Thursday, June 02, 2005

Like/Dislike

In an effort to get back into the swing of things with this online source of opinionated journalistic magic, I am going to go over my current likes and dislikes in the sports world. Some with explanation some without.


I like the SportsCentury series on ESPN Classic. They could do a story on your company's softball team equipment manager and it would be worth watching.

I don't like Malcolm Glazer taking over at Manchester United, he more than likely will put his debt on the United books, and turn a profitable, public and succesful club, into a poor performing, high charging franchise.

I like the Suns, a lot.

I don't like the idea of a Detroit v. San Antonio final. ZZZ. 3 hours of Manu Ginobili flopping like his fellow Argentinians do on the pitch, and Rip Hamilton running around like a mini Reggie Miller, with 3 or four screaming blocks by one of the Wallaces and a monotone double double from Tim Duncan.

Every "analyst" in the world say these teams "play the right way". Since when was boring defensive strangleholds the "right way"? Did the Showtime Lakers somehow play the wrong way by being flashy and fun? Were Bird and D.J. doing the balling Gods an injustice by scoring 2 seconds after a rebound? No. If a team wins the championship, that is simply one of the right ways to play. If we tell every little kid on the playground to set up Isos and stand around setting picks for the little one with the mask we will lose any entertainment left in the game.

I don't like Sportscenter hiring women anchors. Not one sounds like they could talk about sports without a teleprompter, and none add any humor to the show, they only read the stats that are running at the bottom of the screen. Hiring someone with less talent just because they are a woman is far more discriminating than not hiring any at all.

I like the ressurgence of small ball in the MLB. I love to see teams stealing bases, going from first to third on a single, and hit and runs. Speed kills, plain and simple.

I don't like how the Sox refuse to play this "small ball" and how I can't name the best bunter on the squad, or the last time a runner was moved over on purpose and not just by fielder's choices.

I like Maria Sharapova, and I like a 15 year old beating the bad Williams sister.

I like the Yankees being questioned.

I don't like how ANY play Jeter makes is amazing.

I like the San Diego Padres to win the NL West, and the undefeated New England Revolution to win the MLS Championship.

I don't like Joe Buck.

I abhor Tim McCarver.

I like laughing at AHL games.

I don't like the fact that I have to go to AHL games to see hockey.

I like the fact that Darko has more rings than Patrick Ewing.

Sports, as my buddy Dom's T-Shirt says WHAT'S NOT TO LIKE?

Friday, April 22, 2005

Uh Oh.

Hey All.

Due to a backloaded workload this semester, and finals coming up, I am going to have go on hiatus until the summer. But this summer you can expect : Normal columns, Good Things of The Week, Cotuit Kettleer Reports, and Anything else I can think of.

Maybe a treat with a semi updated running diary of the crazy sports day tomorrow.

NFL Draft. Sox At 5. Celts Game 1 at 8.

MAYBE.

Bye All.

Friday, April 15, 2005

Good Stuff of the Week

And we're back, could only find one column that stood out to me, but there were some quality stat lines out there, one from a familiar source. Quotes are classic. Have Fun.

Good Columns.

Scoop Jackson of ESPN.com on Jermaine O'neal's honest stance on the proposed NBA age limit.

The fact is that while 76 percent of the players in the NBA are black, almost 100 percent of the players who will be affected by the "delayed entry program" will be black. And more than color or race, economics is at the core of this. Nearly all of the players who make themselves eligible for the NBA draft directly out of high school do so to immediately better their family's financial situation. And now, all of a sudden, with nothing concrete at which to point that says "players under the age of 20 have been bad for professional basketball," a decision is going to be made on their behalf that will directly change the course of their lives?

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=jackson/050414&num=2

Good Stat Lines:

Vinny Castilla 3B- Washington Nationals 5/14 v. The D’Backs. It seems like the Expos de
Washington are attempting to lockdown the offensive baseball spot of the good stat lines. New team next week, guranteed.
3 AB 3 H (Triple, Double, HR) 1 HBP 4 RBIs

Josh Beckett SP- Florida Marlins 5/10 vs. Washington
9 IP 5 H 0 R 0 ER 1 BB 11 K

Paul Pierce SF- Boston Celtics 5/12 v. Philly
27 Points 13 Rebounds 4 Assists 2 Steals 1 Block in a big win over the Atlantic division rivals.

Good Quotes:

This week’s good quotes all come from members at the Sons of Sam Horn message board regarding the extremely suspicious story of A-rod saving a young boy’s life in Boston.

-I think A-Rod is a hero, Dale Sveum would have waved the kid across the street.

-I also liked A-Rod's quote: "I guess I'm just thankful that the little boy is still around, I guess."
He guesses. :)

-I heard that -- in the Ruthian tradition -- ARod promised the boy he would hit a weak ground out in for him.

-The thing is Jeter would have anticipated the situation and kindly warned him to be careful and watch for cars. Jetes would have been a leader and made the kid a better pedestrian. That's what he does.

-Well, even after flying to the warning track in a critical situation tonight, Alex knows Alex is a hero. And that's all that really matters.To Alex.

-Did he yell at the kid to get a secondary lead?

-So I'm not following this, why was A-Rod out of Limo in Boston? Is he ever out of his Limo?

-Why wasn't little Patrick McCarthy in school?Let's review:The 8-YO son of a Yankee season-ticket holder who works in PR with ballplayers misses school, is walking through downtown Boston, and is coincidentally saved from certain death by the Yankee with the biggest PR problem short of the BALCO Brothers. The only witnesses are Yankee players, the kid, and his dad.Yeah, I buy that.

-The only reason the kid ran into the street in the first place was to chase the ball that A-Rod slapped out of his hands.

-From the SI story.First the author says ARod reached out, grabbed the kid, and pulled him back. Then we have two quotes in quick succession, one each from ARod and the kid, both saying that he just stuck his arm out.

I can’t make this stuff up.

http://p086.ezboard.com/fsonsofsamhornbostonredsox.showMessageRange?topicID=15259.topic&start=1&stop=20

I Feel Obliged

I am going to use Tito's words to explain how I feel.

I am glad they (the yankees) are leaving town tomorrow.

As much as this rivalry excites me, and as much as I enjoy watching the baseball being played, I am glad to see it take a step back and wait six weeks until it rears its ugly head. Because I have already seen the Yankees six times this year, Here are 10 random thoughts about the series since an organized post would be ludicrous at this point.


1. The ring ceremony was great, I loved seeing Dave "Free Dinner For Life" Roberts again. He is the reason I am rooting for San Diego in th NL West (to be fair, him and the puke colored alternate jerseys).

2. Finally. Before every Sox/Yanks game so far this year, hype/side story driven ESPN didn't remind us of all the flops and collapses of the Red Sox over the years. Its nice to watch a baseball game without having to worry about dying a little bit inside while you watch it.

3. Curt will be ok.

4. Tim Wakefield had it dancin' at the home opener. He deserved the start as well, he was the unsung hero of last year's run to the title, eating up innings whenever he could.

5. Maybe after last night's performance the Boston media/impatient fans will get off of ER's back. He was huge last night with a 2 run shot off The Big Unit and an RBI double. I was most annoyed by the impatience with Edgah (ya i did it.) because he came into the game with an RBI more than darling Manny Ramirez, now he has four more RBIs and a homre run more than the man we EXPECT to be dirving in runs and hitting them out of the park.

6. "The Sheffield Incident". I know it won't happen, but I hope I watched the highlight for the last time last night. All the columnists and analysts in the world are going to talk about this for about two weeks, then complain about having to talk about it all the time, somehow shifting the blame onto RSN or the Empire.

After watching it a million bajillion times, I have come to these conclusions.

The Fan was Wrong (not to mention drunk),
Sheffield was Wrong (not to mention having a roid rage).
The Security was impeccable.

The fan was a comlete doofus, he didn't know what he was doing, but thats no excuse for what he did, he interfered with a fair ball/player, be gone.

Sheffield, however wrong he may be, did exaclty what I would have done in that situation. If I was dribbling down the line in soccer, and some fan, drunk or not, stuck their foot out and tripped me, my firts reaction would be to put my cleats into their shin. Wrong? Yes. Natural? Yes.

In the end the playing field belongs to the players. Even if they are playing a game, its still their job, and no one wants to be hit on their job.

That security guard couldnt be past 20. I am assuming he came from the Yankees bullpen, which isn't terribly close to the incident, and put an end to what could have been a disaterous situation for baseball. Sheffield was half taunting a drunk fan, and this kid jumped in between the two, shoved the fan away, and waited for the reinforcements. Great Job.

7. The fact that David Ortiz scoring from 1st on this play got lost in the ruckus is beyond me. Watching on ESPN, I was waiting for the replay with Boomer going on about "Ortiz rounds third, rumbling tumbling stumbling!". I mean we already got a "WOOOP" out of him when Millar fell at first, why couldn't we fit in some more sweet catch phrases out of the big guy?

8. Jonny Damon also went from first to home on ER's double, but that doesn't make me feel all fuzzy inside like Papi running 270 feet nonstop does.

9. A-Rod. No walks in a whole series? Trying to do too much? Biting off more than you can chew? Choking a bit? I loathe him, although he constantly scares me when he represents the tying run.

10. We don't see the Yankees for another 38 games. Thank Goodness. If we go 24-14 in this span I will be extremely satisfied.

Saturday, April 09, 2005

Good Things of the Week.

This is a new weekly installment. Every weekend I will compile group of my favorite quotes, columns and statlines of the week and put them in a concise area for all of you to see.


Good Stat Lines:

Brad Wilkerson-1B-Washington Nationals

April 6th v. Philladelphia At Bats-4 Runs-1 Hits-4 Singles-1 Doubles-1 Triples-1 HomeRuns-1

Allen Iverson-PG-Philladelphia Sixers

April 3rd v. Toronto 42 points 5 assists, 4 rebounds 5 steals in a 96-84 win at Toronto.

Mariano Rivera-RP-New York Yankees (good for me :) )

April 6th v. Boston- IP-0.2 Hits-5 Runs-6 ER-2 Walks-3 K's-1 Pitches-38 ERA 10.80


Good Quotes:

Brad Mills-Red Sox Interim Manager after Red Sox comeback win.

"I almost needed a bed next to Tito."

Paul Pierce-Celtics Guard on the notes Doc Rivers hands out before games.

"They're kind of collegey," said Pierce.

Jalen Rose-Raptors Guard on LeBron James' 56 points against Toronto.

"Like I told the guys earlier, once he turns 21 and is able to drink, it's over."

Good Columns:

Jackie McCullan wrote a great piece on Doc Rivers and his effect on the Celtics so far this season.

Here's a taste:

What's a coach to do? Rivers isn't sure. He knows this much: If guys don't run the floor, he'll find someone who does. If guys don't get after it defensively, he'll find someone who does. And if the guys don't rebound, he'll . . .

He'll hope Antoine Walker and his bruised knee gets better really, really soon.

http://www.boston.com/sports/articles/2005/04/07/riverss_message_still_being_sent/

Bill Simmons, ESPN's "Sports Guy" wrote an extremely long and entertaining column about the MVP race in the NBA, its filled with jokes and great points.

Here's a taste:

35. Ricky Davis In three months, I went from thinking, "That guy will never, EVER get it" to "That guy is the most important player on a potential No. 3 seed." He's been an absolute revelation, especially since the Antoine trade – a throwback scorer who gets better when it matters. And he's only 25. Seriously, look it up. He's two years older than Tony Allen. Of course, that didn't stop ABC's announcers from taking shots at him for the entire Philly game on Sunday. Some guys just can't win.

25. Manu GinobiliIf I could be any NBA player, I would probably choose Manu if it wasn't for the whole "There's a 90 percent chance my parents would get kidnapped" thing. Instead, I'll choose Mike Miller for the fifth straight year. I just want his jump shot for a week.

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/050408


On that note, seeya monday with a post ring ceremony post.

Friday, April 08, 2005

In Need of Some Serious Organ-Eye-Zation

The Red Sox get their World Series rings on Monday, the Celtics are making a run at Green 17, and the NFL draft is just around the corner. Spring is here, yet all I can think of is why a tiny school like North Dakota can topple the best of Hockey East in Worcerster, and why Joe Thornton is the leading scorer for HC Davos in the Swiss League and not for the B’s, and why
Bob Goodenow and Gary Bettman can’t argue with their wives and not with each other.

Though I have been holding daily moments of silence for the death of the 2005 NHL season, hockey has recently found its way back onto ESPN, for all the wrong reasons, and some of the right reasons as well.

CBA

I sat through the bile that is Jim Rome is Burning because he had the mouth of the NHL, Jeremy Roenick on as a guest. I was expecting J.R. to give me a shred of hope for the upcoming season, I mean why else would Rome have him on, right? Wrong. Todd Bertuzzi wrong. Roenick was as pessimistic about the next season as a happy go lucky guy like himself could be. He told Rome that there was so much distrust between the owners and the players that they were as far away from the deal as they have ever been, and there was less than a 50 percent chance of starting the season on time.

Roenick made a good point. The players offered to rollback 24% of their salaries and despite being annoyingly stubborn, finally accepted a salary cap, that’s a lot of money they conceded, and the owners only concession really was to negotiate a higher cap. I am with J.R. on this one, the compromise has to go both ways for this to work, not just the owners punishing the players for managements ludicrous spending in the last couple of years.

That being said, Goodenow and Bettman have done their best to alienate a passionate fan base. Not only have the fans been alienated, but the players as well, he has to be the least popular union head in sports history. All the hope fans held onto for a 28 game season was worthless because the powers that be have decided to rip up everything that happened the past six months and start over, this time their race is uphill in two feet of wet concrete.

Rule Changes

General Managers from all 30 NHL clubs, along with players that included, Rob Blake of the Colorado Avalanche, Trevor Linden of the Vancouver Canucks and Martin Brodeur of the New Jersey Devils, attended a meeting intended to address the defensive nature that has taken over the league. They were in Detroit to discuss rule changes that could open the game up offensively and bring back the style of play that produced five 400 goal seasons from the Edmonton Oilers in the 80’s. Eleven teams didn’t score 200 last season and the leading team was the Ottawa Senators with a whopping 262 goals.

Changes could include cutting down the size of goaltending equipment, limiting the goalie's ability to play the puck behind the net, widening the blue lines and instituting shootouts to eliminate tie games. As a last ditch effort, the teams would discuss an increase in goal size (Which is absolutely ludicrous, would the NBA ever adopt a man-hole sized basket? No. Idiots.).

The decrease in goaltending equipment is probably the most logical rule change being discussed. The pads goalies use now are massive, and they are lighter than the pads used in the past. You used to standup during a breakaway in anticipation of cheering for a great goal, now with the size of the pads, goalies can just lie down and will likely come up with a save.

After the meeting, Red Wings GM, Ken Holland told ESPN that the idea of decreasing the size of goalie equipment was close to a consensus. NHL consultant Kris King also spoke to the worldwide leader and said the proposed equipment would mean 12- to 14-percent less blocking area. This sounds like a good number, it allows forwards and defenders alike more room to operate and still protects the net minders from the even increasing velocity of the frozen cylinder of rubber.

It is, however, in the NHL’s best interest to simply adopt the NCAA’s rule set. I watched two games tonight from the Frozen Four that had decisions of 6-2 and 4-2. If you want offense, do like the kids and make the red line a for-show-only ice decoration, introduce the touch up rule to avoid immediate off-sides calls and put to an end the New Jersey Devil trap and grab defense and anything that emulates that style in any way.

This change would also allow good college players that don’t adapt well to the pro game to make it to the big stage. That means there would be more young Americans, that would otherwise be out of the game, coming into the league for the management to promote and end all of the talk about only Canadians caring about hockey.

Frozen Four

Speaking of the college game. Those aforementioned games were both dominating efforts, but the difference between the Final and Frozen Four is even though North Dakota and Denver were the teams constantly controlling the game, it was still more watchable than a North Carolina blowout. Both of the losing teams, Colorado College and Minnesota never gave up, they played hard, quality hockey until the end of the game. And so did the teams doing the trouncing, they knew they were on national T.V. for the first time all year, and they knew they had a respect they owed their coaches and fans to play as hard as hard as they could to represent their school and their support. I cannot say the same for most of the winners and losers of blowouts in March Madness. Good kids, I just wish there was a North American pro league for them to look forward to.

Euro Hockey

As for pro leagues across the globe, Big Joe Thornton and Rick Nash helped HC Davos of the Swiss Super League win its 26th league title, but only their second in the past 20 years. Thornton who was the league leader in points in the regular season for the regular season runner-up Davos was also the playoff league leader in points with 24. He had 4 goals to go with 20 assists. As point leader in the Swiss League, Thornton wore a different colored helmet than the rest of his team, signifying his scoring prowess. Thornton has yet to lift the Stanley Cup, but hopefully the experience of winning for a team with such rich tradition like Davos will help him win trophies with a team with rich tradition like the Boston Bruins. Congrats to Joe and his silly gold helmet.

If only it were gold and black...

Sunday, April 03, 2005

Let Rocco Play. An AL East Preview

With opening night tonight, I thought it was about time I gave all of you my take on the AL East and how I saw each of the teams playing out their season. All depth charts are from espn.com, all thoughts are from my head.

Baltimore Orioles

Depth Chart
Catcher
Javy Lopez (R) Geronimo Gil (R)

1st Jay Gibbons Rafael Palmeiro Javy Lopez David Newhan

2nd Brian Roberts David Newhan Chris Gomez

3rd Melvin Mora Chris Gomez David Newhan

Short Miguel Tejada Chris Gomez Melvin Mora

LF Larry Bigbie B.J. Surhoff David Newhan

CF Luis Matos Larry Bigbie

RF Sammy Sosa Jay Gibbons B.J. Surhoff David Newhan

DH Rafael Palmeiro B.J. Surhoff Javy Lopez David Newhan

SP Rodrigo Lopez Daniel Cabrera Erik Bedard Sidney Ponson Rick Bauer

Closer B.J. Ryan

Record Last Year: 78-84

Alphabetically, the O’s are on top of the A.L. East. At least they’ve got that going for them, which is nice. I see the Orioles hanging around for the first month based on their hitting alone, that starting pitching cannot withstand the power teams in the American League, never mind their division mates, the Sox and the Yankees.

Sammy Sosa is a hopeful addition, at most. In ‘03 he had one more hit than he had strikeouts. Last year he had 12 fewer hits than strikeouts, and was less liked in Chicago than a man who urinates on himself. You can expect upwards of 300 RBIs from the trio of Miguel Tejada, Javy Lopez, and Melvin Mora, so everything else you get from the declining Sosa is just gravy, and with the extra tickets Baltimore sells for having Sammy in the lineup the owners will be happy.

Pitching will be the Baltimore’s demise. Only two of the starting pitchers, Sidney Ponson, and Rick Bauer have more than four years experience in the Majors. Ponson has a winning percentage under .500 and Bauer has been in the bullpen until this year. None of the starting five have ERAs under four. In addition B.J. Ryan is in his first year as a closer.
The Orioles wont finish anyway near the top, but could be a spoiler for the top teams of the division at the end of the season with their hitting and a rare quality start.

The Orioles made a move to get Sammy Sosa and compete with the new franchise in the capital for fans, but sacrificed their needs of quality starting pitching and will pay dearly for that.



Boston Red Sox

Depth Chart
Catcher
Jason Varitek Doug Mirabelli

First Kevin Millar David Ortiz Kevin Youkilis Dave McCarty

Second Mark Bellhorn Ramon Vazquez

Third Bill Mueller Kevin Youkilis Mark Bellhorn

Shortstop Edgar Renteria Ramon Vazquez

LF Manny Ramirez Jay Payton Kevin Millar Dave McCarty

CF Johnny Damon Jay Payton

RF Trot Nixon Jay Payton Kevin Millar Dave McCarty

DH David Ortiz Manny Ramirez Kevin Millar Trot Nixon

SP David Wells Matt Clement Bronson Arroyo Tim Wakefield Curt Schilling

Closer Keith Foulke

Record Last Year: 98-64

We all know the Sox have the best chemistry in baseball, and have the comfort of winning the World Series last year, but chemistry doesn’t win you another 98 games, and that World Series trophy and those rings aren’t used in any aspect of the game, I think the ‘Idiots’ know this and will get to business tonight and defend their title.

Losing Pedro hurts when you first think about it, but bringing in Boomer, Matt Clement, and Wade Miller (to further our pronounciation problems) for the same money will prove to be great move by The Boy Wonder GM. That is of course, if Miller comes back from the DL ready to throw the stuff he had in Houston. Boomer’s hatred for Fenway is well documented, and his reason for hatred is what scares me a bit. He has famously struggled in Boston, and now has to pitch in the friendly confines more than any other stadium. Hopefully his ability overcomes his psyche, and maybe the Fenway Franks will help win over the hefty lefty.

Overall, the starting picthing, with Schilling and Miller back from injury, is still short of the Yankees rotation. However the bullpen is the superior relieving staff in the division. No longer is “Enter Sandman” the most ominous entrance music for opponents in the east, instead its another metal favorite “Mother” by Danzig, Keith Foulke’s closing anthem. Set up men like Alan Embree and Mike Timlin will continue their solid work and Mike Myers will keep KILLING lefties.

At the plate, the Sox are second to none. Ramirez and Ortiz combined for 84 home runs and 269 RBIs last season, becoming the first American League teammates since Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth to each hit .300 with 40 HRs and 100 RBIs. Johnny Damon led all leadoff hitters with 123 runs, which was only 10 behind American League leader Vladamir Guerrero.

Plus you have newly acquired Edgar Renteria, Bill Mueller, Trot Nixon, and all the others picking up where they left off. Of course, by nature of being the Red Sox, Boston will avoid any semblance of small ball, especially with Dave Roberts and Pokey Poke Poke leaving the Bean. What can you say, chicks love the long ball.

It’ll be a dogfight at the top of the division, the Sox should win around their total from last year and contend heavily for the allusive division crown. If they can’t reach that goal, the Wild Card should be well in hand for Terry Francona’s squad.



New York Yankees

Depth Chart
Catcher
Jorge Posada John Flaherty

1st Tino Martinez Jason Giambi Andy Phillips

2nd Tony Womack Rey Sanchez Andy Phillips

3rd Alex Rodriguez Rey Sanchez Andy Phillips

Short Derek Jeter Rey Sanchez Alex Rodriguez Andy Phillips

LF Hideki Matsui Ruben Sierra Bubba Crosby

CF Bernie Williams Bubba Crosby Hideki Matsui

RF Gary Sheffield Ruben Sierra Bubba Crosby

DH Jason Giambi Ruben Sierra Jorge DePaula

SP Randy Johnson Mike Mussina Carl Pavano Kevin Brown Jaret Wright

Closer Mariano Rivera

Record Last Year: 101-61

A-Rod has a spine of rigatoni, Mo’ Rivera has revealed his tell, Posada and Williams are over the hill, there is no way The Big Unit’s big back can hold up all season, and Joe Torre can’t manage all those egos at once and still reassure The Boss he has control.

That being said, the Yankees will win 100 games or more this season.

There is no better rival to a team with good chemistry than a $225 million team void of any chemistry whatsoever. In all seriousness though, in the regular season, how many games will chemistry win you? 4 or 5 maybe? But how many games does $16.5 million to bring in a 6’10’’ lefty that deserves to be mentioned in every “Best Ever” conversation win you? 20-25 by my calculations.

Johnson, Mussina, Pavano, Brown and Wright on paper is one of the better rotations in the league, and if only three of them pitch to their expectations they will still be one of the winningest rotations in the American League this season.

The bullpen will be a trouble spot for the staff all year though. With such a thin bullpen, consisting mainly of Flash Gordon and Mike Stanton as consistent relievers, the starters may be forced to go deeper in games then they should and could wear by the end of the year, not to mention the shakiness the bullpen showed during the playoffs due to their own fatigue.

This lineup is still formidable, with Sheffield coming off an MVP candidate year, and A-Rod in his second year in high pressure New York, those two could be a potent 3-4 combination. Jeter will be solid, and the other fringe players will carry their own, but the onus lies in the first base and designated hitter areas. Jason Giambi, the master of vague apologies and Tino Martinez will be sharing these duties and frankly, I can’t see these spots producing much at all. Martinez is near fossilization and Giambi is coming off a year of sickness and deplorable numbers and will face more pressure from fans than anyone else on the team.

Looking at the depth chart, you can see that the Yankees have Rey Sanchez and Reuben Sierra, marked as the backup for six positions between the two. Not to mention Andy Phillips taking up four spots, all third string or lower. Now, as a GM I don’t think I would want either being my first choice off the bench for any position never mind three each, so its safe to say that the Yankees aren’t very deep. Luckily for the Bombers baseball is to athletic activities as Kirstie Allie is to skinny people, they just aren’t one of them.

For the 1828934th year in a row the Yank and Sox will be battling for the A.L. East crown, and eventually the American Leagure title and a trip to the World Series, its inevitable, but still fun as hell.



Toronto Blue Jays

Depth Chart
Catcher Gregg Zaun

1st Eric Hinske Shea Hillenbrand Eric Crozier Frank Catalanotto

2nd Orlando Hudson Frank Menechino John McDonald

3rd Corey Koskie Eric Hinske Frank Menechino Shea Hillenbrand John McDonald

Short Russ Adams John McDonald

LF Frank Catalanotto Reed Johnson Gabe Gross

CF Vernon Wells Reed Johnson Alex Rios

RF Alex Rios Gabe Gross Frank Catalanotto Reed Johnson

DH Shea Hillenbrand Frank Catalanotto Eric Crozier Frank Menechino Reed Johnson

SP Roy Halladay Ted Lilly David Bush Josh Towers Gustavo Chacin

Closer Miguel Batista

Record Last Year: 67-94

The Blue Jays, still suffering from their recent separation with their Canadian brethren are still plugging away in a town that cares more about the paperwork that needs to be done in order to play hockey than their performance on the iceless diamond.

They lost Carlos Delgado to the Florida Marlins and did little to show any interest in rebuilding without him. Vernon Wells will still hit for them and that’s about it, it looks like another basement year for the Jays.

On the bright side, Sox fans will get to see how Shea Hillenbrand has matured since being traded to the D’Backs for Byung-Hyun Kim in mid 2003. How do you think that makes Shea feel? First he gets traded to a team in dissarray for the guy who nearly single handedly handed the Yankees the World Series in 2001, suffers in the desert for a year and half and makes a move to the great baseball town of Toronto, gets to play against his old team who recently traded Kim away after only 56 appearances for the club. Every time he visits Boston he must beg Theo for a second chance, even if its in Pawtucket. But I digress.

Former Cy Young winner Roy Halladay and solid #2 starter Ted Lilly have their work cut out for them, and the least the rest of the Jays could do is try to consolidate their minimal run production to the days when those two start so they can use this season as a bargaining chip for a new team.

As mentioned above, the Jays will be the boiler room attendants of the division, and won’t even be interesting to watch.




Tampa Bay Devil Rays

Depth Chart
Catcher Toby Hall Kevin Cash

1st Travis Lee Aubrey Huff Eduardo Perez Josh Phelps

2nd Jorge Cantu Julio Lugo

3rd Alex S. Gonzalez Jorge Cantu Aubrey Huff

Short Julio Lugo Alex S. Gonzalez

LF Carl Crawford Aubrey Huff Eduardo Perez

CF Alex Sanchez Carl Crawford Rocco Baldelli

RFAubrey Huff Alex Sanchez Eduardo Perez

DH Josh Phelps Aubrey Huff Eduardo Perez

SP Dewon Brazelton Scott Kazmir Mark Hendrickson Rob Bell

Closer Danys Baez Lance Carter

Record Last Year: 70-92

Looking at the D’Rays depth chart I am shocked and appalled. How Rocco Baldelli, Rhode Island’s finest is not even the backup center fielder is beyond me. He was ranked behind a guy who already has a starting spot. I am writing a letter.

Anyway, Sweet Lou has some work to do with this young crew filled with speed and youthful exuberance. Aubrey Huff and Travis Lee will do their best to knock home the speedsters that are littered throughout the lineup. The speed of the Rays have given the Sox problems before and I am sure Carl Crawford taking a lead off first would put a small scare into any opposing pitcher. Giving up a single to this guy is pretty much like giving him two bases, he is that fast.

Sad part about the Rays this season, and every season before and after, is when they play division rivals Boston or New York visit The Trop, their fans are outnumbered three to one. All the retirees who were kicked out of New England or New York based on their declining driving skills come out of the wood work to root on their teams. Good people of Tampa Bay, please show some pride in your team, your city, and your livelihood.

I am going out on a limb here and saying the Rays will squeak by the Orioles for the third spot in the division on a double steal in which Rocco Baldelli scores in the bottom of the ninth and becomes not only a Rhode Island hero, but a permanent fixture in the D’Rays lineup.

There is a long way to go. Happy Watching.

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

Random

Its been a few days, and there hasn't been an update, so here are some quick thoughts I was quickly thinking.

BY-Kim is on his way out according to the Boston Herald. They say he is on his way out to Colorado for another pitcher who is likely to be happy leaving the mile high city. Thats just what a head-case like Kim needs, trying to hack it as a submarine pitcher, with low velocity, in the high altitude of the Rockies. If he makes the Rockies regular season roster he will probably have more home runs per appearance than anyone in the league.

Related to Kim leaving, relief specialist Mike Myers is coming back to the Sox from the St. Louis Cardinals. Myers absolutely KILLS lefties.

Steve Nash has to be the front runner for MVP in the Association. Nevermind how the Suns perform while he is hurt, but they are terrible when he is on the bench taking a breather. Up 29-20 late in the first quarter when Nash sat down with what I presume was foul trouble, Phoenix managed just three points while letting the Sixers score 13 up until the eight minute mark in the second quarter. I don't know anyone else as VALUABLE as the Canadian to his team. (P.S. In the two minutes since Nash returned, the Suns have scored nine straight. Quentin Richardson just broke Dan Marjele's franchise single season record for three's with 200, causing Marjele to turn red, rather than his normal crisp golden brown. Tannest Man Ever. )

United States National team dominated Guatamala in a World Cup Qualifier tonight, scoring two, which should have been three, could have been five. The Guatamalans were diving and clutching all game, sloppy on their part, but a controlling and precise effort by the U.S. I won't lie, I thought the 2002 World Cup was a flash in the pan, but this squad, especially Eddie Johnson (9 goals in 7 games?) are proving me wrong, they can make a run in Germany.

In March Madness, go with Pitino. 'Nuff said.

Stay tuned, maybe A.L. East Preview prior to the Sox-Yanks opener.