Showing posts with label While We Wait. Show all posts
Showing posts with label While We Wait. Show all posts

Friday, April 27, 2018

While We Wait Article Revisit: The Long Lost TGP Exclusive Interview w/ Tyler Austin



While we wait on the game tonight between the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim let’s take a look through the Greedy Pinstripes archives and have ourselves an article revisit, shall we? Will this article be a little dated? Sure, it didn’t happen until two years after he was drafted by the team in 2010, the first year of existence for TGP. Did my writing suck back then? Also, an affirmative answer. Should it be fun to read this and look back at how far he has come regardless? Absolutely! So, enjoy!







If some of you guys missed it a few weeks back we interviewed Tyler Austin's mother, Kim Austin, and apparently hit it off well because we used her as a contact to get an interview with her son Tyler. As you all know, or should know, Tyler is the latest Yankees super prospect that is just simply tearing up the minor leagues with the Charleston Riverdogs. We asked him everything from questions about his childhood, a battle with cancer, his minor league baseball life, and when he plans on hitting some of those bombs in Yankees Stadium. Enjoy the read!


The Greedy Pinstripes: Was your dream as a child always to be a baseball player? If not, then what did you want to be when you grew up? 
Tyler Austin : Yes sir I've always wanted to be a pro ball player.  

TGP: What team did you root for growing up as a kid?
TA: New York Yankees  

TGP: Favorite player(s) growing up?
TA: Derek Jeter and Andrew Jones 


TGP: Your biggest inspiration when it came to baseball? 
TA: I was inspired from people telling me I couldn't do it my whole life. And I don't take no for answer, so when people would say that it drove me even more to make my dreams come true.  


TGP: Did you have a preference to what team you wanted to sign with?  
TA: No sir I didn't really care where I went. But it made it even sweeter cause it was with the Yankees who have always been my favorite team.  


TGP: What a lot of people did not know, including myself , was that you were a center fielder as a young player. Did you always want to be an outfielder for the Yankees? 
TA: I didn't really care where they put me. No matter where it is I'm gonna go out each and every day and give it everything I have.  


TGP: Whose idea/call was it to make you a corner infielder rather then an outfielder? 
TA: I'm not sure whose idea it was. 


TGP: How hard is it being away from your significant other while on the road and such? 
TA: It's really hard being away from my family and girlfriend. But I talk to them every night and just thankful I have them in my life and supporting me through my good times and bad.  

TGP: Favorite moment as a Yankees prospect? 
TA: Winning the New York Penn League championship last season   

TGP: Who was the best prospect in the Yankees system that you ever played with? 
TA: Mason Williams  

TGP: Do you keep in touch with any other current or former Yankees prospects or coaches? 
TA: Yes sir I do  

TGP: Hardest part of being a prospect? 
TA: Nothing is really hard about it. I still have to go out there and play each and every game the right way no matter if I am a prospect or I'm not. 

 TGP: A lot of people dont know you battled cancer, so first off congrats on beating that, how was that whole experience?
TA: Thank you!! It was tough going through that I was only 18 years old and didn't really know how to handle something like that at such a young age. But I just kept faith in the lord and knew everything would be okay if I kept the faith in him.  

TGP: Most famous person in your cell phone? 
TA: Justin Maxwell  

TGP: Most embarrassing song/artist in your ipod?
TA: Baby by Justin Bieber, haha 


I want to thank Mr. Austin for taking the time out for a lowly blogger and huge fan. I was like a kid in a candy store typing up the questions to send him and typing this interview out. I was like an anxious kid who could not wait to go to the toy store this weekend while waiting for him to fill it out. It was well worth the wait! Thank you again Mr. Austin and thank you to Tyler's Mom, Mrs. Kim Austin, for being such a kind and giving person (well and for having Tyler lol).

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

While We Wait: Praying for Doc Gooden’s Health as Well


Last week I asked for you all to think and/or pray for Bob Watson as he revealed that he was fighting kidney failure that left him with just a few more years to live and tonight apparently we need that same focus and power for former Mets and Yankees pitcher Doc Gooden. Gooden was last seen inside Yankee Stadium during a ceremony in which the Yankees honored their 1996 World Series Championship squad and I have to admit that my first impressions of Doc was not a good one. Doc looked skinny, almost sickly, and of course my first thought went to him and his past struggles with cocaine addiction. It turns out I may have been right in my assumptions.

Dwight Gooden Jr. issued a statement on Sunday thanking former teammates including former Yankees and Mets teammate Daryl Strawberry for their concerns about his father’s health. It seems that Doc is still fighting his cocaine addiction and is in “horrible” condition per Strawberry in a statement made to the New York Daily News on Sunday.

Doc denied all allegations of use, and why wouldn’t he?, and says he is fine but I don’t buy it. Doc I highly doubt you are reading this but if you are pay attention and listen. I know what your son is going through because I too had a father who battled addiction to drugs his entire life. My father died because of his addiction to drugs and I always felt a little twinge of guilt because of it. Don’t do that to your son. Put the crap down and shape up or you may be shipping out and where you are going there is no coming back from. Let it sink it, please!

Prayers for Doc, his son Doc Jr., and the entire Gooden family and friends circle. You’re going to need it.


Monday, August 22, 2016

While We Wait: UFC 202 Post-Fight Interviews


I don't know what the acceptable time period is to talk about potential spoilers and such so if you haven't watched UFC 202 yet and you don't know who won then please look away now. You have been warned......

Okay so if you did see the fight you saw that Conor McGregor beat Nate Diaz in an intense and grueling five-round decision that was not without its controversy. Personally I thought McGregor won the fight as well and two of the judges agreed so maybe I'm not that far off but I can absolutely see the side of and understand your point if you thought Diaz pulled it out. It was that close, especially in the later rounds.

So while we wait let's check out the always entertaining post-fight interviews from the fight with both McGregor and Diaz. Enjoy and enjoy the game tonight as well.



Nate Diaz
  Conor Conor McGregor

Saturday, July 2, 2016

While We Wait: Link Dump from the BYB Hub


There’s some good and there’s some bad to the whole Yankees being on the West Coast thing and playing games well into the night without three-and-a-half hour rain delays I just struggle to find some of those good things most times. One of the few good things I have found though is it gives me an open slot on the blog to do a link dump while we wait for the games to begin. Tonight we will showcase some of the talent that is currently being offered on the BYB Hub.

If you’re not familiar with the BYB Hub this was the brain child of Robert Casey, the owner and my dear friend from Bleeding Yankee Blue, and it serves as a place for an up-and-coming blogger or just a guy with a website to get his articles and content read. When many of us were just starting out we didn’t have the sort of free exposure and advertising that the BYB Hub was designed to offer and Casey, myself and everyone else involved are looking to give to those what we only wished we had when we started. It’s really a great site and it’s full of great content, not just Yankees content either, so I suggest you check it out. BYBHub.Blogspot.com.


Friday, July 1, 2016

While We Wait: The Soul of the Game


You ever have that one movie that no matter how many times you see it that it doesn’t get old? You ever have that one movie that no matter what else is on if you see it on TBS or something you have to watch it. Even if it’s not the same edited or shortened down by cable TV? Soul of the Game is that movie for me (among others….. I mean Sandlot is a no-brainer…. come on) so I decided while we wait on the Yankees game to begin I would watch a movie. My “go-to” movie tonight is Soul of the Game so I figured I would share that with you as well while you wait.

If you haven’t seen it the movie covers the time period where Jackie Robinson was breaking the color barrier in Major League Baseball. The movie has Jackie in it and Branch Rickey but this movie focuses more on the Negro League struggle, Satchel Paige and Josh Gibson. In the movie you see Jackie trying to earn the respect of Satchel, players being loaned and traded for series just to fill the house with fans, Gibson’s battle with a brain tumor and so much more.

It’s an “oldie but a goodie” so check it out. Enjoy the movie while we wait.


Friday, May 20, 2016

While We Wait: Link Dump from my Bookmarks


I don’t know about you but I read. A lot. Books, websites, news, sports, comic books. You name it, I read it. I like to catch up on my reading and my bookmarks during west coast games and off days because there just simply isn’t enough hours in the day so I thought while we wait I’d share a little bit of what I’m reading tonight on this beautiful Friday night.



Maybe you find something you will enjoy as well. Enjoy!

Thursday, May 19, 2016

While We Wait Link Dump for May 19th from the BYB Hub


There is only one thing, ONE THING, that’s good about having the New York Yankees play out on the West Coast. I tend to get a lot more things done with my extra three or four hours of my day. I am an early riser and I usually run all day long so staying up until 1:00 AM or 2:00 AM ET just to wake up at 5:00 AM to watch the Yankees is not my cup of tea but like I said I use these games as a way to catch up on things. I’m hoping you will do the same here tonight as I had this novel idea, why not do a link dump here giving you a chance to catch up on some reading while you wait for the Yankees game to begin or you start winding down before bed.






I’ve done this before showcasing Yankees-related material from major news publications like NJ.com, the USA Today and the New York Daily News but those guys get enough clicks anyway. When they aren’t getting enough clicks they come up with click baits like “Yankees frontrunners for Mike Trout” so I thought I would bring you some articles from true fans, websites that need some love and members of the BYB Hub. So enjoy and check out the BYB Hub at bybhub.blogspot.com. 

Saturday, December 19, 2015

MLB’s New Frontier: No Injuries in the Game

From the USA Today. This article was too good not to share. Enjoy!

Baseball’s most renowned innovator believes the next frontier of analytics won’t be about changes to on-field performance so much as simply keeping players on the field.

“I think that everybody's looking for a competitive edge,” Colorado Rockies manager Walt Weiss said, “and that's an area where you may be able to find one.” Billy Beane, Oakland Athletics executive vice president of baseball operations, has been among the loudest voices touting injury prevention and medical treatment as the next major data-driven undertaking — and that movement is accelerating across the league as medical technology improves and the investment in player contracts increases.

Training and nutritional programs are individualized based on baseline physical evaluations, as well as a player’s age, position and handedness; further customization takes the calendar — offseason, spring training, early season, late season — into account.

Radar systems track a pitcher’s velocity and release point to gauge fatigue. Elbow sleeves log the strain of every throw. Functional movement screenings are routine tests. Biomechanics data can be delivered in real-time. Medical research papers on the epidemiology of common baseball injuries and based on a league-wide injury database are nearing publication.

In November, after an injury-ravaged roster fell short of an expected playoff berth, the Washington Nationals introduced a revamped medical staff and first-of-its-kind advisory board with new executive director Harvey Sharman, who oversaw the medical program at Leeds United, an English soccer club where analytics are more in use. At the press conference, general manager Mike Rizzo called it “maybe the next Moneyball,” summoning the imagery of the book that made Beane famous.

Mets head team physician Struan Coleman, an orthopedic surgeon at New York’s Hospital for Special Surgery, said research is in the works about the risk factors and corresponding preventive muscle strengthening exercises to avoid injury absences. Someday, that could result in better elbow protection and Tommy John surgery prevention.

“That’s the kind of thing that we’re working toward,” Coleman said, “and I think we’re going to get there.”

In an industry where revenues approach $10 billion, the average salary exceeds $4 million and the first $400 million player may be just three years away, there's ample motivation.

Prevention, not treatment

James Andrews, the internationally regarded orthopedic surgeon, founded the American Sports Medicine Institute in 1987 and, along with Ph.D. research director Glenn Fleisig, have helped revolutionize the field. The mission has always been about injury prevention and recovery, but in 2002, they had a revelation.

“We looked in the mirror and said that we’re really doing a lot more on the treatment side than the prevention side,” Fleisig said.

At that January’s annual baseball injuries seminar at ASMI, Andrews announced that their biomechanics lab was open for all business — in other words, that teams were encouraged to send all pitchers for testing, even the healthy ones, and not just those rehabbing injuries.

Around that time, Oakland A’s pitching coach Rick Peterson sent a few young pitchers — Tim Hudson and Barry Zito, among others — for analysis in February. That November, Zito won the American League Cy Young Award. “That was good for business,” Fleisig said.

Ball clubs are far more proactive now in tracking pitcher data. Peterson — who is fond of saying, “In God we trust; all others must have data” — is now director of pitching development with the Baltimore Orioles and has all of his minor league pitchers tested.

“The Orioles pitching development program is based on research and science from Dr. Andrews and Dr. Fleisig,” Peterson said, “and our motivation is to fully help every pitcher in this organization to bridge the gap between potential and performance.”

The company KinaTrax has developed 3D motion-capture technology to replicate the work of ASMI’s biomechanics lab in major league ballparks. KinaTrax is in discussions with 17 clubs; the Tampa Bay Rays will be the first to install the system, which dovetails with the progressive ethos of the organization’s medical and training staffs.

“They stay innovative — they are constantly at seminars,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “They are constantly trying to learn. They don't get in the mold, well, I've been doing this for 15 years and this is how we did it then. They challenge themselves daily to provide the most for our players.”

Motus Global uses small motion-sensor chips embedded in small pockets of compression clothes to track swing and throwing mechanics. The elbow sleeve measures torque in Newton meters while also logging arm slot, arm speed and a shoulder’s external rotation. Motus is used by 27 of the 30 major league clubs. (Fleisig sits on its board.)

The TrackMan radar that powers MLB’s StatCast data collection also plays a role in injury detection and rehabilitation.

“We know teams will shut players down if they see certain changes,” TrackMan Baseball general manager John Olshan said, adding that, conversely, some clubs will hold back a player in rehab until their pitching measurements reach a certain threshold: “They might not know why that’s happening, but they know that somehow the player is compensating.”

ASMI has also been at the forefront of instituting pitch counts in Little League and endorsing other safer arm-care guidelines through Pitch Smart, a joint effort of Major League Baseball and USA Baseball. With elbow injuries rising, that movement has received universal embracement.
“I watch TV — politics or sports — and how often do you say something and everyone agrees?” Fleisig said.

Rest, recovery, and ‘fingerprints’

The No. 1 cause of injuries is fatigue which, Cincinnati Reds medical director Tim Kremchek said, leads to a staggering 500% increase in their likelihood. Fleisig said a pitcher’s fatigue is often marked by stride shortening and elbow lowering. Th
ose changes can be nearly imperceptible to the naked eye, hence, all the tracking technology.
“When you fatigue, your biomechanics change,” said Kremchek, a leading Tommy John surgeon.
Many medicals staffs previously reacted to injuries and only gave lip service to the realization of baseball’s marathon season. That’s why, Coleman said, the HSS team made a big push on prevention by instituting more rest and recovery days in 2007 which, he said, “substantially” reduced the number of days Mets players missed to injury from one year to the next.

Diagnosing injuries early is essential to avoid worsening. That requires vigilance by the whole staff, as well as having a player’s healthy medical records on file, too.

“Each player has his own signature, baseline motion and strength analysis,” Coleman said. “It’s like a fingerprint.”

Starting with those thorough examinations, medical staffs can work on prospective studies by following players longitudinally.

“If someone has, say, decreased range of motion in their hip,” he said, “are they more likely to have a hip injury or a hamstring injury during the one season, during five seasons or in 10 seasons?”
Coleman said there’s been recent progress in reducing the number of shoulder injuries, due to heightened understanding of the joint’s mechanics, the need for stretching the posterior capsule to avoid internal impingement and improved MRI resolution to detect inflammation.

Medical teams have grown from a doctor and a trainer to dozens of physical therapists, trainers, strength and conditioning coaches. Minnesota Twins manager Paul Molitor, a Hall of Fame player from 1978-1998, said teams didn’t even have weight rooms when he started playing.
“We have gone from — when I started with the Reds 20 years ago — cursory physical examinations in the spring and letting him play,” Kremchek said, “to now individualized, customized programs from them. It’s very sophisticated.”

Among the advances, Kremchek said, are increased use of ultrasound to view muscles dynamically rather than static MRI images and more natural healing approaches. Especially in younger athletes, he said he’s less apt to use cortisone than platelet-rich plasma (PRP) or stem-cell therapies.
“We are very, very proactive in these types of regenerative medicine,” Kremchek said.


The statistics of baseball performance have been so finely studied and dissected that it’s becoming harder to find differentiating factors, so clubs are turning further attention to the field of sports medicine to minimize one particular statistic: disabled list stays.

Sunday, September 20, 2015

While We Wait:By the numbers: A break is (almost) always good for A-Rod


While we wait on tonight's Sunday Night Baseball game on ESPN I wanted to take an opportunity to bring you a great article written by Chad Jennings over at Lohud. Jennings looks at Alex Rodriguez in this article to see whether the days off the Yankees have been giving him, like the three games in a National League park against the Mets and the off day on Thursday, affect his production at the plate or not. CLICK HERE to read the entire article at Lohud and see below for a sample blurb while we wait. Enjoy. 



Last week, when he hit his fourth home run in five days, Alex Rodriguez talked about perspective.

As a younger player, he’d never liked days off. He played all 162 games three times in his 20s, but Rodriguez’s late 30s taught him the value of rest and recuperation. Durability is no longer be taken for granted, and strength in September is no longer a given.

Four home runs in five days? Rodriguez pointed to the week before when he’d more or less taken four days off in a National League park.

“I’ve felt much better,” Rodriguez said. “One of the good things about getting old is you have some perspective. I talked about that in Atlanta, and the days off for me have been good.”

In almost every case, taking at least two days off has paid immediate dividends for Rodriguez. An extended break has been helpful for the 40-year-old, and he should get one more break this weekend when the Yankees play at Citi Field. An off day Thursday followed by three games in a National League park should leave Rodriguez with an extended break leading into the final 14 games of the season.

And those final 14 games start with three against Toronto, so this would be a fine time to continue the pattern of being productive right after a few days off.

“I think one thing is, Joe (Girardi) deserves a lot of credit,” Rodriguez said. “He’s been very disciplined. He’s rested me. I took a day off after the three homers in Minnesota, and I think that has been good. Obviously I’ll have a break against the Mets. I’m in a position now where I can find the strength.”

Here’s every example of Rodriguez being kept out of the lineup at least two days in a row this season.

April 30-May 1Off day, at Red Sox
One pinch-hit appearance
Ten games before: .135/.319/.270
Ten games after: .286/.341/.657
This was A-Rod’s first extended break of the season. He was kept out of the lineup April 28, took an 0-for-6 April 29, April 30 was an off day, and he was back on the bench May 1. On that May 1 game, Rodriguez hit a pinch-hit home run in the eighth inning, which would be the start of another hot streak.

May 19-20at Nationals
Two pinch-hit appearances; one inning in the field
Ten games before: .297/.364/.730
Ten games after: .405/.452/.514

This was early in the season, at a time when it seemed the Yankees had to find a way to get Rodriguez into these National League games. He came back from the short break to have a hit in his next 11 games in a row, including five multi-hit games. Didn’t necessarily need the break, but the time off didn’t seem to hurt him.

June 15-16at Marlins
One pinch-hit appearance
Ten games before: .205/.367/.333
Ten games after: .400/.500/.686

Had eight hits in his previous 10 games, and half of those came in one game, so his slump was perhaps a little worse than the slash line suggests. He was cheered at home in Miami, got into only one of those two games, then returned to hit a home run in three of his next seven games.

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

While We Wait: Robinson Cano and the New York Yankees, Are Either One Happy?

Don't cry Cano, Jay-Z thought this was a great idea....

While we wait, are either Robinson Cano or the New York Yankees happy about their very public, and to some heartbreaking, split before the 2014 season? Read here while we wait for the Yankees and Angels game and click the link to give those guys a view, it’s a great article.



It has been almost two years since second baseman Robinson Cano and the New York Yankees decided to part ways and end their relationship. Cano bolted to the west coast to play with the Seattle Mariners at Safeco Field. The Yankees have had a series of second basemen since the departure of Cano.

Two years later, it’s hard to really signify who profited from the split?
Cano bolted for more money in Seattle. That evidence is staring right in the face of the Seattle Mariners, New York Yankees and the 28 other Major League teams. Cano wanted “the money”.
Cano left for Seattle because he felt he was not profiting from his services at Yankee Stadium for the Bronx Bombers.

Next to future hall of famer shortstop Derek Jeter, Robinson Cano was just as recognized in New York. His face was all over the city on television as well as street signs.
Cano really excelled in New York at Yankee Stadium. He could hit homeruns with relative ease and was a constant threat in the lineup, as well as on the field with his smooth play at second base. Cano’s ‘sweet spot’ for hitting homeruns was right field in the Bronx.

In December, 2013 Cano signed a 10 year $240 million deal with the Seattle Mariners. In comparison, the New York Yankees offered a 7 year deal for $175 million. A longer deal and more money is what Cano opted for. Over the course of the 2014 season, Cano finished with 14 homeruns and 82 RBI’s, along with a .314 batting average. No one doubts his statistics accumulated since his debut with the Yankees in 2005. Cano’s a six time All-Star, five time Silver-Slugger Award winner, two time Gold-Glove winner and a World Series Champion in 2009 with the Yankees.

His second year of the 10 year deal in Seattle is not going well. Cano has 3 homeruns, 23 RBI’s and 68 hits. Boston Red Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia and Cano were considered two of the best second basemen in the American League just a short while ago. Now the game has evolved. There are other second basemen in the American League who have better statistics than Cano. Fellow second basemen, Houston Astros’ Jose Altuve and Cleveland Indians’ Jason Kipnis appear to be taking the league by storm. Pedroia and Cano appear to be showing signs of decline in their play.

The New York Yankees have not found their replacement for Cano. In 2014, they had an assortment of players manning the vacated position. Brian Roberts, Stephen DrewKelly JohnsonMartin Prado and Brendan Ryan were called upon to be the man playing second base role over the course of last season. The Yankees could never really get comfortable and relaxed with their future star since the loss of Cano. The honor, this season, appears to fall upon Jose Pirela and newly acquired shortstop – sometimes used at second base – Didi Gregorius.

Gregorius was acquired by the Yankees as the heir apparent replacement for their long-time captain Derek Jeter, in a three team trade with the Detroit Tigers, Arizona Diamondbacks and the Yankees. It could be argued that since the retirement of Jeter and the free agent departure of Cano, the Yankees are scrambling for both shortstop and second base. The inexperience or pressure of playing for the pinstripes is getting to the men responsible for replacing Jeter and Cano.

In 2014, the New York Yankees finished the season with a record of 84-78 and 12 games behind the Baltimore Orioles. Making the playoffs is essential each season in the Big Apple. Failure is not an option if you are wearing Yankees’ pinstripes. They barely held onto second place in the American League East as they won one single game more than the third place Toronto Blue Jays.

Year one with Cano in Mariner colors, the Seattle Mariners finished slightly better with a record of 87-75. However, they finished in third place, behind the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and the Oakland Athletics. Bringing in Cano did not elevate the team into the playoffs. During the same off-season the Seattle Mariners and former manager Eric Wedge decided to cut ties from one another. The team went out and hired former Pittsburgh Pirates manager Lloyd McClendon.

In the 2015 season, the Yankees have won 39 of their first 72 games. The Seattle Mariners have only won 33 of their 72 games. Yes, while it is true that it is a long season and anything can happen, neither team has skyrocketed. The Yankees are 2 games behind the injury ravaged and small market Tampa Bay Rays. The Mariners are 8 ½ games behind the Houston Astros, Texas Rangers and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.


Just as in fractured marriages, divorces hurt! Kids can be affected and can bruise the future of a family. In this case, both Cano and the New York Yankees decided to end their time together but in year two of their separation it would clearly be apparent that neither party is happy.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

While We Wait: MLB’s Best & Worst from the month of May


You probably already know that Bryce Harper led the majors with 13 homers in May and perhaps even that Ricky Nolasco, Max Scherzer, and A.J. Burnett led the majors with five May wins. Or that the Giants won 21 games in May and the Red Sox, Marlins, and Athletics each lost 19 games in the month, but here are some May leaders and losers you may not know about:

The Mets did not hit for the cycle in May. The team totaled 214 hits including 35 doubles and 28 homers, but no triples.

For those teams scouting Cole Hamels, there was plenty to judge. Hamels threw 650 pitches in May, second only to free agent-to-be David Price, who threw 656.

Windy City, indeed. The Cubs swung and missed 576 times in May, striking out 226 times - most of any club.

The Cardinals got their money's worth out of Seth Maness - the reliever appeared in 16 games, more than any other pitcher.

Corey Kluber pitched 42 2/3 innings in May and struck out 60 batters (walking just six) while Michael Pineda pitched 33 innings and walked just three (striking out 35).

Jason Kipnis got off to a slow start this season hitting just .218 in April, turn the calendar to May and he was baseball's leading hitter - batting .429 and reaching base 73 times, more than any other batter.

Moneyball still lives in Oakland. The A's were the only team without a sacrifice bunt in May.

The crazy eights of May included Twins starter Kyle Gibson inducing eight double plays while Joe Mauer and Ryan Zimmerman each hit into eight DPs.

Red Sox DH David Ortiz batted .214 in May, part of an anemic Boston offensive attack. Barely beating – the heart of the Red Sox batting order (the 3-4-5 hitters) combined to hit .216 in May, the lowest of any team.

Pitcher Tyson Ross has no future as a night watchman - in May, he allowed 14 stolen bases.

Colorado's Charlie Blackmon had a rocky month of May, getting hit by seven pitches.

Kolten Wong, Kipnis, and A.J. Pollock each had 16 hits from the seventh inning on, the most in May baseball.

Dee Gordon stole a dozen bases in May, which is more than 10 team totals, and more than twice as many as the Dodgers, who only stole five.

The A's watched a lot baseball in May – actually they watched 907 pitches for called strikes, the most of any team. The Royals took only 572 strikes all month.

Paul Goldschmidt and Kipnis each had 19 two-strike hits, while Tim Hudson, John Danks, and Ian Kennedy each allowed 19 two-strike hits.

Ichiro Suzuki continued his drive to 3,000 hits with 18 hits, all singles, the most hits without an extra-base hit of any May batter.

Joc Pederson struck out 20 times leading off an inning.

Brandon Crawford had 16 hits with runners in scoring position, more than any other May batter.

Yunel Escobar had 14 first-pitch hits in May, the most of any batter.

Goldschmidt drew three intentional walks in Arizona's last game in May. Goldschmidt had nine IBB in the month, the most of any batter.

Jose Quintana and Chris Tillman each endured five losses.

Blue Jays pitchers only picked up one save in the entire month; then again, they led the majors with four complete games.

Glen Perkins of the Twins earned 13 saves in the month, Minnesota had 14, the most of any team
April showers brings May flowers, but the White Sox' Tyler Flowers only hit .188 with one homer and five RBI in 21 games in May.


Monday, June 1, 2015

While We Wait: Oldest Living Cubs Player Dies at 98



CHICAGO (AP) — Lennie Merullo, the oldest former member of the Chicago Cubs and the last living person to play for them in the World Series, died Saturday. He was 98.

Cubs owner Tom Ricketts said in a statement that Merullo died earlier in the day. The team didn't include details of Merullo's death.

Merullo was a major league shortstop from 1941-47, all with the Cubs. He hit .240 with six home runs and 152 RBIs.

Merullo played three games in the 1945 World Series and went 0 for 2. The Cubs lost in seven games to Detroit, and haven't made it back to the Series since then.

Last June, Merullo traveled from his home in Massachusetts and returned to Wrigley Field as part of the ballpark's 100th celebration.

Wearing a Cubs jersey, he used a walker to go from his wheelchair toward the mound and threw out the first ball before the Cubs played the Marlins, getting a big cheer from the fans.

During the seventh-inning stretch, he took part in Wrigley Field tradition and sang "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" over the stadium's sound system and drew another big ovation.

Merullo recalled that after the 1945 Series, the Cubs imagined they'd make it back soon enough.

"Yeah, sure," he said. "We never gave up hope."

Merullo later scouted for the Cubs. His grandson, Matt Merullo, played six years in the majors, mostly with the Chicago White Sox.

"While I have experienced many joys as owner of this great franchise, one of the most memorable was meeting Lennie last season," Ricketts said.

"When the Cubs last appeared in a World Series in 1945, Lennie was a 28-year-old shortstop. Nearly 70 years later, he brought the same youthful spirit and excitement," he said. "To his family, friends and loved ones, our organization will never forget him."

http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/mlb/2015/05/31/oldest-living-cubs-player-lennie-merullo-dies--98/28241085/

Saturday, May 30, 2015

While We Wait: Brewers Go High Tech for Bud Selig Tribute


MILWAUKEE (AP) — The Milwaukee Brewers are giving retired baseball commissioner and former team owner Bud Selig a high-tech tribute.

"The Selig Experience" attraction at Miller Park was unveiled to Selig, current Brewers owner Mark Attanasio and other dignitaries on Thursday night. Selig described the exhibit as an "out-of-body experience."

"When I look at all this, I say to you all, 'Boy, have I been lucky,'" Selig said on a stage set in center field set against the backdrop of the team's giant video board. The Brewers were off on Thursday.

Hall of Famers Hank Aaron, Joe Torre and Robin Yount attended the event, along with Green Bay Packers president Mark Murphy, University of Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez, and current MLB commissioner Rob Manfred.

The highlight of the attraction is a remarkably realistic, hologram-like video of Selig displayed at the end of a nearly 15-minute multimedia presentation recapping the history of the franchise.

"I'm telling you that when I saw it, I couldn't believe it," Selig marveled.

The holographic Selig speaks in a scene replicating his messy office at old County Stadium, with a simulated Tiparillo cigar lying smoldering in an ashtray.

"Bud, this ensures your spirit will live forever at Miller Park," Attanasio said during a dedication ceremony.

Selig's title is now "commissioner emeritus" after a tenure of 22½ years as baseball's leader ended in January.

His place in Milwaukee baseball history was cemented long before he became commissioner.

Now 80, Selig led efforts to bring baseball back to his hometown after Milwaukee lost the Braves to Atlanta after the 1965 season. He finally succeeded in 1970, when the Seattle Pilots moved to the Midwest and became the Brewers.

The exhibit starts with video walls of old Brewers baseball cards. Visitors then pass Selig's replica office before entering a memorabilia-lined room.

Included are the lineup cards for the Brewers and visiting Cincinnati Reds from April 6, 2001, the day that Miller Park opened. Selig also led the drive to build the retractable-roof stadium.

The park isn't quite as high tech as the exhibit's life-like hologram of Selig, who appears thanking fans before the video closes with him shuffling his hands into his khaki pants.

Selig said he spent four hours posing during spring training in Phoenix for the hologram.

"When I saw the hologram, I would say my heart went in my mouth," Attanasio joked. "I knew it was coming. It was like going to a scary movie."

The exhibit opens to the public Friday, when the Brewers open a three-game series against the Arizona Diamondbacks.


Friday, May 29, 2015

While We Wait: What Happened to Bryce Harper?


Nationals outfielder Bryce Harper drove a Jon Lester fastball over the left-field fence at Wrigley Field on Wednesday for his 18th home run of the season and his 13th in his last 19 games.
Harper, now 22, played very well for most of his first three seasons in the Majors and frequently flashed the type of potential that made him a Sports Illustrated cover boy at only 16 years old. But the young star has never before enjoyed a stretch this long of production this great.

With the Nats now 47 games deep into their 2015 campaign, Harper already has more homers and more extra-base hits than he tallied across 100 games in an injury-riddled 2014 season. He is on pace for 63 homers this season, and if he could somehow maintain his 13-homers-in-19-games clip the rest of the way — and he almost certainly won’t, naturally — he would finish with 78.

It’s nuts. Harper has started the season so well that only an injury or an unprecedented slump will keep it from being by far the best of his young career. And a look at some of Harper’s numbers suggests the difference has come from improved plate discipline.

Check this out: In the early part of 2015, Harper saw significantly more pitches per plate appearances (P/PA) than he ever did in the past — jumping from a slightly above average 3.89 figure to a 4.36 mark that ranks second in the Majors. Harper has swung less frequently and walked far more often.
And though it could be in part a function of the pitchers he has faced to date, Harper has seen a higher percentage of fastballs — the pitch on which he does the most damage — than he ever did earlier in his career. His percentage of hard-hit balls, as tracked by Baseball Info Solutions, has spiked in turn. From the looks of the numbers, Harper is doing a much better job choosing when to swing than he did in the past — “hunting his pitches,” to echo a phrase frequently used by veteran MLB hitting coach Dave Hudgens.

Of course, there’s some chicken-and-eggery at play here. Harper, for his part, told the Washington Post earlier this month that the only difference has been his health:

“This is what I was like in high school and college,” said Harper, who twice had four-homer games at the College of Southern Nevada, where he hit 31 homers in 66 games in 2010. “That’s what people don’t understand. I was healthy. Staying healthy is what I need to do. This is the type of player I need to be and the type of player I want to be. Everybody talks about how I’m doing this different or I’m doing that different. There’s nothing different. It’s staying healthy and staying in the lineup. Truly….
“I feel like the approach, the plan, it’s always been there,” Harper said. “But I’m finally sticking to it because I’m not getting hurt and staying healthy. It’s allowing me to stay in the games every single day and staying with my routine every single day and not getting sidetracked because I’m hurt and out a game and play two and then out for a month and a half and come back and play.”

Could it be that good health and more regular reps alone have contributed to Harper’s apparently improved batting eye? Certainly. He obviously looks more comfortable at the plate than ever before, and it could easily be that the various ailments he sustained the last few years sapped some of his power or impacted his mechanics in a way that forced him to start swinging sooner.

On MLB Network, analyst Darryl Hamilton cued up video of Harper’s swing to show the slugger keeping his weight back longer this season to generate more power. But again, since Harper typically doesn’t say much about the particulars of his mechanics at the plate, it’s hard to know which of the adjustments he made were made possible by the better health he credits for the difference.

In any case, whatever has happened to Bryce Harper this season has now been happening long enough that it can no longer be dismissed as just a fluky early-season hot stretch. By whatever means or combination of them, Harper has become a more selective hitter in 2015, swinging less frequently and hitting the ball harder when he does.

And though this is not to slight Harper — who seems to know as much about baseball as anyone playing it — but it could be that the change plays out so subtly on the day-to-day that he himself is not even conscious of it. The difference between 3.9 and 4.4 pitches per plate appearance, after all, is less than one extra pitch across every two at-bats. Maybe Harper is just maturing as a hitter, seeing pitches better and hitting them harder as he grows bigger, faster, stronger and more experienced.
What we are watching, most likely, is a great young hitter blossoming into a great hitter. Harper may not maintain his Ruthian home-run rate and on-base percentage all year, but if he can stay healthy and maintain his apparently improved process, the Nationals should benefit from significantly improved results all season long.


Thursday, May 28, 2015

While We Wait: Marlins Should Make A-Rod Their Next Manager


While we wait is going to be a daily series where we showcase a post from another site, giving full credit of course to the author, that I thought would be an interesting read while we wait. This will obviously be a thing we see when the Yankees are playing those annoying 10:05 pm ET starts on the west coast and not a regular occurrence, unless you guys show some support and really enjoy the posts of course. With the first post in the "While We Wait" series we showcase the USA Today's post that states that the Miami Marlins should make Alex Rodriguez their next manager. Enjoy:

Though the Marlins are only nine games deep into their experiment with former GM Dan Jennings in the manager’s chair, Buster Olney of ESPN.com presents a fascinating for Miami’s next manager: Alex Rodriguez.

He knows situations, he knows players, he watches other players. He is a fan of the sport. I would assume that if Rodriguez does not get a job on some team’s staff after retiring, he’ll probably work in television, and I suspect he would be pretty good at it because it’s clear, when you hear him discuss specific parts of the game, that he has accumulated a staggering amount of knowledge about how the game is played….
Rodriguez is owed about $41 million for the next two seasons, and even though he has been better than expected this season, Rodriguez knows his best days as a player are in the past. He might leap at the chance for a post-career lifeline and approve a deal, and if the Yankees could save $2 million or $3 million a year for the next two years in some sort of settlement with the Marlins, maybe they’d be open to it, in turn keeping open the DH spot for their aging roster.


Olney’s entire, Insider-only column is worth reading, as he details Rodriguez’s positive relationships with young players and the city of Miami. It makes a pretty reasonable case that hiring Rodriguez would be a decent baseball move.

It would also be an incredible and hilarious troll move on the part of Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria, like even far beyond the time his team hired its GM as field manager despite no experience playing, coaching or managing professionally.

One big issue with the plan, though: A-Rod is still playing really well. Actually, his .919 OPS would lead all Miami regulars. So if the Marlins can really have Rodriguez from the Yankees for a couple million dollars’ worth of salary relief, they’d probably be better off with him at a corner infield spot than on the bench. Or — or! — they could make him the game’s first player-manager since Pete Rose.

We say: Do it. Do it, do it, do it.