Saturday, April 27, 2019

He was ready





It​ was​ Vladimir Guerrero​ Jr.​ poster giveaway​ day last Friday at ​ Sahlen​ Field in​ downtown Buffalo.​ The Triple-A Bisons​ had​ a foot-high​​ stack of glossy prints of a smiling Vladdy to hand out to the fans who braved the cold rainy weather to come to the ballgame.
Less than an hour before scheduled game time, there was a buzz on the stadium concourse. Yes, most everyone came to see Guerrero’s first home game of 2019, after he destroyed Triple-A pitching in five games on the road. But what everybody really wanted to know was: When will baseball’s No. 1 prospect be playing for the Blue Jays?
With the answer to that question achingly close, the Blue Jays’ fan base is perpetually on edge. Even Guerrero’s beloved grandma — his abuela — Altagracia Alvino, has been dealing with the uncertainty. On Friday night she was at home in Tampa, Fla., but soon she will either reunite with her grandson in Buffalo or meet him in Toronto — or someplace else — for his major-league debut.
Meanwhile, business was brisk at the Bisons’ gift shop. Outside the store, fans were checking out a rack full of Guerrero Jr. jerseys, available in Bisons’ red, grey and white, all for $119.95. Inside, more Vlad memorabilia. T-shirts, magnets, baseballs and even a Vlad-themed miniature ball and bat set. And it was all selling. Fast. Anything with Vladdy’s name or face on it was getting snatched up. One fan, 21-year-old Joaquin Chavarria, who came down from St. Catharines, Ont., picked up a white jersey. He hoped in a week’s time, he’ll be buying a blue one, too.


As the relentless rain continued to fall, a small crowd of people was camped out along the right-field line, in hopes that the golden-haired prospect might emerge from the dugout and be so kind as to indulge the fans’ autograph requests. There would be no such luck. Friday’s game was officially postponed due to rain. Saturday’s doubleheader was disrupted, too. The Bisons faithful got a mere glimpse at Guerrero. One plate appearance — he took a walk — in the first inning of a game that ended after only two.
But Vladmania transcends Buffalo city limits, state lines, national borders and team allegiances. Even if they know he’ll be mashing homers against their beloved big-league club in no time, fans wanted a glimpse of the wunderkind as he toured minor-league stadiums last week, perhaps for the final time.
Last Tuesday in Pawtucket, R.I., at McCoy Stadium, deep in Red Sox country, fans young and old peered over the railing above the visitors’ dugout, fishing for autographs by hanging baseballs, cards and other paraphernalia from string and dangling them below. Asked who everyone is waiting for, three young boys turned around and, in unison, answered with one simple word: “Vlad!”
A few seats over, 12-year-old Chamus Barrutt was wearing an oversized grey Montreal Expos jersey that he borrowed from his dad. On the back was GUERRERO 27. The Barrutts are from Bridgewater, Mass. That means Chamus’ favourite team is the Red Sox (duh). But how about those Blue Jays? “Um, I don’t dislike them,” he says, sounding just a tad unsure of himself.

 What he is sure of, however, is that he likes their No. 1 prospect: “He hits it really hard and good and solid,” he said.
Indeed, all this hoopla is because, when it comes down to it, the 20-year-old Guerrero hits the ball so hard, so good and so solid. This past week has been no different. A left oblique strain derailed the second half of his spring training. It forced him to open the season with rehab games in Florida in High A, a level he conquered two years ago when most of his peers were still in high school. If his first week back in Triple A has proven anything, it’s that he’s conquered this level, too.
His five road games produced a .412/.500/.824 slash line. His seven hits included two monster home runs, the second of which was a 440-footer that went over the outfield billboards at McCoy and bounced into the parking lot. Who knows if that ball had even stopped rolling on the concrete before a video of the moonshot was rendered, condensed and shared across the social feeds of any and all baseball fans. Yet another piece of tangible evidence to file under: Guerrero is a ridiculously good baseball player.
In fact, for the past four years, Guerrero has been building a very strong case as the best Blue Jays prospect in a generation. In this last week in the minors, he’s underlined, boldfaced and italicized that statement. He is the consensus No. 1 prospect, an American League Rookie of the Year candidate before he’s even swung at a single major-league pitch. MLB Pipeline says he has “the ceiling of a perennial MVP candidate.” Ask his teammates and they’ll tell you they think he has no ceiling at all. He recently turned 20, and yet, he sees the game like he’s a 35-year-old veteran. He is treated like a superstar everywhere he goes, but he’s humble and unfazed by the attention that comes his way. He is a minor-leaguer today — but those days are numbered. The service-time dilemma has come and gone. His offensive power is elite. His defence and conditioning are works-in-progress, but there’s no reason that work can’t continue in the majors.
He’s primed to be the future face of the Blue Jays franchise. Why wait any longer?
“It’s obvious I am ready,” he said through an interpreter on Friday.

Oh and Stroman threw 7 scoreless innings of 2 hit ball last night.



“Anywhere,” he said, flashing his picturesque grin, which immediately prompted laughs from the dozen media members encircling Guerrero outside the Bisons’ clubhouse.
Guerrero has just been asked if he has a preference between making his major-league debut on the road or at the Rogers Centre. Unsurprisingly, Guerrero does not care one bit about the locale. So long as it’s one of the 30 officially sanctioned major-league baseball stadiums, he will be there.
“I just want to get the call,” he said.
But the economic benefit for the Blue Jays of delaying his big-league career meant that even though he hit .336/.414/.564 in 30 games with the Bisons last year, there was no September call-up waiting for him.
The 15 days that were needed to delay his eventual free agency by a year have passed. Since spring, he’s reportedly lost 10 pounds, and while his weight will remain something the player and the team will have to be mindful of, his preparation has improved and he is keenly aware that keeping up with his conditioning is a vital aspect of being a big-leaguer. His pair of gigantic homers serve as evidence enough that his left oblique has healed nicely and can withstand the impact of his violent swing. His defensive potential may lag behind his offensive might, but no matter how many pregame grounders Buffalo manager Bobby Meacham hits at him, there’s only one way to see if he can handle the demands of a major-league third baseman.


The Blue Jays have suggested Guerrero should ideally play in three straight games before he reaches the majors. Guerrero’s patience has appeared unwavering as he hit .331/.415/.531 in 285 minor-league games. What is three more to really drive home the point that he can crush baseballs and should be allowed to do so in the big leagues? He should get a chance to do so this week when the Bisons play four consecutive games in Syracuse, N.Y., before the Blue Jays open a weekend series at home against the Oakland Athletics on Friday. Vladmania might finally be coming to you, Toronto.

Vlad strode the plate in the bottom of the ninth inning and scorched a ball down the first base line for a double. He was replaced by Alen Hanson as a pinch runner, and scores on Brandon Drury's walk off home run. He was ready, for th right moment on the big stage.

Congrats to you Vladdy.

Friday, April 26, 2019

Babcock under fire





When he parted ways with Detroit and became Toronto's head coach in May 2015, it looked like a savvy move by everyone. Babcock was leaving a decaying team for a marquee franchise with nowhere to go but up under new (and smarter) management. For the Leafs, adding the most respected coach in the NHL (and a guy with a Stanley Cup and two Olympic gold medals) was a big step in the rebuilding plan.

Everyone knew Babcock had his eye on Toronto, but he leveraged interest from other teams into an 8-year, $50 million US contract — easily the biggest ever for an NHL head coach. To put that in context, only two Leaf players made more than him this season. But coaches' pay doesn't count against the salary cap, so the Leafs were praised for throwing their financial weight around to make the team better. Fans loved it.

Babcock missed the playoffs in his first year, but that was expected. Then the Leafs won the draft lottery and added top pick Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner (chosen the year before) for the 2016-17 season. They surprisingly snuck into the playoffs and almost upset the best regular-season team (Washington) in the first round. All six games were decided by one goal, and five went to overtime. The next year, Toronto moved up the standings but lost to Boston in Game 7 of the first round. Not great, but the Bruins were favoured to win the series and everyone figured the young Leafs were still learning playoff hockey.

This season, though, expectations went up. After signing star centre John Tavares as a free agent, the Leafs were actually favoured to win the Stanley Cup by some sports books. Toronto ended up finishing seventh overall in the regular season, and a long playoff run still seemed possible despite another tough matchup with the Bruins. But last night, a second consecutive Game 7 loss in Boston burned the last of Leafs fans' patience and optimism. They're as angry as they've been in years, and a lot of them are blaming their auburn-haired coach (#FireBabcock was a thing on Twitter last night).
Babcock criticism has been bubbling all season because of questionable tactics and odd lineup decisions (example: ripping William Nylander after his contract holdout was a popular thing to do this year, but what was he supposed to do with some of the linemates Babcock gave him?) Last night was the last straw. Babcock declined to jack up the ice time for his best forwards, even with the Leafs trailing for most of the game. Matthews played less than 19 minutes. That's really low for your most talented scorer in a do-or-die-Game 7 where you never had a single penalty to kill.
Babcock still has four years and $25 million US on his contract, so it's unlikely the Leafs #fire him, no matter what their angriest fans say. He has a long enough track record to deserve another shot, and enough smarts to reconsider some of his tactics. But Babcock is entering a scary new phase of his career. The worm has turned. The heat is on. He no longer has the benefit of the doubt.


The Sharks pulled off a Game 7 comeback for the ages — with a big assist from the refs.
San Jose trailed Vegas 3-0 with less than 11 minutes left in the third period when Sharks captain Joe Pavelski was cross-checked in the chest off a faceoff, knocking him off balance before a bump from another player sent him down. His head hit the ice, leaving him motionless and bleeding. No penalty was called initially, but after seeing the gruesome aftermath (and getting lobbied by several Sharks players) the referees gave Cody Eakin a five-minute major for the cross-check. San Jose scored four power-play goals in the next four minutes, then survived a late tying goal by Vegas to win in OT and move on to the second round.
Great story, but Vegas got robbed. Eakin's cross-check was pretty garden variety — maybe deserving of a two-minute penalty, but no more. Vegas' Jonathan Marchessault said after the game that the refs "just called the outcome." He's right. Pavelski's injury was awful, but more a fluke than anything else. Ironic: how many savage and unfair third periods have we witnessed in NHL playoff history because referees didn't want to "decide the game" by calling a penalty? And then this.
The Toronto Raptors are now Canada's last playoff hope

On a night when the country's Stanley Cup curse reached 25 seasons, the Raptors kept the chance of Canada's first NBA title alive by advancing to the second round. Their five-game victory over Orlando was no surprise — Toronto was heavily favoured in the series. But there were some nervous times after the Magic stole Game 1. Turned out to be a complete red herring — the Raps won the next four games by an average of more than 18 points.
Their next opponent is the Philadelphia 76ers, who finished off Brooklyn last night. A start date hasn't been announced yet. It should be an interesting series. Philly is an extremely talented but flawed team with three star players that all carry question marks: point guard Ben Simmons is a phenomenal athlete who can't shoot, Joel Embiid is a superstar big man with a dodgy knee who gets tired at the end of games because he's not in great shape, and Jimmy Butler is a fiery two-way player whose personality rubs everyone the wrong way.


The second round of the NHL playoffs is almost set. After tonight's Game 7 between Washington and Carolina, we'll be down to eight teams. The NHL has already announced the start dates for all four second-round series: Columbus-Boston and Dallas-St. Louis both open Thursday night. Colorado-San Jose starts Friday night, along with the Islanders vs. the winner of tonight's game.
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Thursday, April 25, 2019

Vladdy's arrival




When​ Vladimir​ Guerrero Jr.​ hit​ that​ monster home run against​ the​ Pawtucket Red​ Sox —​ the one​ that​ travelled​​ 440 feet and landed in the parking lot — his teammate Bo Bichette was nowhere to be found in the Buffalo Bisons’ dugout.
That’s because he was in the clubhouse. Nature called. “I walked out and he was giving high fives, so I said, ‘Hey, sorry man, I didn’t see it, but good job,’” Bichette said.


Bichette may not have seen that particular home run. But after playing with Guerrero for parts of the last three seasons, the 21-year-old shortstop has seen plenty just like it. In fact, anyone who has called Guerrero a teammate has likely seen him do at least one absurd, mind-bending, rub-your-eyes thing.
And now, at long last, the game’s No. 1 prospect is going to The Show. Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo made it official on Wednesday evening. Guerrero will join the team on Friday and will play at Rogers Centre against the Oakland Athletics.
But before he makes his debut, let’s give the men who shared a baseball field with him through 288 minor league games one more chance to tell us about it.
“I’ve seen him do so many things, obviously,” Bichette said. “He’s incredible — but I’ve seen it so much, nothing surprises me anymore.”
Making the extraordinary look ordinary is, in essence, the true mark of superstar talent. But what the 20-year-old Guerrero brings to a team is more than just raw power and a .943 career OPS. He brings unmatched consistency at the plate, a relentless work ethic, an off-the-charts baseball IQ. If you ask his teammates to describe what makes him stand out at the plate, the answer is, well, a little of everything.
“You don’t often get the combination of aggressiveness and strike zone discipline, power and contact ability,” said Bichette, who also grew up around the game as the son of a longtime major league outfielder, just like his teammate. “He really just has it all. You just don’t see that very often, if ever, honestly. Just he has every single ability and he’s not just good at them – he’s great at every single part of the game offensively. That’s what makes him so good.”
Because of his talent — and his Hall of Fame dad, Vlad Sr. — Guerrero has travelled through the largely anonymous world of minor league baseball as a somebody, yet his teammates often use the word “humble” to describe him. He lights up a clubhouse like he lights up a scoreboard. He loves baseball and just happens to be really, really good at it.

John Schneider managed Guerrero for parts of two seasons in High A and Double A and during that time, he saw plenty of how-did-he-do-that moments. This one sticks out:


Two years ago, near the end of the Florida State League season, the Dunedin Blue Jays were playing the Clearwater Threshers. The game was tied 3-3. Guerrero, then just 18 years old, came to bat in the ninth inning, facing Clearwater’s closer, Seth McGarry, who was throwing 97 mph. Guerrero saw two fastballs; he fouled one off, then took the next for a ball. Then, third pitch, a juicy slider. Guerrero timed it up perfectly, launching it over the tiki bar atop a slope beyond left field to seal the win and send Dunedin into the playoffs.
Afterward, Schneider — now a coach with the Blue Jays — approached Guerrero and asked him how he made it look so easy.
Simple: “I was waiting for him to throw a slider.”
“And he hit it 20,000 feet,” Schneider said. “That was a moment when I realized the physical part is what it is, but the plan and the adjustments on every pitch separates him from a lot of other people.”
Ask any of his teammates, and they’ll say Guerrero’s secret is in his approach. He always steps to the plate with a plan, a good idea of what the pitcher is going to try to do to get him out. Unlike his famous father, he rarely swings at pitches outside the zone. Through three-plus minor league seasons, he has walked more times than he’s struck out (150 to 139), a rarity for a power hitter.
“People see the eye-popping numbers and they’re like, ‘Wow, this kid is just such a good physically gifted hitter,’ but the thing that sets him apart from everybody else is just how intelligent he is in terms of baseball IQ, in terms of what a pitcher’s trying to do to him, in terms of the feel of the game, flow of the game,” Schneider said. “Never seen a kid his age make adjustments pitch-by-pitch when he’s in the batter’s box the way he does, and I think that’s the biggest thing. That’s really the separator for him: He really, really understands the game.”

A month into his Double-A season with the New Hampshire Fisher Cats last year, Guerrero was hitting over .400. Crazy, right?
“I’ve never seen a guy so young and so good at what he does,” said Jordan Romano, now a pitcher for the Bisons. “He hit .400 in our league. He was treating it like it was almost slow-pitch softball.”
Guerrero was so good, in fact, that his potential exploits became the topic of conversation around the clubhouse.“Every game, all of us would get around and be like, ‘Hey, what’s Vladdy going to do today? How’s he going to surprise us today?’” Romano recalled.

On May 7, this is how he surprised them:


Guerrero already had one home run in the game against the Portland Sea Dogs — a three-run shot to left — when he stepped up to the plate in the sixth. On the mound for Portland was Jake Cosart, who can touch 98 mph. From the dugout, Romano and some of his teammates could see Cosart start to challenge Guerrero with his fastball. They knew this was only going to be bad news for the pitcher.


Romano thought: “If he connects here, something crazy might happen.”


On a 3-2 count, Guerrero connected. He hit the ball so far that it ricocheted off the Hilton Garden Inn hotel, which stands just beyond the left field fence of the Fisher Cats’ stadium.
“It was all of 470 to 480 feet,” Romano remembered. “That’s when I was like, ‘Wow, this guy’s something else.’”
The hotel home run went viral. Before and since, Guerrero’s feats have become social media fodder, but this one remains one of his most memorable.
“I wasn’t sure if anyone could hit it,” Romano said of the hotel. “But if there was a guy to do it, it was him.”


It’s hard to miss Guerrero’s smile. It flashes often. It’s easy to be happy when you are excelling at the game you love, yes. But those who have played with him say even if he’s slumping — a rarity — he’s smiling.
“He’s fun. He’s happy to be here every day,” Bichette said.
During team stretch before games, it’s common to see Guerrero humming and bopping his head along to the music that plays over the loudspeaker. His favourite kind of music, he said, is hip-hop and dembow, a popular genre back home in the Dominican Republic that mixes rap and mambo. His favourite North American artist is Drake, and no, Guerrero has not met him yet. Perhaps he will one day in Toronto. “Maybe!” he said, while smiling, of course.
Guerrero likes to joke around. All his teammates agree he’s a funny guy. But his best prank may have been the one he pulled on the Blue Jays fan base.



Last May, the Blue Jays were in New York, gearing up for a series against the New York Mets. Meanwhile, Guerrero was absolutely raking in Double A. So when the 19-year-old phenom posted a picture of himself at an airport that was geotagged JFK Airport on his Instagram, many Toronto fans flipped out with excitement, assuming he’d been called up.
But the excitement didn’t last. Internet sleuths determined the photo was an old one, and the post was deleted. But not before New Hampshire manager John Schneider’s phone absolutely blew up. He went to the source.
“I said, ‘Hey what’s up with that?’ He said, ‘I just liked the picture.’ And I said, ‘Really?’ And he kind of just smirked at me. We left it at that.”


When his long-awaited promotion to Triple A happened last July, it took all of one inning for the young Guerrero to impress Buffalo Bisons manager Bobby Meacham.
In his first plate appearance, Guerrero stood by and patiently took a walk when the opposing pitcher refused to throw him anything near the zone. He would go on to walk two more times in his Bisons debut.
After that first base on balls, he took his bag, then he took his lead. When Buffalo’s next batter, catcher Danny Jansen, sent a sharp groundball to left field, Guerrero took off. Guerrero’s calling card may be his potent power at the plate – but he’s quick on the base paths, too.


His new manager was about to learn that. Because when Meacham, who also coaches third base, looked out into the outfield he noticed the left fielder was rushing his throw. Why?
Because Guerrero was barrelling toward third base. He slid head-first into the bag. Safe. Both the crowd and the Buffalo bench were going wild.
“That showed me right there, he was excited for the moment, he was ready for anything and he saw that he could take advantage of a guy who was taking a little bit too long in left,” the manager said. “His baseball instincts just go, ‘let’s go to third and fire up this team. Maybe a chance to get us another run.’ That was good, to see him make a difference in a game that he didn’t even get a hit in yet.”
By the way, on that play, Guerrero’s slide into third base was so explosive that his leather belt busted.
Luckily, his veteran manager had a solution. “I just took off mine and gave it to him.”

Guerrero hit a home run last year that Bisons outfielder Anthony Alford vividly remembers. But not for its power or distance, although those were impressive. No, Alford remembers it because Guerrero was downright prescient about it.
Alford knows it was a home game at night, but he can’t recall who Buffalo was facing. He’s certain the ball went to dead centre field, but he forgets who threw the pitch. He can’t remember the exact order of pitches, but the last one was definitely a hanging breaking ball.
The ancillary details aren’t the point. This is what you need to know about this Guerrero home run.
After Guerrero got fooled by the pitcher, he returned to the Bisons’ dugout, went straight to his manager and said, “Bobby, this is what they’re going to do to me.”
He then proceeded to list off a pitch sequence. Alford was standing nearby, listening. He heard Guerrero anticipate that the pitcher was going to throw him a hanging breaking ball. And when he did, Guerrero said, he was going to hit it out of the park.
So next time Guerrero was due up, Alford sat on the dugout railing to watch intently. “I’m like, I’m going to see if they’re really going to — and they did it.”
The outfielder watched as the pitcher threw the exact pitches Guerrero said he would, down to, yes, a hanging breaking ball, which Guerrero launched to deep centre field.
“I was like, this kid is a prophet,” Alford said. “It was very impressive just to see him think along with the game.”
This wasn’t the first case of Guerrero foretelling how a pitcher was going to approach him. On the bench, Guerrero watches his teammates’ at-bats intently, studying the pitcher’s tendencies, filing away vital bits of intel for when he might need them.
“The stuff that he does on the field and the way he’s a student of the game, I really respect that and admire that about him,” Alford said.
Jays fans have anxiously awaited Guerrero’s call-up since he hit this famous home run more than a year ago in an exhibition game in Montreal, his dad’s old home park.
 His new manager was about to learn that. Because when Meacham, who also coaches third base, looked out into the outfield he noticed the left fielder was rushing his throw. Why?
Because Guerrero was barrelling toward third base. He slid head-first into the bag. Safe. Both the crowd and the Buffalo bench were going wild.
“That showed me right there, he was excited for the moment, he was ready for anything and he saw that he could take advantage of a guy who was taking a little bit too long in left,” the manager said. “His baseball instincts just go, ‘let’s go to third and fire up this team. Maybe a chance to get us another run.’ That was good, to see him make a difference in a game that he didn’t even get a hit in yet.”
By the way, on that play, Guerrero’s slide into third base was so explosive that his leather belt busted.
Luckily, his veteran manager had a solution. “I just took off mine and gave it to him.”

Guerrero hit a home run last year that Bisons outfielder Anthony Alford vividly remembers. But not for its power or distance, although those were impressive. No, Alford remembers it because Guerrero was downright prescient about it.
Alford knows it was a home game at night, but he can’t recall who Buffalo was facing. He’s certain the ball went to dead centre field, but he forgets who threw the pitch. He can’t remember the exact order of pitches, but the last one was definitely a hanging breaking ball.
The ancillary details aren’t the point. This is what you need to know about this Guerrero home run.
After Guerrero got fooled by the pitcher, he returned to the Bisons’ dugout, went straight to his manager and said, “Bobby, this is what they’re going to do to me.”
He then proceeded to list off a pitch sequence. Alford was standing nearby, listening. He heard Guerrero anticipate that the pitcher was going to throw him a hanging breaking ball. And when he did, Guerrero said, he was going to hit it out of the park.
So next time Guerrero was due up, Alford sat on the dugout railing to watch intently. “I’m like, I’m going to see if they’re really going to — and they did it.”
The outfielder watched as the pitcher threw the exact pitches Guerrero said he would, down to, yes, a hanging breaking ball, which Guerrero launched to deep centre field.
“I was like, this kid is a prophet,” Alford said. “It was very impressive just to see him think along with the game.”
This wasn’t the first case of Guerrero foretelling how a pitcher was going to approach him. On the bench, Guerrero watches his teammates’ at-bats intently, studying the pitcher’s tendencies, filing away vital bits of intel for when he might need them.
“The stuff that he does on the field and the way he’s a student of the game, I really respect that and admire that about him,” Alford said.

Jays fans have anxiously awaited Guerrero’s call-up since he hit this famous home run more than a year ago in an exhibition game in Montreal, his dad’s old home park. (Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images)
Guerrero doesn’t keep all that intel for himself.
“He’s always going to look to help guys when they need help, and help everybody around him get better,” Alford said.
“He’s definitely someone people seem to gravitate towards to talk to about certain things — approaches with hitting, what his mindset is, everyone tries to pick his brain here and there,” Bisons catcher Reese McGuire said. “He’s definitely open to helping guys if he sees something. From experience, I know he’ll come up and say something that he sees. He’s definitely in tune.”
“He’s really good at watching the game, watching other players, his own teammates, looking for things that they’re doing, things they may be doing well,” Schneider said. “He’ll say, ‘Keep doing it’ – or he’ll talk to them about something he sees as an area of opportunity. And it’s quick. It’s not like, ‘I’m better than you.’ It’s, ‘Here’s what I see. Take it for what it’s worth.’ He’s awesome that way.”
Last season, early on, Guerrero noticed Bichette was pulling the ball a lot during batting practice. At the time, Bichette didn’t think too much about the observation. It was practice. He was just working on things, he reasoned. But in games, Bichette was also pulling the ball more than usual. He was slumping, too. About two months later, Bichette made an adjustment at the plate. When he made the change, Guerrero’s words played back through his mind.
“I was like, ‘Man, maybe he was right.’ And I started making adjustments and it worked out pretty quick.”
Everywhere Guerrero goes, there are cameras, reporters, autograph seekers, all looking for him. It would be easy for the hype to get to his head. He’s barely past his teenage years. A little immaturity could be forgiven.
“What impresses me the most with him is just how nice of a guy and great of a teammate he is,” Romano said. “Honestly, I’m 25, and him as a 19-, 20-year-old who has a lot of hype around him — just how grounded and humble he is, that’s what’s honestly impressed me the most. Not even baseball-wise, just him as a person.”

So how do we sum up this person, who has lived and breathed baseball since practically the very beginning, on the verge of his big breakthrough?
He was born in Montreal when his father, Vladimir Guerrero Sr., was an Expo. He grew up spending time in major-league clubhouses. He has memories of his time as a boy in and around the big leagues. When he was 6, his uncle, Wilton, also a former big-leaguer, started to teach him the game in the Dominican Republic. Ever since, he has worked to perfect his craft.
He was still a boy when scouts began clamoring to see him. By 16, he had signed as an international free agent with the Blue Jays organization for $3.9 million. Four years and three minor-league seasons later, he was the consensus No. 1 prospect in all of baseball.
Guerrero is no doubt happiest on a baseball field. It is his sanctuary. And it’s no wonder. During his 20 years on planet Earth, he has experienced many great joys on a baseball field.
But what about when he wants to just get away from the game, just for a bit? Go home, kick his feet up and relax? What does Vladimir Guerrero Jr. do then?

“Play video games,” he said, proudly, in English, bypassing his translator just this once.
Oh? Right. You’re 20, of course, you love video games. Which one is your favourite to play?
Big smile.
“MLB The Show.”

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Ramirez Regressing ?




Last weekend’s premature report failed to come to fruition, but it does sound like Jays phenom Vladimir Guerrero Jr. will arrive in the majors very soon. Since returning from a strained oblique and joining Triple-A Buffalo, Guerrero has hit .360/.429/.640 with two homers in 25 at-bats. That’s barely any different from his .381/.437/.636 line from 2018. Of course, Guerrero could use some more polish defensively, but there’s no reason that can’t happen in the majors. He’s probably never going to be an asset at the hot corner, and a long-term future as a first baseman or designated hitter still seems to be the most likely scenario.
Guerrero’s bat is ready now, and he could be a .300 hitter in the majors right away. It would be a surprise if he didn’t at least come close to that mark in making a run at AL Rookie of the Year honors. He’s still a couple of seasons away from reaching his prime as a power bat, but even so, he’s a threat for 20 homers this year. It’ll take some sort of injury to prevent him from being a top-10 fantasy third baseman the rest of the way, and he might just rank in the top five.

  Jose Ramirez has been a massive disappointment to date, and while I don’t like to panic over any April struggles from established hitters, it is scarier in his case because of the way he collapsed at the end of last year (.165/.304/.273 with two homers in his final 38 games). Still, the ugly numbers this year have come with the same exit velocity and barrel rate he enjoyed over the course of what was still a hugely successful 2018 season. He’s also gone 5-for-5 as a basestealer, and even if he doesn’t match last season’s power numbers, the likelihood of 30 steals should still make him awfully valuable. I had Ramirez fifth overall in the preseason top 300. I’d drop him into the 10-15 range now, partly because the Indians offense as a whole seems likely to disappoint, but I wouldn’t sell him any lower than that.

- Red Sox second basemen have been hurt and done nothing while healthy, so top prospect Michael Chavis got a crash course at a new position and a surprise promotion last week. Chavis, who was busted for steroids last year, hit four homers in his first 12 games at Triple-A Pawtucket this season. It’ll likely be a while before he’s ready to hit for average in the majors, but the power is legit. Still, he’s probably not up for good this time around; he definitely needs some more work at second base before getting a real chance there. It’s hard to say exactly how the Red Sox will arrange their infield for the long haul; Xander Bogaerts is eventually going to need to shift to third and Rafael Devers to first would make a lot of sense. Chavis fits in a lot better if he can play second, but range will be an issue there.

- Jurickson Profar’s defense has been just as abysmal as his offense this year, and there’s a really good case for Oakland sending him to the bench. He’s been probably the AL’s worst regular for 25 games, and it’s not like his history is all that rosy; in his one good year with the Rangers, he had an .874 OPS in the AL’s best ballpark for offense and a .712 OPS elsewhere. Chad Pinder looks like a better option at second base right now, and Franklin Barreto might deserve a shot if he starts hitting in Triple-A. Barreto has gotten some work in center field and continued to play some shortstop, but his last six starts for Triple-A Las Vegas have all come at second base. Unfortunately, he’s batting just .197/.347/.344 so far.

- Former Yankees prospect Justus Sheffield will make his Mariners debut Friday as a planned long reliever after a brief start for Yusei Kikuchi. Sheffield wasn’t off to a great start at Triple-A; he’s walked 14 and given up four homers in 18 1/3 innings for Tacoma. There’s the chance for some real fantasy value here later this year, but this figures to be a short stay for the 22-year-old.
- Erik Swanson, who was also acquired by the Mariners in the James Paxton deal with the Yankees, had a rough go of it Tuesday against the Padres after a fine first start against the Indians. Swanson is a strike-thrower without a truly standout offering, but one who has managed to rack up quite a few swings and misses anyway. He’s a big flyball pitcher, which is an especially bad thing to be with the way baseballs are flying this year, but at least he has ex-Safeco and a fine outfield defense helping him out. He’s not a good enough bet in the ERA department to be worthy of a pickup in shallow mixed leagues, but those in slightly deeper formats could benefit from a solid WHIP and K rate.
- It was a given that the Orioles would be terrible this year, but it seemed likely that they’d be run smarter after raiding the Astros’ front office. And they probably will be. Still, they’ve done some odd things already, like putting Stevie Wilkerson on waivers to clear a 40-man roster spot at the end of the spring, only to bring him back to the majors three weeks later to replace the struggling Cedric Mullins. The original Wilkerson decision was really odd given the abundance of alternatives to be dropped; the previous administration was quite high on the versatile 27-year-old, even though he was banned for amphetamines and missed the first 50 games of last season. There isn’t much in the way of upside here, but it was still surprising no one picked him up for free at the beginning of April, especially since he had options left. He’ll probably get a lengthy look now and amass some value in AL-only leagues.
- I think the Orioles should have given Mullins a little while longer, especially since the alternative was so bleak, but he was not looking like a major league hitter of late. Joey Rickard will be the regular center fielder, which is less than ideal.


- With Erik Gonzalez (broken clavicle) joining Kevin Newman (finger) on the IL, the Pirates were forced to give Cole Tucker a shot at shortstop. Tucker is easily the most interesting option of the group for fantasy purposes, mostly because he stole 34 bases in Double-A last year and 47 between high-A and Double-A the year before. His offensive profile isn’t as exciting; although he doesn’t strike out a ton, he’s been just a .260 hitter in the minors, and his career high for homers is six. On the plus side, he seems to have taken a step forward in the power department this year; he had three homers in his first 13 games in Triple-A and has one more in four games since being called up. I’m still not particularly optimistic that he’ll offer mixed-league value this year, but he does have a shot.
- Ian Desmond seems to have made a conscious effort to get some air under the ball this season, but while he has succeeded in doing that, he’s rarely hitting the ball hard; in fact, his hard-hit rate is down about 20% from last year, while his strikeout rate is up about 15%. Maybe he’ll figure something out with his new approach, but nothing that’s happened these last couple of years leads to much optimism. Meanwhile, Raimel Tapia has homered in three straight games (even if one was an inside-the-parker), giving him the second-highest OPS on the Rockies at the moment. Tapia deserves a longer look and would seem to be worth at least a bench spot in mixed leagues.
- The Cardinals said Tuesday that Carlos Martinez (shoulder) will make his return as a reliever. That’s less the team’s preference and more a result of it being all he can handle right now. Martinez has ample fantasy potential as a reliever -- he had a 1.47 ERA and five saves in 15 appearances after joining the Cardinals bullpen last August -- but he’ll need to impress and have Jordan Hicks falter some if he’s going to get a chance at the closer’s role. The Cardinals would have financial incentive for making the switch at some point, but that alone isn’t likely to win the day. Martinez is still probably at least 2-3 weeks away from coming off the IL if everything goes correctly.
- Daniel Ponce de Leon was expected to be sent back to Triple-A after filling in for Michael Wacha (knee) on Tuesday night, but with Martinez in the pen, his path to a spot in the Cardinals rotation has gotten clearer. He’s never been viewed as a prospect at all, but his stuff looked perfectly legit while he amassed a 2.73 ERA in four starts and seven relief appearances in the majors last year. He’d likely be a fringy mixed-league option if given a real shot.
- Not only has Jesus Aguilar been doing some sitting in favor of Eric Thames against righties, but on Tuesday, the Brewers bypassed both to give Yasmani Grandal a rare start at first base. Aguilar isn’t striking out overly much, but he’s not making much hard contact, and even when he does drive the ball, he’s not doing so in the air. His longest fly this year has traveled just 370 feet. Even Eric Hosmer, who has been a disappointment while hitting mostly grounders, has shots of 399, 392 and 385 feet already. Aguilar seems droppable in mixed leagues at this point. Even if Aguilar proved solid, there was always a chance that Thames would go back to outproducing him against righties this year.
- While it sucks that Matt Kemp (rib) got hurt, it’s a good thing for the Reds that he’ll be unavailable for a spell. Kemp had started seven straight games before going on the IL, even though the Reds outfield had been healthy. Kemp was hitting a disastrous .200/.210/.283 with five RBI in 60 at-bats, and his presence in the lineup usually put Jesse Winker in center, leaving the Reds with far and away the worst outfield defense in the majors. Phillip Ervin replaced Kemp, and though he doesn’t have a ton of offensive upside, he’s a better fit for the Reds roster.
- The Dodgers chose to give Rich Hill an extra rehab outing that hardly seemed necessary, but it will earn Ross Stripling one more start Thursday against the Cubs before Hill returns this weekend. Stripling is then penciled in for a bullpen stint, barring another injury to a different Dodgers starter. Most likely, Dodgers starters will keep dropping like flies all year, so Stripling shouldn’t be let go in any formats.
- Jeff Samardzija has quietly opened the season with a 3.00 ERA in five starts, but the velocity he lost last season hasn’t come back at all; he’s down about 2.5 miles per hour from where he was a couple of years ago. He’s been successful because he’s surrendered just three homers in 27 innings, but since he’s giving up a lot more flyballs than he used to, the home run rate figures to jump significantly. He still looks like someone to avoid.
- Addison Russell, who has been serving a domestic violence suspension, is set to rejoin the Cubs in a week after a brief stint in the minors. It doesn’t seem likely that he’ll be an everyday guy initially, but he should take at-bats away from Daniel Descalso, Ben Zobrist and David Bote. Descalso has been off to a strong start offensively, but his defense at second base just isn’t any good; unfortunately, he lost all of his defensive value at about the same time that he learned how to hit. There could be a path to mixed-league value for Russell, but one imagines it’ll be at least a month or two before he has any chance of getting there.
- From a personnel standpoint, Arizona seemed as an unlikely a fit for Blake Swihart as there was in the majors, but given the familiarity with him from the former Red Sox people in the organization, perhaps it shouldn’t have been such a surprise that the Diamondbacks were the team to acquire him after he was DFA’d. It doesn’t sound like Swihart will be doing much catching, so he’s probably not going to be an option in fantasy leagues unless the Diamondbacks start selling off position players this summer.

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Jays win and are out of the basement




A series win, yay. This scoring stuff is fun.
The name of the game was homers today. We had 3 of them:
We had 9 hits total. Sogard and Grichuk had 2 each. Everyone else had 1 hit other than Freddy Galvis (who had a very nice play in the field and Brandon Drury (who did get a walk). Sogard has been a surprise, 4 hits in his first 8 at bats since coming up from Buffalo.



In the pitching side, Clay Buchholz went 4.2, allowed 6 hits, 3 earned, 3 walks with 4 strikeouts. He came out of the game in the 5th inning with 2 on and 2 out, but Thomas Pannone came in and stranded the runners.
Clay had one bad inning, he gave up 3 runs in the second inning. After a leadoff homer, he got a strikeout, then gave up a walk, single, an RBI single, and a ground ball that scored one.
The bullpen did the job. Pannone came out of the game after getting just the 1 out in the 5th. I wasn’t thrilled, I’d have liked him to get us at least one more inning. Pulling him quick left 4 innings of relief work to go. I don’t like the idea of using a bunch of relievers in a game, it leaves you short in the future.
  • Ryan Tepera pitched a very nice 6th inning, getting 1 strikeout. He looked really good in his first appearance of the season.
  • Tim Mayza pitched a quick 7th and started the 8th but gave up a leadoff homer to Edie Rosario, and then came out of the game.
  • Joe Biagini came in and pitched the 8th, getting a strikeout.
  • Ken Giles gave up a leadoff single in the 9th, and gave up a deep fly that wasn’t foul by too much, but he got 2 strikeouts and his 6th save of the season. 


Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Vlad is Coming to town


 
 Now try and sing with me, to the tune of Santa Claus is coming to town, "Vladdy is coming to town..." Okay, it's a stretch, I know, but boy when he comes, it's going to Christmas for the Blue Jays. It is going to happen in the next week and a half ( my prediction ). My best guess is May 6th, a Monday home game against the Twins. Otherwise, it could come earlier , like the 26th against the Athetics.

Let me first give some perspective on Vladdy......

Coach Bobby Meacham stood against the dugout railing before Thursday night's game explaining how the newest addition to his Buffalo Bisons lineup had found so much success at such a young age.
Then, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. took the field in an International League game for the first time this season and put on an efficient demonstration of his manager's words.
The barely 20-year-old third baseman slammed the first ball he put in play hard off the wall the other way for an RBI double and pulled the next well over the fence for a three-run homer when the Bisons fell to the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red Barons, 9-8, in a 10-inning game.
The Toronto Blue Jays prospect, serving as designated hitter for the night, showed why he is regarded as one of baseball's hottest up-and-coming players. He finished 2-for-4 with a walk, two runs and four RBIs in his first game above Class A after having his spring disrupted by an oblique muscle injury.
"I felt very happy," Guerrero said through interpreter Tanya Bialostozky, a mental performance coach with the Blue Jays. "I was ready to work. I wanted to help out the team.






With service time issues now out of the way, the start of the Vladimir Guerrero Jr. era could soon be upon us.
Guerrero played his second game of the year with the AAA Buffalo Bisons on Friday night, but it doesn’t sound like he’ll be down there for long.
“Our sense is that it’s sooner than later,” Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins said in a scrum before Toronto began a three-game series with the Tampa Bay Rays with an 11-7 loss.
“There’s a lot of excitement in and around him for a good reason,” Atkins said of baseball’s No. 1 prospect who crushed a home run on Thursday.
The organization would like to see Guerrero get just a tad more work in the minors.
“For a player that has played as much as he has, as much success as he’s had, now it’s about getting built up and getting into really just regular season form and being hopefully ready to make a debut at some point soon,” Atkins said.
“So there are some other variables to that as we’ve talked about a lot. And we want to make sure that we get everything we can out of the minor leagues to ensure that there never is a day that we’re ever considering the minor leagues again … We’re not looking for him to check boxes, we’re looking for him to maximize this opportunity and this time to be the most well-rounded he can be before he transitions.” By Sunday Toronto will have ensured a seventh year of contractual control, so Guerrero could then be called up at any point.
Manager Charlie Montoyo estimated that 20-30 at-bats in Buffalo might be enough.

GROWTH WILL CONTINUE
The Jays believe Guerrero can still continue to improve and develop as a Major Leaguer and they will be patient.
“He’s going to make mistakes here, as we’ve seen from some of our young players that are transitioning. Mistakes are going to occur. But the foundation is what we’re pushing so hard for him to have,” Atkins said.
“And a lot of that is tapping into all the power he has, making sure that we’ve done everything from a performance standpoint to help his body be in the best possible position to execute all the plays that he can make – and has shown us he can make. Only we want to see him do it in a more consistent way. And that’s been the challenge. So there isn’t going to be a day where we say he’s done from a development standpoint because his development will continue here.” Regular starting third baseman Brandon Drury, who has struck out 12 times in his past 22 at-bats, with only one hit, was rested in favour of Richard Urena against Tampa Bay.

INJURY UPDATES APLENTY
There were plenty of injury updates from Montoyo and Atkins.
Starter Ryan Borucki received a cortisone shot in his elbow and will be re-evaluated in two weeks when he will begin throwing again.
“Just a mild setback, we hope is what it is,” Atkins said.
“He felt some pain again after a bullpen (session), so getting a cortisone injection will hopefully relieve that. The images are encouraging, that’s always a good sign.” Borucki’s continued absence could lead to more time in the rotation for Friday’s starter Thornton.
Meanwhile, reliever Ryan Tepera threw an inning with Buffalo on Friday and could return to Toronto soon, while starter Clayton Richard (knee) will begin with light catch this weekend. David Phelps (Tommy John Surgery) will start bullpen sessions next week. Devon Travis (knee surgery) will start baseball activities next week.
Starter Clay Buchholz will be added to the active roster, which means infielder Richard Urena is heading to the minors, despite a solid start.

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Appeal Repeal



Were you ever suspended from school when you were younger? A couple of days off, no teachers telling you what to do, but here was the thing: you had to catch up on all of the work you missed. Simply put, the punishment usually fit the crime. You were rarely better off.
Then there’s Major League Baseball, where the crimes don’t matter and the suspensions are nonsense. Other than its strict stance against players who get busted for using performance enhancers, the suspension/appeal process within MLB is a bad joke.


This season alone has given us numerous examples of just how pathetic the organization is when confronted with unacceptable behavior.


 Milwaukee Brewers center fielder Carlos Gomez was suspended three games for his involvement in an altercation with the Pittsburgh Pirates. While the particulars are not important, the way MLB handled it was atrocious.
After being handed his suspension, Gomez appealed—as most players do. His appeal lasted about one month until a back injury forced him out of the lineup. So what did he decide to do? Suddenly drop his appeal and start serving his suspension. Imagine that.
First, it shouldn’t take a month to schedule a meeting for an appeal. Second, this process allows a player to basically think, “Well crap, I'm injured; I might as well serve the suspension now.”
If you’re going to suspend a player, here are a couple of suggestions:
  • Give the player the option of appealing, of course, but schedule a meeting within the week.
  • Avoid cop outs, such as allowing the player to serve his suspension while injured.
The instance of the process taking too much time will come up a little later on, so stay tuned.


In April, New York Yankees starting pitcher Michael Pineda blatantly used pine tar twice in two weeks against the Boston Red Sox. He wasn’t punished the first time, however. Why? Because this is widely practiced and acknowledged throughout baseball, so apparently that makes it okay.

Despite that arbitrary acceptance, the official rule clearly states: “The pitcher shall not apply a foreign substance of any kind to the ball.” The three most important words there clearly seem to be “of any kind,” but hey, I could be wrong.
Red Sox manager John Farrell only had a problem with Pineda’s usage the second time around because it was too obvious, saying “I fully respect, on a cold night, you're trying to get a little bit of a grip…but when it's that obvious, something has got to be said.”

Wait, why do you fully respect cheating? Or, I'm sorry—why do you fully respect someone altering the ball to potentially give themselves a seemingly unfair advantage? Why is this okay? Oh, because baseball accepts it, just as they accept throwing balls at 95 miles per hour to “get back” at the other team. But we'll get to that.
Regardless of whether the offense is obvious or not should not matter. It's breaking the rules, plain and simple. But then something interesting happened, which only fueled the nonsense. When it appeared that Pineda was using pine tar to alter a baseball the first time around, nothing happened. But the second time around, and because he was “too obvious” with his usage, the hurler was handed a 10-game suspension.
Let's recap: “No foreign substance of any kind,” unless it's widely accepted, apparently. Yet if it’s obvious, you get punished for it. I suppose rules are rules, until they’re not.

 For what it’s worth, cheating of any kind is entirely wrong and should always be punished. The fact that there are arbitrary exceptions is laughable. Also, “10 games” for a starting pitcher is actually two starts in reality. So even if you are punished as a pitcher, you’re not really punished.


Our next two instances are very fun. Let’s start with a temper tantrum, shall we?
It began on June 6 when the Oakland Athletics were facing off against the Baltimore Orioles. Athletics third baseman Josh Donaldson made a tag on Manny Machado, but the Orioles’ rising star apparently didn't take too kindly to it. In fact, he proceeded to throw his helmet at the ground and get in Donaldson’s face.
Why? Because the tag was too hard. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, baseball players are toddlers. Machado had this to say about the incident: “Didn’t agree on the tag. Right play, he made the right play, but just didn’t agree on the tag that he made on me, and I just had to get up and confront him.”
I totally get it. Just the other day at the grocery store a small child bumped my leg while running through the aisles. I should have responded by throwing my vest and yelling at the parents. Oh, wait, that’s exactly what I shouldn't have done. It’s a good thing I possess common sense; it’s a shame Machado didn’t in that moment.
Then it got even better over the weekend.

Manny Machado Josh Donaldson
Just two days later, Machado was at it again. The Athletics were up big on the Orioles in the eighth inning when he stepped to the plate. Relief pitcher Fernando Abad threw a pitch that almost hit him in the knee, so on the next pitch Machado swung incredibly late and released his bat down the third base line—glaring all the while.
Both players were ejected, but there was also a previous incident of note in this contest. On two separate occasions, Machado hit catcher Derek Norris in the back of his head during his back swing. Not once, but twice. That’s not irregular at all, considering the third baseman was already irrationally pissed off heading into the weekend.
On the second shot, Norris actually had to be removed from the game. Surely the 22-year-old asked the catcher if he was alright, right? Well, no. “Norris says batters typically offer a ‘You all right?’ after backswings like that.” He apparently didn't.
So Pineda gets 10 games for putting something on the ball, which means common sense would indicate a much steeper penalty for someone knowingly threw their bat at another human being. Oh, but MLB does not conduct themselves with common sense.
Machado received a five-game suspension. Five. Not only that, but he had the audacity to appeal. The process lasted just over a month until it was revealed that he had lost the appeal. He also recently returned from said suspension.
So here’s the question: How does a player get a lesser suspension for potentially endangering another human being opposed to those who cheat? Because kids, cheating is wrong. Throwing your bat at someone because you're upset, though? That’s almost completely acceptable.



We’ll end on another fun note, even though the Machado temper tantrum coupled with complete lenience really took the cake for me.
On a night when the Arizona Diamondbacks held a rare lead, Brewers starter Kyle Lohse had struggled with his command. In fact, he hit two batters over the course of the game—both instances clearly being accidental.
Manager Kirk Gibson didn’t share that sentiment, however, and in the top of the seventh inning he had reliever Evan Marshall throw intentionally at Ryan Braun with first base open. Why Braun? Because in 2011 he tested positive for PEDs, around the time that the Brewers eliminated the Diamondbacks from the playoffs. Gibson has never gotten over that, and in all likelihood he never will.
We all must have missed the part where Braun pitched and played every position on defense, too.


Anyway, after Marshall missed with his first effort, he drilled Braun in his backside with the second attempt. He was immediately ejected and met with a standing ovation from the Arizona fans. While ridiculous, the fan reaction was neither surprising nor uncommon. What followed was repulsive.
Kirk GibsonHere was Gibson, a grown man (maybe) who had just ordered one of his pitchers to hit another player. Not only that, but he didn’t have another pitcher warming up in his bullpen. Surely he knew Marshall was going to be ejected. A pitcher entering the game without warming up is incredibly dangerous, and that was just the first part of incompetence displayed by Gibson.
The second part was when Marshall returned to the dugout. His manager held out a fist and bumped it, smiling and congratulating all the while. Were there punishments for either of these “men?” A light fine for Marshall with no suspension, and absolutely nothing for Gibson.
To recap: cheating is bad—which, don't get me wrong, it is. Cheating is an atrocity. Then again, so is endangering another human being. Machado gets five games for throwing his bat at another person while Gibson barely gets a slap on the wrist for ordering a hit and congratulating his player for it.
Sometimes, baseball really is the worst.

Change not forthcoming

What’s wrong with Major League Baseball's suspension process? Everything. The rulings are arbitrary and never really fit the severity of the offense.
You’re going to drop your appeal because you’re hurt? Sure. You put something on the ball for grip? That's fine, just as long as nobody cares. Oh but it’s too obvious? Okay, well then we’ve got to punish you.
You threw a baseball bat at another person? Well in reality you’d likely be brought up on charges (and fired from any other place of employment), but here we’ll just give you a week off without pay.
You, the manager of a professional baseball team, ordered somebody to hit another person with a ball then congratulated him for it? That’s okay. After all, it’s preserving the “unwritten rules” and “integrity of the game.”
MLB needs to figure out what it values more at the end of the day: tradition, or safety and rationality. If there is one thing it is not, it’s consistent. A week or two off during a 162-game season is essentially nothing, and causing bodily harm to another individual should never be acceptable.
That being said, don’t look for the game to change anytime soon. Judging by the way it's headed, we’re likely to witness an unfortunate injury before Major League Baseball realizes it has plenty of issues to sort through.

Of course, then it will be too late.

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Yanks bounce back



Bouncing back from losing two of three to the Orioles should be no big deal for the Yankees. Recovering from the loss of two of their key lineup cogs figures to be a more difficult task.
The Yanks placed both former 2017 National League MVP Giancarlo Stanton and reigning American League Rookie of the Year runner-up Miguel Andujar on the 10-day injured list Monday. Stanton is down with a biceps strain, while Andujar is battling a strained shoulder.
Stanton suffered the injury on an awkward swing Sunday and was diagnosed with a Grade 1 strain. He will be shut down for at least 10 days before being re-evaluated. Manager Aaron Boone said he hopes to have Stanton back before the end of the month, but that seems like far from a safe bet at this point.


"I don't like it at all," Stanton said. "I just worked for six weeks to get here, plus the offseason. I'd much rather this would have popped in [during] Spring Training, but it's where we're at. I don't have to start from scratch when I come back, but I've just got to build everything up and make sure everything is ready to go when I'm back."

Mike Tauchman started Monday in left field, which is where Stanton had been playing with Brett Gardner sliding over to center to cover for Aaron Hicks (back). The Bombers also recalled Clint Frazier and Tyler Wade.
Frazier is the biggest name of the trio and has the most upside, and Boone indicated that the 24-year-old should see the lion’s share of playing time in left while Stanton is out. The former top prospect had his 2018 season wrecked by concussion issues, but he’s healthy now and said Monday that he’s “feeling the best I've felt at the plate in a long time.” Frazier is a worthy pick-up even if his time as a regular could be brief.


While it appears that Stanton’s absence might be relatively short, the situation with Andujar, unfortunately, is much bleaker.
Tests have revealed a small labrum tear in Andujar’s right shoulder, an injury he suffered on a slide back into third base Sunday. Initial tests showed that he still had strength in the shoulder, which has the club hopeful that he can rest and rehab the injury. It’s certainly possible that rehab won’t work, though, which would mean season-ending surgery. He’ll be re-evaluated in two weeks.
Even if the rest and rehab route does work, Andujar figures to be sidelined for a while. Also, when you’re dealing with a labrum tear, any awkward swing or dive has the potential to make the injury worse. Simply put, it’s hard to feel optimistic right now if you’re an Andujar owner.
If there’s any good news here, it’s that the Yankees have a pretty nice backup plan for the hot corner in DJ LeMahieu.
The Yanks signed LeMahieu with the intent of using him as a utility infielder, but their biggest need for the 30-year-old obviously is now at third base. The former Rockie’s fantasy value appeared cloudy coming into the season with no set position, but Andujar’s injury should firm up his playing time. LeMahieu has reached base in eight of his first 12 plate appearances of 2019.

 

Clevinger Cruises

He may have started the Indians’ fourth game of the season, but it would be a mischaracterization to refer to Mike Clevinger as a No. 4 starter.
The 28-year-old proved again Monday in his first outing of the season that he’s a top-of-the-rotation talent, as he held the White Sox to just one single and three walks over seven scoreless innings in chilly Cleveland. Clevinger set a new career high with 12 strikeouts and garnered 21 swings and misses among his 106 pitches.
Unfortunately, Clevinger did not walk away with a victory. He departed the game with a narrow 1-0 lead and that advantage quickly disappeared when Adam Cimber, Oliver Perez and Jon Edwards combined to allow three runs in the eighth inning. The Indians did wind up winning that contest following an eighth-inning rally of their own.
Clevinger burst onto the scene in 2017 when he posted a 3.11 ERA with 137 strikeouts across 121 2/3 innings for the Tribe. He then took a big step forward in 2018 in his first full major league season with a 3.02 ERA, 1.16 WHIP and 207/67 K/BB ratio over 200 frames.
The big drop in Clevinger’s walk rate last year was particularly encouraging, and he accomplished it while also adding velocity. The right-hander’s fantasy owners would be happy with a repeat of last season, but there might be even more upside here.

Pete Power

Pete Alonso picked a good time for his first major league home run, and it was a bomb.
After being retired in his first four plate appearances Monday in Miami, Alonso teed off against Marlins reliever Drew Steckenrider in the top of the ninth inning, drilling a three-run home run over the center field wall that traveled an estimated 444 feet. The blast would extend the Mets’ lead to 7-3 and hung on after a shaky appearance from closer Edwin Diaz.
After being retired by three-time Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer in his first three plate appearances of the season, Alonso has since gone 7-for-14 with one home run, three doubles, two walks and six RBI. He’s also batted second for the Mets in each of their first four games (although he will receive a day off Tuesday).
Alonso slugged his way onto the Mets’ Opening Day roster with a 1.006 OPS and four long balls this spring, and he obviously hasn’t slowed down since the regular season began. Some bumps in the road are expected – especially since Alonso has some swing-and-miss in his game – but the power has been as advertised for the top prospect and he’s occupying a prime spot in the Mets’ lineup.