Archive for January, 2008

[NEWSPAPER BLOGS] Strange Things Are Afoot At The Heater

January 31, 2008

The Heater, a Rays blog hosted by the St. Pete Times has a post today referring to an ESPN.com chat hosted by Sean McAdam. The focus of the chat is which team will be better in 2010, The Tampa Bay Rays or the Florida Marlins.

The focus of the chat is not what caught our attention. Rather it was Marc Topkin’s use of an external link directing the reader to ESPN.com. [Ed. note: we feel as though this is not the first time, but we were unable to find other examples. At the very least this is a very rare practice]

Last week we attempted to lay out the differences between our blog, the mainstream media and other more professional blogs such as DRays Bay. Several people took the time to write in and ask why we did not address newspaper blogs.

Newspaper blogs such as The Heater and The Rays Report offer the newspapers a way to report the news in real-time for a society where most news is old news by the time the paper comes out in the morning. However, they are still subjected to many of the same limitations as the journalists that write for the newspaper, such as style and language. In the cases of The Heater and The Rays Report they really are just snippets of what is going on in and around the team as it happens. There is never any analysis of the news item and the commentary is kept to a minimum. Rather it is as they say, “Just the facts”.

Another factor that differentiates traditional blogs (sounds like an oxymoron) from newspaper blogs is the use of external links. Newspapers are a business and like any business they are afraid to send their customers to another location, even if that other location is not a direct competitor. We have long felt that this is the single biggest factor that is holding newspaper blogs back from being something more than just a source of news that comes directly from the team.

Without the freedom to use external links, a journalist is limited in the breadth of news they can report. It appears as though The St. Pete Times may be learning this lesson. It will be interesting to see if this becomes a regular habit for the writers at The Heater and whether or not the Tampa Tribune follows the St. Pete Times’ lead.

Rays or Marlins [TampaBay.com]
Please Do Not Accuse Of Trying To Be Journalists [Rays Index]

[THE HANGOVER] An In Depth Look At James The Greater

January 31, 2008

Tampa Bay Rays (14 days until pitchers and catchers report)
Baseball Prospectus profiles James Shields. Take five minutes to read this and you will know more about James the Greater than you thought possible.

Two things stood out to us: 1) Shields scouting report from Baseball America’s list of the Rays’ top 30 prospects of 2002 (Shields was #27). This was after his first professional season as a 16th round draft pick. He would not show up on the list again until 2006.

Shields has good command of his fastball, which was clocked as high as 91 mph last summer. He also has a plus curveball that features sharp, late-breaking action, making it particularly troublesome for right-handers. Shields has impressive determination and excellent endurance…His changeup is no better than average, but the Rays believe that once he makes it more consistent, he could move rapidly. Shields made the most of his opportunities last year.

As pointed out in the piece, Shields’ change-up has come a long ways in seven years, as it was almost an after-thought early in his career. The profile continues to evaluate each of his minor league seasons and concludes by looking at how Shields used each of his four pitches in 2007, which is an excellent look at how a pitcher can attack righties and lefties differently.

As is typical of most right-handed pitchers, he uses his traditional breaking pitches much more frequently against righties by utilizing his slider (19 percent) and his curve (12 percent) at the expense of his changeup (26 percent). He’ll start off most right-handers with either a fastball (55 percent) or a slider (27 percent) and then if he gets ahead, he does a good job of mixing up his pitches. If he falls behind it’ll primarily be fastballs until he evens the count and can begin to work in the other pitches again.

His changeup has more tailing than downward action, moving over 8.5 inches on average (relative to a reference pitch thrown without spin) and he threw it over 43 percent of the time against lefties and a quarter of the time against righties. Although he doesn’t get a lot of called strikes on it, it is where he gets 60 percent of his swinging strikes and a fair percentage of his foul balls. As his out pitch, against right-handers he’ll pull it out a majority (60 percent) of the time on 0-2, 1-2, and 2-2 counts.

If you’re a left-handed hitter, 90 percnt of the pitches you’ll see from Shields are the riding fastball or changeup. He’ll usually start lefties with the fastball (64 percent) but employ the changeup 60 percent of the time when he’s ahead or even in the count. One would think having to choose from just two pitches would make things easier on the hitters but that proves difficult, as lefties hit worse (.243/.278/.393) on the season than right-handers (.250/.289/.428) because of his ability to changes speeds and locate both pitches very effectively. The other two pitches are just for show, as over 50% of the few sliders and curves he threw to lefties ended up in the dirt for balls.

The profile concludes by stating that Shields should not see a let-down in 2008 and will likely be better with an improved defense behind him.

Player Profile: James Shields [Baseball Prospectus]

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • The Philadelphia Daily News speculates that the Rays may be one of five teams interested in acquiring third baseman Wes Helms. The signing of Pedro Feliz by the Phillies makes Helms expendable. Still, there is little chance the Rays would be involved after the recent trade that brought in Willy Aybar. And the Daily-News’ assertion that the Rays front office is considering keeping Evan Longoria in the minors for the entire 2008 campaign is dubious at best. [Philadelphia Daily News]
  • Armchair GM has the first power rankings of 2008 out. The Rays come in at a somewhat respectable #22, eight spots ahead of the Baltimore Orioles. There is a lot of hope this year for the Rays, and third base is strong possibility. But if the Rays do not finish ahead of the O’s in the AL East, heads will roll. [Armchair GM]
  • It has been well-documented that the 2007 Tampa Bay Devil Rays had one of the worst bullpens in the history of baseball. Now 28.5% of the Rays 2007 opening day bullpen will be backing up newly acquired Johan Santana for the Mets in 2008. After acquiring Brian Stokes earlier this off-season from the Rays, the Mets have now claimed Ruddy Lugo off of waivers from Oakland. This is typical Mets. They distract their fans with shiny objects and hope they don’t notice that the front office just plugged one hole with a diamond, and yet there are still several other holes. This team is destined to be just good enough to break the fans’ collective hearts…again. [MetsBlog]
  • The St. Pete Chamber of Commerce will form a 35-member task force to investigate the impact of the Tampa Bay Rays proposed stadium. The task for will be made up of local business and community leaders. The task force will help decide if the Chamber of Commerce will ultimately support or oppose the new stadium. [St. Pete Times]
  • Bill Chastain continues his preview series of each of the Rays “positions”. The latest installment is “starting rotation”. [DevilRays.com]
  • 365 Days of Dough, Rays and Me also takes a stab at the Rays 2008 starting rotation. [365 Days of Dough, Rays and Me]
  • DRays Bay interviews Marc Normandin. Honestly, we had no idea who he was either until we went back and re-read the James Shields profile above. Normandin wrote that profile. [DRays Bay]
  • The Diamond Cutter takes a look at the Rays top 5 prospects. [The Diamond Cutter]

[PETER KING] Peter King Jumps On The Tampa Bay Rays Bandwagon

January 30, 2008

The Mighty MJD took the following picture at Radio Row in Phoenix. Maybe the Tampa Bay Rays new what they were doing when they decided for an image overhaul.


Let us get this straight…The Yankees get LeBron James, the Red Sox get Jennifer Garner, and the Rays get Peter King? Actually…sounds about right.

[Ed. note: We really wanted to go with Renee Russo for the Sox, but could not find an image of her wearing a Sox hat]

The Tampa Bay Rays new cap has now been seen in public on a celebrity more than all previous incarnations of the Devil Rays caps combined:

Circa 1998: 0


Circa 2005: 0

2008: 0.5 (We are not giving Peter King full credit for being a “celebrity”)

Radio Row is filled with celebrities; quite boring [NFL Experts Blog]

[DELMON YOUNG] Delmon Young Does Not Have Makings Of A Winner

January 30, 2008

Patrick Reusse of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune wrote a piece entitled “Young has makings of winner” in which he offers evidence that Delmon Young is an adequate replacement for Torii Hunter.

Twins followers now have the choice of continuing to lament the departure of the productive, gregarious Hunter, or to be optimistic that the Twins were aggressive in finding a righthanded hitter of outstanding potential to replace him in the batting order, if not in center field.

We have our own reservations with Young’s “outstanding potential” (He is a 5-tool player that has never displayed three of those tools [Speed, Average, Glove] at any level). But our problem with this piece is the assertion that Young will be a “winner”. Young has a history of showing that he is anything but a “winner”.

  • Suspended 50 games for hitting an umpire with a bat.
  • Returned from suspension and refused to answer questions about bat-tossing incident and snapped at reporters repeatedly.
  • Told reporters he had not talked to manger or teammates after the incident because he did not need to socialize on past events”.
  • Complained openly to the press about not being promoted to the majors sooner.
  • Complained openly to the press about having to play center field after the suspension of Elijah Dukes and an injury to BJ Upton, leaving Rays with no other options.
  • Blasted manager Joe Maddon for the way he was treated after failing to run-out a groundball in the penultimate game of the season, which led to Young being pulled from the lineup. The tirade led to a 1-game benching (later rescinded).

Did we mention that all those incidents occurred in a two-year span?

We are surprised that anybody that follows the Minnesota Twins would refer to a player with this much baggage as somebody with “the makings of a winner”. The Twins of the last 20+ years have been the beacon of respectability in baseball and the ultimate example of the proper way to do things. The Twins have always been the classic example of “team”. Players are taught from the lower-levels on, that the “team” comes first, with strong emphases placed on sacrifices, moving runners over and fundamentals in the field. Delmon Young is a talented baseball player, but he has yet to show any signs of having “the makings of a winner”.

Young has makings of winner [Minneapolis Star-Tribune]

[THE HANGOVER] National Media Knows More About Rays Prospects Than The Major League Roster

January 30, 2008

Tampa Bay Rays (15 days until pitchers and catchers report)
Today is national croissant day, which of course means that we are making American croissants for breakfast.

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • Just in case Marc Topkin is looking for material today, here are two more positions that the Rays are trying to fill. HERE and HERE. [TampaBay.com]
  • The Baseball Analysts take a look at the correlation between wins and payroll in 2007. [The Baseball Analysts]
  • Keith Law has ranked the top prospects at each position. And as a surprise to none, the list is littered with Rays. Reid Brignac is the #3 shorstop. Evan Longoria is the top ranked third baseman. Desmond Jennings is the #3 center fielder. Wade Davis is the #4 right-handed pitcher. David Price and Jake McGee are the #3 and #4 left-handed pitching prospects, respectively. [ESPN]
  • We don’t ever pick apart Bill Chastain’s mailbag at DevilRays.com. We understand he pretty much has his hands tied with the questions. But this week he skirted an answer that could use a little more substance. Chastain was asked when we can expect to see John Jaso at the major league level. In short, Chastain answers “I don’t look for Jaso to be with the team on Opening Day, but stranger things have happened. Right now Dioner Navarro, Shawn Riggans and Mike DiFelice are blocking Jaso’s way. I think the Rays want to see Jaso compete at the Triple-A level before thinking about giving him the call.” Well, he isn’t wrong, but he never really answered the question. It is OK to speculate even if we don’t know. A quick look at Jaso’s minor league record and we see that in his 5 minor league seasons, 2007 marked the first year he played more than 100 games and 35 of those we as the biscuits DH (he is oft-injured). He has moved up a level each year, but has never been promoted in-season (the team is being patient as all teams do with catchers). He has yet to appear in AAA. All that adds up to a 2008 season spent entirely at AAA Durham. He will be 25 on opening day in 2009, his second year on the 40-man roster. We will see Jaso at the major league level sometime during the 2009 season. Whether he is on the opening day roster or not is more dependent on how Dioner Navarro performs in 2008, and whether he still requires a veteran back-up. We are on the record as saying previously that we drool over the idea of a Navarro-Jaso platoon in 2009. [DevilRays.com]
  • The Dugout is back with part 2 of their Evan Longoria chatroom. [AOL Fanhouse]
  • Roto Authority has begun their list of Spring Training cliches, as this is the time of year when it seems as if every player shows up having lost 20 pounds, or packed on 20 pounds of muscle or are in the best shape of their career, etc. While not on the list yet, we should be able to add Carl Crawford and Jeff Niemann as we have already heard about how both are in better shape than recent years. [Roto Authority]

[JOHAN SANTANA] Johan Santana Traded To The Mets; Rays Dodge Bullet

January 29, 2008

USA Today (via MLB Trade Rumors) is reporting that the Twins have agreed to a deal with the Mets for Johan Santana.

The deal is pending the Mets and Santana reaching agreement on a six- or seven-year contract extension and that Santana passes a physical; they have been granted a 48 to-72-hour window to do so. Santana has a no-trade clause that he will waive if agreement is reached on a contract extension.

The Mets paid a high price in prospects to land Santana, agreeing to send the Twins outfielder Carlos Gomez and pitchers Phil Humber, Deolis Guerra and Kevin Mulvey.

This deal has a large impact on the Tampa Bay Rays in 2008 and for the next six or seven years. Only two other teams were reportedly in serious contention to acquire Santana, and both reside in the AL East (Red Sox and Yankees).

If Santana had landed with either Boston or New York, Santana would have made approximately four starts against the Rays. Unless Sandy Koufax, circa 1966, comes out of retirement and signs with the Red Sox or Yankees, the Rays now have a much better chance to win those four games. In addition, either team would have just acquired a pitcher that would have helped them maintain their level of dominance for the better part of the next decade.

The Rays just dodged a large bullet. Actually, the Rays just dodged four bullets the size of Bigfoot, and hopes for making the playoffs in 2009 or 2010 remain intact.

Johan Santana Trade To Mets [MLB Trade Rumors]
Twins agree to deal Santana to Mets for prospects [USA Today]

[ST. PETE TIMES KOOL-AID] Marc Topkin Auditions For Role In Rays Personnel Office

January 29, 2008

We are not sure why Marc Topkin is serving as a recruiter for the Tampa Bay Rays and posting job ads in his blog. We thought that was what the classifieds were for.

The Rays are holding open casting calls this week for members of the Ray Team…The Rays are seeking energetic, outgoing individuals who not only possess a winning personality, but also enjoy performing their various talents (i.e. dancing, cheering, tumbling, singing and public speaking) in front of a large crowd.

If you are interested, the auditions are Thursday and Friday night, 6-9 p.m., at the Trop.

We understand it is a slow time of the year for baseball teams, but this really is not helping our perception that the St. Pete Times is just a PR firm for the Rays.

Rays want you to get crazy [TampaBay.com]
The St. Pete Times And The Tampa Tribune Would Like Rays Fans To Drink Their Kool-Aid [Rays Index]

[THE HANGOVER] Trying To Find A Common Ground In Hall Of Fame Debates

January 29, 2008

Tampa Bay Rays (16 days until pitchers and catchers report)
One our regular commenters, is starting to expand his horizons with a contributing piece at The Baseball Analysts. We were tempted to dedicate an entire post entitled “Why The Devil Rays Commenters Suck: Bob Rittner”, but were afraid nobody would get the joke.

The piece at The Baseball Analysts is an excellent read on a point we have been screaming about for a long time, in regards to Hall of Fame voting. That is, why is there such a deep divide between the statisticians and the traditionalists? For example, why can’t we consider both a players OPS+ and the perception that he was a feared hitter? Certainly people will weigh the measures differently, but why should either side ignore the other?

When an issue like the Hall of Fame elections arises, the problem is magnified because for statistically minded analysts there are objective criteria from which to begin the discussion. But to many traditionalists, the key word in the discussion is “Fame” as in who do people know, who had an impact on the story.

Jack Morris exemplified qualities that suggest he is a Hall of Fame character; Bert Blyleven did not. Jim Rice dominated because that is the story line, and for anyone who lived in his era, it makes perfect sense. It does not matter to those who are now voting if the statistics belie the claim.* When I watched a Yankee game and Rice came to the plate, I was scared. I was not as worried when Dwight Evans was at bat. I may have been wrong, but Rice felt like a star and Evans a supporting player. To say the journalists are wrong does nothing to advance the discussion because these players are first and foremost literary figures to them. You and I may know that Watson and Crick were far greater men than Alexander the Great and Napoleon, but in the pantheon of human heroes, you can bet Alexander will get in first, and nobody is going to identify Crick as Crick the Great.

The example we like to bring up is Derek Jeter. We wonder what the argument would be for Jeter if he suffered a career-ending injury before the start of the 2008 season. He has a solid if not spectacular career OPS+ of 122 (33rd among active players, min. 1000 at bats), but to look at traditional stats, he does not even have 2,500 hits, or 200 home runs or 1,000 RBI. His .317 batting average is strong, but most now look at Jeter as a defensive liability at the most important defensive position, despite three gold gloves.

Is Derek Jeter a Hall of Famer? Few people would argue that he is not. But what if Jeter had played his entire career in Kansas City on a last place team? Most importantly, what if Jeter was not as handsome and played his entire career away from the lights of Broadway and did not win four world series in five years? Would he still be a Hall of Famer?

My point is not to say that we should be debating the merits of Derek Jeter as a hall of famer. My point is that we cannot ignore the half of the package. Derek Jeter is a hall of famer. He might have been anyway, but he is a lock because he performed on the biggest stage. So in part, Derek Jeter is a hall of famer because he was lucky. Lucky to be drafted by the New York Yankees. Lucky that the Yankees needed a shortstop when he was ready. Lucky he never suffered a career-ending injury. Lucky the Yankees spent so much on payroll. He was lucky the Yankees had Joe Torre and lucky they had all the great starting pitching. And he was especially lucky that the Yankees had Mariano Rivera.

Should we hold that against Jeter? No. Just like we can’t go back and look at Tony Conigliaro’s career and say he should be in the Hall of Fame because he was unlucky. Some players are good. Some are great. But just as importantly, some players are lucky and some are unlucky.

Sometimes…to get into the Hall of Fame, a player can compensate their lack of greatness with some luck. I’m OK with that. Are you?

I’m OK, You’re OK [The Baseball Analysts]

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • Baseball Musings takes a look at the 2008 Tampa Bay Rays offense. Using a statistical tool straight out of a nuclear physicists handbook, the Rays project to score between 5.21 and 5.54 runs per game in 2008. That would be a considerable jump from their 2007 rate of 4.83 runs per game. A rate of 5.21 rpg would give the Rays 844 runs in 2008, which would have been good enough for 4th in the AL in 2007. [Baseball Musings]
  • Yet another blogger believes that baseball can never succeed in the bay area. This time Sports Business News latches on to Matt Silverman’s recent comments that the Rays lost money last year. While we question the validity of the statement and wonder out loud why it was said (excuse to trade big salaries, leverage for new stadium, etc.) this has absolutely zero bearing on whether or not a team can survive and turn a profit in the Tampa Bay area. While the author acknowledges Vince Naimoli’s “Reign of Terror”, he does little to separate that ownership group with the current. Nobody expected miracles from the new front office immediately. They have a plan and so far it appears to be working. When the team begins to win more games, then and only then will we see if a team can survive in the area. Of course the author’s lack of knowledge on the subject is clear when he states, “Namoli (sic) has been, and continues to be, the face of the franchise, which may not be a good thing”. Once we read that we couldn’t stomach it to read any further. So if anybody does read the entire piece and finds any thing close to a cogent argument, please let us know in the comments. [Sports Business News]
  • In The Baseball America Prospect Handbook 2008, one of the four analysts list Evan Longoria as the top hitting prospect, while the other three have him listed behind Jay Bruce. [Fake Teams]
  • in their latest installment of a “A Tale of Two Erics”, Rays Anatomy picks apart Carl Crawford. [Rays Anatomy]
  • Rays of Light takes a look at the Rays projected opening day lineup and compares that to the opening day lineup for the Devil Rays in each of the last five seasons
    . [Rays of Light]
  • Rays of Light also takes a look at the projected rotation and compares that to the rotation’s throughout the history of the franchise. [Rays of Light]
  • DRays Bay interviews Rays’ pitching prospect Mike Wlodarczyk. Wlodarczyk has spent the last three seasons in the shadow of teammates Jake McGee and Wade Davis, but has posted an impressive resume for himself. [DRays Bay]

[RI CONFIDENCE GRAPH] The Rays Index Confidence Graph: 9 Weeks Until Opening Day

January 28, 2008

The RI Confidence Graph will appear every Monday and is a look at how much confidence we have in the Tampa Bay Rays at this moment. The graph is designed to give us a look at how our emotional bias as Rays fans fluctuates through time. The “confidence” in the team is an inexact measure of how we feel about the team’s current strength as well as how much confidence we have in the Tampa Bay Rays moving forward. You can think of a “confidence” rating of 10 as an indication that we believe the team is “playoff-caliber”. A rating of 0 is a strong indication that we need to start reevaluating the process that led to us becoming Rays fans. Notes on this weeks agida-level can be found after the graph..

Notes on the RI Confidence Graph…

The big news this past week was the announcement the Rays had signed James Shields to a deal that could be as long as 7 years. The deal could be a major coup for the Rays but in reality it has little or no bearing on the Rays this year or next, so it doesn’t do much for our confidence in the 2008 Tampa Bay Rays. In addition, the Rays were named the Top Organization by Baseball America, which again bodes well for the future. On the other hand, the team claims they are losing money. Those are the types of words that teams start throwing around just before they sell-off big or potentially big contracts (Scott Kazmir?) or threaten to move if they don’t get a new stadium.

9 weeks until opening day and we can see this team as 70-win team or an 85-win team and anything in the middle. That keeps our confidence at a 5.

  • PROS
    1. We feel good (not great) about the offense as RF and DH should be much more productive in 2008 and Akinori Iwamura should see a minor up-tick in his stat-line which will be a nice contribution from a middle infielder. We also have this feeling that we don’t like to say out loud to often for fear of jinxing it. But we have a sneaky suspicion that Carl Crawford and BJ Upton are both going to blow up in 2008 with huge years.
    2. The top of the rotation can match-up with just about anybody in the league. If the Rays enter a series with Scott Kazmir, James Shields and Matt Garza scheduled to throw, there is no reason they should not win the series.
    3. The bullpen is much better as-is…if they can stay healthy.
    4. The pitching staff should benefit from a much-improved defense, especially up the middle with Jason Bartlett, Akinori Iwamura and BJ Upton, who should be much more comfortable in center field in 2008.
  • CONS
    1. Nobody has yet figured out a way to combine Willy Aybar’s OBP with Joel Guzman’s power and glove. “Jolly Guzbar” would make one hell of a third baseman and nobody would be in a hurry to see Evan Longoria.
    2. It is looking more and more like the final two spots in the rotation will be Nuke (Edwin Jackson) and The Duke (Andy Sonnanstine). We are hoping for great things from The Duke, but Nuke scares the hell out of us.
    3. The bullpen is old and the Rays are only two pitches away from Dan Wheeler closing games and Gary Glover setting him up in the 8th inning.

[THE PROFESSOR] Cork Gaines Has Joined The Staff At MLB Trade Rumors

January 28, 2008

Ricky Henderson would be so proud

Just wanted to take a moment and let you guys know that I have accepted an invitation to write a regular feature at MLB Trade Rumors. We have long been fans of Tim Dierkes’ site and have watched it grow into one of the biggest sports blogs in the world.

While my exact role has yet to be determined, I am excited to be joining the staff, and look forward to bringing the Raysiverse to a larger audience. I might even wear pants when I am writing over there.

Introducing Cork Gaines and Matt Birt [MLB Trade Rumors]


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