Archive for May, 2009

When the Yankees placed Chien-Ming Wang on the 15-day DL with hip weakness, most fans viewed it with a skeptical eye. He had been bombed in three straight outings, capped off by one of the most embarrassing performances in recent memory. Clearly the Yankees had to do something, but absent minor league options they were quite limited. In order to continue fielding a full 25-man roster, the Yankees placed him on the disabled list, which seemed like the only possible move which could accommodate the needs of all parties.

Yes, this was done on shaky conditions, but it’s not like the Yankees are the first team to fudge a DL placement. Teams have done it throughout history to free up roster spots. Sucka Got No Juice talked to one GM who think that “certain teams are manipulating the disabled list for a competitive advantage.” He supported this statement by pointing to Wang’s case, among a few others. So are the Yankees abusing the system by placing Wang on the DL?

I think it’s pretty clear that there is something physically wrong with Chien-Ming. His velocity was down from previous years, and his mechanics were all out of whack. While that doesn’t necessarily point to a physical issue, it certainly could. That possibility should give them the right to place the player on the disabled list. The only alternative is to keep him on the 25-man roster, and if he’s on the 25-man roster he’d probably be pitching. If his ineffectiveness was in fact because of an injury, keeping him on the 25-man and having him pitch would prove of further detriment.

Adding to the case is Wang’s current rehab plan. It’s not like they disabled him just so he could get work in the minors. Rather, they sent him to extended spring training to make a start, from which they determined that his issue was physical before placing him on the DL. And now he’s staying in extended spring training, undergoing physical therapy between starts. In other words, he’s going through the regular motions of a player on the disabled list.

This obviously comes from a biased perspective. No Yanks fan wants to see the team play a man short, or be forced to trot out a totally ineffective pitcher every five days. Still, I have a hard time taking these abuse claims seriously. Chien-Ming Wang is not in the physical shape to pitch in the majors. Isn’t that what the disabled list is for?

Categories : Injuries
Comments (40)

This doesn’t happen often, but I think that the Yankees should play copycat to a recently-enacted Mets policy. The other New York team no longer allows the Post or the Daily News in the clubhouse. In reporting this news, the Post 1) plays the typical bully role, doing a chicken dance to mock the Mets, and 2) refer to the Daily News as “the other New York tabloid” (how petty). Nevermind that players can just as easily access stories about them on this newfangled Internet thing. Yet, why should players give a crap what the media writes about them? If some writer prints something which might help the player, the coaching staff will surely pick up on it. Otherwise it’s nothing but a bunch of noise that players should probably avoid anyway (and yes, this includes RAB).

h/t Shyster

Categories : Asides
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May
06

The two sides of Pat Venditte

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In the annals of River Ave. Blues history, no post has garnered more page views than a June 2008 video of Pat Venditte facing off against a switch-hitter. The video is lives on via YouTube, and Venditte, a legitimate switch-pitcher, is still going strong. While his nearly 24 years of age make him a bit old for the Class A Sally league, in 11.2 innings this year, he hasn’t allowed an earned run and has 21 strike outs. Stunningly, he hasn’t walked a batter.

Today, Rick Reilly of ESPN The Magazine profiled the ambidextrous hurler. Who knows what the future holds for Venditte? The Yanks may push him out soon to find out what they have, but as a Minor League sideshow attraction of a potential MLB reliever, Venditte and his six-fingered glove certainly make for an interesting story.

Categories : Asides, Minors
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May
06

2009 Draft Preview: Damaged Goods

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Nick Adenhart MemorialBaseball’s amateur draft has quickly become a highly competitive marketplace for talent. Just a few seasons ago only a handful of teams really flexed their financial muscles to acquire top talent in the draft, but as young players have taken over the game clubs have revamped their focus on the annual talent drive. Case in point: The Royals spent $11.1M on the draft last year, a new record, while other traditional tightwads like the A’s ($6.5M), Brewers ($8.4M), and Pirates ($9.8M) also ramped up their spending from recent years. The Yankees are no longer the only team digging for late round bargains, but that doesn’t mean they still can’t uncover talent in the late rounds.

One thing Damon Oppenheimer has shown in recent years is that he’s willing to gamble on players with questionable medical dossiers. Both Andrew Brackman and Mark Melancon were drafted knowing that it was extremely likely they would need Tommy John surgery, Damon Sublett was selected after an injury riddled junior year, and Joba Chamberlain was taken despite concerns about his knee, triceps and weight. Perhaps the best example of a player being drafted while he was injured is the late Nick Adenhart, who was the top high school pitcher in 2004 before blowing out his elbow just days before the draft. The Angels gambled on his upside and TJ’s success rate, handing him a $710,000 bonus as a 14th rounder before watching him grow into one of the best young pitchers in the game.

Here’s some players that are either hurt, or have another negative mark on their resume that could cause them to fall into the later rounds, an avenue a team like the Yankees could explore to land extra talent. Fun starts after the jump.

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Categories : Draft
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May
06

Rooting for U.S. Steel

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In the mid-1950s, when Casey Stengel’s Yankees were doing a whole lot of winning, some bemused and frustrated baseball writer (or executive or player) coined a phrase: “Rooting for the Yankees is like rooting for U.S. Steel.” This year, as the Yankees are seemingly involved in more off-field controversies than ever before, I am reminded of that phrase but for all of the wrong reasons.

The big story yesterday concerning the Yankees and the way the organization treats its fans focused around confusing communication during Monday’s rain delay. As I reported yesterday, some fans were told by employees that the game was being canceled. When those fans attempted to return, security guards refused to let them in.

In truth, everyone was to blame for that debacle. The fans shouldn’t be leaving without official confirmation from the team, and the team’s employees at the stadium should not be spreading false information about the game. That’s the short of it though. There was an undercurrent to the events on Monday that really bothered me. It goes well beyond a story told in The Times today about a guard who refused to let one fan see someone he knew in another section. At the time of that incident, the only thing on the field was the tarp and some rain.

When a riot nearly erupted outside of Gate 6, a Daily News photographer happened to be nearby. As he started snapping pictures of the brewing dispute, Yankee Stadium security guards threatened him with a revocation of his press credential if he did not vacate the scene. That’s a pretty egregious abuse of power.

The rain delay melee overshadowed what, on any other day, would have been a fairly shocking column by Bob Raissman’s mustache. The Daily News columnist is known more for his facial hair and outrageous opinions than anything else, but his column on the Yankees’ heavy hand in the stadium is well worth our attention.

Basically, members of the media are pretty unhappy with the way the Yankees are treating the press at the new park. The team has jacked up the park-and-power fees and live broadcast fees by 300-400 percent. The Yankees are trying to charge networks $12,000 per game, up from $3000 at the old park, just to broadcast. The team is jamming internal communications frequencies and isn’t allowing off-duty broadcasters into media-only areas that go unused.

According to Raissman, even Paul O’Neill was hassled by security. The beloved ex-Yankee was watching the Yanks take BP when a security guard told him he couldn’t loiter by the indoor cages. What an odd turn of events.

Having read Jane Heller’s book the Yanks’ efforts to block her access to the team, having seen Yankee officials defend obscenely high ticket prices, exclusionary access to the Stadium and blatant abuses of political power, I feel like I am rooting for some evil version of U.S. Steel. I know some RAB readers will accuse of me of being overly sensitive to the Yanks and buying into some anti-corporate portrayal of the team’s leaders. Still, from stadium issues on down, the Yankee Front Office has been rubbing me the wrong way this year. They certainly know how to lose a PR battle.

For now, though, I’m going to take solace in the fact that I’m rooting for a baseball club. I don’t need to like what the Yankees media department is doing or how their security forces won’t let fans watch BP from the empty expensive seats three hours before first pitch. I’ll cheer on Joba and Derek, Mo and Mark and hope they do well. Maybe as the Yanks win, the Front Office will relax and just let baseball happen as it should. We all like control, but at some point, overbearing control and security just become too much.

Categories : Musings
Comments (128)
May
06

A tale of two Jobas

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It was the best of Joba, it was the worst of Joba.

For five batters tonight, Joba was as bad as the Yankee bullpen any pitcher can be. He allowed the first five Red Sox to reach base and four them of them came around to score. It seemed like it was going to be another one of those nights against the Red Sox in the Bronx.

But then, something clicked. Aided by a generous outside strike zone with left-handers up, Joba Chamberlain put on a pitching clinic at Yankee Stadium tonight. He became the first Yankee to strike out 12 opponents at home since Mike Mussina did it in 2003, but he was more impressive than that. He retired 17 Red Sox tonight, 12 of them by the good ol’ K. After allowing that fifth first-inning hit, Joba gave up just one more hit over his final 5.2 innings.

After his 108th pitch — a third strike to Jeff Bailey — Joe Girardi came out to get Joba. The Yanks’ youngster was dealing at the time. His first few pitches — the ones the Red Sox hit — clocked in at around 90 miles per hour. As the game progressed, his velocity improved and the bite on his slider grew sharper. He left throwing in the 95/96 range and made an emphatic statement. “I am Joba. Hear me roar.”

Unfortunately for the Yanks, as good as Joba was, those four runs in the first still counted, and the Yanks’ offense couldn’t find a way to catch up. In the third inning, the Bombers gave it the old college try. Jose Molina and Derek Jeter singled, and Johnny Damon hit a three-run home run into right field. The Yanks had closed the gap to one, but Damon’s home run would be the only Yankee hit with runners in scoring position.

Over the next few innings, the Yanks threatened but could not deliver. In the bottom of the sixth, with Nick Swisher on first, Melky Cabrera hit a double that unfortunately bounced off the spring-loaded warning track and into the stands. Had the ball stayed in play, the Yanks would have tied the game. Alas, it was not meant to be. Ramiro Peña struck out, and Jose Molina grounded out to end the threat.

Meanwhile, the bullpen tried to keep things close. Jose Veras and a very effective Phil Coke each recorded two outs. Apparently, though, Coke had reached his 11-pitch ceiling, and in the eighth, Joe Girardi called upon his favorite bullpen arm, Jonathan Albaladejo. Peña made an error at third that led to a pair of unearned runs, and the Yanks’ chances faded.

In the ninth, Mark Melancon made things exciting but for all the wrong reasons. He threw 22 pitches without retiring a batter and just 8 of them were in the strike zone. David Robertson allowed just one of his three inherited runners to score, and the revolving door of the bullpen continued to spin.

With this 7-3 loss, the Yankees dropped back to .500. They have lost their first five match-ups against the Red Sox, and in another era, Joe Girardi would be out of a job. That is, at least, what happened to Yogi when his 1985 Yankees pulled off the same underwhelming feat.

Anyway, Joba gave us something to cheer about. He showed why the B-Jobbers who continue to advocate for his move to the bullpen are wrong, and he was as dominant as a pitcher can be. The rest of the team slogged their way to another cold, rainy loss. They’re 1-3 on the month and will face Tampa Bay tomorrow night in a bid to avoid that dreaded drop below .500.

Categories : Game Stories
Comments (203)

Scroll down for tonight’s game thread or news on the A-Rod investigation.

The Yanks resigned Humberto Sanchez, and assigned him to Double-A Trenton. They released Sanchez a week ago to clear room on the 40-man roster for Mark Melancon. These kind of release-and-resign deals aren’t all that uncommon. Teams will usually do this when they have a player they want to remove from their 40-man roster, but want to keep him in the organization without exposing him to waivers. Since Humberto is a young power arm that is cost controllable for the next six years, there’s a chance someone would have put a claim in.

Triple-A Scranton (3-1 loss to Indianapolis)
Kevin Russo: 2 for 4
John Rodriguez & Austin Jackson: both 1 for 4 – J-Rod drove in the only run & K’ed
Todd Linden: 0 for 2, 2 BB, 1 K – hit streak ends at 19 games
Shelley Duncan: 0 for 4
Juan Miranda & Chris Malec: both 1 for 3, 1 BB
Doug Bernier: 0 for 3, 1 K
Chris Stewart: 2 for 3, 1 R, 1 2B
The Ghost of Kei Igawa: 6.1 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 6 K, 5-8 GB/FB, 1 E (throwing) – 62 of 91 pitches were strikes (68.1%) … he’s up to 10 homers allowed in 27.2 IP
Jose Valdez: 0.1 IP, 1 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 4 BB, 0 K, 1-0 GB/FB – just 13 of 32 pitches were strikes (40.6%) … yikes
JB Cox: 1.1 IP, zeroes, 2 K, 1-1 GB/FB – 13 of 22 pitches were strikes (59.1%)

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Categories : Down on the Farm
Comments (50)

This is ridiculous. According to Jon Heyman, Major League Baseball’s investigation into Alex Rodriguez is being expanded to include an inquiry into the pitch-tipping allegations in Selena Roberts’ book. The allegations come from some — or perhaps one — of Roberts’ anonymous sources, and MLB is simply doing its due diligence here. I have to wonder though why the numerous on-the-record denials aren’t enough to counter Roberts’ nameless allegations.

Either way, Heyman says that Major League Baseball’s burden of proof will be extraordinarily high. “They’d need either Rodriguez to admit to the charges,” Heyman writes, “or for someone else intimately involved to swear to it.” I expect nothing to come out of this. Bud Selig sure is staking a lot on a book that isn’t very good.

Categories : Asides
Comments (32)
May
05

Game 26 Spillover Thread III

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Where’s that damn squirrel?

Categories : Game Threads
Comments (195)
May
05

Game 26 Spillover Thread II

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Here comes the rain — and hopefully the Yankees — again. Suzyn Waldman is very perturbed by the weather.

Categories : Game Stories
Comments (297)