Archive for June, 2007

Down On The Farm: David Price May Start/Finish Season At Hudson Valley

June 11, 2007

Scranton 2, Durham 1. Jae Kuk Ryu made his second start of the season and was able to stretch out his arm a bit. He lasted 5 innings giving up 1 run on 3 hits and 1 walk. He struck out 6. Ruddy Lugo gave up 2 hits and a walk in the 9th to allow the winning run to score. The Bulls managed only 3 hits.

Montgomery 8, Mobile 3. Jonathon Barratt gave up 3 runs in 5 innings. Reid Brignac was 2-5 with a triple and 2 RBI. Evan Longoria was 0-5. John Jaso was 2-3 with 2 walks to raise his average to .339.

Vero Beach 4, Jupiter 3 (10 inn). Jake McGee struck out 11 in 5.2 innings, and gave up 3 unearned runs on 5 hits and 2 walks. McGee struck out 5 of the first 6 batters he faced. Rhyne Hughes went 3-4 and hit his 7th home run. He is now hitting .338. Garrett Groce hit his 2nd home run.

NOTES FROM DOWN ON THE FARM

  • In 2006, the Devil Rays signed eight of the pitchers that they drafted. All eight were assigned to short-season Hudson Valley to finish the season. Arguably, none of those pitchers had the pedigree of David Price, but we do agree that Price does not have many innings left in his arm for 2007.
  • On Saturday night, Jeff Niemann posted one of his best starts of the season, by going 7 innings and allowing only 6 hits and 1 run. He struck out 5 and walked none.
  • In Montgomery, Chris Mason, got knocked around on Friday night for just his second loss of the season (8-2). He was pulled after 3 innings and 6 runs. On Saturday James Houser was pulled after 3 innings with a strained quadriceps muscle. He had allowed 2 runs (1 earned) and struck out 4.
  • On Friday, Wade Townsend pitched 5 innings and gave up 3 runs (2 earned). He struck out 6. Desmond Jennings stole 3 more bases and now has 26.

David Price Was The Choice All Along

June 8, 2007

I’m sure many of you noticed that in the day or two before the draft we started getting more and more enamored with Georgia Tech catcher Matt Wieters. Let’s just call that pre-wedding jitters. When it comes down to it, the Rays made the right decision and it sounds as if the decision was an easy one for RJ Harrison and the rest of the front office.

So why were they so secretive while sitting at the top of the draft board? That’s easy. Until a couple of days before the draft, Vanderbilt and David Price were still playing in the NCAA tournament. The last thing Major League Baseball and the Devil Rays needed was to publicly announce that Price was their guy and then have him throw out his arm in a tournament game. The Rays would have egg on their face and it would be a very unfair situation for Price.

In the end, the decision was an easy one. A big power lefty is the rarest of commodities in baseball. And when a team has an opportunity to acquire one, they grab him and run…real fast.

David Price is considered the closest player to the majors in this year’s draft. So where will the Rays assign Price once he signs? First of all, we need to keep in mind that Price has already thrown 133 innings in 2007. The Rays are not going to want to add too many more to his young arm this season. It would not surprise us if he is assigned to AA Montgomery, but high-A Vero Beach is more likely to be his first stop. Depending on when Price is signed, look for only a half dozen starts from him this year (30-35 innings) and a AA Montgomery start next season, with hopes of a mid-season move to AAA Durham. If all goes well he could get 5-6 starts for the Rays in September of next season.

DEVIL RAYS DRAFTOPIA…

  • In a change from previous drafts, the Rays have until August 15, to sign their first three picks. If they fail to sign the pick before that deadline, they lose the rights to that player and will be awarded a nearly identical pick in next years draft. For example, if the Rays fail to sign David Price, they will be awarded the #2 pick in 2008.
  • Here is a scouts video clip of David Price pitching. This is the first time we have ever seen Price throw. We are obviously not a scout, but we played past high school and we even coached for a few years. First of all, WOW. We have seen a lot of high school games and a lot of college games, and this is the most impressive pitcher we have ever seen at either level. We now see why the scouts drool over him. First thing we noticed is he has an “ease” to his delivery. There is no wasted movement. Notice how, despite being a power pitcher, that he lands like Greg Maddox. That is, very easy on the follow-through (fast forward through the warm-up pitches to the game action. He is not “letting it go” in the warm-up pitches). When a pitcher has such a simple and easy delivery, there is not a lot of strain on the arm. This is why many have stated that he is less likely to have arm troubles than other pitchers. At the end, you get a view from the first base side. Notice how, despite the easy delivery, he generates a lot of arm speed. Never seen anything like it at the college level. And for those that are not familiar with this type of radar gun, it measures the speed at the point of release and also the speed as it crosses the plate. An average fastball will lose 7-10 MPH from the hand to the plate. You would worry if a pitcher was consistently in the 10-11 MPH drop-off range. Price’s fastball looks to be just right, losing around 8 MPH on average. Hold on…we need to clean this drool up.
  • In the second round the Rays selected Will Kline, a right-handed pitcher from Ole Miss. Ole Miss is still alive in the NCAA tournament. Kline had Tommy John surgery in high school. A junior, this is the first season in which he was used as full-time starting pitcher since having the surgery.
  • In the first 5 rounds, the Rays selected four pitchers. Even MLB.com does not have scouting reports on any of the Rays selections past the second round. So, if anybody thinks they know how well the Rays did in this draft are smoking.

The Hangover: Kyle Farnsworth To Close In 2008?

June 8, 2007

Devil Rays 5, Toronto 3.
We’re done trying to figure out this team. They do this all the time. Tuesday’s loss was the sort that can kill a team. It was the sort of game that can lead to a 6-game losing streak and a 7-28 stretch, and all of the sudden the season is over, and next thing you know the Rays have the #1 pick again next year. The Rays have had a few of these losses this season. And every time the team has bounced back big. On Tuesday night after that last runner stepped on home plate, did anybody think there was a chance in Hades that the Rays would win the series? Nobody would have been dumb enough to make that bet.

But there is a pattern here…

  • Apr. 22. James Shields strikes out 12 and allows only 2 hits and 1 walk in 8 innings. Brian Stokes gives up a 3-run home run in the 9th and the Rays lose 6-4 to the Indians.
  • May 4. Brian Stokes gives up a 3-run home run in the 9th inning of a 2-2 game. Rays lose 5-2 to the A’s.
  • June 5. Rays take a 11-6 lead into the 9th against the Jays. Four relief pitchers combine to walk 64 batters and can only record one out. Rays lose 12-11.

In each case, the Rays rebounded to win the next day. And on two of those occasions, the Rays won the next two games. So what was the common denominator in the three games? In each case, Al Reyes was not available to pitch.

Reyes will not be with the Devil Rays in August and September and that scares the hell out of us. Might be a good time to plan that trip to Fiji.

Speaking of which. For those of you that actually read our “AL East Roundup” in the past, know that we are no fans of Kyle Farnsworth. He throws real hard, but his fastball is straight as an arrow and he does not have a good complimentary pitch. The Yankees have finally soured on Farnsworth and will probably do anything they can to get him off the team. He has one more season on his contract and is set to earn $5.5 million in 2008. As long as the Yankees stay within ear shot of the wild card, they will look to improve their pen down the stretch. Does a Farnsworth-Reyes trade make sense? Let’s say the Yankees are willing to pay $4 million of Farnsworth’s contract for the rest of 2007 and 2008 and throw in a AA pitching prospect?

Reyes is going no matter what. The Rays do not have a closer for 2008. Any potential closer on the market will only be slightly better than Farnsworth and will cost a lot more. Don’t get us wrong here. There will be games next season when we would burn Farnsworth in effigy. We will curse his name. But the Rays may also catch lightning in a bottle. Farnsworth can be a good closer and getting him out of the glaring lights of New York could be good for him…Just a thought.

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • Al Reyes is now comfortable working three straight games. He believes he is close to being able to work four straight, depending on pitch counts.
  • We are a little confused this morning. Marc Lancaster of the Tampa Tribune gives us this title yesterday afternoon: “Rays Pick Price; How Much Will He Cost?” And then the first paragraph of the story is this:

Now that the Devil Rays have eliminated the suspense and chosen Vanderbilt LHP David Price with the first overall pick in the draft, two questions loom: How quickly can Price be signed? And, how soon will be be in the majors?

So…Is that two questions or three? Math was never our thing, but we did learn to count. Mr. Lancaster does address the question from the title, stating that the Rays are willing to sign Price in the $3-3.5 million range. He also addresses the first question from the first paragraph by stating that the team has until August 15 to get Price signed. But for some reason Mr. Lancaster never addresses the third question. So was the third question not a question at all? Or was the first question not a question even thought he answered? Our heads hurt.

  • These two wins are the first time the Rays have won two straight road games since June of last year.
  • 13 more strike outs last night and the Rays are now second in the majors with 462. Tonight’s opponent, the Marlins lead the majors with 516. Of course they have the advantage of having their pitchers hit 2-3 times a game. What is the common factor between these two teams? They are the two youngest teams in baseball. Ahhh. Growing pains.
  • Elijah Dukes is mired in an 0-21 stretch.
  • Akinori Iwamura will be in the lineup tonight against the Marlins. He will return to the leadoff spot.

Down On The Farm: All Justin Ruggiano Does Is Hit The Ball Hard

June 8, 2007

Durham 9, Ottawa 5. The Rays outfield is like musical chairs. Too many bodies and not enough chairs. Well, it might be time to add another name to the mix. Justin Ruggiano. Not the same pedigree of the others, but all this kid does is hit the ball and he hits it hard. Ruggiano was the “other” player the Rays received when they sent Toby Hall and Mark Hendrickson to the Dodgers for Jae Seo and Dioner Navarro. How ironic if Ruggiano ends up being the best player in the bunch. Just a 25th round selection in 2004, he is already knocking on the door of the major leagues and the Rays may have to open it in September. Last year, after struggling in the first 2/3 of the year in the Dodger organization, he came to the Rays and hit .333/.442/.630 in 31 games at AA Montgomery, with 21 extra-base hits. This season he has picked up right where he left off with AAA Durham. Last night he went 3-5 with 2 doubles and an RBI. On the season he is hitting .308 with 14 doubles and 10 home runs. He also had his 9th stolen base last night…Ben Zobrist added a double and 2 RBI, but he is hitting only .238 and he also committed his 7th error in 22 games since being demoted. On the mound, Jason Hammel struggled, giving up 4 runs on 7 hits and 3 walks in 5 innings. He allowed runs in the 3 different frames and now has an ERA of 3.42.

Montgomery 5, Mobile 3. Could this be the game that gets Reid Brignac back on track? Brignac went 3-5 with a solo home run in the 9th. He is now hitting .256. Fernando Perez had 2 hits including his 2 home run and his 12th stolen base. He is hitting .289. Derek Feldkamp gave up only 1 run in 4.1 innings.

Vero Beach 8, Fort Myers 2 (7 inn). Mike Wlodarczyk gave up 2 runs in 4 innings. We wish he would give up a couple of letters from his last name. Erold Andrus hit his 8th home run in the rain-shortened game.

Columbus 4, Charleston 2. On the same day that the Rays added to their minor league pitching depth, the first pitcher they draft last season, Josh Butler (2nd round), picked up his 5th win (5-1) throwing 8 solid innings, allowing 2 runs on 9 hits an no walks. He struck out 5 and his ERA is now 2.15.

NOTES FROM DOWN ON THE FARM

  • Justin Ruggiano is tied for 4th in the IL in HR and he is 6th in OPS.
  • Jason Hammel leads the IL in strikeouts with 75. Andy Sonnanstine is still tied for 3rd in the IL with Jeff Niemann (66). JP Howell is 6th with 64.
  • Catcher John Jaso is 5th in the SL with a .331 average.
  • Evan Longoria leads the SL with 14 home runs, tied for 2nd with 46 RBI and is 3rd with a .965 OPS.
  • Chris Mason leads the SL with 8 wins (8-1), is 2nd with a 2.31 ERA, and tied for 2nd with 64 strikeouts.
  • Wade Davis is 2nd in the FSL with 75 strikeouts and Jacob McGee is 5th with 71. Davis is 3rd with a 1.88 ERA an McGee is 8th (2.63).
  • Heath Rollins is 2nd in the SAL with a 1.51 ERA, 2nd in strikeouts (75) and 6th in WHIP (0.97).

Devil Rays Select David Price And Years Of Cheesy Headlines

June 7, 2007

Marc Tompkin, of the St. Pete Times is reporting that the Rays have decided to select Vanderbilt pitcher David Price with the first pick of the draft.

Funny. I wonder how it came to be that the St. Pete Times was the first to report this story? Great journalism? Good hustle on the part of Mr. Tomkin? Luck? Hmmm? What could it be. Oh yeah! We remember. The Times is the personally hand-puppet for the Devil Rays.

Please notice the very original headline (see below) that Mr. Tompkin came up with for his article. See what he did there? A little play on David Price’s name. Mix in a news story that is quite topical right now (Bob Barker retiring is topical right?). Probably went through 67 revisions and lost sleep over the past week trying to get the headline just right. Or maybe he just took the title from 6,000 news stories that ran in the past 2 weeks.

Man, somebody must have pissed in our Wheaties this morning.

[Update: The Devil Rays made it official. David Price was the first overall pick and Don Zimmer should never leave a baseball field]

Price is right for Rays [St. Pete Times]

The Hangover: Papa Joe And His Rose-Tinted Glasses

June 7, 2007


Devil Rays 6, Blue Jays 2.
We promise not to rant about Scott Kazmir and how he throws too many pitches. We are tired of mentioning it and you are tired of reading about it. So we promise today we won’t mention that Kaz threw 31 pitches in the first inning and had to be removed after 5 innings because he had already thrown 103 pitches. And yes, we know that Shawn Camp came on again with runners on base and got a huge out in the 8th inning, but we are not going to all of the sudden praise him. He did a good job last night, but we wouldn’t heap praises on a .150 hitter on the rare occasions he gets a hit, so why should we do that with Camp?

Speaking of Camp, let’s take a step back in time and re-address the implosion that occurred in the 9th inning of Tuesday’s game…Apparently changes are not on the horizon for the bullpen. And as usual, Papa Joe Maddon was doing his best to pretend like nothing bad happened.

We pitched badly in the ninth inning…I’m not going to let that one inning infiltrate all the good things that occurred yesterday.

Actually, that is exactly why changes are needed in the bullpen. Because giving up 6 runs in the 9th inning to blow a 5-run lead does infiltrate all the good things that happened. Seven different hitters had at least 2 hits. BJ Upton had 4 hits including his 15th double and 9th home run. Andy Sonnanstine was shaky at times in his major league debut, but did his job, handing the ball to the bullpen after 7 innings with a lead. All those good things were wasted because the Arsonists in the bullpen could not even get two outs between four pitchers. All those good things were wasted because the team LOST.

The Professor visits Joe Maddon at home…

The Professor: Hey Joe, how’s it going?
Papa Joe: Great. Team is exactly where I want them and my girlfriend just made this great pie.
The Professor: But it is burnt.
Papa Joe: (scraping top of pie with a knife) Nah. It is just a little overdone. It still tastes great. You just have ignore the black stuff.
Papa Joe: (takes a big bite of what looks like apple pie) mmmmm. So good.
Papa Joe: (blind dog with only three legs comes hopping into room) Hey! Pollyanna. A guy couldn’t have a better dog. Isn’t she gorgeous? We are still working on it, but someday soon she is going to be the best hunting dog ever.
The Professor: But the dog is blind and only has three legs.
Papa Joe: (dog runs into the wall) Yes, but look at that nose! what a great nose!
The Professor: (notices wall on back of house has fallen down) This is a really nice house Joe, but what happened to that wall?
Papa Joe: What wall? Oh that! Jae Seo got drunk and drove through it a few months ago. But it was OK, because he had that great start in Toronto.
The Professor: Why haven’t you gotten it fixed? The Wall, not Jae Seo.
Papa Joe: There is no need right now. We aren’t having any important parties here anytime soon, and besides the rest of the house is so great. I would rather just focus on the positives, like now it is much easier to get outside. Here, I will show you.
The Professor: (Follows Papa Joe outside) What is that awful smell?
Papa Joe: (looks around in confusion) I don’t smell anything.
The Professor: (notices a dead cow rotting in the back yard) Is that a dead cow?
Papa Joe: (again looks around confused) Huh? I don’t see anything. Here, look at this pool. Isn’t it gorgeous?!?
The Professor: Joe. There is a dead cow in your backyard. Right there (pointing and holding nose).
Papa Joe: (walks over to rose bush) Look at these beautiful roses. My girlfriend planted these. Don’t they smell beautiful?
The Professor: (passes out)

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • It may seem that we have been pounding on Joe Maddon a little more as of late. No, he did not make a joke about our momma. We do occasionally disagree with his moves (anytime he has Shawn Camp warm up) and we wish we saw a little more fire (not Lou Piniella, but not Jolly Fat Guy either) and wish he wasn’t always trying to be a spin-doctor. Still, it would be irresponsible of us if we did not point out that the Rays are only 7 games below .500 despite the fact that Axis of Evil (Seo/Fossum/Jackson) have started 30 games for the Rays and there are only 2 decent arms in the bullpen (Reyes/half of Glover/half of Stokes). When you consider that, it is actually quite amazing that this team has won 25 games, and at least some of that credit must go to Papa Joe.
  • A little unusual for the timing, but we had a post up about the draft late in the day yesterday. So if you missed it and need some light reading to warm up for the festivities, HERE is the direct link. Must admit, we are really torn, and you know we are usually all about the pitching, pitching, pitching. But man, Matt Wieters sounds like the real deal. Must be the inner-catcher in us. That, or we are just over-thinking the whole mess. But doesn’t it seem like every time, everybody, agrees on something, just the opposite comes tru
    e? It’s why we had confidence when the Bucs were in the Super Bowl. Nobody gave them a chance.
  • One good thing about the draft finally being over, is we are sick and tired of reading the exact same two headlines everywhere. “Price could be right for Devil Rays” and “Devil Rays weigh 3 players for top pick“. The problem is they are AP stories. Don’t news outlets ever write their own stories anymore?

Down On The Farm: A Dirtbag Among Boys

June 7, 2007

Durham 2, Ottawa 0 (gm 1). Joel Guzman hit a 2-run home run to break a scoreless tie in the 7th inning. It was his 8th of the season. Mitch Talbot pitched a 7 inning shutout, striking out 3 to even his record at 5-5.

Durham 4, Ottawa 3
(gm 2, 10 inn). You can’t stop Justin Ruggiano you can only hope to contain him. Ruggiano broke a 3-3 tie with his 10th home run and 6th in his last 10 games. Ben Zobrist led off the game with his 4th home since being demoted. Jae Kuk Ryu made his first start since being sent down and being converted back to a starter. He lasted only 3 innings and gave up 2 runs on 6 hits and 2 walks.

Montgomery 12, Carolina 6. *Yawn* Evan Longoria went 3-4 and hit his 14th home run as well as his 13th double. We should just make that sentence part of the template. Don’t be surprised to see the Dirtbag in Durham soon. John Jaso added 2 hits and drove in 3 to raise his average to .337.

Ft. Myers 3, Vero Beach 2. Wade Davis was spectacular, striking out 8 in 7 innings. He gave up only 2 hits and 1 run on a solo home run in the 4th inning.

Charleston 15, Columbus 6. Stop the Presses! Heath Rollins is human! Rollins allowed 8 runs (4 earned) in 5 innings on 9 hits. He struck out 6 and walked none. It was his first loss of the season. For comparison, Rollins had allowed only 11 runs (8 earned) in his 11 previous starts…Ryan Royster went 3-4 with his 9th home run.

NOTES FROM DOWN ON THE FARM

Draft Pre-Gaming: Beauty Or The Beast?

June 6, 2007


We are now less than 24 hours away from what will be the biggest day of the 2007 baseball season for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. From most accounts the Rays are faced with the exact same scenario that the Minnesota Twins had to endure in 2001 when they had to choose between Joe Mauer and Mark Prior. In that draft, the Twins went with the can’t-miss catcher who didn’t miss over the “can’t miss” pitcher that has so far not even been close to the target.

All indications are that the Rays will take David Price and we have to admit that a 2009 rotation of Kazmir-Shields-Price makes us down-right giddy. Still, the new Devil Rays front office subscribes to two philosophies that fully agree with. First is the idea of taking the best player available, regardless of position. The second philosophy is an old adage in baseball of being strong up the middle, and that starts with the catching position. We still think the Rays will take Price, but it would not surprise us if the Rays selected Matt Wieters. The Rays pitching depth in the minor leagues is suddenly a strength of the organization and Dioner Navarro has yet to show signs of becoming the all-star many projected when he was the Yankees top prospect. Of course, Wieters might be an easier selection to make if he weren’t represented by Satan.

DEVIL RAYS DRAFTOPIA…

  • David Price may have tipped the hand of the Devil Rays the other day when he participated in a conference call. He sounded a lot like a player that had already been selected by the Devil Rays.

It’s only a matter of time before they start competing for pennants…I think they’re going to have a great team. With leaders like Scott Kazmir and Carl Crawford leading a group of young, great players. It’s gonna make it a lot easier and fun to play. With manager Joe Maddon, one of the great managers in baseball, they’re obviously a great talented team.

  • Good news for the Devil Rays, if indeed David Price is there guy. Vanderbilt was eliminated from the NCAA tournament much earlier than expected. The loss means that Price, who normally throws 120-130 pitches per game, will have 3-4 fewer starts this year than had Vandy gone on to win the College World Series.
  • Three of the top draft experts from Baseball America participated in a roundtable discussion about this year’s baseball draft. When asked if David Price would be the first pick of the draft, Jim Callis and Alan Matthews agreed that Price should be and will be the top pick.

The consensus among most scouting directors is that Price stands above everyone else in his draft class. As one put it, “There’s David Price, but after that there aren’t a lot of top-of-the-draft guys.” I’d say that he’s rated just slightly higher than Andrew Miller was as the top prospect last year. Price also is advised by Bo McKinnis, so there shouldn’t be much risk of protracted negotiations. He’ll probably get the standard contract given to the best college pitchers each year, a big league deal worth from $5 million to $6 million, and MLB may have the Rays wait to announce it because it doesn’t want that deal to affect others. Price also would be a good fit for Tampa Bay. The Rays’ biggest weakness in the majors is pitching, even though they have some impressive arms coming up through the minor [Jim Callis]

The deal breaker comes in your evaluation of Price, for me. If he’s a true No. 1 pitcher, and some scouts think he is, I don’t see how you can walk away from him, regardless of your evaluation of Wieters. I don’t think R.J. Harrison, the Devil Rays scouting director, has any doubts about Wieters’ ability to catch and throw. Let’s not forget, Harrison himself was a tall, lanky catcher in his days in college at Arizona State who was drafted by the Cardinals. But based on the way Price has pitched, my hunch is the Rays’ like him as a future No. 1 pitcher, recognize the lack of starting pitching in Tampa Bay at present, and make Price their choice. [Alan Matthews]

  • John Manuel also thinks Price should be the top pick but argues that a case can be made for Matt Wieters.

I think Price should be, though I do think a case could be made for Matt Wieters. If “signability” weren’t a factor, I’d really want to know, if I were running a club, if my scouts thought Wieters could catch and throw at the big league level. It sounds like he can, and it sounds like he can hit. A switch-hitting C, possible repeat all-star kind of talent, versus a front-of-the-rotation LHP. I’d actually consider organization need in that case, because to me both are legit 1/1 overall talents, and you’re not selling yourself short on talent. In the end I’d still take Price, but it’s pretty close on talent, for me. I don’t think there’s another true 1/1 talent in the draft; it’s down to those two. [John Manuel]

Spoke with a couple of general managers recently and asked if they would trade their best young pitcher for Crawford — in both cases, these are excellent major league pitchers — and they immediately shot down the speculation. “No chanc
e,” said one. “I love Crawford, and there are a lot of players I would trade for him. But not that guy [the pitcher], because how would I replace him?”…So if the Rays pass on Price, they would still be searching for someone like him. They need to take the pitcher.

Playing For The Rays Is Not Why Elijah Dukes Is A Mischievous Little Badger

June 6, 2007

In Peter Gammons latest blog entry, he notes that the Rays have started to entertain offers for Elijah Dukes…

Tampa Bay will start listening to offers on Elijah Dukes, simply to get him away from the environment of his Tampa neighborhood.

This was the same sentiment reported by Jayson Stark last week in his latest Rumblings and Grumblings

We’re hearing the Devil Rays have been floating the name of troubled Elijah Dukes to see whether a trade can (A) get Dukes a fresh start away from his hometown and (B) bring them a decent, badly needed bullpen arm.

This must be a publicity ploy by the Rays to beef up Dukes trade value by trying to convince teams that he will be well-behaved in another organization. There are several reasons why a “change of scenery” won’t be the deciding factor in Dukes behavior

  1. He will still be in Tampa during the off-season and is likely to still have the same friends.
  2. Consider that his latest incident, in which he threatened his wife and children happened with a cell phone. Pretty sure he could still do that even if he was playing in Manitoba.
  3. All of Dukes’ suspensions have been the result of incidents in the ballpark. Whether it was fights with teammates or coaches or tirades directed at umpires. None of these suspensions had anything to do with which organization he was playing for.
  4. And of course, since Elijah Dukes was drafted he has played 518 games (including spring training). Of those 518 games, he has played a grand total of 77 games in the state of Florida (including spring training). In other words he has spent 14.9% of his professional career in the state of Florida.

In other words, if Elijah Dukes is going to get in trouble again, it won’t make a difference where he is playing and who he is playing for. And if a lil’ ole blog like ours can figure that out, we are fairly certain that 29 major league general managers and owners can figure it out also. OK, maybe not Peter Angelos.

The Hangover: Rays Bullpen Likes To Start Fires

June 6, 2007


Blue Jays 12, Devil Rays 11.
It hurts. real bad. But it would hurt a lot worse if we were surprised. Is there anybody out there that didn’t think, with Al Reyes unavailable, that this bullpen was capable of blowing a 5 run lead? Bullpens are supposed to put out fires. That’s why closers are referred to as “Firemen”. The Devil Rays bullpen starts fires. Some pitchers have lightning bolts for arms. The Devil Rays relievers have arms made of lighter fluid.

And the worst Arsonist of the group? Shawn Camp. Hands down. Of course we could also make an argument for Joe Maddon for once again putting Camp in a situation to hurt the ballclub. Supposedly Papa Joe is a computer guy and a statistics guy and loves to look at trends and matchups. If that is the case we obviously don’t need to remind Papa Joe that Camp is THE WORST PITCHER IN BASEBALL WHEN IT COMES TO INHERITED RUNNERS. He has now inherited 40 runners (5 more than anybody else in baseball) and allowed 17 of those runners to score (42.5%). The major league average is about 30%. So not only is Camp horrible in these situations, but for some reason Papa Joe keeps bringing him in with runners on more often than any other pitcher in baseball. We can’t make it up.

And when we think about it, the bullpen is lucky that the Rays were only up 5 runs in the 9th. Last night the Arsonists would have blown a 15 run lead. We are still waiting for one of the 4 relief pitchers to record the second out of the 9th.

If there is a silver lining from last night’s game it is that this is the sort of performance that could lead to a shake up that is long overdue.

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

After a rough start to the season, the Rays’ bullpen is starting to establish itself as one of the strengths of the team

  • Is James Shields deserving of a spot on the All-Star team? At this point you would have to say ‘yes’. But BJ Upton and Al Reyes are also deserving and it is hard to imagine the Jim Leyland will take more than one member of the Devil Rays.
  • One fan has had enough of the 2007 Devil Rays, and this latest implosion was the final straw. We understand the frustration but we have to say we knew this team had a terrible pitching staff when the season started.

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