December 2008

Wild Thing on MLB Network

Mitch Williams is going to be one of the analysts on MLBN's "MLB Tonight" and the live off-season show "Hot Stove."

I'm glad that Mitch is going to have a national audience because he's great and he deserves it. I'm not happy that he won't be doing Phillies Post Game Live on Comcast anymore...watching him talk about the Phils every night was part of the total experience.  I'm especially glad he was there in '08.   Who to replace him?

Ned Colletti's Ironic Laryngitis

From today's MLB.com article by Ken Gurnick:

The agent for Manny Ramirez contacted the Dodgers on Tuesday, one day after word that the club was considering making a run at free-agent outfielders Adam Dunn and Bobby Abreu.

[Dodgers] General manager Ned Colletti said he received a voicemail from Scott Boras in regards to Ramirez, the first contact between the two sides on the free-agent outfielder since a session at the Winter Meetings went nowhere earlier this month.

"He left me a voicemail about an hour ago," a raspy Colletti, fighting off laryngitis, said Tuesday night. "I'm sure we'll talk in the next few days. Hopefully, I'll have my voice back."

Ned, I think we all know that when it comes to these negotiations, you've got your voice back and then some.  I said last week that Teixeira to the Yankees neutralized Manny's already waning appeal and left Team Ramirez with few options.  As Gurnick puts it: " The market for Ramirez has been essentially non-existent. The Dodgers' two-year, $45 million offer with a $15 million third-year option -- made in October and withdrawn soon after their window of negotiating exclusivity closed on Nov. 14 -- remains the only one yet extended to the slugger, who turns 37 next year."

The original offer, if it's even still on the table, seems like Manny's only option at this point, but don't be surprised if someone else makes a move when a Dodgers deal seems close.  

For Pete's Sake Part II

(This began as a comment on the previous post, but I've made it it's own entry because it started getting a little long and it's something that I think will interest people who have been watching the MLB Network promos.  See the previous post, "For Pete's Sake", for context).

Actually, the clip I saw (perhaps a different montage than you both saw) was of later-day, player/manager Pete in a Reds uniform celebrating something (perhaps the all-time hit record?). I think technically speaking, being banned from MLB doesn't actually ban one from the HOF...they have separate governing bodies and rules for these things as I understand it. That said, I don't think that betting on baseball is in the same category as steroids when it comes to the HOF. I can see a valid argument against people who haven been proven to have used PEDs during their career, because the PEDs do exactly what the acronym says: they enhance performance in an unfair (and illegal) way. Betting does not give one an unfair competitive advantage, unless you're betting against the team you manage, and I doubt Rose did this. Even if he did, I find him a far more sympathetic character than steroid users. Sure, betting is against the rules, but betting didn't help Rose become the hit king. Steroids (presumably) did help Bonds and others reach their HOF-like numbers, so it's different. I know there are sabermetrics people who say you can take Bonds' pre-steroids numbers and extrapolate an HOF career, but for me, these numbers are forever tainted. Minus the PEDs, we'll never know about a player's natural longevity or proneness to injury. We just can't know what would have been. With Rose, however, there's no question.

For Pete's Sake

I was just scrolling through the higher channels on my digital cable package and was extremely happy to discover that I will, indeed, be receiving the MLB Network starting on New Year's Day at 6 PM.  

For the time being, the Network is running montages, previews, and so on before going off-air and returning on Thursday night with a show called "Hot Stove Live."  I'm DVRing the preceding half hour, as I suspect there's going to be a pretty well-produced Network intro.

That said, the Network isn't even officially on air yet and I already have a gripe.  Tonight, during one of the montages featuring all-time great moments and players to promote the channel (and, by extension, MLB), an image of Pete Rose was used.  In case you don't know, I'm a firm believer that Rose should be eligible for the Hall of Fame.  I believe he was the best all-around player of real baseball we've ever seen, and I believe he's the on-field model for guys like Chase Utley and others who will their teams to victory.

So, why should I have a problem with Charlie Hustle getting some due from MLB?  It's probably obvious.  Under the current MLB regime, Rose remains persona non grata as a matter of official policy.  Why should MLB be able to make a buck off him or, worse, use his likeness to promote itself even while Rose is banned from MLB?  If he's banned, he's banned, and baseball should, at the very least, avoid exploiting the image of an all-time great that they've officially otherwise blacklisted for life.   

I get that Rose bet on baseball and lied about it.  I also get that Bud Selig is bent on making sure Rose will never beat him.  But scolding Rose with one hand and making a buck from him with the other is a joke, and for a game that's supposedly at least a little bit about character, it sets a hypocritical example.  Not a good start.

(Free Pete Rose!)

The Neutralization of Manny Ramirez

...is named Mark Teixeira.  We know Manny's not going to Boston.  Teixeira singing with the Yanks makes a Bronx move less likely.  Where do you see this going?  Would a move to South Philly surpise you?  The Fightin's already have a new left fielder, but it's interesting to think about adding Manny to that line up.  And I think he'd play with passion (think Dodger Manny) and drive for a team like the reiging champs. 

I get that ending up with Bad Manny is the monster downside to a gamble by any team for Good Manny, and I'm not saying I want him in South Philly.  But if he had an Utley mentality...

Manny and Teixeira Heading East?

I think the Yankees are going to sign Manny.  I bet it gets done before the New Year, especially if Boston signs Mark Teixeira.  

CC Is The Most Pinstriped Of Them All

Uniwatch has the story.  

The also have details on changes to the Red Sox, Orioles, and Rays uniforms, which you've probably already seen by now.  

I'm not sure if I like the hanging socks logo on Boston's caps.  I do like the Maryland state flag patch on the O's jerseys.  The Ray's new alternate jersey doesn't excite me one way or another. 


For The Rated Rookie In Your Life

This shirt from No Mas is fantastic:

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Check it out here.

No one reading these blogs needs the greatness of this shirt explained.  How many Kevin Elster and Greg Jeffries Rated Rookie cards did you have?


How Long Until The Pirates are Competitive?

Jack Wilson wants some gamers in Pittsburgh.   Buccos GM Frank Coonnelly points out that the Rays and Phils were built with an old-school focus on drafting, depth, and development.  Both men are right.  But if the Pirates were to get serious right now about building a winner the old-school way, how long would it take for them to become competitive?  Sure, being competitive and being a winner are two different things, so how far are the Bucs from either both? I don't know anything about their farm system (apart from Patel and Singh) so I don't know what they're starting out with. 

17 losing seasons. Man.  17 years ago Jamie Moyer was in his 30s.  Think about that.  That's a long time.   

Fightin's Get Some Love In TYIB Awards

The fans' votes are in:

Manager of the Year:  Uncle Charlie
Executive of the Year:  Pat "The Bat" Gillick
Closer of the Year:  Brad Lidge 
Postseason Moment of the Year:  Chase Utley's pump fake and throw home in Game 6 of the Series. 

I don't think any of these awards could have gone any other way.  Matt Stairs' walk-off homer in the NLCS against LA would be a very close second in the postseason category.  

Check out the rest of the "This Year In Baseball Awards" here.

No. 50 Is The Man

With the exception of the very recent moves of Burnett and Sabathia to the evil empire, things have been really quiet in the Hot Stove League this off-season, presumably because of the worsening financial crisis.  (And I'll say it again:  the Yankees are wasting good money).

Finally, some happy news to share.   In case you haven't heard, the 2008 World Campion Phils have signed Jaime Moyer, 46, to a 2-year deal.  Oh yes.  I love this man.  And he has a deal before Manny.