Showing posts with label don drysdale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label don drysdale. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

BOSOX SNAG SALE. RESPECT IT!

(Photo Credit: MLB.com)
If you can't understand the significance of the Red Sox snagging Chris Sale from the White Sox today, not just for the team, but for baseball itself... you just can't be a true baseball fan. 

The Red Sox did something that was once a signature of the New York Yankees. They snuck in during the Nationals "hot and heavy" negotiations for Sale and made an offer too good to pass up. The Sox weren't concerned about their future. They were concerned for the immediate now. There is no question in my mind, this move was important for baseball, and as much as I am not a fan of that team... as a baseball person, I'm the first to say from a Yankee fan standpoint, what an incredible deal! 

(May 18, 2016 - Source: David Banks/Getty Images North America)
Don't be mad at the Yankees. We were never in on the Chris Sale sweepstakes... at all! You gotta be in it to win it... the Red Sox were. We were not.  Don't be mad at the Red Sox... they did it right.  Wow... they just blew me away.  

(Oct. 29, 2016 - Source: Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images North America)
Look, the Yanks have another plan. The Yanks have other needs apparently. The bullpen is very important to them. Aroldis Chapman is their priority and to that I say 'stay on track'. The offer is in to he and to Kenley Jansen... it will be one or the other... one would hope at least.  Hell, maybe both.  What I wouldn't want is none.  Then we would have failed as an organization.  But Chapman and the Yankees have an understanding, and I would hope that that plays into Chapman's decision to come back to the Bronx.  Let's hope.

(In Photo: Yankee minor leaguer, Clint Frazier)
Look, the last thing the Yankees would wanna do is build up our farm system just to give it away to Chicago for Chris Sale, right? We needed to stay the course, and Cashman has. To be honest, as much as I would have loved to have seen Sale in pinstripes... we Yankee fans can't have everything.  Relax.

The Red Sox have a rotation that could one day be one of legend one day. I tweeted that earlier tonight.
It doesn't mean I'm a Red Sox fan. It means I respect the process and tip my cap.


One day that rotation of Price, Porcello and Sale could be something you read about like we did of Koufax, Drysdale and Podres.  It's great for baseball, crappy for the American League East, but hey... this game isn't always fair, is it?

(Source: J. Meric/Getty Images North America)
Brian Cashman should stay the course. Brian Cashman should keep to his plan. Let the man work. Let's have faith in what the Yanks can pull off to counter those nasty Sox. That's all we can do as Yankee fans. And don't get angry at those Sox fans either, bro. They got a great player for Christmas. They didn't have anything to do with it. Sure they'll gloat, but wouldn't you?

Wow... Sale to the Sox.

You can't make this stuff up. My goodness.

Come on Cash... whatch'a got?


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Thursday, December 4, 2014

THE YANKEES, THE DODGERS & BIG FISH LESTER


The Dodgers are the club that will make the late push for Jon Lester.  They have Magic Johnson money and they are the ones who plan on making the big push.  The Yankees might be in on Lester, but we really don't know.  Couple that with the offers and meetings Jon has had with the Red Sox, the Cubs and the Giants and the big fish is about to make a final decision, possibly by the end of the week.


Here's what I think.  In the end, I think Lester is a gamer and his true home would be Boston. It makes sense to me. They signed Kung Fu Panda and Hanley and they don't want to be embarrassed and end up in last place again in 2015.  They will make a solid offer, and it may not be the highest, but it will be more than fair and they'll bank on their relationship with Lester to try and bring him home. And they should, because it's my belief that Lester belongs there. He IS the Red Sox.


The Cubs will make a big push. Theo Epstein and Lester know each other well and there is no question he can help the club win in Chicago.  Truth be told, he'd look like a bad ass in Chicago, and while he's never pitched in the NL, I see him being quite successful.


The Giants are winners.  They will do their best the snag him coming off a big win to become World Series champions again.  Wow... Madison Bumgarner and Jon Lester in the same rotation? That's like Tom Seaver and Nolan Ryan or something.  I like that a lot and San Francisco should be rooting for it.


I would love the Yankees to get Jon Lester.  I think having a few lefties in a starting rotation is a great thing.  I think if the Yankees have Masahiro Tanaka leading us off, Lester becomes our number 2 easily.  Three could be Michael PinedaCC Sabathia could be 4th.  Then, after reviewing that rotation, I'd even offer to pitch in the 5th spot.  It wouldn't matter, the top 4 are quite capable.


But the Dodgers are the wild card, merely because they could dump a suitcase of money on the table and say, "We almost made it last year, but you weren't here.  Sign in LA and we win the whole damn thing.Clayton Kershaw and Jon Lester in the same rotation? That's Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale shit right there.

Jon Lester will make a decision soon.  We will sit back and wait. One thing is for sure though, once Lester signs, the market will move rapidly because the market will set. It's all very, very interesting... it's also quite exciting to watch.

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Friday, May 2, 2014

HISTORY OF THE FUNNY BALL


If you Google ‘history of doctoring the ball in baseball’ you get incredible results.  The top five specifically are Whatever Happened to the Spitball; Biggest Cheaters in Baseball; Red Sox pitcher Clay Buchholz accused of doctoring ball; Gaylord Perry; and Spitball.


Even if we didn’t go any further into the controversy behind the funny ball, you can deduce that doctoring the ball involves spitting, cheating and pitchers.  But it is much more than that.  It’s something that has always been a part of the game and it is never going away unless it is successfully proven to hurt the game of baseball and its integrity much in the way PEDs has.


According to BaseballReference.com, “Doctoring the baseball is altering the baseball in some way so the pitchers are able to create unusual amounts and types of movement on pitches.” Not really a big fan of that definition frankly because one could say that Mariano Rivera “created unusual amounts and types of movements on pitches.”  He virtually patented the infamous cutter and he did so without doctoring.

Then there are the knuckle ballers like RA Dickey and retired Red Sox pitcher Tim Wakefield.  These guys get lots of movement on the ball but they are not doctoring the ball, they are gripping it in an intentional way. 

But whatever happened to the spitball, greaseball, shineball, slimeball?  Why is it so bad?  Who are the worst offenders?


The shineball made famous by pitcher Eddie Cicotte of the notorious Black Sox, was created by lathering “special oil used to treat infields onto the ball, creating a shine on one side and making the ball move in ways that confounded even the best hitters. Depending on what they smeared on the ball and how good they got at manipulating oozy substances, pitchers could make pitches drop, fade away, or ride in on hitters, all while using their same old throwing motions,” stated Jonah Keri in his 2012 Grantland blog post picked up by ESPN.com.  There were a number of pitchers over the years who were accused or even suspended for doctoring the ball. 


Guys like Gaylord Perry, Joe Niekro, Whitey Ford, Don Sutton and Don Drysdale all spit, greased and applied a foreign substance on the ball.  Four out of the five pitchers listed are in Baseball’s Hall of Fame.


In more recent years, we saw Kenny Rogers, Clay Buchholz and now Michael Pineda get caught with their hands in the mysterious substance goo jar.  But why do it if it is considered illegal?  It helps pitchers grip the ball in cold spring and fall games.  It gives pitchers more movement on the ball.  According to Keri’s post, doctoring the ball has helped “extend the careers of countless fading arms throughout baseball history.”  Can it hurt the batter?  Sure it can, much like an inside pitch that gets away from a hurler.  A spitball even killed a batter (before helmets were mandatory) in 1920.  Incidentally, it was Yankee pitcher Carl Mays

Why did the spitball go away for a while?  "Pitchers got reluctant to do it simply because they didn't know how to do it," said Jim Hickey, pitching coach for the Tampa Bay Rays and a former minor league pitcher. That knowledge base eroded so badly that today, "it's like a hitter trying to change the way he positions his hands. He's afraid to do it, even for one at-bat, because he doesn't want to go 0-for-1. Pitchers now are afraid of using an experimental pitch, getting whacked, and losing the game because of it,” stated Hickey in an interview with ESPN.com.


The spitball also is said to have disappeared for a while when Bruce Sutter developed the now famous splitter or split finger fastball, which gave the ball the magical movement that the spitball can give.  The spitball may have gone away for a while but guys like Gaylord Perry brought the demon back in the 70s and early 80s.  You never knew if or when he would throw it and Perry liked having that reputation.  I have to be honest, it was kind of cool to watch him pitch because there was always some sort of controversy and I guess some anticipation in wondering when the funny ball would come.


The difference between what happened with Pineda recently and what happened with Rogers and even Buchholz is that Pineda was blatant and about as subtle as a bull in a china shop.  Sure, we didn’t have HDTV when Niekro and Perry were pitching but use a little discretion.   Accusing Buchholz of throwing a spitball in the a game last season, Blue Jay analyst Jack Morris stated that he “found out because the guys on the video camera showed it to me right after the game," Morris said. "I didn't see it during the game. They showed it to me and said, 'What do you think of this?' and I said, 'Well, he's throwing a spitter. Cause that's what it is,” according to MLB.com

Umpires are trained to watch a pitcher very closely.  A pitcher has to step off the rubber when he puts his hand to his mouth or grabs the rosin bag.  And if managers or coaches draw attention to something suspicious with their pitcher or the opposing team’s pitcher, it can throw of the pitcher’s game and rhythm, which is never a good idea.

I am not advocating spitting, ever.  Not on the ground, not at someone and not on a baseball.  But, if guys are going to doctor the ball to get a good grip or feel more confident about their performance, then okay, but don’t flaunt it and don’t be stupid about it.  Two words- Be Discrete! Throw hard but don’t get so wrapped up in wanting perfection that you forget to keep your eye on the ball.




--Suzie Pinstripe, BYB Opinion Columnist
Twitter: @suzieprof



 
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Monday, May 7, 2012

WHY THE COLE HAMELS SUSPENSION IS ABSURD



Cole Hamels was suspended 5 games and an undisclosed amount of money by Major League Baseball this afternoon.  But, for what?  I mean, I know he hit Nats superstar Bryce Harper last night in the lower back/arse Sunday night but wasn't Hamels also pegged by Nats pitcher Jordan Zimmerman?  So I assume Zimmerman is going to be fined, right?  Wait, no?  Why not?  What did Zimmerman do that was different than what Hamels did?  The answer is nothing, yet because Hamels was honest and admitted to doing what pitchers do dozens of times a year he gets fined.  I think its ridiculous.  Even Bryce Harper basically laughed it off after the game.  Almost like he knew it was coming and knows its part of the game.  Here's a 19-year-old kid who gets it yet MLB doesn't?


Let me ask you this...If MLB did nothing what do you think would happen?  Do you honestly think pitchers everywhere would go rogue and start throwing at every star player who comes to the plate to send a message?  Wait, they already do that!  Can you imagine if MLB fined Pedro Martinez every time he hit the Yankee hitters, especially Derek Jeter?  Pedro would have been broke.  Don't get me wrong, I use to scream at my TV every time Pedro hit one of the Yankees over the years, but I never thought MLB should intervene.  I mean, although Pedro never stood in front of a mic and admitted he was throwing at Jeets or Posada, everyone knew he was.  But that was the game.  That's what made the rivalry so intense.  It was the game within the game.

(Don Drysdale)

Look, I don't condone throwing at players heads or at the knees (which is where Zimmerman was trying to hit Hamels), but a little "message" to the backside of a player never hurt anyone..  This is good 'ole fashion baseball.  What Hamels did has been going on for decades.  In fact, I was listening to Mike Francesa this afternoon and he told a great story.  He said the great Dodger pitcher Don Drysdale would approach hitters on opposing teams before a game and ask where they wanted to get hit. I mean there are stories after stories of great players in this game who knew they were going to be hit following a big home run or in retaliation of one of their players being hit.  It was and IS part of the game.



So I guess Cole Hamels really learned his lesson MLB.  I mean after all, he's being suspended five games which means...he will NOT even miss one start!  That's right, it looks like Hamels next scheduled start will now be Sunday instead of Saturday. So the "suspension" is even more absurd.  I do believe there are definitely times when MLB should step in and suspend players, especially when it impacts the integrity of the game.  I'm talking about drug use, bar fights, gambling on baseball, etc.  But MLB, please, do me a favor, keep your noses out of the game within a game.


--Mikey Blue, BYB Senior Writer
Email: DonnieBaseball2323@gmail.com
Twitter: @MikeyBlu23

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