Category Archives: Baseball

Irony, thy name is Felix


Ironic innit, that a couple of days after I write about how pitchers can’t hit, an American League pitcher hits a grand slam. This is the first time in 37 years that this has happened. Hey, even a blind squirrel finds a nut now and again.

Straight outta left field


OK, I didn’t see that one coming. John Gibbons was fired today (that’s not the part that I didn’t see coming, though I disagree with it), and who do the Jays hire as their new manager? No, not Gary Carter, but former Jays manager Cito Gaston. I’m not sure how I feel about this. As much as I loved Cito (and how can you not love Cito?) when he managed the Jays to back-to-back World Series titles in 1992 and 1993, the Jays under Gaston were mediocre at best after that, and then he was fired in 1997, and hasn’t managed a team since. He was apparently on the short list for a few managers jobs, but never got them.

Right now it’s 0-0 in the 11th inning, so the change of management hasn’t done anything yet to fire up the hitters. However, it’s been less than 12 hours, so maybe we’ll need to give Cito and the new guys (other former Jay coaches Gene Tenace and Nick Leyva — hardly the “new guys”) a little more time.

In Defense of the DH Rule


I read an article the other day called “In Defense of the No-DH Rule”, where the author listed ten reasons why he doesn’t like the DH rule. Before I comment on this, let me say two things:

  1. I like the DH rule in the AL.
  2. I do not want to see the DH rule implemented in the NL. Call me a traditionalist or “old school” or whatever, but I’m totally fine with pitchers hitting in the NL, and I agree with the poster who says “It would be sad to see the rule that makes the NL unique disappear.”

The reason that I like the DH rule is simple: in general, pitchers can’t hit. They spend all their training time working on pitching (as they should), and don’t have time to spend at the other end of the batting cage. How does having an almost guaranteed out every nine batters make the game better? It does make managing more of a challenge (it’s more work to think about pinch hitters and shuffling lineups and when to make defensive changes and such) and that’s not a bad thing, but all they’re doing is trying to work around one player’s glaring incompetence in a vital aspect of the game.

Looking at the article (I won’t quote all ten points and address them individually, you’ll have to go to the article itself), of the 10 reasons in that article not to have the DH rule, five of them (1, 2, 4, 7, 8) boil down to “managing is harder because pitchers can’t hit”. Numbers 3 and 5 I agree with. Number 6 (“You throw the ball, you catch the ball, you hit the ball”) isn’t helping his cause much — DHs only do one of those three, but pitchers only do two. The quote isn’t “You throw the ball, you catch the ball, you bunt the ball and hope to make contact and that the third baseman or catcher blows the play” (because pitchers generally can’t run, either). As for number 9, pitchers can and have pinch hit in the AL as well. I don’t understand how point 10 is an argument against the DH, but it also boils down to “pitchers can’t hit”.

Maybe because I’ve grown up a Blue Jay fan, I’m just used to the DH rule. But whenever I do watch an NL game, I shake my head every time I see the pitcher strike out on three pitches or weakly ground out. Forcing a player who’s great at one thing to go out there and do something else that he sucks at just doesn’t make the game better. You don’t force your punter to be a defensive lineman as well. You don’t force your goalie to take shots in the shootout.

I’ve said before that I don’t like the idea of a full-time DH because he only hits, and fielding is an important part of baseball. But I’ve changed my mind on that. Edgar Martinez was a great hitter who because of injury couldn’t play the field. Without a DH rule, you either force him to go out and play the field, or he retires. If you make him play, (a) his inability to play defensively hurts your team, and (b) his injuries probably get worse and he has to retire anyway. If Martinez had retired before becoming a full-time DH, baseball fans would have been robbed of watching him play and that would have been too bad.

Blair’s right, Toth is on crack


I was listening to Prime Time Sports the other day, and guest host Mike Toth (who made the list of my least favourite sportscasters a while ago, and has since dropped even further down the list) mentioned a column he had written suggesting that not only should John Gibbons be fired, but that Gary Carter should be the next Jays manager. Now, I don’t think Gibbons should be fired (though I’d understand it if it happened at the end of the season, as long as Ricciardi was fired too) and I know nothing about Carter, so I listened (and later read the article) to find out Toth’s reasoning behind why Carter would be good for the Jays. I have still yet to figure that out.

Jeff Blair, who covers the Jays for the Globe and Mail, was also on the show and basically said that he thought that Toth must have been joking in his article (I believe his actual words were “you’re on crack”), since hiring Carter would be an immensely stupid idea. Blair has met and covered Gary Carter in the past, and says that Carter isn’t very smart and doesn’t have very good people skills. He’s currently managing in a semi-pro league, which means that not one of the thirty major league teams wants him to manage any of their major or minor league teams. Blair also said that the Jays problems driving in runs are not Gibbons’ fault, and asked Toth to tell him why Gibbons should be fired. Toth’s only response was that sometimes you need to do something like fire the manager to shake up the team. That’s it? Let’s fire someone who is not responsible for the problems because it might fire up the hitters, who are responsible? Toth has been saying for several months now that he thinks Gibby should be fired, and the best reason that this professional sports broadcaster can come up with “I dunno, ya gotta do something…”?

When asked about Carter’s qualifications for being the next Jays manager, Toth said that Carter has two things that John Gibbons does not: a World Series ring and a plaque in Cooperstown. When asked about Carter’s people skills, Toth said that a bunch of years ago, he was the MC at Gary Carter’s induction into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, and Carter was so emotional about the induction that he gave Toth a hug. He also mentioned that Carter was Toth’s idol growing up. That’s it. He was a great baseball player, I idolized him as a kid, and he once gave me a hug, and that makes him qualified to be a major league manager. Get serious.

Sometimes great players make great managers (Ozzie Guillen, Joe Torre, Lou Piniella), but not always (in looking around, I couldn’t find any good examples because the players that this applies to were never hired as managers). It’s also true that sometimes players who weren’t that great end up making great managers (Tony LaRussa had a lifetime .199 average, Tommy Lasorda and Bobby Cox only played in the majors for a couple of seasons), but obviously being a lousy player doesn’t mean you’ll be a good manager either. In general, I think it’s safe to say that playing skills are no predictor of managing skills. Does anyone think Barry Bonds would be a good manager? Hey, he won Gold Gloves, several MVP awards, and hit more home runs than anyone! And I saw him hug his son on TV once! What about Roger Clemens? He won seven Cy Young awards, so he’s prime manager material, right?

Clarification: I’m not saying that hiring Gary Carter would be a bad idea, because I don’t know enough about him to have an opinion either way. But if you want to hire a manager at the big-league level who’s never even managed a single-A team, you better have a damn good reason. Toth’s reasons weren’t even remotely intelligent. His reasons were based on his idolization of Carter as a kid and the fact that he was a great player. Not the kind of intelligent reasoning I’d expect from a professional sports broadcaster.

Rogers Communications owns both the Blue Jays and the FAN 590, and perhaps they would be stupid enough to hire Carter. After all, they were stupid enough to hire Mike Toth to guest host when the incomparable Bob McCown (“Best in the business — just ask him” as the ads say) is on vacation.

Burnett for Johnson! It’s perfect!


A.J. Burnett said the other day that he would welcome “with open arms” a trade to the Cubs. He tried to backpedal a little by saying “As of right now I’m a Blue Jay, and I’m going to pitch to the best of my ability as long as I’m part of this club. But if something like that were to happen, … that would be awesome.” Maybe A.J. didn’t pay attention ten years ago when Roger Clemens asked to be traded from the Jays. Jays fans booed him out of town and haven’t forgiven him. This was after two straight Cy Young seasons. Now Burnett essentially says the same thing after 2½ seasons of injuries and mediocrity. Hey A.J., we know Roger Clemens. We watched him pitch here. We watched him win Cy Young awards here. A.J., you’re no Roger Clemens.

Burnett’s first two seasons with the Jays both ended up at 10-8 with an ERA just under 4.00. This year he’s 6-6 and 4.90. Overall, 26-22 and an ERA just over 4.00. Not bad, but is that really worth the $11+ million a year he’s getting? These days, I suppose it probably is, given what other second-tier pitchers are getting. His performance as a Jay shouldn’t surprise anyone though — he pitched for seven seasons in Florida, and in his best season, he was 12-9. He was one game under .500 for his career before joining the Jays, and he’s all of three games over .500 now. Burnett’s career is about the same length as Roy Halladay’s — Halladay pitched in 2 games in 1998 and Burnett was a rookie in 1999. Halladay’s career ERA is .24 lower than Burnett’s, he’s started 45 more games, has won 44 more games, and has lost 9 less. Oh yeah, and he’s won a Cy Young award.

Maybe a comparison to Halladay is unfair, since nobody considers Burnett a top-tier pitcher, as Halladay is. But $11 million a year is very close to top-tier money, and I would think that if you’re making that kind of money and obviously not performing to that level, you really shouldn’t go saying stupid things like what he said. If Ricciardi can trade Burnett (to the Cubs or anyone else) and get something decent for him, do it. Otherwise, encourage him to opt out of his contract at the end of the season and take the draft picks. Don’t let the door hit you on the way out, Mr. Burnett.

Speaking of the Cubs, former Jay Reed Johnson homered off of Roy Halladay on the weekend. Let’s compare how he and his replacement, Shannon Stewart, are doing so far this year:

  Gm Avg HR RBI SB Notes
Johnson 55 .267 3 31 4  
Stewart 52 .240 1 14 3 Currently on the DL

Stewart, in about the same number of games, is hitting 27 points lower, has less home runs, less than half the RBIs, less stolen bases, and is currently injured. Nice move, J.P.

Brilliant idea: Trade Burnett to the Cubs for Reed Johnson! The Cubs want a veteran pitcher, the Jays get rid of someone who has a hefty contract and doesn’t want to be here anyway, and the Jays need a left fielder since Stewart is hurt! Everybody wins!

A couple of sports quickies


Congrats to the Detroit Red Wings on their Stanley Cup victory. Yes, the game-winning goal was ugly, but the ugly ones count just as much as the pretty ones. The Penguins put up a good fight, but the Red Wings were just too dominant. My finals prediction was Penguins in 6, and it ended up Red Wings in 6, so I really only missed by one. I haven’t watched a lot of playoff hockey this year, but I always enjoy watching the final (i.e. Championship) game of hockey or baseball, even if I don’t care who wins it. I watched the last ten minutes of the third period of game 5, and assumed like everyone else that Detroit would win it and that would be it. Also like everyone else, I was stunned when Pittsburgh scored with 35 seconds left, and resolved to watch the end of the game. The first overtime period was amazing, and I missed about half of the second OT because Gail returned from a Board of Education meeting and we chatted about it for a while. Just before the third OT started, I got sleepy and decided to watch the rest from bed, since Gail was going to stay up and work for a while. I was standing in my room brushing my teeth when the winning goal was scored. Last night I played baseball, so by the time I got home and turned the game on, there were only five minutes left in the third, but Pittsburgh scored with a minute and a half left to cut Detroit’s lead to one, and I thought “here we go again — can Detroit be a minute away from the Stanley Cup two games in a row and still lose?” It turns out the answer was no, but damn, that shot that trickled by Osgood with a second left on the clock was awfully close…

I’ve heard from a bunch of hockey people in the last 24 hours that the Penguins time will come, and very soon. With all the pressure that’s on them now, I kinda hope it does. They were “allowed” to lose it this year — even the mighty Edmonton Oilers were swept in their first Cup appearance in 1983 — but with all these analysts talking about them like it’s a given that they will win Cups in five of the next ten seasons, they better win one within the next two or three years, or their confidence might get rocked, and then they’ll go from perennial Cup contender to “they used to be good” before you can say “Ottawa Senators”.

Hey Ozzie Guillen — I need you to do one of two things, OK? Either (1) grow up or (2) shut up. We’re all tired of your childish little tirades. If you can’t keep your head on straight, just keep your mouth shut. Just manage your team, give the press the standard clichés and that’s it. Thanks.

I was working from home today, and I planned on bringing my laptop into the family room this afternoon and working while watching the Jays-Yankees game, but I completely forgot about the game. I left to go pick up Nicholas around 5:00, and turned the game on in the car. When I turned it on, it was 8-6 Toronto, bottom of the ninth, two outs, B.J. Ryan pitching. I figured I’d hear the end of the game before I got to Nicky’s caregiver’s place, and one way or another, I was right. A-Rod, who was on first, took second on defensive indifference, then Matsui his a single up the middle to score him. Now it’s 8-7, but still 2 outs and B.J. Ryan pitching — no problem, right? The next batter is Jason Giambi, who takes two quick strikes as I pull into the driveway. I decided to listen to the next pitch and hope for a strikeout or groundout and the game would be over. Well, the next pitch was a strike, technically, and it did end the game, but not in the way I was hoping. Giambi hit it over the right field fence for a walk-off home run. Yankees win 9-8. Yuck.

Both Shaun Marcum and Dustin McGowan had breakout seasons last year, and I remember thinking before this season started that if they do half as well this year, and none of the pitchers gets injured, then the Jays pitching staff is looking pretty decent. Well, Marcum and McGowan are both pitching just as well as last year if not better, Halladay has been his normal self (dominant pitcher, complete games all over the place, but he could be 10-3 instead of 7-5 if he had more run support), and A.J. Burnett has been, well, A.J. Burnett — sometimes unhittable, sometimes quite ordinary. All four are at or above .500, and the highest ERA of the four of them is Burnett’s respectable 4.32. If all that wasn’t enough, along comes Jesse Litsch, the former Tampa Bay bat boy, who’s currently 7-2 with an ERA under 3 ½. The Jays quite possibly may have the best starting rotation in the game.

How the other half lives


Last summer, I was the captain of one of the iAnywhere Mobilizers, one of two Sybase softball teams. We had a crappy 3-19 season, but stepped up a bit in the tournament, winning 2 out of 5.

This year, I couldn’t get enough players to put together a Mobilizers team, so I ended up joining the Sybase Sluggers in the A division. We’ve done pretty well so far (2-2 after four games), and I’ve been getting better in each game. On Tuesday night, I only made a couple of plays in the outfield, but I didn’t blow any, and I even had three hits. And for the first time this season, I didn’t have to ice my shoulder after the game and still felt fine the next day. Some interesting differences from last year to this year:

  • Date of our first win: May 22 (game 2)
    Last year: July 4 (game 11)

  • Date of our second win: May 27 (game 3)
    Last year: Aug 21 (game 18)

  • Number of games where we scored over 20 runs: 1 (out of 4)
    Last year: 1 (out of 22)

  • Number of games where we scored 10 or fewer runs: 1 (out of 4)
    Last year: 13 (out of 22)

  • Number of games where we gave up less than 5 runs: 2 (out of 4)
    Last year: 1 (out of 22)

  • Number of games where we gave up 20 or more runs: 1 (out of 4)
    Last year: 10 (out of 22)

Canadian Sports Personalities – Best and Worst


I read an article on another blog on the best Canadian non-hockey sports announcers. There were also specific articles on the hockey people and the anchor desk people. I thought I’d put together my own list of Canadian sports announcers, writers and broadcasters, good and bad. These are in no particular order.

Best

  • Bob McCown — simply the best. Host of Prime Time Sports on the FAN 590, one of my favourite podcasts and according to Bob, “the country’s most listened-to sports talk presentation”. Says what he thinks, doesn’t care if he offends anyone, doesn’t (usually) pull punches during interviews, knows his stuff inside and out, and he’s funny too.
  • Stephen Brunt — he writes for the Globe and Mail, which I don’t read, so I only know him from his appearances on Prime Time Sports, but he’s very knowledgable. And he’s from Hamilton.
  • Jim Kelley — writes for sportsnet.ca, and also appears on Prime Time Sports. He’s in the Hockey Hall of Fame as a writer, and for good reason. He knows more than just hockey though. He, Brunt, and McCown make PTS the best sports show there is.
  • Dan Shulman — Used to do play-by-play for the Blue Jays. Smart guy, and just an all-around great broadcaster. So good, ESPN grabbed him and hasn’t let go.
  • Rob Faulds — I didn’t like him much when I first heard him on Jays telecasts, but he used to host Prime Time Sports when McCown was away, and I grew to respect him. Listening to him on the radio doesn’t feel like listening to the radio, it feels like talking sports over a couple of beers with your buddy.
  • Jennifer Hedger — smart, knows her stuff, and easy on the eyes. Married to Sean McCormick (see the worst list below), but nobody’s perfect.
  • Eliot Friedman — another former guest host on Prime Time Sports, but haven’t heard him for a while. Works on HNIC, though I think he’s underused there.
  • Tom Cheek and Jerry Howarth — Cheek called every single Blue Jays game, including pre- and post-season, from their first day in 1977 until 2004, a streak of over 4,300 consecutive games. I grew up listening to him and Jerry calling Jays games on the radio.
  • Don Chevrier and Buck Martinez — called Jays games on TV in the 80’s and 90’s. Buck went on to manage the Jays, and I was disappointed when he didn’t return to the broadcast booth afterwards.
  • Jay Onrait — host of SportsCentre on TSN. Not particularly insightful, since he’s just reporting the sports news, but he’s pretty funny. The last couple of years, he’s done a real-time blog on trade deadline day which was very funny.

Worst

  • Mike Toth — I used to really hate this guy, but he’s growing on me. Now I only hate him a little bit. He hosts Prime Time Sports when Bob McCown is away, and he’s OK, but I prefer when Rob Faulds used to guest-host.
  • Sean McCormick — they call him The Dude. Or perhaps he calls himself that. Just seems a little too full of himself.
  • Michael Landsberg — speaking of full of himself…
  • Warren Sawkiw — did Jays broadcasts for a year after Tom Cheek passed away, then they fired him. Haven’t seen him since. Didn’t seem to add much to the broadcast, and had too much of a “golly gee whiz, I’m in the big league!” air about him.
  • Don Cherry — very entertaining and I enjoy watching Coach’s Corner because of him, but what an idiot. Thinks that any hockey game without a fight is a waste of time. Thinks that wearing helmets and visors to protect your head and face makes you a pussy. Hey Don, the truth is that it just makes you smart.
  • Nick Kypreos — thinks along Don Cherry’s lines. He was a goon when he played, and thinks that players who don’t know one end of the stick from the other but are great fighters make a valuable contribution. News flash Nick — the ’94 Rangers would have won the Cup even without you. He’s so pro-player anti-owners it’s not funny, which was particularly annoying during the lockout.
  • Fergie Olver and Tony Kubek — both worked for the Jays in the ’80s. To be honest, I don’t remember what it was I didn’t like about these guys, I just remember that when watching a game on TV where these guys were broadcasting, I’d turn the sound down on the TV and turn the radio on. I do remember that Fergie also hosted a kids game show called Just Like Mom where kids and their moms competed as a team against other kids and their moms. Fergie’s wife was the co-host.

A bit of both

  • Pierre McGuire — Most of the time, he’s fine, though he talks really quickly. (I do too, but I’m not a professional broadcaster.) He knows the fine points of hockey very well. However, when he gets excited about something, he talks a mile a minute and STARTS TO YELL. Then I can’t listen to him anymore.

Bonds a Blue Jay?


Frank Thomas was released by the Jays last weekend after a dismal start. Now some people are advocating that the Jays sign Barry Bonds as their new DH. While he’s a better hitter than Thomas (in fact, he’s a better hitter than many of the Jays), I think this would be a colossally bad move for the Jays. Sure they’d get a lot of press for it and attendance might increase, but the effect on the clubhouse might be devastating. Bonds is not known for his friendliness, and he’s widely known as one of the least team-oriented players around. According to Rick Reilly, formerly of Sports Illustrated, when Bonds was with San Francisco, he skipped the team photo, didn’t work out with the team, didn’t travel on the same bus as the the team, and didn’t eat with the rest of the team. Do the Jays, or any other team, need a DH badly enough to accept that kind of a primadonna?

I think the fact that Bonds has been a free agent since last September and nobody has signed him speaks volumes.

Stewart in, Johnson out


The Blue Jays released Reed Johnson today, in favour of Shannon Stewart in left field. I don’t get this move. Johnson’s numbers overall look very similar to Stewart’s — Stewart has a higher career batting average (though Johnson hit .320 in 2006, which is higher than Stewart has ever hit), but the power numbers are the same. Stewart was faster in his prime, but hasn’t stolen more than 7 bases since 2002. Stewart is a decent fielder but can’t throw, while Johnson is a much better fielder who can play more than just left. And Johnson is almost three years younger.

But Stewart makes way less than Johnson — which is weird, considering the Jays signed Johnson to a one-year contract less than three months ago. Once again, the almighty dollar makes decisions that should be left to baseball people.