In my life I have attended many more major league games than minor league ones, but 2010 will be a chance for me to experience the minors like never before. I will be working in media relations for the Toledo Mud Hens of the International League. The Mud Hens are the Triple-A affiliate of the Tigers and play at Fifth Third Field, just an hour from Detroit, which means that Tigers on rehab assignments will likely make cameo appearances throughout the season.
New York Yankees
12 March 2010
26 February 2010
After their playing careers are over, Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera will undoubtedly be elected to the Hall of Fame in their first year of eligibility, but will teammate Jorge Posada join them in Cooperstown? Yankee fans may feel differently, but the truth is that if Posada retired from baseball today, he would not belong in The Hall. His credentials include five trips to the All-Star Game, five Silver Slugger awards, 243 home runs, and five seasons with 90+ RBI’s, as well as having caught the perfect game thrown by David Wells in 1998. Arguments against Posada’s candidacy are that he is not a strong defensive catcher, has only once batted over .300 (.277 career average) and his 1,488 career hits do not make him stand out among his catching peers. Despite 11 career playoff home runs, his postseason line (.239/.351/.384) is sub-par for a catcher known primarily for his hitting.
Continue reading "Third member of Yankee trio not a lock for Hall"
Posted by David | No comments yet
15 January 2010
Big news from the Big Unit: 46-year-old Randy Johnson announced his retirement, concluding his career with a record of 303-166, a 3.29 ERA and a 1.17 WHIP. His five Cy Young Awards – one with the Mariners and four in a row with the Diamondbacks – rank him behind only Roger Clemens, and his 4,875 career strikeouts are second only to Nolan Ryan. He was a 10-time All-Star, starting the Midsummer Classic four times – twice for each league. Johnson made history in 2004 when he became the oldest player – at 40 – to throw a perfect game.
Posted by David | No comments yet
1 January 2010
While researching ballplayers of the nineties, I discovered that in 1993, Jeff King of the Pirates drove in 98 runs while hitting only nine home runs and slugging just .406. I then wondered if any player has ever driven in 100 runs with fewer than 10 homers or with a slugging percentage under .400. Upon further investigation, I found that in 1996 – the year he turned 40 during the Dog Days of August – Paul Molitor hit just nine homers but accumulated 113 RBI’s while playing for the Twins. Thanks to his American League-leading 225 hits and batting two hitters behind leadoff man Chuck Knoblauch in the midst of his best season (.448 OBP), Molitor led the Twins in both hitting (.341) and Runs Batted In. I have yet to find a player with a season of 100+ RBI’s despite a slugging percentage under .400 (Molitor’s was a healthy .468), but I will continue searching.
Posted by David | No comments yet
18 December 2009
After the way Cliff Lee pitched against the Yankees in the World Series six weeks ago, I would have been surprised to hear that the Phillies were even listening to offers for their ace. But when the chance to acquire Roy Halladay comes around, I suppose any team would be crazy not to listen. Before I knew it, Halladay was a Phillie and Lee was heading to Seattle, where he’ll join his third club in the span of four and a half months. How often does that happen to the defending Cy Young Award winner?
Posted by David | No comments yet
4 December 2009
Should Roberto Alomar be elected to the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility? The spitting incident with umpire John Hirschbeck does not help his case, but it really has nothing to do with his success on the field. Fans may also remember that Alomar’s career ended with a couple of mediocre seasons, but when you look at his statistics, it’s a no-brainer.
Posted by David | No comments yet
6 November 2009
Chase Utley and Ryan Howard put themselves in the record books in back-to-back at-bats in the seventh inning of Game 5 of the World Series in Philadelphia. Each tied an offensive mark originally set before Phil Coke, the Yankee pitcher who faced the duo, was born. Utley matched Reggie Jackson, who hit five home runs in the 1977 Fall Classic. Jackson, incidentally, was in his first year in Yankee pinstripes. Howard tied Willie Wilson, whose 12 strikeouts in the 1980 World Series were at the hands of none other than the Phillies. (Howard went on to set a new record in Game 6.)
Posted by David | No comments yet
23 October 2009
In the National League Championship Series, fans of both teams saw familiar faces wearing the opponent’s uniform. Dodgers Jim Thome, Vicente Padilla, and Randy Wolf used to play their home games in the City of Brotherly Love, while Phillies Jayson Werth, Pedro Martinez, Chan Ho Park, and Paul Bako once upon a time bled Dodger Blue.
Continue reading "Did you say you played for the Dodgers? ..."
Posted by David | No comments yet
11 September 2009
Last week I saw Andy Pettitte throw six and two-thirds innings of perfect baseball at against the Orioles at Camden Yards. With two outs in the bottom of the seventh, Adam Jones hit a ground ball to third. Alex Rodriguez was getting the night off, and his replacement at the hot corner, Jerry Hairston, booted it. Having grown up an Orioles fan and somewhere along the way developing into a Yankee-hater, one might think I would have been rooting for the Birds to end Pettitte’s bid for perfection; however, this was not so. As a fan of the game, I wanted to witness history. Sure; I would have preferred seeing an Oriole pitcher throw a perfecto (though even a shutout by one of this year’s starters would have been historic), but I can’t expect miracles.
Posted by David | No comments yet
31 July 2009
Since I last posted before my trip to Spain, there have been a number of noteworthy occurrences in Major League Baseball.
The American League won yet another All-Star Game – by a single run for the fourth year in a row. Manny Ramirez returned from his 50-game suspension. The Nationals fired manager Manny Acta. Jonathan Sanchez threw the season’s first no-hitter. The Braves gave up on underachieving hometown boy Jeff Francouer, and traded him to the Mets for Ryan Church, who hit the foul ball I caught at RFK in 2007. The most exciting news, however, took place the day I returned from my voyage: Mark Buerhle of the White Sox threw a perfect game. The following day, the A’s traded slugger Matt Holliday to the Cardinals, who now have protection for Albert Pujols.
Posted by David | No comments yet
2 June 2009
There are lots of guys like Burt Hooton.
Well, not at your local bar, or at church or the grocery store. Unless former pro ballplayers hang out there. Former pro ballplayers who won the clinching game of the 1981 World Series. Against the Yankees. What I mean by Burt being like lots of guys is that the annals of baseball have so many players we tend to remember mostly the Babe Ruths and Ty Cobbs and –insert random player name here- and so on. But the game is larger than even the biggest stars. The game consists of so many players, so many games, so many stats, that unless a player was on your favorite team he may only garner a fleeting memory, an “oh yeah, I kinda remember him” reaction. If you followed the Cubs in the early to mid seventies, or the Dodgers from 75 to 84, you remember Burt Hooton. He’ll never get into the hall of fame, but his career is worth a look; there are definitely enough interesting moments to warrant it. This isn’t some guy who had one or two moments of fame; he had a career’s worth. Currently he is the pitching coach of the Round Rock Express, the Triple-A affiliate of the Houston Astros.
Posted by Keith trussell | No comments yet
30 January 2009
New York Yankee signings and trades over the last eight years (Mike Mussina, Jason Giambi, Alex Rodriguez, Hideki Matsui, etc.) have not yet led to a single World Championship. That’s right – these “impact” players, as they are commonly called, have not been able to bring even one trophy to the city of New York. Sure, the Yankees have been perennial contenders this entire decade, but they haven’t been able to seal the deal for The Boss, who expects everything and more from his high-priced talent. So while it is inevitable that all Yankee haters worry about what the 2009 season will bring now that the Bronx Bombers have signed CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira, and A.J. Burnett, there’s no reason to suddenly assume that the team has what it takes to go all the way.
Continue reading "Yankee moves don’t guarantee championship"
Posted by David | 1 comment
16 January 2009
What are some of the Braves other needs before the season opener against the Phillies on April 5? Adding an outfield bat seems to be Wren's top priority, but who could it be?
Hopefully not Andruw Jones, who just hit the free agent market yesterday. I just don't think he's worth taking a shot on. After all, the Dodgers did agree to pay him the rest of his contract as long as he stopped hurting their team by taking up a roster spot.
Posted by Alex Bauer | No comments yet
13 January 2009
Yes, it's great for the Atlanta Braves that Derek Lowe is their rotation's new ace. He's better than what they have now — with the exception possibly being Jair Jurrjens, who might be really, really good one day but is still just 22 years old — and there aren't too many other options out there. Randy Wolf isn't that great, neither is Oliver Perez, and Ben Sheets is exactly what the Braves don't need, another starter who will spend more time on the DL then he will off of it.
Continue reading "Braves overbid for Lowe - but they had no choice"
Posted by Alex Bauer | No comments yet
19 December 2008
Francisco Rodriguez just signed a big-money contract with the Mets, who have missed the playoffs the last two seasons. CC Sabathia chose to become the highest-paid pitcher in baseball history, signing with the Yankees in spite of the fact that they play in what is considered the toughest division in baseball and failed to make the postseason in 2008. What drew Sabathia to the Bronx and K-Rod to Queens? It wasn’t a near-guarantee to return to the playoffs, which they could have had with the Angels. They didn’t grow up in New York dreaming of wearing Yankee Pinstripes and Met blue and orange one day. There’s only one thing it could be: money – $161 million for seven years of Sabathia and $37 million for three years of Rodriguez.
Posted by David | No comments yet
31 October 2008
I read yesterday that Manny might be going to the Yankees. I guess they're the only team that can afford him. But it sure doesn't seem right.
Boston Red Sox fans have got to be letting out a collective groan.
Posted by Lisa | No comments yet
21 July 2008
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8 June 2008
At the of 10, I pitched my first baseball game. By 16, I had pitched my last. I was a product of a career cut short by tendonitis in the elbow of my throwing arm. I recall coming home after high school games to the weak therapy of a heating pad which only isolated my pain. The throbbing would be so intense that I was unable to move my arm enough to pick up a pencil to do my math homework. I knew things were on their way down when a kid clobbered a 300 some-odd foot homerun off of the first pitch of my career. It would be the only homerun I gave up all year, but as the season moved on, my stamina withered. A 5 inning outing quickly turned into 4 innings then 3. Before I knew it, I was moved to the role of closer. By the end of the season, I was lucky if I could handle more than 1 innings worth of work. My fastball steadily declined from the upper-mid 70s to the low 60s. With only two games left in the season, I broke my left thumb and was done for the season.
Posted by Andrew Fixell | No comments yet
13 March 2008
Billy Crystal got his chance to take a Major League AB today for the Yankees. He led off the bottom of the first as a DH with a strike out. Apparently he was able to make some minor con
Posted by Matt Adams | No comments yet

