some form of steroid."
This was in September of 2002. It doesn't take a genious to go to
baseball-reference.com and figure out who these people were.
Here is the 2002 Marlins' roster, along with a few comments.
2002 Marlins
Vladimir Nunez
Vic Darensbourg
Toby Borland
Tim Raines
Ryan Dempster
Ramon Castro
Preston Wilson
Pablo Ozuna
Ozwaldo Mairena
Nate Teut
Nate Robertson
Mike Redmond
Mike Mordecai
Mike Lowell
Michael Tejera
Marty Malloy
Luis Castillo
Kevin Olsen
Kevin Millar
Justin Wayne
Julian Tavarez
Juan Encarnacion
Josh Beckett
Homer Bush
Hansel Izquierdo
Graeme Lloyd
Gary Knotts
Eric Owens
Derrek Lee
Cliff Floyd
Charles Johnson
Carl Pavano
Brian Banks
Braden Looper
Brad Penny
Blaine Neal
Armando Almanza
Andy Fox
Alex Gonzalez
Abraham Nunez
A.J. Burnett
Very few of these guys had some kind of significant spike in their
production at an odd time in their careers, like Sosa did in 1998 or
Bonds in 2000. But there are some potential connections here:
Tim Raines was diagnosed with Lupus in July 1999, a disease that is
sometimes treated with steroids. Could he have been a link in the
chain? it would not have been the firt time he was linked to drugs.
Mike Redmond is an interesting case. He joined the Marlins in 1998, as
a 27-year old catcher, about the time that he should have been
reaching his peak as a hitter. Despite a career minor league line of
.260/.319/.332 and a reputation as a catch-and-throw guy, he hit well
over .300 in limited playing time in 1998...and then did that five
more times in the next eight seasons, plus a .294 mark last season
with the Twins. He's 37 now and has continued to hit (most of the
time). Not that a career slugging average of .368 is anything to write
home about, but this comes from a guy who never hit better than .287
in a minor league season. Most guys don't get better when they face
tougher competition, you know? I'm not saying he was/is using, just
that it's worth thinking about.
A lot of these guys had sufferred or were suffering from injuries at
that time. Cliff Floyd, Charles Johnson, Josh Beckett, A.J. Burnett,
Brad Penny, Carl Pavano, Alex Gonzalez and others either missed time
due to injuries in 2002 or very recently before that season. It's
certainly possible that one or mor eo fthem, in order to combat their
penchant for getting hurt, might have tried HGH or some steroid. But,
you know, like Pettitte and Vina, they probably only did it once or
twice. Right.
Remember "Roid Rage"? Well, how about this:
In 2006, 2002 Marlins' pitcher Julian Tavarez was suspended for 10
days for punching Tampa Bay's Joey Gathright during an on-field brawl.
During Spring Training. That was the 5th of Tavarez' tumultuous
career, most of which were for brawling or throwing at players.
The other groub that Perez ratted out was the Montreal Expos' bullpen:
2002 Expos Pitchers
Javier Vazquez
Tomokazu Ohka
Tony Armas
Masato Yoshii
Bartolo Colon
Scott Stewart
Matt Herges
Joey Eischen
T.J. Tucker
Britt Reames
Graeme Lloyd
Dan Smith
Jim Brower
Zach Day
Carl Pavano
Bruce Chen
Tim Drew
Sun-Woo Kim
Ed Vosberg
Scott Strickland
Note that both Graeme Lloyd and Carl Pavano appear on both lists, due
to a mid-season trade (including Cliff Floyd and Wilton Guererro, who
had previously been suspended for a different kind of cheating), for
whatever that's worth.
Matt Herges is mentioned elsewhere in the report as having bought HGH
from Kirk Radomski in 2005, but he was 32 years old in 2002 and was
struggling a little after a very good 2001 season with the Dodgers.
There are some injury-prone guys here, too, but there are also a few
who look like good suspects for PEDs, based on sudden changes in their
performance levels.
Dan Smith was 25 at the time, but had been a pro since he was 17, had
an unremarkable minor league career and had flopped in two attempts at
the majors. But in 2002, he "got it together" and pitched well in AAA,
getting called up to the majors, where he continued to pitch well. In
2003 he was awful again, and by 2005 he was out of baseball.
Joey Eischen was a journeyman LOOGY, the very picture of mediocrity,
in 2002, with a 4.37 career ERA in the majors. In 2002, however, he
went 6-1 with a 1.34 ERA at age 32, and managed to sustain his success
for at least a few years, though he fell apart in 2006 and did not
play last year.
Other non-pitchers on that team definitely fit the "body type" you'd
think of with respect to steroids and/or HGH: Vladimir Guererro and
Andres Galaragga at the very least, though there may be others. Just
becaus ePerez didn't specifically mention people who weren't pitchers
doesn't mean that we should be foolish and think that all the hitters
must have been clean.
On a more general note, look at the numbers: The 2002 Ezpos finished
the season 83-79, in 2nd place, but 19 games behind the Atlanta
Braves. the Marlins were worse, winning only 79 games and finishing
4th, thanks to the hapless Mets. So if the members of two teams as
blatantly mediocre as the 2002 Marlins and Expos were rife with PED
users, why should we believe that the players on the good teams were
innocent? How can we believe that?
We can't, of course. The 102-win Braves had Gary Sheffield, Matt
Franco, Kevin Millwood, and Darren Holmes, all of whom get some blame
in the Mitchell Report, not to mention likely candidates who have not
yet been outed like Javy Lopez, Vinny Castilla, and Julio Franco.
Free Agent Analysis Part 4 of 4 and Ron Washington Hired
This is part four of a series where I will examine the free agents and
name the top players the Rangers should go after. This week, I will
examine the free agent relief pitchers and catchers.
Grade A:
Javy Lopez
Dan Kolb
Grade B:
Robert Fick
Mike Lieberthal
Mike Piazza
Gregg Zaun
Joey Eischen
Alan Embree
Aaron Fultz
Eddie Gaurdado
Darren Oliver
Mike Remlinger
J.C. Romero
Scott Schoenweis
Antonio Alfonseca
Joe Borowski
Chad Bradford
Doug Brocail
Mike DeJean
Octavio Dotel
Keith Foulke
Ryan Franklin
LaTroy Hawkins
Dustin Hermanson
Scott Sauerbeck
Roberto Hernandez
Kevin Jarvas
Matt Mantei
Troy Percival
Cliff Polite
David Riske
Felix Hernandez
Rudy Seanez
Justin Speier
Russ Springer
Tanyon Sturtze
David Weathers
Grade C:
Sandy Alomar, Jr.
Paul Bako
Rod Barajas
Gary Bennett
Henry Blanco
Todd Greene
Doug Mirabelli
Bengie Molina
Todd Pratt
Kelly Stinnett
John Halama
Ray King
Steve Kline
Kent Mercker
Terry Mulholland
Arthur Rhodes
Mike Stanton
Ron Villone
Jamie Walker
Jim Brower
Geremi Gonzalez
Steve Karsay
Jose Mesa
Jeff Nelson
Julio Santana
Rick White
Scott Williamson
Grade D:
Einer Diaz
Mike DiFelice
Vic Darensbourg
Chris Hammond
Mike Holtz
Tom Martin
Matt Herges
Brian Meadows
Guillermo Mota
Grade F:
Tim Laker
Chris Widger
Giovanni Carrara
Jason Grimsley
Esteban Yan
Top relief pitchers or catchers that the Rangers should go after:
1. Dan Kolb: He is a very good set-up man.
2. Robert Fick: He can fill the empty back-up catcher spot and back-up
the infield.
3. Darren Oliver: He is a good long relief pitcher and can fill in at
starter every once in a while.
4. Scott Schoenweis: He is a very good relief pitcher.
5. Gregg Zaun: He can fill our back-up catcher role.
6. Octavio Dotel: He has been a great relief pitcher.
7. Tanyon Sturtze: He is a good long relief pitcher and can fill in at
starter every once in a while.
8. Antonio Alfonseca: He was good before his injury last year.
9. Alan Embree: He is a good set-up man.
10. Russ Springer: He has done very well with the Astros.
Also, this week, the Rangers named Ron Washington their new manager. I
don't know enough about him to really give a good opinion but I am a
little worried that he wants Barry Bonds. He seems to be very popular
with his former players so will hopefully be someone that our players
will like and play hard for.
What I'm Gonna Do With This 'Ere Site
I want to plug you into the different Science Fiction worlds that I
have created. I would like to reprogram some of the old ideas and do
Relief Package
As news that Rafael Betancourt and the Indians have avoided the ugly
process of "exchanging numbers" and the ensuing negotiations by buying
out Senor Slo-Mo's arbitration years, to the tune of a 2 year deal
worth $5.4M, as well as the Indians holding a club option ($5M) for
what would have been Betancourt's first year of Free Agency (2010),
the Indians have further cemented their roster going forward by
ensuring that Betancourt remains in the fold for at least another 2
years.
In light of the recent deals meted out to relievers on the Free Agent
market (and realizing that a the situation of a player like
Betancourt, who was under the club's control for two more years even
before this deal due to his Major League service time, is completely
different than a player on the open market), the real coup in the deal
is the CLUB option for the 3rd year for only $5M. The protection that
the Indians retain in the chance that Betancourt's effectiveness wanes
in the first or second year (knocking firmly on wood) is something
that cannot be undervalued in the highly volatile world of relievers,
much less elite set-up men.
To wit, realizing that the "Hold" is a fairly new statistic (wherefore
art thou, GW RBI), it does measure the ability of a reliever to "hold"
a lead and transfer to a closer. While better, more complicated,
measures of relievers exist; for our purposes, consider the top hold
leaders from just the last few years:
2007
Brandon Lyon - ARI - 35
Heath Bell - SD - 34
Derrick Turnbow - MIL - 33
Jon Rauch - WAS - 33
Jonathon Broxton - LAD - 33
Rafael Betancourt - CLE - 31
2006
Scott Linebrink - SD - 36
Scot Shields - LAA - 31
Joel Zumaya - DET - 30
Aaron Heilman - NYM - 27
Juan Rincon - MIN - 26
Scott Proctor - NYY - 26
2005
Scot Shields - ANA - 33
Tom Gordon - NYY - 33
Scott Eyre - SF - 32
Ryan Madsen - PHI - 32
Julian Tavarez - StL - 32
Bob Howry - CLE - 29
2004
Tom Gordon - NYY - 36
Akinori Otsuka - SD - 34
Ray King - StL - 31
Chris Reitsma - ATL - 31
Salomon Torres - PIT - 30
Guillermo Mota - LAD/FLA - 30
2003
Octavio Dotel - HOU - 33
Brendan Donnelly - ANA - 29
Jason Grimsley - KC - 28
Paul Quantrill - LAD - 28
LaTroy Hawkins - MIN - 28
Tom Martin - LAD - 28
The lists, which contain few of the same names from year to year,
illustrate how relievers remain a volatile commodity and one that
really can't be counted on from one year to the next. The problem with
giving these players long-term deals (which is what they're demanding
now on the open market...even the marginal ones) is that if they do
regress, they are virtually unmovable and simply take up a spot in the
bullpen that could be filled by a more promising youngster cashing a
much smaller paycheck. It speaks to the importance of developing your
own players (whether they be relievers or otherwise) into MLB players,
as opposed to potentially overpaying for an extremely unstable
commodity.
Overpaying, you say?
How about the fact that the Brewers committed a combined $23M to Eric
Gagne and David Riske, while the South Siders gave Scott Linebrink a
4-year deal for $19M and Octavio Dotel a 2-year deal for $11M this
off-season in an attempt to fortify their bullpens. All are decent
pitchers, but none jump out as legitimate closers or even are would be
guaranteed to be viable set-up men for THIS season. However, with the
Brewers and White Sox bullpens being major question marks, with no
internal alternatives to exhaust, Milwaukee and Chicago simply
obtained the pitchers that they felt would best help their team,
regardless of cost.
Conversely, with the Indians boasting the likes of Rafael Perez,
Jensen Lewis, and Tom Mastny (with more young arms on the way), it
would seem that the Tribe will finally see some permanent help for
their bullpen coming up from the farm to stay, which puts them in the
enviable position of not having to explore the FA market as they have
in years past with...shall we say...mixed results. Having those
youngsters fill the pipeline at known salary numbers and with options
remaining in case of a regression is a luxury that cannot be
underestimated for a team that knows all too well what a Jose Jimenez
or Roberto Hernandez can (or more accurately, cannot) do.
But back to the impetus for the discussion, the deal for our presiding
judge of the bullpen (you know, because "Betancourt is in Session")
and the importance of the length of the deal. Some may argue that the
Indians should have included another option year or guaranteed the 3rd
year with a 4th year club option. However, it is important to remember
that Betancourt is no spring chicken due to his career starting as an
infielder (he was a 21-year-old SS for the Michigan Battle Cats),
spending some time in the Pacific Rim, and overcoming arm injuries
before finally settling in with the Tribe.
Betancourt will be 33 this year and 35 in the club option year,
meaning that the Indians would have been guaranteeing that 4th year to
a 36-year-old in 2011. To give that some proper perspective, consider
that everyone's favorite whipping boy, that "washed up, over-the-hill"
closer of ours, The Big Borowski, turned 36 this past May. Given the
volatility of relievers and the variables that seem to affect
relievers more than most, the 4th year is simply unnecessary.
But don't let that explanation of why including the 4th year in the
contract overwhelm the fact that the Indians re-signed (arguably) the
most effective reliever in the AL last year, locking in a set salary
for his two arbitration years and possibly buying out his first year
of Free Agency. The deal further solidifies the bullpen, as well as
the whole roster, for the short-term and the long-term as the Indians
lock in another piece to the puzzle for the foreseeable future...and
Guest Blogger Holly Tillman
The following message is from Holly Tillman and then her mom. They
asked to post the following message. Good Luck Holly and Karen!
Dear Freinds, Family, and HPS Network community, I am involved in a
fundraising event to benefit the community of local nonprofit
organizations by getting sponsors through a single donation. The
organization I have chosen is the Hermansky Pudlak Syndrome (HPS)
Network because my mother has this serious illness, and quite frankly
I would like to find a cure or a way to help my mother deal with
symptoms. HPS causes albinism, a visual impairment, a platelet
dysfunction with prolonged bleeding, and progressive symptoms include
pulmonary fibrosis a terminal lung disease, Crohn's Disease, and
kidney disease. My mother is having to deal with all but the kidney
disease on a daily basis. At the moment there is no cure for the
disease, you can only treat the symptoms, and death occurs in patients
with pulmonary fibrosis usually in their 30's and 40's. My mother is
43 and is in the early stages of pulmonary fibrosis, so you can see
why this issue is so dear to my heart. If you'd like to make a
donation, please make checks payable to The Human Race, and write HPS
Network in the memo line, then send it to Holly Tillman at 4114
Landerwood Dr. Greensboro, NC 27405. Please have this sent to me by
March 10th 2008. If you would like to walk or run for the HPS Network,
give my mom a call (she is regional coordinator here in Greensboro) at
336 954 3604. The race is to be held at Grimsley High School on Sat.
March 15th. from 9am-noon. Refreshments and entertainment will be
provided. The event is sponsored by the Volunteer Center of
Greensboro. All contributions are tax deductible.
Many thanks in Advance
Holly Tillman
From Karen:
While this means a lot to Holly, it means so much more for me as i am
fighting for my life, and for the lives of those in the HPS community.
I was told 6 years ago that I would either be on oxygen, or dead by
now, and God has seen to it that I have beat the odds!! i am so
grateful to Him and modern technology. Without funding the HPS
Network, research cannot continue, nor can we continue to inform
people about this rare disease. On that note, I too thank you from the
BREAKING STEROID SCOOP!
YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST!
FROM READER FAGGOTYBACKPACK VIA A SPORTSWRITER HOOK-UP:
Damon
11:33 AM
radley, David Bell, Dante Bichette, Albert Belle, Paul Byrd, Wil
Cordero, Ken Caminiti, Mike Cameron, Ramon Castro, Jose and Ozz
ie Canseco, Roger Clemens, Paxton Crawford, Wilson Delgado, Lenn
y Dykstra, Johnny Damon, Carl Everett, Kyle Farnsoworth, Ryan Fr
anklin, Troy Glaus, Rich Garces, Jason Grimsley, Troy Glaus, Jua
n Gonzalez, Eric Gagne, Nomar Garciaparra, Jason Giambi, Jeremy
Giambi, Jose Guillen, Jay Gibbons, Juan Gonzalez, Clay Hensley, Jerry
Hairston, Felix Heredia, Jr., Darren Holmes, Wally Joyner, Darryl
Kile, Matt Lawton, Raul Mondesi, Mark McGwire, Guillermo Mota, Robert
Machado, Damian Moss, Abraham Nunez, Trot Nixon, Jose Offerman, Andy
Pettitte, Mark Prior, Neifi Perez, Rafael Palmiero, Albert Pujols,
Brian Roberts, Juan Rincon, John Rocker, Pudge Rodriguez, Sammy Sosa,
Scott SChoenweiis, David Segui, Alex Sanchez, Gary Sheffield, Miguel
Tejada, Julian Tavarez,Fernando Tatis, Maurice Vaughn, Jason Varitek,
Ismael Valdez, Matt Williams and Kerry Wood."
THE LIST IS SCREWY, BUT YOU CAN FIGURE IT OUT.
THE PANDA CAN'T STOP SCREAMING!
Pudge is a disappointment. Rocker, ha ha. Nixon, ha ha and fuck you.
Damon is bad. Clemens and Andy, expected, but heartbreaking from Andy.
Would Jeebus do the roids? Varitek? Shocking. Sheffield, ha ha.
Pujols, sooo busted. On and on
UPDATE:
The report is out. I just scanned it and with a little help, don't see
Pudge or Varitek. Hmmm. Or Nixon, damn it. Greg Zaun, though. Poop.
Oh, I don't see Everett either. Shit. Motherfucker ruined Moose's
perfect game.
None of this seems to effect the Yankee Champinships of the 90s/2000.
Phew. Final list will come soon, I'm sure.
Big lesson? Pay cash. The whole report is filled with photocopied
checks.
UPDATE II: The final list from NYT. No Damon! Rondell White is there!
Names On the Mitchell Report
As reports come in I will list them here.
Update 10:00am:
Clemens named according to ESPN.
Update 11:12:
Pettitte is named, damnit!
Update 11:40:
Deadspin has a list compiled completely from rumors.
Update 12:27:
Arod's contract was annouced today, finally ARod is not the big story!
I hope.....
Update 12:56:
Add Brian Roberts, Miguel Tejada, Chuck Knoblauch, Mike Stanton and
Jason Grimsley according to SI.com. Knobby? Why did he suck so bad
then?
Also, the backlash has started with this smear piece on Clemens. This
could get ugly fast.
Please Mr. Postman.......
With the absence of any hard Red Sox news, I'm going to delve into Ian
Browne's MLB dot com mailbag. There'll be a question about our veteran
starter, Curt Schilling. I'll print it and Browne's answer, and then
be back with a comment or two. After that, there'll be a question and
reply about our young phenom Clay Buchholz, whose stuff is so good,
it's scary! Here you go.. question numero uno.....
"What are your projections for Curt Schilling in 2008? I feel with the
incentives that were written into his contract recently, these will
prove invaluable to a productive season. Personally, I feel if
Schilling keeps his weight in check and continues to rely on other
pitches besides his once-dominant fastball, he will win 15-20 games in
2008."
-- Greg L., Owings Mills, Md.
"Schilling learned a lot about himself last season. Mainly, he learned
how to pitch without the velocity he's had most of his career. I think
Schilling is also making a strong commitment to getting in great shape
this offseason, which is always a key for any pitcher in his 40s. I
agree with your optimism, that he should have a pretty good year.
Plus, in Schilling's mind, this is going to be his last season, and
you know he wants to go out strong. This is the first time in a long
time he'll go to camp as something less than an ace or a co-ace, so I
bet that also motivates him."
Peter here, and right now Curt is in the midst of his off-season
training routine. He's not losing weight....that will come later. He
is building muscle mass, especially in his throwing shoulder. The hope
is that the "tired" shoulder problems of last year, when he missed
roughly six weeks to rehab into playing shape, will be a thing of the
past. Schill certainly knows how to pitch, that's for sure. He can't
overwhelm hitters with gas anymore, but he can mix up his speeds and
use his devastating splitter for maximum effectiveness. All we need
from Curt next year is six, maybe seven quality innings, giving up
three runs or less. He will be a 15 plus game winner if he can do
that, and that's so sweet. And not being the "top dog' of the rotation
WILL motivate him. Like the car rental company AVIS, "he'll try
harder!" Now, on to question numero dos.....
"I know that Clay Buchholz wasn't pitching at the end of last season
because of a tired right shoulder. Is he ready to go for next season?"
-- Karl M., Clifton Park, N.Y.
"Buchholz was in Boston earlier this offseason and underwent some
strength tests and the Red Sox were very pleased with the progress he
has made. The expectation is that Buchholz will be full speed ahead at
the outset of Spring Training. And as pitching coach John Farrell
recently said, the club is hoping to get about 180-185 innings out of
Buchholz in 2008."
Peter here, one more time on this still dark but balmy Saturday
morning, the first hours of an exquisite four day weekend. Clay
Buchholz is a gem in the making, a developing talent who has such
great stuff, he's a "can't miss" future All Star. Remember his
no-hitter last year against the Orioles? I sure do. He used his great
fastball and mixed in his "fall off the table" curveball to keep the
Baltimore batters off balance the entire night. His pitch count was
mounting in the later innings, however, and Theo MIGHT have had to
make a decision that would seemingly vilify him to every member of Red
Sox Nation and Red Sox International...a few more pitches and he would
have had to "strongly suggest" to Boston manager Terry Francona to
pull him from the game, no-hitter or no no-hitter. Boy, I'm glad it
didn't come down to that. He was shut down in early September of '07,
and that was a good move. As the above letter showed, 185 Buchholz
innings in 2008 will be a joy to behold. I love watching him pitch.
And with a Daisuke who will be embarking on his second run-through of
the American League and Josh Beckett continuing his dominance
and.....oh well, I could keep going, but I won't. We ALL know that the
2008 Boston Red Sox club will be a good one, fun to watch while
staying successful. What a combination! And maybe a Johan in the
starting five? We'll see.......
Click on the title of this post for an article from the Boston Globe
that illuminates, a little, the Jason Grimsley steroid tell-all "who
did this, who did that" story. There's not much Soxy stuff around
today. probably because so many people are taking the long weekend
off....time to be with families and friends, loved ones. Be well, have
fun, and I'll be back tomorrow, and every day thereafter, the Big Guy
in the sky willing. I'd love to see and respond to your
comments....comments about Schill or Clay, or ANYONE/ANYTHING.
Thanks!!
posted by Peter N @ 6:08 AM 2 comments links to this post
2 Comments:
At 12/22/2007 4:20 PM, Blogger gingerly said...
Peter,
I'm looking forward to seeing Buccholz pitch too, and I say we
hang on to Ellsbury no matter what. This is going to be a great
season . . . it just seems so far away when we're sitting here
in December.
And Peter, thanks for telling me about baseballnooz.com. I love
it. It used to be hard to find new baseball blog entries. Now
I've got a fresh page of them to view every day. Good deal.
Now if we could only fast-forward to Spring training.
Keith
At 12/23/2007 6:30 AM, Blogger Peter N said...
Keith, I'm so glad you set up an account that enables you to
comment directly...great job! And basballnooz dot com is a
great place to pick out your favorite blogs, Sox or others, and
get an overview of what's happening here and now, all at the
same place. I'm glad you like it. And for ALL of my readers,
the link is on my link list, near the top. Keith, I hope you
subscribed to the BN link to my blog, because I'm sitting at
number six on the top blog list, ready to crack the top five!
Always great to hear from you, and Clay Buchholz is as
untouchable as anyone gets! And that's good.
Happy and healthy holidays to you and yours, and again, thank
you for reading!!!!!
Post a Comment
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Roch Kubatko is a Jock Sniffing Turd
And other things that have pissed me off lately.
First things first, here is where Roch Kubatko demonstrates his
aforementioned Jock-Sniffing-Turdiness, in a blog entry about Jay
Gibbons' suspension for receiving illegal PEDs. The gist is that
Gibbons should be quickly forgiven because he was a man about it all,
took responsibility, even "offer[ed] a plausible explanation."
Sure, Gibbons took responsibility, now that he got caught. Once the
investigators back you into a corner and say, "here are the credit
card receipts, here is the proof that you bought all these illegal
drugs" it's easy to admit you did it. As for offering a plausible
explanation, well...Gibbons said he took a doctor's advice, to recover
from injuries more quickly. [Expect this excuse to get very popular
soon]. Was Gibbons suffering from any of the following; multiple
sclerosis, fibromyalgia, Crohn's disease, renal failure, short bowel
syndrome, idiopathic short stature? No. Oh. Then why did his doctor
recommend it? Probably because it was a prescription mill in another
state that was selling the stuff over the internet.
Not to mention this sampling of Jay Gibbons quotes from the past few
years:
November 2005: "We want to end the problem now and get back to playing
ball and not worrying about steroids every day."(The problem being
PED/steroid use).
October 2006: "I have passed every test administered by Major League
Baseball over all the years. I have never taken anabolic steroids. And
I am not going to dignify these claims and accusations with any
further response." (Responding to Grimsley).
That's not "taking responsibility." That's "choosing one's words
carefully" and, less precisely, "lying" and "being a dishonest shit."
But we're supposed to forgive him for this, eh Roch? No. No, I think
not. But I think what we are supposed to do is understand that you
don't want to take a hard line with any of the players, that you want
to keep being a warehouse mouthpiece, that you want to keep cracking
lame jokes on your blog and not knowing much about what makes a
baseball player, or team, any good. Roch Kubatko: jock sniffing turd.
(Note, I am going to keep saying that...Roch Kubatko is a jock
sniffing turd...because my sincere hope is to somehow link the terms
"jock sniffing turd" and "Roch Kubatko" in Google searches, so that if
someone types in Roch Kubatko they will see references to "jock
sniffing turd," or that if...and it could happen...they type in "jock
fans).
Now, today, Gibbons says he's going to try to win the fans back. To
wit: "All I can do is go out there and try to play good baseball and
try to win them back. That's my goal."
Given that Gibbons appears to not yet have actually played good
baseball at any time in the past several years, I must assume one of
two things. First, he has not tried to play good baseball. In that
case, the fact that he is going to try this year should make all the
difference.
On the other hand, it seems entirely possible that a .314 OBP and a
101 OPS+ is exactly what Jay's capable of, since that what he has done
in 779 ML AB, and that trying to play good baseball isn't going to
make an ass-hair's width of difference.
Some other random thoughts.
Really looking forward to that Mitchell report. I mean really. I just
hope Andy MacPhail gets some of his tradin' done before that thing
comes out. The more I think about it, though, the more I realize there
is, above all, one player I do not want to see on the Mitchell Report:
Pedro.
Yes, that Pedro. Why? Because he is, without a doubt, the best pitcher
I have ever seen, the best pitcher I will probably ever see, and in
the running for best at doing whatever it is he does in ANY category
that I've ever seen. I want to believe that the weird, brilliant,
crazy, genius Pedro was real. I want to believe that the ERA+ of 291
(TWO. NINE. ONE. GOOD GOD THAT IS INSANE. SANDY KOUFAX NEVER CRACKED
200!!!!!!) in 2000 was real, untainted. I want to believe that he was
just that freakin' good. I want to believe that at least one natural
talent went out there against all those 'roided and leaded hitters and
made them look like fools. Even when those hitters were playing for my
beloved Orioles.
It boils down to this; the few times I saw Pedro pitch in person (and
many many times on TV) I genuinely felt I was watching somebody do the
thing he was born to do, and doing it inimitably. That's rare. I don't
want the Mitchell report to cheapen that. I really don't.
Posted by LastBestAngryMan at 9:13 PM
2nd Round Playoff Game Scores
CLASS 4-AA East
Leesville Road 21, Wake Forest-Rolesville 6
South View 34, Jack Britt 23
Millbrook 49, Garner 35
New Bern 48, Athens Drive 7
CLASS 4-AA WEST
Independence 20, Butler 7
East Burke 28, Scotland County 18
West Charlotte 22, Grimsley 14
Richmond County 19, E. Mecklenburg 13 (OT)
CLASS 4-A EAST
Southern Durham 20, Fuquay-Varina 7
Chapel Hill 13, Smithfield-Selma 7
Wilmington Hoggard 52, Pine Forest 23
Durham Hillside 42, Greenville Rose 30
CLASS 4-A WEST
No. 10 Shelby Crest (8-4) at No. 2 Mount Tabor (9-3)
No. 11 Charlotte Ardrey Kell (8-4) at No. 3 Ashbrook (7-5)
No. 8 Central Cabarrus (5-7) at No. 1 Watauga (9-3)
Purnell Swett 22, Asheville Reynolds 21
CLASS 3-AA EAST
Oxford Webb 35, Triton 13
Greensboro Dudley 18, NE Guilford 13
Nash Central 53, Wilson Hunt 20
Eastern Randolph 45, Western Guilford 13
CLASS 3-AA WEST
No. 10 NW Cabarrus (10-2) at No. 2 South Point (11-1)
No. 14 Parkland (6-6) at No. 6 Asheville Roberson (10-1)
No. 8 Glenn (11-1) at No. 1 Hickory (12-0)
No. 5 Charlotte Catholic (10-2) at No. 4 AL Brown (11-1)
CLASS 3-A EAST
Rocky Mount 52, South Granville 0
Southern Wayne 28, Southern Lee 19
Western Alamance 37, Hertford County 10
Bertie 20, West Craven 13
CLASS 3-A WEST
No. 10 Franklin (7-5) at No. 2 Anson (10-2)
No. 6 North Gaston (9-2) at No. 3 West Rowan (11-1)
No. 9 West Iredell (9-3) at No. 1 Carver (11-1)
No. 5 Statesville (9-3) at No. 4 Asheville (9-2)
CLASS 2-AA EAST
Southern Vance 47, Richlands 14
Northwood 35, Ledford 28
Reidsville 54, Cedar Ridge 12
St. Pauls 43, Southern Guilford 27
CLASS 2-AA WEST
No. 7 Lenoir Hibriten (8-4) at No. 2 Mount Pleasant (12-0)
No. 6 North Lincoln (9-3) at No. 3 Salisbury (9-3)
No. 8 West Henderson (5-6) at No. 1 Shelby (11-1)
No. 5 Canton Pisgah (9-3) at No. 4 Ashe County (8-4)
CLASS 2-A EAST
Northside-Jax 27, SW Onslow 7
East Duplin 35, North Brunswick 20
South Columbus 36, Bunn 0
Cummings 44, West Bladen 39
CLASS 2-A WEST
No. 10 East Lincoln (8-4) at No. 2 West Davidson (9-3)
No. 11 Maiden (7-5) at No. 3 Newton-Conover (8-4)
Wilkes Central 31, Atkins 28
No. 5 Lincolnton (8-4) at No. 4 Brevard (8-4)
CLASS 1-AA EAST
James Kenan 41, North Johnsotn 6
East Bladen 29, Wallace-Rose Hill 7
Louisburg 16, Camden 8
Pender 28, Ayden-Grifton 0
CLASS 1-AA WEST
Jordan-Matthews 33, Thomasville 21 (J-M ends Thomasville's 47-game win
streak)
No. 14 Hendersonville (7-5) at No. 6 West Montgomery (10-2)
Mount Airy 30, Swain County 0
No. 12 East Surry (9-3) at No. 4 Albemarle (8-4)
CLASS 1-A EAST
Plymouth 46, North Edgecombe 0
Roanoke 26, Williamston 20 (OT)
Perquimans 19, Northampton-West 6
Jones Senior 25, Northampton-East 0
CLASS 1-A WEST
South Stanly 28, Cherokee 13
Lakewood 14, Robbinsville 13
Mitchell Report Made Public, Now What?
Well, I didn't guess nearly as many players as I expected to, as you
can see below. I've bolded the players which I correctly guessed would
be mentioned in the Mitchell Report.
1. Barry Bonds
2. Mark McGwire
3. Rafael Palmeiro
4. Ken Caminiti
5. David Segui
6. Jason Grimsley
7. Sammy Sosa
8. Bret Boone
9. Brady Anderson
10. Lenny Dykstra
11. Paul Byrd
12. Jose Canseco
13. Jason Giambi
14. Jeremy Giambi
15. Gary Matthews, Jr.
16. Guillermo Mota
17. Scott Schoenweiss
18. Curt Schilling
19. Jose Guillen
20. Jay Gibbons
21. Gary Sheffield
22. Jim Leyrtiz
23. John Rocker
24. Rafael Betancourt
25. Matt Lawton
26. Roger Clemens
27. Ozzie Canseco
28. Rick Ankiel
29. Matt Williams
30. Mark Whitten
31. Eric Gagne
32. Benito Santiago
33. Wally Joyner
34. Miguel Tejada
35. David Ortiz
36. Juan Gonzalez
37. Ivan Rodriguez
38. Alex Rodriguez
39. Kyle Farnsworth
40. Carlos Delgado
41. Dante Bichette
42. Andres Galarraga
43. Albert Belle
44. Troy Glaus
45. Manny Alexander
46. Greg Vaughn
47. Mo Vaughn
48. Kevin Brown
49. Adrien Beltre
50. Mike Piazza
51. Jim Thome
52. Adam Dunn
53. Richie Sexson
54. David Cone
55. Bobby Bonilla
56. John Wetteland
57. Dwight Gooden
58. Darryl Strawberry
59. Melido Perez
60. Pasqual Perez
61. Jack McDowell
62. Mitch Williams
63. Roberto Alomar
64. Carlos Baerga
65. Chuck Knoblauch
66. Jose Mesa
67. Armando Benitez
68. Jay Buhner
69. Luis Gonzalez
70. Pat Hentgen
71. Keith Foulke
72. Mike Hampton
73. Denny Neagle
74. Rod Beck
75. Nomar Garciaparra
76. Bartolo Colon
77. Paul Konerko
78. Kenny Rogers
79. Raul Ibanez
80. Michael Young
Only 29 out of 80, not a very good percentage. But look at some of the
players I missed: Sammy Sosa, Bret Boone, Brady Anderson, Ozzie
CANSECO. There were even some admitted, not to mention caught,
performance enhancing drug users who were not mentioned in the report,
such as Guillermo Mota and Rafael Betancourt. These two men were found
guilty of using steroids by positive drug tests and were suspended by
Major League Baseball as a result; wouldn't you think they would be
included in a report regarding performance enhancing drugs in
baseball?
Others I was surprised were missing included Juan Gonzalez, who was
accused of steroid use by the owner of a team he played for, Manny
Alexander, who was also caught using banned substances and Luis
Gonzalez, who seemed like the prototypical steroid user in 2001 when
he hit 57 home runs after never hitting more than 31 (he never hit
more than 28 after).
Clearly the news that Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte used steroids
and HGH, respectively, is extremely disappointing for any Yankee fan.
However, one must look at the positive that Derek Jeter, Bernie
Williams, Alex Rodriguez, Tino Martinez and Jorge Posada were not
named anywhere in the 409 page findings.
I have no idea how this report is going to effect each individual
Find out who's in Mitchell Report
Find out who's in Mitchell Report
MVPs, All-Stars named in steroids investigation
_________________________________________________________________
Posted: December 13, 2007
3:26 p.m. Eastern
� 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
Seven-time Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens among the players named
in the Mitchell Report
Players named by former New York Mets batboy Kirk Radomski, who
pleaded guilty to distributing performance-enhancing drugs and agreed
to co-operate with former Democratic Sen. George Mitchell's
investigation:
* Lenny Dykstra
* Larry Bigbie
* David Segui
* Brian Roberts
* Jack Cust
* Tim Laker
* Josias Manzanillo
* Todd Hundley
* Mark Carreon
* Hal Morris
* Matt Franco
* Rondell White
* Roger Clemens
* Andy Pettitte
* Chuck Knoblauch
* Jason Grimsley
* Gregg Zaun
* David Justice
* F.P. Santangelo
* Glenallen Hill
* Mo Vaughn
* Denny Neagle
* Ron Villone
* Ryan Franklin
* Chris Donnels
* Todd Williams
* Phil Hiatt
* Todd Pratt
* Kevin Young
* Cody McKay
* Mike Lansing
* Kent Mercker
* Adam Piatt
* Miguel Tejada
* Jason Christiansen
* Mike Stanton
* Stephen Randolph
* Jerry Hairston, Jr.
* Paul Lo Duca
* Adam Riggs
* Bart Miadich
* Fernando Vina
* Kevin Brown
* Eric Gagn�
* Mike Bell
* Matt Herges
* Gary Bennett, Jr.
* Jim Parque
* Brendan Donnelly
* Chad Allen
* Jeff Williams
* Howie Clark
* Nook Logan
Players linked to Internet purchases of performance-enhancing drugs:
* Rick Ankiel
* Paul Byrd
* Jay Gibbons
* Troy Glaus
* Jose Guillen
* Jerry Hairston, Jr.
* Gary Matthews, Jr.
* Scott Schoeneweis
* David Bell
* Jose Canseco
* Jason Grimsley
* Darren Holmes
* John Rocker
* Ismael Valdez
* Matt Williams
* Steve Woodard
Players linked through the BALCO investigation:
* Benito Santiago
* Gary Sheffield
* Randy Velarde
* Jason Giambi
* Jeremy Giambi
* Bobby Estalella
* Barry Bonds
* Marvin Benard
*
Buy or Sell - NL WEST
Sorry for the delay folks - between a couple of ball games, a concert,
a new job, and some unbelievable family issues (really, they are
unbelievable), I've not been able to sit down and work on this. I'll
try harder, though!
The NL West is an odd beast where parity within the division rules
(all teams are within 5.0 games of first). But with even competition,
there is no decisively better team, nor is there a particularly good
team (all are .500ish teams), which makes for excitingly boring
playoff race - if such a thing is possible. To put it frankly, I don't
see any NL West team as capable of winning the World Series, or even
making it that far.
San Diego: Buy
Needs: San Diego has gotten decent pitching from most of their
rotation, with the notable exception of Jake Peavy. They need him to
turn it around in the 2nd half. The Padres need an infusion of power
in the infield, including 3b (there have been whispers of interest in
Mike Lowell and Shea Hillenbrand before the latter was picked up by
rival SF). Giles has had pedestrian power numbers, and as a result,
the OF could use a boost in power from an outside source.
Chips: Peavy has made it into whispers, though he is extremely
unlikely to be moved because of his age, talent, and contract.
Reliever Linebrink has been talked about as someone they could dangle
to add a bat, and has probably become expendable with the acquisition
of Scott Williamson from the Cubs. Klesko will be available upon his
return from the DL.
San Francisco: Buyer
Needs: This team needs someone to protect Bonds in the lineup,
provided Bonds is still between the lines and not behind bars. The
starters aren't great, but the offense makes it hard for any pitcher
to win. This team's window is closing after this season, with Schmidt
and Bonds free agents and a very old squad with little depth in the
ill-tended system. They could use some added mobility in the OF, as
well as more power from the CFer. The Giants could use a little more
depth in the bullpen, like everyone else, especially with the troubles
of Benitez. The team helped itself by acquiring Shea Hillenbrand from
the Blue Jays for pitcher Accardo.
Chips: Schmidt is their biggest chip and San Francisco should take the
best deal on the table for him, rather than settle for a draft pick if
he leaves. Chances are he'll still be a Giant after the deadline
passes, though. The Giants have a solid young catcher, Alfonzo, who
has performed well in limited time (5 HR in 99 ABs)
Los Angeles: Buyer
Needs: Furcal has not lived up to his lofty 2005 season, but there
aren't many replacements on the market. The Dodgers haven't gotten any
power out of their 3b since Bill Mueller went down, but Garciaparra
has played like his old self at 1b and drastically outperformed his
2004 and 2005 seasons. Lofton could be upgraded should anyone hit the
market (LA can afford just about anyone). The Dodgers have endured
injuries in the rotation and the bullpen (namely, Gagne), and could
use help in either department.
Chips: Los Angeles has the farm system to acquire just about anyone if
the seller is looking for young talent. Andy LaRoche, Joel Gonzalez,
Chad Billingsley (currently on the team) and Russell Martin (on MLB
team) are several prospects prospective sellers will ask for in
exchange for top talent. The out-of-grace Odalis Perez has also been
shopped to pitching-hungry teams
Arizona: Hold
Needs: Arizona jumped out of the gates looking like a young contender,
but either inexperience or clubhouse dramatics (ahem, Jason Grimsley)
have slowed them as of late. Arizona has possibly the best feeder
system in the bigs and has several young players learning on the big
stage. They don't really have a need for the time being, just a need
for players to get some experience under their belts.
Chips: Again, the Dbacks really aren't sellers because their team is
so young. Luis Gonzalez has had some issues with ownership and could
be had if a team is willing to take on his contract. Shawn Green is
another veteran outfielder on the market that could help an ailing
contender (LAA, NYY, DET?). The DBacks will not move any of their
young talent and would be wise to hang onto a veteran or two to teach
the youngsters.
Colorado: Seller
Needs: The Rockies need a better campaign from their SS than they have
seen this year - Barmes was much better in his rookie year before
injuring himself in shady circumstances. Many of their young players
are playing exceptionally well, but the power numbers have yet to
develop in most of them. The Rockies need help at catcher.
Chips: Any of their rotation members could be moved (Jennings,
Francis, Cook, Fogg, Kim) to a contender needing a #3-#5 starter.
Because Helton is an immovable contract, prospect Ryan Shealy should
be moved to a team who can play him, especially since he's getting
older and has torn up every level of MiLB and deserves to be in the
bigs. There has been talk between the Red Sox and Rockies revolving
around a bullpen arm for Shealy, who the Sox have been interested in
since last year's ill-fated Shoppach for Shealy swap. Ray King has
The Latest in Banned Substance News: Tom Brady
Here's the story, of a scrub named Brady, who took some pills and
magically got good. He met a woman, we'll call her "Steroids," and
they pulled a fast one right before our eyes. He was barely, even
drafted. Now he's telling me that Visa cards are good. So it's time
now, to pull the plugs out, and show the world he's not our golden
son.
Does that tune sound familiar at all to you? Probably not because
you've most likely been brainwashed by the hype and hoopla surrounding
perhaps the third most overrated quarterback in NFL history (behind
two guys named Montana and Vick respectively - and Vick may be trying
to move his way off that list after his last 2 weeks, but I'll remain
skeptical for now). We hear all about how humble he is, how hard he
works, and how he came from no where. He was taken 199th overall in
the 2000 NFL draft. He has no great receivers. He is a team leader
with heart to spare and three Super Bowl rings. Blah...blah...blah. I
have heard enough and the truth must be told.
Ladies and gentleman, it's time to reveal to you the real story of Tom
Brady. Yes, that handsome young man who plays QB for the New England
Patriots. We all know who he is. We see his mug all over the place.
Does anyone else notice that he can't get that eye black off from
under his eyes? Hey Tom, you're playing in a dome, at night. Why do
you need eye black? We should send him a manual explaining how to use
the shower. I also know a great skin doctor if that whole shower thing
doesn't work out.
Enough about his looks now though, because it's his game and his rep
I'm here to revoke. Did you know that when Tom Brady was a freshman at
Michigan, he was listed as 6' 4'' and 215lbs? By the time he
graduated, he had sprouted to 6' 5'' and was down to a slim 213lbs.
That's just where it starts to get fishy. Brady is now back up to 6'
4'' and a whopping 225lbs! Hello? How do you not notice a guy
shrinking an inch while putting on 12lbs? There's some shady business
going on here that we can't explain and my guess is that he
was/is/recreationally using steroids. Shrinking is not really a common
problem for men between the ages of 22 and 29. Not to mention the fact
that Brady was drafted by the Montreal Expos in 1995. I feel like that
is where he found out about the wonderful world of performance
enhancing drugs. In fact, I believe his name was one of the names
blacked out on Jason Grimsley's affidavit. I'm putting the dots out
there for everyone to see. All you need to do is connect them.
Have you ever watched a Patriots game on TV? All you hear about all
day long is how great Brady is; apparently they also feel the need to
tell us how awful his supporting cast is. I feel for those receivers
and offense linemen and I hurt with each hit a tight end or running
back takes. People forget that Brady was taken really, really,
ridiculously late in the 2000 draft. They also forget that Brady spent
a season doodling on white boards and revving up the practice squad.
Mr. Wonderful was not always so wonderful. And yes, his team may lack
some of the star names in the NFL, but his teammates are still making
blocks to give him time to throw the ball, making catches, running for
yards after the catch, and running the ball to keep his arm from
falling off.
You can say it's the system and you can say he's always had that
special something. I say Tom has gotten help from outside sources. I'm
not saying it's just the steroids because I think he may have
purchased contacts. He may even wear two sets at the same time because
he seems to see things that other players do not. I also think he has
inside information. People have claimed the Bush administration has
been a little too secretive for our own good. I believe it's because
they're passing information on to Mr. Brady that no one else can see.
Why else would President Bush invite Brady to the White House? I don't
trust that it's for winning the Super Bowl. I know what's going on.
Brady is actually there collecting secret defensive plans and videos
so he knows exactly what he will be facing in the upcoming week.
So the ruse is over and it's time to come clean Tom. This will save
you a lot of embarrassment down the road.
The worst thing though, is that we as Americans are being duped into a
false sense of love for Tom Brady. We need to turn off SportsCenter,
we need to change the channel when Visa commercials are on, and we
need to tear down the billboards of this so-called "hero." It's time
to find a new hero.
Speaking of which, I hear that Shawn Merriman is trying to avoid
suspension. Anyone want to lend him some free help on his appeal?
*Disclaimer: There is NO proof that Tom Brady has ever used a banned
substance, I'm just sick of hearing about him. Perhaps Tom Brady is
himself a drug released upon the rest of you to make you feel all warm
and tingly inside. It doesn't work on me though, I'm too hardcore.
Adam Putnam Hearts Fred Thompson
I have to laugh that Adam Putnam is still actively cheerleading for
FRed Thompson. I knew Putnam was politically tone deaf, but this is
ridiculous. Adam, your candidate doesn't even care if he wins. Nice
time to endorse Thompson and be the co-chair of his Florida campaign.
It is bad when Putnam has to tell the media that Thompson will not
drop out before Florida.
"This is an election season very much in flux," Putnam said.
"People wrote John McCain off last summer, and he's the champion of
New Hampshire. People wrote off Fred Thompson before Iowa and he
placed a strong third." With Michigan up next, followed by S.C.,
Putnam said "absolutely" Thompson will not exit the race before
Florida.
Thompson could not even be bothered to be in New Hampshire the day of
the primary. That screams burning desire to be President.
Here is the Florida elected Republicans jumping on the Fred Express.
Jeff Miller co-chairman
State Senator Paula Dockery (R-Lakeland)
Speaker Pro-Tempore Marty Bowen (R-Haines City)
State Representative Larry Cretul (R-Ocala)
State Representative Clay Ford (R-Gulf Breeze)
State Representative Aaron Bean (R-Fernandina Beach)
State Representative Denise Grimsley (R-Lake Placid)
State Representative Doug Holder (R-Sarasota)
State Representative Carlos Lopez-Cantera (R-Miami)
State Representative Seth McKeel (R-Lakeland)
State Representative Mitch Needleman (R-Melbourne)
State Representative Bryan Nelson (R-Apopka)
State Representative Stephen Precourt (R-Orlando)
State Representative Garrett Richter (R-Naples)
State Representative Dennis Ross (R-Lakeland)
#4
I registered the blog with HCPL
Posted by BM's Blog at 2:25 PM 0 comments
#3
I created a Blog
Posted by BM's Blog at 2:23 PM 0 comments
#2
easiest habit - have confidence and know I am competent
hardest - don't look at everything as a crisis
Posted by BM's Blog at 1:46 PM 0 comments
In the Shadow of the Game
David Segui has a confession. Lean in really close, and please don't
laugh. I'm only going to say it once. You won't believe it, and I know
its a little funny, but guess what?
He used HGH.
He had a doctor's prescription, but not a waiver from MLB. Whatever,
they can't test for it.
Segui will be labeled a cheater and a fraud, for his 139 career home
runs, and .291 batting average. According to reports, he started using
HGH in 2003, when he hit 5 home runs, then hit another one in 2004.
6 home runs. A travesty.
Segui and Jason Grimsley are now the two faces of HGH in baseball.
Before the expansion era, players of their caliber would be nothing
more then late september call-ups and career minor leaguers.
Isn't that great? The feds have done this massive hunt and have turned
up two sub-par players. Its so great that our country is so problem
free that we can investigate baseball.
But, I digress. We're told by the talking heads on SportsCenter that
steroids are evil, and that those who use them are scum. Its almost to
the point that every home run is automatically suspicious. The first
thing people say about Albert Pujols after the inevitable, "Wow" is,
"I hope he's clean."
While watching a ballgame the other night (interstingly, a Cardinal's
game) the topic of steroids came up, as it so often does. I think MLB
mandates it. You can't rebroadcast the game, and the announcers have
to talk about steroids, and what the league is doing to stop them.
But, one of the announcers pointed out that the game will survive. It
always has, and it always will. Its survived gambling scandals and
drug users. It will continue.
Know why? Because the game is just that. Its a game. There's a bunch
of stat freaks out there, and sometimes I can be one of them. But, I
don't get obsessed with them. I enjoy the game. I go to the ballpark,
listen on the radio, and turn on the TV because I love the game, and
will always be entertained by it. If someone hits a 500 foot blast,
thats awesome. If he flies out to the warning track, well, its not as
impressive, but the next batter comes up, the game moves on.
Everyone wants to protect 714 and 755. And I don't blame them.
Baseball's allure is that it is timeless, and its history is
remarkable. But, do we need to protect those numbers in this style?
This is no longer an investigation. It is a witch hunt and a mud
smearing campaign. At times, it reminds me of the French media's
attack of Lance Armstrong. Its shameful.
I'm not saying that players like Barry Bonds are innocent, and they
certainly aren't angels. And if they are found guilty of using
steroid, by all means, throw the book at him. But, in the mean time,
we don't need to put wires on pitchers or send in the Marines.
And should steroid users retire and slip out of the public eye and
never be caught, let history be the judge. How will fans fifty years
from now view Bonds? What will they think of HGH?
As for now, all we have is hearsay and hollow accusations, and thats
not good enough. If this is just the "tip of the iceberg" show me the
iceberg.
But no matter what happens out of this whole steroids mess, just
Open season on your property
I don't normally comment on local stories here in Indy, but this
disgusting story deserves comment:
Burglaries surge 25% in area
$14 million in property was stolen in IPD area in 2004; only
$607,000 was recovered
Andrew Scott, 29, returned to his Far-Westside home after work to
find crooks had jimmied a window and taken his digital camera and a
jewelry box.
Wes Johnson, 57, was gone for about an hour when burglars broke a
window, entered his Northeastside home and made off with a Sony
PlayStation and other valuables.
Helores Grimsley, 81, had a kerosene heater and checks stolen from
her Near-Southside garage and home while she was asleep.
Those three incidents last week are among the most recent in a wave
of burglaries, which have increased more than 25 percent since 2000
in Marion and Hamilton counties.
As national and statewide rates remained flat from 2000 to 2004,
burglaries surged in Greenfield, Noblesville and many other
communities across the metro area
.
Drug use, the added opportunities provided by a growing population
and, one expert said, early releases from the Marion County Jail
helped drive the increase.
Burglaries are among the toughest crimes to crack, with 14 of every
100 IPD cases solved and about $4 of every $100 in stolen property
recovered. The losses reported in TVs, jewelry, tools and other
possessions amounted to nearly $14 million in the Indianapolis
Police Department area in 2004.
People need to be concerned about the rise, according to Jason
Hutchens, a deputy director for the Indiana Criminal Justice
Institute, a state planning agency. Burglaries, Hutchens said, are
often a gateway crime from which offenders graduate to more violent
offenses.
"These people are violent," Hutchens said. "I think there's a
perception by some to treat drug offenders, burglars and people
doing certain property crimes as nonviolent offenders, and that's
just not what the criminal history and research shows."
Burglaries in Greenfield doubled from 2000 to 2004, according to
the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics. Indianapolis police
investigated 28 percent more burglaries in 2004 than in 2000.
Noblesville also saw a steep increase, with 48 percent more
burglaries over the same period.
Even after adjusting for population growth in several areas, the
rate of burglaries increased. In Noblesville, for example, the rate
was up 27 percent -- to 40 burglaries per 10,000 residents in 2004,
compared with nearly 32 per 10,000 in 2000. The IPD burglary rate
was 136 per 10,000 people in 2004.
IPD Maj. Lloyd Crowe said it will take the help of the public to
reduce the burglary rate.
"What people need to be is vigilant," he said. "It takes a
collaboration between the neighborhoods and the police."
The trend reflects just how difficult it is to catch a burglar,
police say. Without a witness, DNA or fingerprints, the crime
becomes impossible to prosecute.
Many burglars are stealing to support a drug habit, police say.
Meth was almost unknown in Indiana a decade ago, and as recently as
2000 police broke up fewer than 500 labs making the drug. But by
2004, the number had soared to more than 1,500.
New laws make it harder to set up a home meth lab, but police say
users are likely turning to other sources for the drug.
Addicts tend to be disorganized and prolific burglars, IPD Sgt.
Lloyd Walker said.
"The lust of the drug is just so severe that they don't worry about
being caught," Walker said. In the time it takes police to gather
and process evidence from one crime scene, Walker said a desperate
burglar can hit four or five more homes.
Criminologists also say an economy that has more people living in
poverty affects burglary rates. In Indiana, more than 516,000
people enrolled for food stamps in 2004, up 74 percent from 2000.
And the growth in areas such as Johnson and Hamilton counties
offers burglars more chances to act.
"I think we have always been a target," said Hamilton County
Sheriff's Detective Todd Uhrick. "People here do typically enjoy a
higher standard of living, which means they've got more stuff."
Marion County officials have struggled for decades to solve
crowding problems at the jail. To avoid violating a federal court
order, judges have released more than 10,000 inmates early since
2001.
Six of those released prisoners have gone on to be accused or
convicted of murder, but the question of how many have committed
lesser crimes after their release has drawn little attention.
"It's the same folks over and over," said Hutchens. "Twenty percent
of the criminals do 80 percent of the crime." (emphasis mine)
As a victim of both burglary and auto theft, I believe some comments
are in order:
1. I dealt with this issue in an earlier post. Law was originally
intended to protect order in a civilized society -- life, liberty and
property. It has morphed to protecting only life. Property is no
longer protected. Disagree with me? The cold numbers in this story
tell the tale: $14 million in property stolen, only $607,000
recovered; 14 of every 100 cases solved. Police cannot prevent or
solve these crimes. People are discouraged from defending their
property because it would threaten life -- that of the criminal. This
is unacceptable. The solution here is putting more police on the
street, but then we have ...
2. The meth labs. The police statement that many burglars are trying
to support a drug habit is illustrative of the ineffectiveness --
indeed, counterproductivity -- of the war against illegal drugs. We
don't want people cooking up meth in home labs -- for one thing, it's
not safe and can blow up the home, injuring the people involved. So we
make it more difficult to make meth -- better enforcement and banning
the OTC sale of certain cold medications used to make meth. Now, they
can't make meth in their homes and have to go to drug dealers for it,
which is more expensive. As a result, they have to resort to crimes
such as burglary and auto theft.
So, as a result of these new laws, instead of meth users killing
themselves by blowing up their own homes, they are burglarizing
everyone else's. Brilliant!
3. Jail Overcrowding. I've also commented on this before. The Star
won't touch it, not in the way it needs to be touched anyway. A
certain federal judge here has determined, at the behest of the ACLU,
that the Marion County Jail is overcrowded. The dangerous criminals
are a li'l uncomfortable, it would seem. A federal court order has set
a cap on the number of inmates. As a result, inmates get released all
the time.
So, instead of our jail being "overcrowded" with criminals, our
streets are now overcrowded with criminals, just waiting to pay a
Baseball Notebook
Bonds Hits 12th Homer
720th of Career
Barry Bonds hits 12th homer in 87th game of season for Giants
yesterday. He needs 36 more homers this season to pass up Hank Aaron.
However, as most Bond's homers they come in a losing cause as Dodgers
win the game.
ESPN.com projects him to hit 25 homers this season so adding the 13
more he is projected to have by end of season he would have 733 homers
still 23 homers short of 756 which would pass Hank Aaron in career
homers.
Assuming he is not sent to jail for perjury or tax evasion he would
have to stay healthy the rest of this season and next season to pass
Aaron and to probably DH in the American League.
By the end of this winter Bonds should be in a courtroom somewhere and
whatever happens in the courtroom may more likely determine if he
breaks Aaron's record than what he does on the field.
Lackey Pitches Best Game of Season
According to ESPN Game Ratings Score
John Lackey received a 95 for his performance last night in the win
over the A's. Lackey pitched a complete game 1 hitter while striking
out 10.
The previous high score was 91 for a game Scott Kazmir pitched. C.C.
Sabathia received a 88 yesterday for defeating the Orioles giving him
the 4th best game score in AL plus he also is tied for 6th for his
game against the Pirates in May.
A's Lose Yesterday
Could Still Be 5 Ahead
Of Angels With Win Today
Despite their loss to John Lackey yesterday the A's can move back to 5
games ahead of Angels with a win today. Jered Weaver 5-0 will face Joe
Blanton 8-7 in the contest.
At the end of the day the A's will be either 5 ahead or 3 ahead
depending on whether they win. These are the games they have to win to
stay in first place when they directly decide their own fate and not
depend on another team to help them out.
Red Sox, Yankees
Both Win Yesterday
With the Yankees winning 1-0 and the Red Sox winning behind David
Ortiz hitting his 30th homer and driving in his 84th run of season.
Jon Lester's record went to 4-0 with the victory and his ERA is now
3.06. Lester has beaten some good teams including the White Sox
yesterday and the Mets two of the best teams in baseball.
The Yankees remain 3 games behind the Red Sox while the Blue Jays fall
to 6 behind with their loss to the Royals win their 4th straight and
are 14-6 in their last 20 games.
Breaking News on Lima: Lima was demoted to minors after the game
yesterday so don't know if it will be Lima Time again this year or
not. Mets may win NL East after all with Lima out of rotation.
Mets Wish it Wasn't
Lima Time Again
Jose Lima surfaces again after being demoted to minors and pitches a
typical Jose Lima game giving up 7 runs in 3 innings as his ERA
balloons to 9.87.
In 17 innings in his 4 starts he has given up 22 runs and 25 hits. He
even gave up a grandslam to Dontrelle Willis yesterday.
If the Mets are depending on Lima to win baseball games they are in
for an unpleasant surprise and with him in the rotation the Braves may
yet win another NL East division title as they will be assured of
gaining a game on the Mets anyday he pitches if the Braves can win
their game that day.
Unfortunately for Braves they couldn't do that and stayed at 12 and a
half back. The Reds made sure the Braves didn't come back this time
scoring enough runs that the Braves couldn't overcome the deficit like
they did on Thursday night.
Breaking Lima News: Mets decided Friday was enough Lima Time for
awhile and sent him back for reassignment.
Brewers Back
To .500 Again
The question of the day for the Brewers is will they go over .500
again today or fall back under .500. They seem to have a proclivity
for hanging around the .500 mark but still are only 3 and a half games
behind Cardinals.
Great story about players who made the Non-All Star team.
Insider: It's time to 'salute' our anti-heroes
Scott Miller July 6, 2006
By Scott Miller
CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer
Think you've got problems? When life gives you ivy, you're turning it
into poison?
Well, then, you're the Chicago Cubs.
Ha. That was a joke.
That's Rule No. 1 when it comes time to choose the annual
Anti-All-Star team each July. Jokes are good. Sometimes they even keep
the designated hitter from trying to run you over with his car. (Oh,
how we wish Albert Belle was still eligible for this team).
Rule No. 2 is hire an accountant who will ram expense reports right
through, because the team budget is outrageous. You try running a club
like this without a full staff of licensed therapists, psychologists,
trainers, lawyers, bailiffs, computer analysts and video game
coordinators.
See, while the real All-Stars get all the love and attention, in the
spirit of today's all-inclusive society, we make sure to take a few
minutes at midseason to acknowledge the efforts of the rest, too.
Like today's Little League teams that award trophies to every single
player, up to and including the fat kid who skips practice, spends
more time picking daisies than fielding fly balls in the outfield and
hogs the postgame pizza and Popsicles.
Our Anti-All-Star team encompasses everything that the little ol' game
in Pittsburgh next week does not: poor play, humorous play, antisocial
behavior, rap sheets, handcuffs and, yes, salad tongs.
Sometimes it's those with the biggest challenges who need the most
love.
So while the guy we had in mind as first-base coach is out fetching
bug repellant for our reliever who is hiding in the bushes, we present
our all-new, all-weather, all-season 2006 Anti-All-Star team:
Catcher: Michael Barrett, Chicago Cubs
Let's be honest. Lots of people around the game would love to slug
A.J. Pierzynski. But that doesn't mean they do it.
Barrett did. It cost him a richly deserved 10-game suspension, not to
mention the indignity of watching himself look like an over-sugared
12-year-old on highlight shows for years to come.
It would have been one thing if Pierzynski had made like Pete Rose and
attempted to knock Barrett from here to Pluto. He didn't. Pierzynski
slid, Barrett moved over to apply the tag, there was contact, they
both got up, Pierzynski doubled back to collect a piece of equipment
and -- pop! -- an episode of Batman broke out.
While Barrett is our guy for sheer brazenness, he had plenty of
competition. San Diego's Josh Bard also was strongly considered for
attempting to catch a knuckleball without a license in Boston earlier
this summer. Bard was charged with 10 passed balls in Tim Wakefield's
first five starts, but made a strong comeback by playing well as part
of the Padres' three-man catching team this summer (Bard, Mike Piazza
and Rob Bowen). In fact, Bard is hitting .378 with five homers and 19
RBI.
Also under consideration was Washington's Matt LeCroy, for making
manager Frank Robinson cry earlier this season. That came following a
game in which Houston stole seven bases and LeCroy was charged with
two throwing errors. Pass the tissues, we're just getting started.
First base: Richie Sexson, Seattle
A bitter disappointment since signing with the Mariners before the
2005 season, Sexson swats the occasional home run and grabs an RBI
here and there, but in between, oh, is it painful to watch. The guy
was batting .225 at midweek. Which isn't nearly the eyesore that his
.296 on-base percentage is. The good news is, he's only making $11.5
million this year -- a dirt-cheap salary considering the $14 million
the Mariners will owe him in each of the next two seasons.
Who's idea again was it to sign this guy?
If, for some reason, you disagree with this selection -- and unless
you're a relative of Sexson, that's awfully difficult to see -- our
runner-up is Phil Nevin of the Chicago Cubs, who's probably about to
be traded for the third time in 12 months. From San Diego to Texas to
the Chicago Cubs and beyond, it's like every one of the 30 teams is
attempting to put the cleats to his rear end.
Second base: Rickie Weeks, Milwaukee
Let's make this clear: We love the Brewers' young talent overall, and
we truly believe that Weeks' stay on our team will be brief and that
one day he will be a real All Star.
But for now, kid, you've gotta catch the ball!
His 21 errors at midweek not only were a major-league high at his
position, but a high at any position. The only other NL second baseman
with double digits in errors was Pittsburgh's Jose Castillo, with 11.
Then there's Atlanta's Marcus Giles, who is slumming along with a .246
batting average and a .340 on-base percentage. Ouch. That's part of
the problem in Atlanta, not part of the solution.
Third base: Tony Batista, free agent
In a wide-ranging search to add power to its lineup, Minnesota gambled
last winter that Batista would be a boon.
Instead, from Day 1 in spring training, Batista quickly became the
Round Mound of Gospel Sound.
The Twins cringed when they took one look at his doughy body this
spring. You would think that a guy who had been out of the majors for
a year would report in good shape. Instead, Batista looked as if he
spent more time at Krispy Kreme than at the gym.
Add that to the fact that he appeared more interested in converting
pagans in the Twins clubhouse than in changing fastballs into home
runs, it was a bad mix. (Not that there's anything wrong with
attempting to convert pagans, but perhaps it works better when things
are going OK with your day job.)
Batista was hitting .236 with only five homers in 50 games when the
Twins shipped him out.
Also considered was Seattle's Adrian Beltre, who has only seven homers
and 35 RBI while batting .259 -- and being paid roughly $11 million
(with another $24 million owed him over the next two seasons).
Shortstop: Clint Barmes, Colorado
The talk of baseball during the first part of 2005, things haven't
been the same for Barmes since he tripped on the stairs while carrying
venison and broke his shoulder.
While the Rockies have several young players who are doing yeoman's
work keeping them in contention in a tepid NL West, Barmes -- a
terrific kid from Larry Bird's alma mater, Indiana State -- isn't one
of them. He's batting just .209 with a .248 on-base percentage, and
that's only part of the story.
Barmes' on-base percentage at home in Coors Field, somehow is only
.289.
The guy is making Washington shortstop Cristian Guzman look like he
has a pulse (and Guzman is out for the year following spring shoulder
surgery).
He keeps this up; he's got a future in Coors ... as the full-time
humidor attendant.
Left field: Barry Bonds, San Francisco
Big Helmet is a big liability in the outfield, not nearly the plate
presence he once was and, when he's not hitting homers in bunches as
he once did, an all-around downer of a guy to have on your team. Which
is why we welcome him to this team with open arms (though we need an
airplane seat belt extension-type of device for those arms if we wanna
wrap them around that noggin of his).
Usually, Big Helmet is packing for the real All-Star Game at this time
of year. And while there are those who argue he deserves to be there
this year as a sort of lifetime award despite his appalling .246
batting average and miniscule 11 homers, there's no way that argument
holds water.
The Sullen of Swat (he's so big he gets two nicknames) has soiled the
game with his behavior this season, and the last place he deserves to
be is in Pittsburgh. If Greg Anderson, his personal "trainer," is
going back to the big house for his blind loyalty in refusing to
testify to a federal grand jury regarding whether Bonds perjured
himself, Bonds can cool his heels on our team while the Feds continue
to look at him.
Center field: Juan Pierre, Chicago Cubs
The Cubs sent pitchers Sergio Mitre, Ricky Nolasco and Renyel Pinto to
Florida for Pierre last December.
So far this season, Pierre, lugging around a dismal .314 on-base
percentage, has one homer and 12 RBI in 352 at-bats.
Nolasco has one homer and two RBI in 19 at-bats.
Give the pitcher Pierre's 352 at-bats at his current rate of one homer
every 19 at-bats, and Nolasco would have 19 long balls by now.
Right field: Rondell White, Minnesota
We're cheating a bit here because, technically, White was signed as a
designated hitter. But he has played five games in the outfield this
season, which qualifies him for our right field spot -- and, besides,
we've got a special treat already lined up as the DH.
So ... White, signed to DH -- and, at the very least, provide some pop
for a traditionally homer-challenged Twins team -- has, in 54 games
and 184 at-bats ... exactly 0 home runs.
That's, uh, zero.
Z-E-R-O.
Designated hitter: Carl Everett, Seattle.
Everett is on record as saying he does not believe that dinosaurs once
roamed the earth, nor does he believe that man actually landed on the
moon.
Apparently he doesn't believe that he's batting only .161 against
left-handers (and only .158 with runners in scoring position) this
season, either.
He was lifted for a pinch-hitter, newcomer Eduardo Perez, in the ninth
inning of Tuesday's 14-6 loss to the Angels ... and then charged into
manager Mike Hargrove's office following the game and engaged the
skipper in a shouting match (those within hearing range, and that
included most of the 206 area code, say Everett was doing most of the
shouting).
So what happens on Wednesday? Everett gets ejected, and you should
have seen the moment when Hargrove was out on the field defending him
to the umpires. No way was Hargrove getting ejected, too.
We think the skipper would have rather been marooned on a desert
island with hungry cannibals than spend the rest of Wednesday's game
alone in the clubhouse with Everett while the rest of the Mariners
were out in the dugout.
Starting pitcher: Brett Myers, Philadelphia
This one was a no-brainer.
There are not many iron-clad rules for our club, but one of them is
this: Anytime a guy is charged with assaulting his wife in the middle
of a city street (Boston in this case), and police have witnesses
saying he punched his wife in the face and pulled her hair, there's a
pretty good chance he'll be named to our team.
Myers' actions are the most despicable of the season, yet he still
started for the Phillies, in Boston, two days later.
Why?
"Because he's our best pitcher," Philadelphia GM Pat Gillick lamely
explained at the time.
Soon after that start, Myers went on a personal leave that is expected
to last through the All-Star break.
The entire situation was a disgrace for Myers and Gillick in
particular, and for the Phillies in general.
Meanwhile, here's the competitive list of starting pitchers edged out
by Myers:
* Russ Ortiz, Baltimore. The Diamondbacks wanted him gone so much that
they released him while knowing they would have to eat the remaining
$24 million on his contract. Now that's desperation.
* Esteban Loaiza, Oakland. Hasn't pitched well (3-5, 6.39 ERA) after
A's general manager Billy Beane broke the piggy bank and awarded him a
three-year, $21 million deal, but he sure can drive. When police
finally caught up to him last month and arrested him on drunken
driving charges, they clocked him traveling in his Ferrari at more
than 100 mph.
* Oliver Perez, Pittsburgh. He's gone from would-be staff ace to
Triple-A stiff, in a heartbeat.
* Runelvys Hernandez, Kansas City. Counted on to be a mainstay in
Kansas City's rotation this year, Hernandez reported to spring
training 40 pounds overweight in the estimation of the club, and had
to open the season in the minors. Try mixing in a few salads,
Runelvys.
Closer: Jason Grimsley, suspended.
You'd be a free agent, too, if you decided that Human Growth Hormone
was a good way to go, then decided to cooperate with the Feds when
they caught you taking delivery, then decided to stop cooperating
after you named names, then watched the whole thing blow up in your
face when it became public. Grimsley couldn't get out of the
Diamondbacks clubhouse soon enough after that, asking for his release.
That the Diamondbacks gladly paid Ortiz $24 million to go away but are
disputing what's left of the $800,000 they owe Grimsley tells
everything you need to know about the bitterness here.
While Grimsley is the obvious Anti-All Star closer, don't think
several others didn't make a bid for the team, too. Among them:
* Matt Wise, Milwaukee. He's not only an Anti-All Star, but an
Anti-Runelvys Hernandez, too. Proving that mixing in a salad is not
always as healthy as it sounds, Wise missed a few days last month when
he sliced the middle finger of his pitching hand on aluminum salad
tongs during a postgame spread. This after teammate Jeff Cirillo
sprained his ankle jumping up and down in frustration after one of his
batted balls went foul. "At least his was game-related," Wise
grumbled. "I was going after a freaking salad."
* Scott Sauerbeck, Oakland. There's a reason he's with the Athletics.
It's because he moved himself right out of Cleveland with his behavior
following a game earlier this season in which he and a woman were
taken into custody after fleeing Sauerbeck's vehicle and were found
hiding in the bushes around 4 a.m. Oh, and Sauerbeck is married, and
the woman wasn't his wife. The undercover (and under branches) couple
was caught when the owner of the house reported hearing voices
outside. Hey Destiny, shhhh! I don't think that's a drunk coming to
pee on this bush, I think it's the cops!
* Brian Shackelford, Cincinnati. After pitching in the 13th inning of
Wednesday night's four-hour, 19-minute Reds-Brewers game, was arrested
on suspicion of third-degree sexual assault at Milwaukee's Miller
Park. The arrest came just about the time the Cincinnati team bus was
leaving the stadium for the charter flight to Atlanta. Oops.
Manager: Joe Mikulik, Class A Asheville
So this is a bit of a stretch, but Mikulik's June 25 meltdown was so
good, so delicious, so enchanting that, in our book, it earned him an
immediate promotion to the majors.
Among other things too numerous to list, Mikulik's tantrum included a
dive -- or was it belly flop? -- into second base. It was the talk of
major league clubhouses and dugouts for days, though in a
don't-try-this-at-home sort of way. When asked if he ever considered
diving into a base while arguing, Padres manager Bruce Bochy grinned
wide and shook his head no. "I'd get hurt," he said.
If Mikulik isn't available, we know someone who likely will have some
time on his hands one day soon,
The Mitchell Report Fallout: Thoughts...
Wheeeeeeee! It's like Christmas morning! Does everyone else find this
as hilarious as i do?!?
More on this later, but a couple things i wanted to point out:
What the hell were the Astros thinking trading for Miguel Tejada
yesterday? Seriously, you don't think the fact that he might be in
this report didn't come up once during trade talks? Either the Astros
are freaking retarded, or they just don't care. As sad as it is, i'm
inclined to think it's the latter...
The MLB Players Association sent out a letter to players during the
investigation basically telling them not to cooperate. Lovely.
It was amazing to me how many of the players paid for these steroids
with a CHECK. Hello, paper trail?! Are you stupid? Let's see, i'm
buying something illegal and i don't want anyone to know about it.
Instead of paying him the $1,100 to $3,200 (average payment) in cash
i'm sure most of these guys carry, they pay with a personal check. The
guy they were buying them from, Kirk Radomski, kept copies of all the
checks players had given him. You think he wasn't covering his ass
just in case?
Players mentioned in the report who have links to the Dbacks are:
- Jason Grimsley (We already knew that)
- Matt Williams (Same)
- Alex Cabrera
- Jack Cust
- Chris Donnels
- Stephen Randolph
- Mike Bell
- Matt Herges
- Troy Glaus
- Jose Guillen
- Darren Holmes
- Multiple Members of the Dbacks farm team the El Paso Diablos (Who
reportedly repeatedly crossed the border into Mexico to purchase
steroids.? Players on that team include the aforementioned Cabrera,
Cust, and Williams, as well as notable names such as Alex Cintron,
Travis Lee, Lyle Overbay, Robby Hammock, and Junior Spivey. Not for
nothing, but Cintron, Cabrera, and Cust led the team in pretty much
every offensive category. I'm just saying...
More on this later as more comes out and i delve deeper into the
Report...
Posted by Smitty Lite at 2:34 PM