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Alex Rodriguez, Yankee Tripper, Took More from Baseball Than He Ever Gave

What should be a “proud” day, as Alex Rodriguez said, isn’t.

What should be a celebratory time…well, the balloons are flat.

Few men leave this game dragging a legacy as complicated as A-Rod, and one enormous foundational piece of his legacy is this: He took far more from the game of baseball than he ever gave.

The man drilled 696 career home runs, but his mountain of baggage ascends even higher.

Who invokes his opt-out clause in the middle of a World Series game, diverting the spotlight from baseball’s showcase event straight to himself, as he did in 2007?

Who admits using performance-enhancing drugs (2001-03), then apologizes (while blaming a cousin, by the way) during a spring training press conference dutifully attended by all of his teammates, promises he will stay clean…and merrily dives off the high board straight into the Biogenesis pool?

Who sues baseball, sues the Players Association and, while he’s at it, attacks the late head of the Players Association, Michael Weiner?

Yes, yes, bygones. Water under the bridge. Blah, blah, blah.

Except the pattern of A-Rod’s narcissism stretched far too long to overlook at the end, and it wasn’t simply one or two missteps.

Forgive? Sure. Forget? Not possible.

Sure he loves the game.

But A-Rod always loved A-Rod more.

And so, Sunday was about what you expected. Broken down at the plate, breaking down at the podium, he nevertheless figured out a way to do what he does: He spun the story his way, saying he was happy with the agreement he reached with the Yankees.

This might have been the grandest press conference ever for a guy who was essentially released. New York has not wanted him around for a long time now. Manager Joe Girardi stopped playing him. He had become the “pink elephant” in the room, a malaprop he once uttered at one of his more infamous press conferences.

Managing general partner Hal Steinbrenner approached Rodriguez on Wednesday to begin what essentially was an exit interview. Headed in a fresh, new, younger direction after the trades of Carlos Beltran, Aroldis Chapman and Andrew Miller and the retirement of Mark Teixeira, the Yankees decided their next step had to be pushing A-Rod off their roster. So they began working with him to hatch a plan that would lead to a graceful ending for both sides.

Maybe the most shocking thing given all of the vitriol of the past is that, after last year’s reunion, A-Rod and the club were able to negotiate that graceful ending.

He gets all of his money, of course, as he should. Nobody twisted New York’s arms into signing that 10-year, $275 million deal back in 2007. So next year, at a cool $21 million, A-Rod will set a salary record for an organization’s special instructor/adviser.

“I’m at peace with the organization’s decision,” A-Rod said, providing a clear window into both whose decision the endgame was and how peaceful $21 million more and some $400 million over a career can be.

In the end, he was cornered by time and circumstances. His production began to deteriorate rapidly last August, and it never picked up (he’s 3-for-30 since the All-Star break and hitting .151 versus relievers). During these past few weeks, his playing time diminished so much that there were times, according to a person close to the club, when A-Rod didn’t even bother to put his cleats on for games.

The plan is for him to simply go home following Friday’s game against Tampa Bay, a final Yankee Stadium sendoff, then to return in the spring as an instructor.

“The last four weeks have been very painful and embarrassing and awkward,” Rodriguez said Sunday. “I’m very happy we found a solution.”

Of course, A-Rod being A-Rod, rarely is the path linear. He will have some television opportunities—the guess here is on national broadcasts with Fox. And he also becomes an unrestricted free agent with his unconditional release Friday, which means he still could choose to pursue his 700th career homer—and perhaps 714 and beyond—somewhere. At home in Miami with the Marlins?

That, though, would preclude him from wrapping himself in Yankees pinstripes for eternity, which is another part of the deal he reached with Steinbrenner that is highly advantageous to him. No matter what happens during his role as an instructor/adviser next year, if A-Rod doesn’t work for another organization, he’s a Yankee.

Given his love for the game, though, it’s difficult to not see him involved somehow well beyond next year. Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said Sunday he could see A-Rod as an owner one day, and in that, Cashman wasn’t alone.

“The one thing I’m most proud of is that I’ve been able to mend some relationships at every level,” Rodriguez said. “Starting with the fans, the commissioner’s office. The fact that I’m able to stay a Yankee is something I’ll be able to share with my [daughters] forever.”

And: “I do want to be remembered as someone who was madly in love with the game of baseball, as someone who loved it at every level.

“As someone who tripped and fell a lot but kept getting up.”

So, adios to A-Rod, the Yankee Tripper.

Both sides got what they wanted: A-Rod got the grand stage, and the Yankees, after some false starts with him, used him to help win their 27th World Series title.

“I’m wearing the ’09 ring,” Cashman said Sunday. “That doesn’t come along without Alex’s contributions.”

As for the rest, yes, the Yankees will still be docked the luxury tax on A-Rod’s contract in 2017. And including what he’s owed this year, A-Rod will walk away with roughly $28 million more.

“He gets everything he deserved,” Cashman said.

The GM was talking about the contract. But the statement speaks volumes, and covers so much more territory.

    

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Scott Miller’s Starting 9: Rangers, Indians, Cubs Race Toward History

Trading places, trading stories, trading, trading, trading…. Reactions, thoughts and takeaways…

   

1. Sacred Moment, Sacred Teams

Maybe the Chicago Cubs break their 107-year World Series-less drought this year, maybe they don’t. But in picking up closer Aroldis Chapman, the Cubs boldly made the move they needed to make to give this team an even better chance to win.

Afterward, Theo Epstein, the Cubs’ president of baseball operations, offered this untradeable quote:

“Every chance to win is sacred,” he told USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale. “So if you don’t do it now, when?

“We have a healthy rotation, a healthy bullpen, two MVP candidates and a team that has built this big lead. You can’t just take that for granted.”

Write that down, print it out and tack it up on your wall.

Every chance to win is sacred. So if you don’t do it now, when?

Credit the Cleveland Indians for recognizing that in dealing four prospects to the New York Yankees for lefty setup man Andrew Miller.

Credit the Texas Rangers for recognizing it and acquiring both Carlos Beltran (from the Yankees) and Jonathan Lucroy (from the Brewers).

Credit the Washington Nationals for recognizing it and scooping up closer Mark Melancon (from the Pirates).

Credit Miami for acquiring a couple of starting pitchers and a closer, even if the Marlins did wind up sending injured Colin Rea back to the Padres in a partial reversal of last week’s deal on Monday.

The Cubs (last won a World Series in 1908), Cleveland (1948), Rangers (never in their 55-year existence, since 1961) and Nationals (last World Series in D.C.: 1924) represent the longest World Series droughts in the game.

On the opposite end, you have the Dodgers, who I wrote last week blew it by not making a bold move one year ago to put their team over the top. When you have an in-his-prime Clayton Kershaw (last year), history will be a harsh judge if you don’t take advantage of those chances to win.

So now will Los Angeles’ acquisitions this year of lefty starter Rich Hill and outfielder Josh Reddick put the Dodgers over the hump? I still don’t think the moves were bold enough, but with Kershaw injured and Zack Greinke gone, it isn’t nearly as egregious as the Dodgers’ work last year at the deadline.

Certain fanbases have been waiting their entire lives for a World Series title. As former San Francisco Giants coach Tim Flannery is fond of saying, you don’t pick the time to win, the time to win picks you.

Some teams recognize that better than others. When the time to win picks you, you need to move. Prospects are enormously important, yes. But every season is not a one-size-fits-all blueprint. Sometimes, the best thing you can do with those prospects is turn them into major league players who can help you win, and win now.

   

2. Cleveland Goes All-In

Imagine a World Series between a Cubs franchise and an Indians franchise that collectively have not won in 174 years.

What a story that would be, and the Indians did their part by acquiring lefty Andrew Miller at the trade deadline to boost a pitching staff that already has what it takes to win the American League pennant.

For that, credit a front office that, recently, too often has been too timid at this time of year to make the big move. But here’s the thing: The Indians hired Terry Francona to manage before the 2013 season, and you don’t hire a manager with Francona’s pedigree unless you are going to go for it when the time is right.   

With Francona running the show, the Indians have a responsibility to hit the gas, and boy, did they ever. They swung and missed on catcher Jonathan Lucroy, who used his no-trade clause to reject a deal to Cleveland. But the Indians added Miller, who, at the time he was acquired, had 77 strikeouts and only seven walks this season.

“I don’t want to be overly dramatic, but from [Indians owner] Paul Dolan to Chris [Antonetti, president of baseball operations] and his guys…not just what it does for our team statistically, wins and losses, but the message it sends is that you’re going to see guys with some extra bounce in their step,” Francona told reporters Sunday.

Not to mention that when the Indians travel to Yankee Stadium this weekend, they don’t have to face Miller.

Francona talked about how when he is out around town, some in Cleveland have been questioning him about the team’s direction.

“People will stop and say something to me and inevitably, it’s that kind of comment like…’How come we’re not with the big fish?'” Francona said. “I mean, there is no bigger. Chris and the guys just went out and got the very best guy there was, and if you don’t think other teams wanted him, you’re crazy.

“So they didn’t half-ass it; they went and got the best there is. There’s no better message.”

   

3. Jay Bruce’s Nightmare Over, But the Mets?

Having served as a Human Trade Rumor for the past year-and-a-half, finally, outfielder Jay Bruce learned he had a new home: the New York Mets.

A couple of things here:

One, good luck to that vaunted Mets pitching staff now when it gives up fly balls to an outfield whose glove work is, well, questionable. Mets general manager Sandy Alderson continues his long pattern of collecting corner outfielders who can hit while pretty much ignoring defense while he’s at it. Heading down the stretch, the Mets now have three corner outfielders in Bruce, Yoenis Cespedes and Curtis Granderson (plus Michael Conforto) but no true center fielder. And center field is enormous in Citi Field.

That said, here’s why the Mets acquired Bruce, whom Alderson called “not an absolute perfect fit”:

The change of scenery should work wonders for Bruce. When B/R caught up with him over the weekend, the poor guy’s mind was turning somersaults on him. Last July, the Reds nearly dealt him to the Mets for pitcher Zach Wheeler. This spring, the Reds nearly dealt him to the Blue Jays. Last week, the strong rumor was a three-way deal that would have Bruce landing with the Dodgers.

When we talked, Bruce said he just wanted it done.

“I love Cincinnati,” he said. “I’ve loved my time here. But it’s clear what’s happening. It’s time for both sides to move on. I want to win.”

He now has a chance…as well as a very unique place in history:

   

4. Texas No Longer All Hat and No Cattle

This side of San Francisco executive vice president of baseball operations Brian Sabean and his assistant, GM Bobby Evans, nobody works the trade deadline as expertly as Rangers GM Jon Daniels and his staff. And the Rangers did it again, adding outfielder Carlos Beltran, catcher Jonathan Lucroy and reliever Jeremy Jeffress while holding on to key youngsters Jurickson Profar, Joey Gallo and Nomar Mazara.

Lucroy helps both behind the plate and with the bat. Beltran will be cool lemonade on a hot day to a club whose designated hitters rank 13th in the AL with a .655 OPS. And Jeffress strengthens a bullpen whose closer, Shawn Tolleson, was last seen being optioned to Triple-A Round Rock.

For Beltran, the Yankees were able to acquire Texas’ first-round pick (No. 4 overall) from last year, pitcher Dillon Tate. But overall the Rangers, who sources told B/R investigated starting pitchers from the White Sox’s Chris Sale to Tampa Bay’s Chris Archer to Philadelphia’s Vincent Velasquez and everyone in between, ultimately made Houston’s task of playing catch-up in the AL West far more difficult.

The Rangers played in the World Series in 2010 (losing to the Giants) and 2011 (losing to the Cardinals), coming within one strike of winning in ’11 before suffering heartbreak.

From here, it looks like the Rangers have every chance of getting that last strike this October.

    

5. Crunching Numbers With the Dodgers

OK, so Los Angeles failed to make a big move, but Reddick will help the Dodgers. And in a sabermetric-leaning front office that includes experienced and forward-thinking types such as Andrew Friedman, Farhan Zaidi, Josh Byrnes and Alex Anthopoulos, you don’t have to look far to decipher one thing about Reddick that was very attractive to them:

   

6. Weekly Power Rankings

1. August: Quick, who is going to clear waivers this month?

2. Twitter: The trade deadline, when even players can’t keep their noses out of their smartphones in the clubhouse.

3. Danny Duffy: Takes a no-hitter into the eighth and whiffs 16 Tampa Bay Rays on Monday night. Not exactly the kind of trade deadline day Royals fans were looking for, but it was fun while it lasted.

4. Yasiel Puig: His absence on the Dodgers’ charter flight to Denver garnered a lot more attention than any absence from the Dodgers’ lineup, and that’s the problem. Spent three seasons making himself expendable. And now, after having reportedly been told he will either be traded or demoted, according to Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal, he is.

5. Do-overs: Wait, didn’t the Marlins acquire right-hander Colin Rea from the Padres? And the Padres acquired Colin Rea from the Marlins? Huh? 

   

7. Explaining the Marlins-Padres Re-Trade

Speaking of the trade that didn’t quite work out as planned, Miami worked overtime to add two starting pitchers as the Marlins push to overtake Washington in the NL East, or to earn one of the two NL wild-card spots.

Then Rea felt pain in his elbow in the fourth inning Saturday, and all hell broke loose.

In a nutshell: The Marlins screamed that the Padres sent them damaged goods. Sources close to Miami noted San Diego’s turnover in medical staff this year and claim that Padres general manager A.J. Preller hired trainers who would simply tell other clubs whatever he wanted them to say.

The Padres maintain that Rea was completely healthy when they shipped him to Miami, noting that in each of his two starts leading up to the deal, he had pitched six innings, throwing 106 and 103 pitches, respectively. No problems. They also say Preller is not responsible for the new trainers.

In the end, according to B/R sources, there was a discrepancy between the teams in the medical records exchanged. Rea, a source said, had changed the anti-inflammatory medicine he takes between starts the week before he was traded. While the original medication was included in the documents the Marlins received, the new medication was not.

Consequently, when Rea was forced to leave Saturday’s game with pain, the Marlins were upset. The Padres were at fault for leaving the anti-inflammatory detail out of the chart and, as such, to end the dispute, agreed to take Rea back and send minor league pitcher Luis Castillo back to Miami.

   

8. Chatter

 Yes, the Chicago White Sox (for Chris Sale) and everyone else wanted young Texas slugging prospect Nomar Mazara. As one NL executive told me: “I’d give my eye teeth for Mazara.”

 San Francisco’s additions of left-handed starter Matt Moore and lefty reliever Will Smith appear to be two more perfect deadline moves by the Giants. Manager Bruce Bochy has not had as strong a bullpen this year as he did during world championship years in 2010, 2012 and 2014, and Smith helps. Moore deepens the rotation. And the two lefties combined will help against the Dodgers down the stretch, whose lineup is left-handed-heavy with Cory Seager, Adrian Gonzalez, Chase Utley and Joc Pederson.

 One MLB executive on the Cubs’ acquisition of Chapman, who will be a free agent this winter: “They’ll sign Chapman, and it will be something like three years at $15 million a year. They have to. They have a short window with their pitching. Jon Lester and John Lackey are older, and Jake Arrieta probably is going to be gone [via free agency]….”

 The Padres worked hard to deal catcher Derek Norris, but when Lucroy vetoed the potential trade to Cleveland, it muddied the waters enough to shoot down any potential Norris deal. Sources tell B/R the Padres were talking with the Brewers about sending Norris to Milwaukee as a stopgap catcher the rest of the summer. But in the end, the Brewers acquired Andrew Susac from the Giants in the Will Smith deal. San Diego also spoke with Houston about Norris, but the Astros weren’t ready to address their catching until this winter.

 In his first summer as a seller, Yankees GM Brian Cashman killed it, acquiring eight prospects for Chapman and Miller, plus three more for outfielder Carlos Beltran. After their trades, the Yankees now employ eight of the top 100 prospects, according to Baseball America.

 The Yankees last were sellers in 1989, when they sent Rickey Henderson to Oakland for pitchers Greg Cadaret and Eric Plunk and outfielder Luis Polonia.

• Don’t sleep on the other two relievers the Cubs acquired. Joe Smith (from the Angels) and Mike Montgomery (Mariners) don’t have the cachet of Chapman, but they make Chicago’s bullpen much better as well. Smith is a funky side-armer, and Montgomery is left-handed. The Cubs now have more weapons who come at opponents from different angles.

    

9. Closing Time?

So, we’ll close with this: Is Rich Hill the guy who will put the Dodgers over the top? Really? Maybe:

   

9a. Rock ‘n’ Roll Lyric of the Week

Nothing more fitting than this from Johnny Cash as we cross the non-waiver trade deadline…

“Boston, Charleston, Dayton, Louisiana,

“Washington, Houston, Kingston, Texarkana,

“Monterey, Ferriday, Santa Fe, Tallapoosa

“Glen Rock, Black Rock, Little Rock, Oskaloosa,

“Tennessee, Hennessey, Chicopee, Spirit Lake,

“Grand Lake, Devil’s Lake, Crater Lake, for Pete’s sake;

“I’ve been everywhere, man

“I’ve been everywhere, man

“‘Cross the deserts bare, man

“I’ve breathed the mountain air, man

“Of travel, I’ve had my share, man

“I’ve been everywhere.”

—Johnny Cash, “I’ve Been Everywhere”

   

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Andrew Miller Blockbuster Sets Yankees Up to Relive Glory Days

Standing on the grass at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Florida, this spring watching Aaron Judge drill moon shots toward Dale Mabry Highway, you couldn’t yet see into July, when the New York Yankees would hit the eject button on two-thirds of their killer back end of the bullpen and parachute into seller mode for the first time since 1989.

But here in midsummer, Andrew Miller—now property of the Cleveland Indians, as the Yankees’ PR Dept. announced Sunday—and Aroldis Chapman—now of the Chicago Cubs—you sure as heck can look ahead as these ho-hum Yankees slog toward the 2016 finish line and see a future that has clicked from grainy, muddled signals to high-def.

Somebody asked general manager Brian Cashman on a conference call Sunday whether he thought the Yankees fanbase would tolerate this sell mode, a concept that in recent years has been as difficult to imagine as Derek Jeter getting, um, married.

A better question would have been whether the Yankees should have done this a long time ago.

Look, as great as the days of Jeter, Jorge Posada, Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera were, what’s evident at the other end of that era is how the Yankees allowed their farm system to become overrun with weeds. The only homegrown position player they’ve developed since 2008 is Brett Gardner. No offense to Gardner, who is a gamer, but he ain’t exactly the second coming of Joe DiMaggio…or Bernie Williams.

Yes, in their efforts to keep the ball rolling in the present over the past few years, the Yankees wound up delaying their future. Birthday candles for Alex Rodriguez and Carlos Beltran don’t exactly lead to the next promised land.

For Miller, the Yankees pulled in outfielder Clint Frazier and left-hander Justus Sheffield, considered two of Cleveland’s three best prospects, along with right-handers Ben Heller and J.P. Feyereisen.

For Chapman last week, the Yankees hauled in prized shortstop Gleyber Torres, considered the best prospect in a very rich Cubs system, right-hander Adam Warren and two other minor leaguers.

“I don’t know if I can say there is a change in institutional thinking,” Cashman said Sunday with Miller en route to the Indians. “Clearly, there is a recognition that has to take place that the chessboard that’s lined up that we’re playing on is not the same chessboard we were playing on when I started in the late 1980s and 1990s.

“Clearly, there have been a lot of changes in the game. Access to talent is more restricted; penalties are more in play. Back when I first started under the Boss [Steinbrenner], we could go into the international market and pull down an El Duque [Orlando Hernandez] to replace an Eric Milton we traded away. You could execute and dominate that way.

“You could play in the draft with a Deion Sanders, [taking a flier on] a two-sport star. But now the draft is restricted; you’ve only got so much money to play with. And the cost of international talent is capped.

“Instead of institutional change, it’s a reaction to how the industry is completely different and operating standards are completely different.”

In other words, the game is a lot more balanced now. Old money doesn’t go as far as it once did. The game was forced to react, and it did. Not only does money flow through many more markets in a modern game that last year produced some $9.5 billion in revenues, but rival front offices have gotten smarter. Much smarter.

“If you want to become a superteam, there are different ways to go about that now,” Cashman said. “One thing the Yankees have always stood for is an effort to become a superteam.

“We obviously have a number of World Series titles, and there were years we haven’t been able to win. But I can tell you, the effort is always there—the strategizing and dreaming about how to become a superteam.”

Cashman did not dream overnight Saturday, because he did not sleep. Not a wink, he said. Talks with Cleveland that produced the Miller deal started in earnest around 10 or 11 p.m. Saturday, the GM said, and continued throughout the night.

“It’s hard, especially with Miller, because we’ve had him through last year, and we had him under control, obviously, under a very strong contract for the next two years,” Cashman said. “In his case, it was extremely difficult.”

Reality is, the difficulty should have been in the details of whom the Yankees were getting back, not in the decision to move Miller. As play started Sunday, the Yankees were one game over .500 (52-51). Toronto was 14 over (59-45). Baltimore was 13 over (58-45). Boston was 10 over (56-46). If the American League East teams were swimming in a pool, the Yankees would be the kid learning how to swim, flailing madly just to keep moving forward and hold their head above water.

That’s no way to roll. And that’s coming off last season, when the Yankees were eighty-sixed from the AL Wild Card Game they hosted by Houston.

No, this superteam Cashman talked about, the Yankees haven’t been that in years. And it’s because when you acquire too much of your oxygen from the free-agent market—A-Rod, Beltran, CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira, Brian McCann, etc.—you get too many players just after their peaks. Maybe you get a brief window of high production, but the returns begin to diminish far too quickly.

As Theo Epstein and the Cubs are showing, as World Series champion Kansas City exhibited last year and the up-and-coming Astros continue to prove, teams cannot thrive in today’s game without a healthy farm system.

Finally, the Yankees are making the moves they need to in that area. Cashman talked Sunday about “doing a dance between the future and the present” to “cushion the blow,” attempting to give manager Joe Girardi a chance to win now while the club focuses on the future. Thus, Warren from the Cubs and the acquisition of reliever Tyler Clippard from Arizona.

But all that is is borrowing furniture during a move because, well, you’ve gotta have someplace to sit in your living room until the move is complete.

Let’s just say the Yankees won’t be having guests over to show off their place right now. But they plan to soon.

“I’m getting a lot of compliments when scouts parachute in to cover us; they walk away impressed with the work we’ve done,” Cashman said. “I know that recognizability hasn’t been the case as much for a period of time.”

Now, he promised, “the picture is brighter than at anytime since I started.”

In Frazier, Cashman said, the Yankees acquired “an electric bat. His bat speed is already legendary. He’s got all the tools: He can run, hit, he has hittability, he can hit for power, play all three [outfield] positions. And he has high energy—he shows up for the national anthem in a dirty uniform.”

Sheffield, he said, “gets up to 95 [mph], has a three-pitch mix and is a competitor on the mound.”

Using their “Prospect Points,” MLBPipeline.com, in a midseason adjustment Wednesday, ranked the Yankees system fourth in the majors.

It now ranks Frazier as the No. 1 prospect in the Yanks organization and Torres No. 2. Judge, the 6’7″ behemoth with the raw power to make any park look small, is No. 4.

“They’re nice additions to what already is considered a very strong farm system,” Cashman said of Sunday’s haul. “When I started with the Yankees, with [current San Francisco GM] Brian Sabean as director of player development and [legendary former Yankees scouting director] Bill Livesey, we had started to build under their direction some of the best young talent we’ve had.

“The system currently in play is hopefully starting to mirror that system that propelled us into the 1990s.

“We’re trying to get back into a situation where we’re building an uberteam.”

Call it what you want—superteam, uberteam, whatever.

The most important thing today is the renewed recognition that the seeds for those teams must begin to flourish in the bushes—and not with the free-agent checkbook.

       

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Scott Miller’s Starting 9: Dodgers a Year Too Late to Make Moves They Need Now

It’s not the heat, it’s the humidity….

   

1. The Dodgers Play Catch-Up

Clayton Kershaw is down, the Los Angeles Dodgers are out and Chavez Ravine cannot disguise the cracks in its faulty roster.

Is now the time for the Dodgers to deal top-tier prospects for a Chris Archer, or a Matt Moore?

No. Absolutely not. A thousand times no.

If the Dodgers wouldn’t sacrifice their best prospects for Cole Hamels or Johnny Cueto, the legitimate aces available last July, why weaken their farm system now for far weaker starters?

One year ago this week, I wrote this: “This is arguably the biggest baseball week in Los Angeles in the past 27 years. Think that’s outrageous? Consider this: The Dodgers haven’t played in a World Series since 1988.”

At the time, the Dodgers had a killer rotation led by Kershaw and Zack Greinke. They had a chance to add Hamels, which would have done two things: He would have given the Dodgers a great chance to play deep into October, and he would have provided a terrific insurance policy for this summer after Greinke opted out of his contract, which everyone knew he would.

Failing to land Hamels, who was signed through 2018, the Dodgers could have signed David Price or Johnny Cueto last winter as free agents. Instead, they opted to amass depth through mediocrity, filling their roster with has-beens and underwhelming choices like Scott Kazmir and Alex Wood and inexplicably gambling on the brittle Brett Anderson and Hyun-Jin Ryu. (Is it really a surprise that both are injured?) Speaking of which, how long will now-healthy Brandon McCarthy last?

Kershaw is now 28, and he’s a once-in-a-generation pitcher. He will not be in his prime forever, and his current back trouble suggests there is a chance we may have already witnessed his prime.

That’s why last year was so crucial for the Dodgers, to take advantage of Kershaw and Greinke together, to add a third ace that would have given them a tremendous chance to play in their first World Series in decades.

Now, if Kershaw doesn’t rebound at full strength, does anybody think these Dodgers can even get out of the first round of the playoffs, if they get that far?

The Dodgers have had extensive talks with Tampa Bay, according to B/R sources, among other clubs. The Dodgers-Rays talks are particularly interesting, given that Andrew Friedman, Los Angeles’ president of baseball operations, knows that organization so well. Friedman and Rays president Matthew Silverman are working directly with each other, sources tell B/R, which makes sense because they have a good and comfortable relationship from the days when the Rays employed Friedman.

Tampa Bay does not want to deal Archer despite his down (5-13, 4.60 ERA) year. The Rays are more inclined to trade Jake Odorizzi, Drew Smyly or Moore. Other names have been discussed in what could be an expanded deal, including Tampa Bay third baseman Evan Longoria, a longtime favorite of Friedman, and the Dodgers’ Yasiel Puig.

What the Rays have are some options, if they so choose, that should bring back solid young pieces in what many in the industry are complaining is the worst trade season for starting pitchers in many years. In a seller’s market, the Rays could become big sellers.

As for the Dodgers, they continue to bank on their organizational depth boosting them through the dog days and into the stretch run, when they believe they can overtake NL rivals who will fade. We’ll see. They do get kudos for moving quickly to acquire Bud Norris in the immediate aftermath of Kershaw’s injury, but are Norris, Kazmir, McCarthy, Kenta Maeda and maybe Ross Stripling and others to be named enough?

If Kershaw is out long term, that clearly spells doom for the Dodgers, no matter what they do over these next few days until the deadline. The humiliation for the Dodgers isn’t that they haven’t won a World Series since 1988; it’s that they haven’t even played in one since 1988.

Though they pulled to within 2.5 games of San Francisco in the NL West on Monday, without a healthy Kershaw, it is difficult to see how that’s not anything other than fool’s gold.

         

2. Chris Scissorhands: Chris Sale as Johnny Depp

While this is the worst starting-pitcher market at any trade deadline in recent memory, a Chicago White Sox decision to trade Chris Sale suddenly would make things interesting.

But don’t look for them to do it.

Baseball’s raging question over the past 72 hours has been whether Sale’s bizarre behavior Saturday damages his value.

Some industry sources believe that Sale’s rant in which he mutilated the throwback uniforms Chicago was scheduled to wear Saturday night will scare some teams away, or at least cause them to dilute their offers.

Other sources say baloney, that teams who need starting pitching know what a weapon Sale is and will aggressively pursue him anyway.

The Sox are asking for a five-player return for Sale, according to Jon Heyman of Today’s Knuckleball. Texas, with Colby Lewis and Derek Holland both sidelined, is aggressively shopping for pitching as Houston makes life interesting in the AL West. The Rangers and White Sox have conversed, but B/R sources close to the talks say the Rangers will not surrender Nomar Mazara, their 21-year-old slugging phenom from the Dominican Republic. For any package centered on Sale, the White Sox want Mazara, Jurickson Profar and Joey Gallo, plus others.

Indications out of Chicago are that the Sox are listening, as they should, but will not move Sale unless they are blown away with an offer.

Meanwhile, as for Sale’s wicked temper, he is due back from his five-game suspension Thursday. But being that he is away from the team during his suspension, it is difficult to imagine he’ll come right back and start the day he returns without having thrown a normal between-starts bullpen session.

Not only did Sale rip Sox vice president Kenny Williams this spring over the flap surrounding now-retired Adam LaRoche and his son, Drake, but sources tell B/R that this flap over the ugly 1976 throwback uniforms has been brewing for at least a few weeks.

Sale warned White Sox management a few weeks ago that he did not want to be wearing those ’76 throwbacks on any day he pitched, according to sources with direct knowledge of the history of the incident. Then, when he caught wind that the Sox were planning to use them Saturday night, he reiterated his opposition to uniforms he feels are uncomfortable. It was when he walked into the clubhouse Saturday and saw those ’76 throwbacks hanging in the lockers for that night’s game despite his repeated disapproval of them that he snapped.

That explanation certainly is not meant to excuse or condone Sale’s behavior. More than anything, what the incident suggests is a need for anger management.

Kudos, by the way, to Murphy’s Bleachers, the iconic tavern across the street from Wrigley Field that fired the first shot in this week’s Cubs-White Sox crosstown classic with this fabulous marquee:

      

3. The Yankees’ Cuban Missile Crisis

So Aroldis Chapman has been packed up and sent off to the Chicago Cubs, who boldly sent a four-player package to New York for essentially three rental months of Chapman. It’s a good haul for the Yankees, too, highlighted by top shortstop prospect Gleyber Torres. In addition, the Yankees get right-hander Adam Warren back and two minor league outfielders, Billy McKinney and Rashad Crawford.

For the Cubs, this is an October move, designed to help them win a World Series, not just get there. And in the process, they boxed out NL rivals Washington and San Francisco, both of whom need bullpen help themselves.

For the Yankees, they would have been foolish not to trade Chapman, who is a free agent this winter. This may not be a fire sale yet, but the Yanks could be sellers if they follow the Chapman trade with deals for setup man Andrew Miller, outfielder Carlos Beltran and perhaps others.

In case you’re wondering, the last time the Yankees were formally sellers? How about 1989? That’s right, you’ve got to go back that far, to when they were 33-35 and 6.5 games back in the AL East and dealt outfielder Rickey Henderson to Oakland for pitchers Greg Cadaret, Eric Plunk and outfielder Luis Polonia.

Entering this week, the Yankees were 50-48 and 7.5 games back in the AL East (and 4.5 back in the wild-card standings). And they can always re-sign Chapman as a free agent this winter if they find they miss him terribly.

Meanwhile, there is one NL team guaranteed to be highly perturbed to see Chapman back in the NL (and, especially, back in the NL Central), as ESPN.com’s Jayson Stark noted:

   

4. Marlins on the Move

Miami has deployed scouts all over the land, sources tell B/R, in its search to add one starting pitcher and, yes, possibly even two. Make no mistake: The Fish are not simply playing for an NL wild-card slot; they think they have what it takes to overtake Washington in the NL East.

New manager Don Mattingly likes his team, slugger Giancarlo Stanton is showing signs that his second half will be better than his first, and Jose Fernandez is as lethal of an ace as there is in the game.

The Marlins have talked with San Diego about Andrew Cashner, Philadelphia about Jeremy Hellickson, Minnesota about Ricky Nolasco and Tommy Milone…if a starting pitcher is available, chances are the Marlins have watched him.

   

5. The Padres Reboot and Look to Deal

Unlike last July, San Diego is not going quietly into this trade deadline. Having already dealt starter James Shields (Chicago White Sox), closer Fernando Rodney (Miami Marlins) and starter Drew Pomeranz (Boston Red Sox) this summer, the Padres sent Melvin Upton Jr. to the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday, according to Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal, and, per B/R sources, are shopping starter Andrew Cashner hard.

The Padres were close to a deal with Baltimore for Upton Jr. last Monday, according to B/R sources, but couldn’t agree on the money. Upton is owed roughly $22 million for the rest of this year and next.

That Upton Jr. rekindled interest is one of the more surprising stories of this season. But it was no fluke: Upton has been good with the bat and with the glove this year.

Another reason for the heated Upton Jr. market might have been this sensational play against the Orioles that surely piqued the interest of many teams. In a game in June, Upton played Spiderman, robbing J.J. Hardy of a home run and then firing a strike to first base to double off Mark Trumbo:

As for Cashner, the Padres have had conversations with the Texas Rangers, the Marlins and the Orioles, among other clubs. Questions continue to surround Cashner’s makeup and whether he has the heart of a winner. Some in the industry think a move back to the bullpen with whichever team acquires him would better suit him.

The Orioles can use a midseason boost, especially in their rotation. As difficult as it is to believe, they’ve won more games than any other American League team over the past five seasons but have nothing to show for it.

    

6. Weekly Power Rankings

1. Scissors: Hottest home tool going right now in Chicago, thanks to Chris Sale.

2. Cooperstown: Damn you, Ken Griffey Jr. and Mike Piazza, despite your bait, I still refuse to make any more No Crying in Baseball jokes. Smile, already!

3. Aroldis Chapman: So when he reaches 105 mph in Wrigley Field, will they put the number up by hand on the center field scoreboard?

4. Alex Bregman: The future of the Houston Astros arrived Monday when one of their top prospects was summoned from Triple-A Fresno. Hey, wait a minute, I thought Carlos Correa was the future of the Astros!

5. Ichiro Suzuki: Closing in on 3,000 hits, which the Marlins surely will celebrate in Technicolor.

   

7. Changes in Minnesota

Despite their disappointing season and poor record, Minnesota’s firing of longtime general manager Terry Ryan still came as a shock.

For one thing, nobody is more respected as a baseball man throughout the industry than Ryan. For another, only three men have served as GM in Minnesota since 1986: Ryan, Andy MacPhail and Bill Smith.

It is a remarkable run of continuity, one that surely won’t be duplicated in today’s rapidly changing world. Former Boston GM Ben Cherington would appear to be a heavy favorite for the job if Twins owner Jim Pohlad decides to go outside of the organization to make the hire. Two other veteran GMs who know their way around trade talks are Jim Hendry, now a special assistant to Yankees GM Brian Cashman, and Kevin Towers, now a special assistant to Cincinnati’s Walt Jocketty.

One former Twin who has been mentioned appears to have publicly taken himself out of the running: Randy Bush, who played on the 1987 and 1991 Twins World Series winners, is now an assistant to Cubs president Theo Epstein and GM Jed Hoyer, and told the Chicago Sun-Times‘ Gordon Wittenmyer the other day he is quite happy where he is.

Currently, Rob Antony is the interim GM in Minnesota, is well-respected throughout the organization and will be considered for the job if the Twins hire from within. Wayne Krivsky—one of Ryan’s longtime assistants who did a far better job than he’s given credit for during his two years as Cincinnati’s GM—and Mike Radcliff are strong candidates as well.

It’s been a tough year for the Twins all around. In May, popular scout Larry Corrigan suffered a stroke and is still recovering.

    

8. Chatter

• No team needed the All-Star break more than the Chicago Cubs. They had played 24 consecutive days without a day off leading into the break, and 23 of their final 33 games before the break were on the road. Coming out of the break, they won’t have to get on a plane until Aug. 4. The team with the best home record in the NL (30-16 going into this week) is opening the second half with 14 of its first 19 games at home. And the five road games are at Milwaukee (short bus ride north of Chicago) and at the White Sox (during which the Cubs get to stay in their own beds).

 Atlanta Braves people are shocked at how Shelby Miller has backslid this year in Arizona. They don’t understand it.

 The feeling in Arizona, where rumors have manager Chip Hale’s job status as being tenuous, is that president of baseball operations Tony La Russa has Hale’s back, but few others do. Phil Nevin, who is managing Triple-A Reno, is viewed by many as Arizona’s next manager.

 Toronto first baseman Chris Colabello returned from an 80-game performance-enhancing-drug suspension, only to be designated off of the Jays’ 25-man roster.

 Miami second baseman Dee Gordon is due back soon from an 80-game PED suspension as well, but why should the Marlins reinstall him in their lineup? Derek Dietrich has been terrific both offensively and defensively at second base in Miami, and if the Marlins make the playoffs as they hope, Gordon won’t be eligible anyway because of his suspension.

 As labor negotiations continue between owners and players, one item under discussion is the schedule and the fleet of late-starting getaway-day games. Both sides agree that to improve quality of play, there should be more day games scheduled on travel days for the visiting team.

 Sliding San Francisco is looking for both a hitter and bullpen help.

 The Padres have spent more than $60 million so far on international free agents as a means to restock their farm system. San Diego’s system is viewed throughout the industry as having improved markedly as a result, though many of the international free agents are only 16 or 17 and, as such, are a few years away. One of the older ones is Jorge Ona, a 19-year-old slugger from Cuba who was viewed by Baseball America, via United Press International, as the fourth-best Cuban player on the market. Padres GM A.J. Preller says he’s got “now” strength, noting his body is more Albert Belle than Vladimir Guerrero.

   

9. Injury of the Weak

Toronto catcher Russell Martin stayed in the sauna too long:

   

9a. Rock ‘n’ Roll Lyric of the Week

This song is just as relevant with the crazy things going on in today’s world as it was when it was released in the early 1970s amid racial riots:

“Mother, mother
“There’s too many of you crying
“Brother, brother, brother
“There’s far too many of you dying
“You know we’ve got to find a way
“To bring some lovin’ here today

“Father, father
“We don’t need to escalate
“You see, war is not the answer
“For only love can conquer hate
“You know we’ve got to find a way
“To bring some lovin’ here today

“Picket lines and picket signs
“Don’t punish me with brutality
“Talk to me, so you can see
“Oh, what’s going on
“What’s going on
“Yeah, what’s going on
“What’s going on”

— Marvin Gaye, “What’s Going On

       

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Of Backward Caps and 9/11: Memories Stir as Griffey and Piazza Join Immortals

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Tears began flowing immediately. Like, we’re talking instantly. Hall of Fame inductions always are emotional. But this one, what a weepfest.

And it was absolutely, sniff, touching.

Careers often become sentimental journeys while we’re paying scant attention, whether you’re talking baseball, teacher or auto mechanic. The thing is, so many of us don’t even stop to realize it until you look up one day and the twilight is beginning to set in.

“We made it, dad,” Mike Piazza said near the end of his 30-minute Hall of Fame induction speech Sunday. “The race is over.

“Now it’s time to smell the roses.”

Piazza was first up to the podium, and his voice began to quiver and the waterworks gushed within the first 30 seconds after he started to talk, when he spoke of the legends sitting on the stage behind him.

Ken Griffey Jr.’s breakdown came even quicker. He started off by thanking the Baseball Writers’ Association of America, who elected him with a record 99.32 percent of the vote, and he couldn’t even get through that.

“Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball,” the late American historian Jacques Barzun wrote in 1954, and while the NFL and even the NBA have conspired to muscle past baseball in popularity by some measures, even at that, nearly seven decades later, Barzun’s words still ring true.

As the hot sun blistered some 50,000 in attendance, Piazza referenced his Italian immigrant father, his Roman Catholic mother, his godfather Tommy Lasorda, Pope Benedict XVI, Jackie Robinson, President Teddy Roosevelt and 9/11.

It was Piazza’s home run in the New York Mets’ first game back following the terrorist attacks in 2001 that provided the first glimmer of normalcy and hope for a better tomorrow late that summer in New York, and it is a moment in time that still accompanies him today, wanted or not.

He often works to avoid the subject for two reasons. He does not want to seem boastful. And he recognizes that he was no hero on that emotional evening, just a guy who was fortunate enough to help pitch in and do his part.

“A day that forever changed our lives,” he said from the stage. “To witness the darkest evil of the human heart as it tore many loved ones from their families will forever be burned in my soul. But from tragedy and sorrow came bravery, compassion, character and, eventually, healing.

“Many of you give me praise for the two-run home run in the first game back on Sept. 21, 2001, that pushed us ahead of the rival Braves. But the true praise belongs to police, firefighters and first responders who knew that they were going to die but went forward anyway.

“Jesus said there is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for his friends. I consider it an honor and a privilege to have witnessed that love. Your families and those left behind are always in my prayers.”

He meets them today, still. It could be at a ballpark. Or at an airport. Most memorably one day in the recent past, it was on an airplane. He had placed headphones over his ears for a cross-country flight. Near the end, the man sitting next to him said something. Piazza removed his earphones and asked what it was.

“I just want to tell you,” the man said, “that I lost my brother on 9/11, and I was at that game.”

Piazza’s plaque reads in part: “Led Mets to 2000 Subway Series, and helped rally a nation one year later with his dramatic home run in the first Mets game in New York following the 9/11 attacks.”

Understand the hearts and minds of America? Piazza started Induction Day by attending an early morning Mass at St. Mary’s Our Lady of the Lake Catholic Church on Elm Street in Cooperstown. Father John P. Rosson dispensed a special blessing to him afterward on the steps leading into the church, after which Piazza stood outside for about 15 minutes signing autographs and posing for pictures.

At a private party the night before, amid salmon sliders and barbecued beef brisket, the Mets presented him with a 2015 National League Championship ring for his work with them in spring training and with a special Hall of Fame watch.

Griffey, meanwhile, spoke of a television. It was at his home years ago, and his son, Trey, swung a bat. Crack—there went the television.

“Mom got mad at you,” Griffey said from the podium, speaking directly to Trey. “Then she asked why I wasn’t mad. I said, ‘Girl, you can’t teach that swing.’

“Then I went out and bought a new television.”

Families, hard work and taking care of others. The same elements upon which America was founded and still leans hard on today were repeatedly invoked Sunday. These are principles endemic to both blue collars and Hall of Famers.

“That’s probably the first time in a long time I’ve seen Junior come out from his security blanket and lose his composure,” said Jay Buhner, Griffey’s former Seattle teammate and longtime friend. “It was good to see. It shows you that this is a very special honor.”

Mostly, Griffey said, he lost it when he gazed out into the audience and looked at his wife, Melissa, and their three children. He knew he would. He also singled out a friend who had traveled 6,000 miles from Israel to be in attendance Sunday.

The actor Jim Caviezel, a Seattle-area native who once harbored hopes of playing in the NBA and is a friend of both Griffey and Piazza, was there, too.

He recalled playing basketball in the late 1980s with some of the old SuperSonics, like Gary Payton. John Stockton sometimes would show up, too, and a young baseball phenom named Griffey, who was just starting his Mariners career. And it was Griffey who helped steer him into acting.

“Next thing I knew, he had his foot on my chest as he went up to dunk,” Caviezel said, chuckling. “I couldn’t believe it.”

So much for hoop dreams.

Next, his acting career led him to the movie Frequency, the plot of which revolves around a son trying to travel back in time to save his father, a heroic firefighter, who lost his life in a raging blaze on Oct. 12, 1969.

The fictional movie, you might notice, takes place smack in the middle of the real-life Amazin’ Mets’ run to a World Series title over Baltimore. And in the movie, key plays from that World Series serve as devices to move the plot along, and one character utters the memorable line, “I will love Ron Swoboda until the day I die.”

Caviezel met Swoboda a few years later by chance, and the former Mets outfielder asked the question you would expect: Why me in the movie?

“I told him that the writer told me because you represent everyman,” said Caviezel, who met Piazza on Opening Day in 1999 and has been a friend ever since.

Yes, whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn….

“It’s weird, it really is,” Caviezel said, standing in a field in Cooperstown, waiting for his two baseball friends to be inducted. “One thing is, life is so fast.”

Yes, it is. And it only gets faster. As in a baseball game, we all do a little better when we can breathe deeply and slow things down just a bit. Smell the roses, as Piazza told his father.

“You look at the greatest center fielders who ever played, we have a shelf life of about 12 years,” Griffey said. “We run into walls. Everything is fair for us.

“I hated to give up triples. If I didn’t get a hit, you weren’t going to get a hit. People ask me, ‘Why did you play so hard?’ Because you never want to be that guy who comes out in the seventh inning for a defensive replacement.

“Would I do it all over again? Absolutely. Because that’s what made me me.”

“Easygoing nature and love of the game helped define a new era for baseball’s popularity,” reads Griffey’s plaque, and so here we are today, as ever, looking to the future while honoring the past.

Sure enough, as he ended his speech, in his signature look, he plopped a baseball cap onto his head, backward. It was another Hall of Famer, Frank Thomas, who instigated.

“He told me, ‘You’ve gotta do it, you’ve gotta do it,’” Griffey said, and score one for the Big Hurt.

It was absolutely perfect.

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


David Price and Sonny Gray Building a Bromance That Transcends the Game

Theirs is a friendship based on curveballs, Commodores and chip shots.

Maybe one day, these two Vanderbilt University alums and Tennessee neighbors will be teammates, too.

For now, David Price is the $217 million anchor in a sketchy Boston rotation as the Red Sox take aim at another World Series run.

And Sonny Gray? Scouts are bird-dogging the down-on-his-luck erstwhile ace of the Oakland Athletics as the August 1 non-waivers trade deadline approaches, though his 4-8 record and 5.12 ERA over 17 starts don’t exactly make him the sexiest midseason trade target.

Acquiring Drew Pomeranz from San Diego last week likely precludes Boston from adding another starting pitcher this month. But maybe it doesn’t. However it plays out, one thing is clear: Somewhere, sometime, these two great friends would love to be teammates.

“Absolutely. It’s something we’ve talked about before,” Price told B/R during a conversation before Boston acquired Pomeranz. “Before I signed with the Red Sox.

“I knew how they operate in Oakland…[And with] our minor league system, how many prospects we had, and how young our team still is with the core group of guys we have and to be kind of logjammed at some of those positions, [I knew] that something like [a trade for Gray] could happen…

“We can do anything. We have the money to do whatever we want. We have the prospects to make whatever trades we want. There’s not a guy in baseball that we could not trade for: [Bryce] Harper, [Mike] Trout, it doesn’t matter who it is. We have the prospects, we have the money and we have Dave Dombrowski [Boston’s president of baseball operations], who is not afraid to go out there and make a big splash.”

Nobody is more aggressive at the trading table than Dombrowski. Price knows this firsthand. The former Tigers president and general manager brought Price to Detroit from Tampa Bay at the 2014 trade deadline, then shipped Price to Toronto at last summer’s trade deadline.

In the last couple of weeks alone, Dombrowski has acquired infielder Aaron Hill (from Milwaukee), closer Brad Ziegler (from Arizona) and Pomeranz (from San Diego).

Over the past several seasons in Detroit, aside from Price, Dombrowski landed right-hander Doug Fister (from Seattle), Miguel Cabrera and Anibal Sanchez (from Miami), Prince Fielder (free agent) and more.

“Those were all the factors that went into my decision to be here,” Price says when asked about the possibility of one day teaming with his buddy Gray, and knowing Dombrowski‘s aggressive nature. “I know we’d all welcome him as our teammate, for sure. He’s just a good dude. He’s an energy-giver. He works his tail off. He’s a guy you want to be around every day.”

In the winter, Price has that chance.

They often work out together at Vanderbilt.

“He’s great,” Gray says. “He’s super fun to be around. He has great personality on- and off-field…He’s a fun-loving, genuine guy.”

They talk, they laugh, they golf, they tweet.

“I think it’s a middle-Tennessee bond, to be honest with you,” says Tim Corbin, Vanderbilt’s head baseball coach since 2003. “They come from a very similar area. Murfreesboro [where Price grew up] and Smyrna [Gray’s home], really, are side by side.”

Price came through Vanderbilt first, pitching for the Commodores from 2005-07, when Tampa Bay picked him first overall in the draft that June.

Gray followed, pitching for the Commodores from ’08-11. Oakland picked him 18th overall in the June 2011 draft.

Each entered Vanderbilt as a local star, each pitched right away as a freshman and each exited as a highly celebrated first-round pick.

But it isn’t simply geography and common alumni status that cause the two to text each other incessantly and frequently share their affinity for each other via social media.

“Their personalities are similar,” Corbin says. “They’re fun. You see them smile a lot. They have an innocence about them that has never been tainted by getting to the big leagues very fast. They keep the game for what it is. They’ve never taken the game and made it more serious than what it is.

“They’re very good competitors, but they also enjoy what they’re doing and who they’re doing it with. They’re both very inclusive. They celebrate teammates.”

From the exterior, it would seem to be an odd pairing.

Gray is 5’10”, right-handed and white.

Price is 6’5″, left-handed and African-American.

Yet they fit together like texting and teenagers.

Take the time Gray had a starring role in his high school’s production of High School Musical. Corbin, his wife, Maggie, and their daughters, Molly (now 31) and Hannah (28), trekked to Smyrna High School to see his recruit’s acting chops.

“He was the lead singer; he can’t sing; he’s terrible,” Corbin says, chuckling. “Like everything Sonny does, he thought he was really good. And he is really good at most things. Just not singing.

“So he’s on stage, there are something like 300 people in the auditorium at the play. My phone buzzes, and he must have seen I was on the phone. He texts me during the play, sends me a text that says ‘Pay attention!’

“I showed that to my wife, and she couldn’t believe he was singing and acting and could still text.

“At that point, I knew we had a confident player.”

Then there’s Price, a frequent winter visitor to Corbin’s office. One problem: Corbin is a neat freak who likes things organized and clean. And Astro, Price’s beloved French bulldog, usually rides shotgun with his master.

“David will bring Astro into my office and let him run around on my couch, and he laughs because I’m so meticulous with my things,” Corbin says. 

“He’ll have Astro up on my couch, and when I’m not in, he’ll have Astro sleeping on my pillow.

“It pisses me off, and he loves it.”

What Gray, Price and the other Commodores do is essentially serve as the sons Tim and Maggie never had. And if you think that’s an exaggeration, you should have been watching the MLB Network television broadcast of last year’s AL Cy Young Award announcement. Because they were both finalists and live within 25 minutes of each other, Gray and Price gathered, along with an MLB Network production crew, in Price’s basement.

As they were setting up, Price told the technicians, “OK, I want Corbs and Maggie to be right behind us” in the live shot.

“Why?” a technician asked.

“Because we’ve got to get some recruiting advantage out of this,” Price reasoned.

“So we’re sitting behind them,” Corbin recalls, “and I’m holding Sonny’s baby, Gunnar (one-and-a-half years old), and I had Gunnar drooling all over me in the shoot, and my wife’s holding Astro, and Astro is lapping her leg.

“The kids were getting interviewed, and we’re like grandparents holding the kids in the back seat of the Ford station wagon.

“Those two are pretty funny. They’re comedians. They provide lot of comic entertainment for us, for sure.”

Neither won that night, as Houston’s Dallas Keuchel ended up taking home the AL Cy Young Award. Price, the 2012 winner, finished second, while Gray was third.

Another unique shared memory in two lives filled with plenty of shared experiences.

Gray, 26, first became aware of Price, 30, when the latter was starring on the Blackman High School baseball and basketball teams in Murfreesboro. When Gray was in high school, he watched Price pitch at Vanderbilt.

Price recalls that during his junior year at Vanderbilt, after having heard so much about Gray’s local exploits quarterbacking the Smyrna High team to Tennessee 5A state titles in ’06 and ’07, he finally went to watch him play baseball that spring.

“He played quarterback, and he’s not the biggest in stature and that was in 5A, the biggest class at the time in Tennessee,” Price says, still wowed. “I remember my junior year we didn’t have practice [one day], so I went back home and he was pitching, so I went to go see what all the hype was about. Sonny Gray. I was blown away.

“It was hands down the best high school arm I’d ever seen. He was 94-96 mph, 97, hitting spots, throwing a curveball, slider, changeup. He had a four-pitch mix at 18 years old. It was by far the best high school arm I’d ever seen.”

Gray was aware of the big guy’s scouting mission.

“We all knew his name, obviously, with him being so close to where I was from,” Gray says. “Anytime he came around, you obviously knew he was there because it was a big deal to everyone. It’s not like he can show up somewhere and hide.”

Price says he didn’t help recruit Gray to Vanderbilt, deferring all credit for that to Corbin. Neither recalls the first time they met. Rather, the relationship simply evolved. Corbin told Price that Gray reminded him of Price—his work ethic, how much he cared, how special he was both as a baseball player and as a person. He told Price that Gray’s total focus was the team, same as Price’s always was.

From there, they gravitated toward each other.

Now, it isn’t so much gravity as a magnetic force.

“At times it’s like [he’s a] big brother, and at times it’s like a good friend,” Gray says. “It’s definitely a relationship that’s grown over the last three or four years.”

Says Price: “I don’t look at it as big brother-little bother. He’s just a really good friend. He’s a really good dude. I don’t know anybody that has anything negative to say about Sonny Gray. He’s a really good human.”

In the winter, they’re among a group of 30 or so who work out at Vanderbilt. The gathering includes ex-Commodores and random major leaguers drawn to the school’s facilities by Price, Gray or both. Last winter’s group included Baltimore’s Brad Brach and Pedro Alvarez, Tampa Bay’s J.P. Arencibia and Curt Casali, Pittsburgh’s Adam Frazier, the Cubs’ Ben Zobrist and more.

Quite a statement, too, given that Arencibia is welcome even though he played at rival Tennessee. But that’s how difficult it is not to smile along with Gray and Price, and their crowd.

“Good kids attract good kids,” Corbin says. “It’s a nice element we have.”

Price and Gray, of course, are regular throwing partners during these winter workouts, which led Price to quiz his younger colleague about the grip on his lethal curveball. Despite the fact that Gray is right-handed and Price is a lefty, the curve Price started throwing last year came from Gray.

“I worked on it every day with him [that winter],” Price says.

Conversely, when Gray pitched against Boston in Fenway Park earlier this season during a stretch in which he was struggling badly, it was Price who dispensed wisdom afterward. They talked for 15 or 20 minutes on Gray’s bullpen day, two days after the Sox blistered him for seven runs in 3.2 innings.

Trust your stuff, Price told him. Things are going to get better. Everything is falling in for a hit right now, and that will change.

“You can’t change what you’re doing just because you’re not getting the results you expect to get,” Price says.

The seeds of the trust factor between them spring not just from their elite talent, but from time spent together away from the field, too.

In the winter, Price estimates they golf together five times a week.

“Absolutely,” Price says. “He’s the first guy I’m going to text and say, ‘Do you want to play golf?’ We play a lot together, his stepdad and myself, his Uncle Rick and our friends from high school.”

Says Gray: “We already have a trip planned this offseason. We joined a place back home, joined the same place and we got to play quite a bit.

“It’s really fun when you beat him, too.”

Scoreboard? Price says they probably each win about 50 percent of the time…then, grinning, he backs off just a bit.

“I’d say he probably wins a little bit more, for sure,” Price says. “But it’s always fun.”

If this winter’s trip is anything like Price’s golf tournament last winter, more laughs—if not birdies—are in store.

“They have log cabins they built a couple years ago,” Price says. “So we all stayed out at the log cabins. They left the lights up at night; they had little garage doors you could hit out of onto the driving range. The driving range lights up, and they have these huge putting greens, and two greens in the back you can hit chips.

“Sonny, myself and some more of our buddies stayed out there for a couple of nights, had that whole experience. We played night golf, because they gave us these really souped-up golf carts with lights on them, and we had a blast. We’re going to do it again this year.”

Often in Nashville in the offseason, they’re together attending the NHL’s Predators games. Or they’re going out to eat, or just hanging out. And though they live about 25 minutes apart now, that distance is about to shrink: Gray is building a house closer to Nashville.

If it sounds like one big, happy family, well…

Gray will be married this offseason and is already father to Gunnar, which continues to amuse Price.

“He’s a good kid, cute and well-behaved,” Price says. “I don’t have any kids, so I don’t know what all that entails. But I know that a lot of people who know Sonny Gray, if you told them he has a one-and-a-half-year-old, they’d be like, ‘Oh boy.’ Because Sonny’s a little kid himself, and to look at him being a dad, it’s kind of crazy.”

Eventually, it may happen to Priceand perhaps sooner rather than later: He’s recently engaged now, too.

So Corbin figures he’ll have Gray’s wedding to attend this offseason and Price’s maybe a year from then.

“I thought [Price] was marrying Astro when he told me he was getting married,” Corbin quips.

Seriously, Corbin says, “They’re talented human beings. They’re five-star people, they really are…They’re as loyal as the day is long. It’s great. You don’t really think about their relationship because it is very simple and it’s real. It’s not manufactured.”

So far, they’ve been teammates for only one game: the 2015 All-Star Game in Cincinnati.

That could change, of course, in this or a near-future trading season. That conversation Price had with Gray last winter? Hey, man, this could work out if Oakland trades you…why not dream big?

“He just smiled that big ol‘ smile he has,” Price says. “He probably rubbed his fingers through his thinning hair.

“He just wants to win. That’s what it’s about and that’s what he’s done. When the time comes, if that were to happen, I can’t speak for him but I know that I would be happy. That would be very cool.”

Says Gray: “We always talk about hopefully one day down the road, or whatever happens, it would be nice. We’ve never actually played on the same team. It would be cool. But who knows? Who knows how this game ever turns out?

“He’s a good guy to be around, for sure.”

     

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


David Ortiz’s All-Star Farewell Is Passing of Baton to New Elite MLB Generation

SAN DIEGO — On the plane ride to California, where so many over the years have found only fool’s gold, David Ortiz gathered his young Boston Red Sox All-Star teammates and delivered an All-Star message.

He looked at Jackie Bradley Jr. Looked at Mookie Betts. Looked at Xander Bogaerts and Steven Wright. It was a JetBlue charter flight from Boston, and they were eating burgers, but it was Big Papi’s message they devoured.

“He told us a lot of guys only make it to the All-Star Game once,” Wright said. “He wanted to make sure we enjoyed every moment. Soak it in. Learn as much as you can.”

The snapshot moment from the 87th All-Star Game was easy on a brilliant Tuesday evening here in Petco Park. Though Kansas City’s Eric Hosmer belted a home run and drove in two and wound up as the Most Valuable Player in a 4-2 American League victory, the snapshot moment came when Ortiz took ball four in the third inning.

He ambled down to first base, two decades’ worth of major league wear and tear evident in his legs, and was met there by pinch runner Edwin Encarnacion.

“Go get ’em,” Ortiz told him. “Have fun.”

“I’m never going to forget that moment,” Encarnacion said. “It was so special.”

With that, Ortiz U-turned toward the first base dugout, where he saw the entire AL team had flooded onto the field for an emotional reception. One by one, they slapped his hand and patted him on the shoulder as the sun set on another closing chapter in Ortiz’s story.

But in a rarity on the big stage, under the brightest of lights, the most important stuff was what we didn’t see.

It was Ortiz’s private message to his Red Sox comrades at 30,000 feet Sunday.

And it was his private message to his AL teammates Tuesday that resonated the most.

“It was really special,” Orioles outfielder Mark Trumbo said. “It was how much he enjoys making an impact on the younger players.

“How everyone in the room has the ability to do something special for someone else. When you see someone with ability, take time to help them out.”

Pay it forward. What a concept. In baseball and in life, if everyone took these words to heart, how much better could this world be? Everyone has the ability to do something special for someone else. How great would it be if that really happened?

These words resonate loudly today, both outside the game in our increasingly troubled world and inside the game as a new generation of young, talented players charge forward.

In catcher Salvador Perez, first baseman Hosmer, second baseman Jose Altuve, shortstop Bogaerts and third baseman Manny Machado, the AL produced the first starting infield and catcher in All-Star history in which all players were 26 or younger.

There were 34 first-time All-Stars in San Diego. There were a record 30 All-Stars born outside of the United States.

The hardball times…they are a-changing.

Here Ortiz was Monday, talking about how much he misses Derek Jeter and Ichiro Suzuki at these Midsummer Classics. Jeter, of course, retired two years ago. Ichiro is gamely chasing his 3,000th hit (he’s 10 away) at 42 but wasn’t an All-Star this year.

He spoke passionately about how they represented the game so well. They did things the right way. And their absence is noticed.

What Ortiz did not mention was that next summer at Marlins Park in Miami, and the year after that at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C., and in years beyond, it is going to be Bradley and Betts and Mike Trout who miss him. It will be Machado, Altuve, Hosmer and others whose responsibility it is to pitch in and carry this game’s torch into the future.

“I worry about this game a lot,” Ortiz said during a conversation before Tuesday night’s game. “This game has a great future. If I can do something or say something to make you better, that’s what I want to do. That’s just me.

“When a player gives you advice, the players take it more serious. If I’m giving advice to a kid from the Dominican Republic, I want him to do well. I want to be able to enjoy his career and watch what he’s doing for a long time.”

At a time when baseball works hard to engage a young audience, it also remains very attentive to staying connected with its history. Maybe even more than Ortiz’s exit from the game, simply because of its San Diego setting, the most emotional moment of the evening came during pregame ceremonies. Commissioner Rob Manfred enlisted the legendary broadcaster Dick Enberg to announce from the field that the sport is naming its annual batting championships after Hall of Famers Rod Carew (AL) and the late Tony Gwynn (NL).

It was a thrilling moment, the kind of goosebump-inducing theater that baseball can produce so well. The Petco Park crowd of 42,386 broke into a deafening chant of “Tony! Tony! Tony!” as Gwynn’s widow, Alicia, fought back tears on the field with son Tony Jr. and daugher Anisha at her side.

Gwynn, Carew, Jeter, Mariano Rivera, Ortiz…the game pays its respects and rolls on.

“You’re always going to compare them,” said Seattle’s Robinson Cano—a teammate of Jeter and Rivera in New York and a witness to Ortiz’s impassioned speech Tuesday. “They’re great players. They’re great people. It’s sad to see them leave.

“That’s something everyone, including myself, we’re always going to appreciate playing with them.”

Marlins flamethrower Jose Fernandez, just 23, told ESPN’s Marly Rivera on Monday that he dreamed of facing Ortiz and that he would throw him three fastballs down the middle.

“I want to watch him hit a home run,” Fernandez said. … “Ninety miles per hour, so there is no chance that he fouls them or misses them.”

So would this be shades of Adam Wainwright? Two years ago in Minnesota, the Cardinals starter served up an opposite-field double to Jeter in the Yankee legend’s final All-Star Game and then promptly told a national television audience that he grooved the pitch to Jeter.

After Ortiz bounced to first in the first inning, sure enough, there was Fernandez on the mound when Big Papi stepped to the plate in the third.

Three fastballs?

Fernandez opened up with an 80 mph changeup.

“We’re going to discuss that later,” Ortiz quipped.

Then he saw five straight fastballs, worked the count to full…and took ball four on another 80 mph change.

Ortiz comically wagged a finger at Fernandez as he made his way to first, toward his exit for a pinch runner.

Then, not long after tipping his cap to the fans, there he was in the interview room, talking about how much he’d love to see Fernandez in the Boston rotation. The Marlins sure will enjoy hearing those quotes.

Really, though, it ended exactly the way it should: Ortiz at 40 battling Fernandez, just a kid, the sun setting on the old man in Boston as it rises on the Cuban sensation in Miami.

The game steamrolls into the future, pausing for no one, no matter how large the legend.

“It was awesome,” Bogaerts said of Ortiz’s night. “That’s the type of player he is.”

“Because we’re around him every day, it doesn’t surprise me that he [addressed the AL before the game],” Wright said. “He’s a class act.”

“We have a lot of new guys to the All-Star team, and it’s good to hear that kind of message from David,” said Carlos Beltran, 39.

It was thrilling and captivating. It was emotional and nostalgic. There was a lump in your throat as you sat on the edge of your seat, waiting to see what was going to happen next.

It’s baseball, yesterday and today. And especially tomorrow.

   

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Stephen Strasburg’s Father-Son Bond with Tony Gwynn Made Him an MLB Star

SAN DIEGO — The Master looked out at The Pupil. It was autumn, 2006, the first days of fall practice, and the incoming freshman class was finding its way, as ever, maturity not always matching exuberance. So there was work to be done. A lot of work.

What The Master saw as he scanned the horizon and focused on one freshman in particular was not future riches and stardom. Instead, what he noted was baby fat to be melted. Toughness to be instilled. What he saw was a lost ball in tall weeds.

It was a start.

The Pupil looked back at The Master, the view wholly different from the one he had when he was two. Or 12. He now was reporting directly to his boyhood idol. And he was not prepared for this thing called college, or college baseball or maybe even all that much in life. Not yet. Though he didn’t know it. Not quite.

Then came the weight room, the runningso much runningand soon, The Pupil was keeled over, gasping for breath, puking in the ice plant, heaving until he had nothing left to heave. Or give.

But over time, The Pupil would learn that he had far more to give than he ever knew.

The initial lows would yield to incredible highs. As if propelled by rocket fuel, once he launched, he zoomed straight up into the stratosphere. San Diego State closer, then ace. Beijing Olympics. One of the most hotly anticipated No. 1 overall picks in the country, ever.

The frenzy around them exploded into kaleidoscopic colors, and what The Master now began to see was a reflection of himself: an elite, no-nonsense player who hated to lose. One whose shyness made him uncomfortable in the fish-bowl environment of fame. One who eschewed flamboyance for substance and hard work.

As the outside worldmedia, agents, fans, gawkersclamored for its pound of flesh, The Master tapped the brakes, again and again, affording The Pupil a chance to breathe. “An artisan with the bat,” reads The Master’s Hall of Fame plaque in Cooperstown, but what he really was, in addition, was an artisan in humanity.

Today, when Stephen Strasburg speaks in reverential tones of the man who became his “second father,” the late San Diego State University coach and 20-year MLB veteran Tony Gwynn, these are the seeds from which one of the great baseball love stories of our time bloomed.

“It was eye-opening, because I had him so high up on a pedestal at that point,” Strasburg, who grew up in San Diego, tells B/R during an extended conversation last month. “I quickly realized he was one of the most genuine people I’ve ever met.

“He was Coach. That was the thing. It wasn’t like he was showing up every day telling the guys, ‘Wow, I did this and that.’ You could ask him, and he would share some really cool stories.

“But at that point in his life, when I was around him on a daily basis, he was Coach. He made a very big point of developing guys’ characters first, and then hopefully they became better ballplayers on the way as well.”

Soon, The Pupil would outgrow the confines of college. And when he married, The Master, who enjoyed formal occasions about as much as a fastball to the skull, knotted up a tie, took his wife’s hand and had a ball at the wedding.

Five months later, in June of 2010, the man who hated to fly even more than he hated formality boarded an airplane for a cross-country flight to be see the phenom’s MLB debut.

Now, as the All-Star Game returns to San Diego for the first time since 1992, The Pupil laces up his cleats for his second Midsummer Classic. And the tragedy is that The Master, whose legend looms over this game, this beautiful ballpark and this sparkling city, is not here to attend.

“With Muhammad Ali passing and being called ‘The Greatest,’ let me tell you, Tony Gwynn was ‘The Second Greatest,'” Kathleen Swett, Strasburg‘s mother, tells B/R.

“We loved him very much.”

Gwynn, of course, who became synonymous with San Diego during his career, died of cancer on June 16, 2014.

But in so many ways, both big and small, he will be with us at this 2016 All-Star Game.

Especially in the hearts of one particular All-Star and his family.


“Please excuse me if I start sounding like I’m crying a little bit,” Kathleen says over the telephone. “Forgive me for that. It goes way, way, way back to when Stephen was a toddler. He watched a lot of baseball on TV, and he would totally light up whenever Tony would come to bat.

“He’d have birthday parties and people would give him all of the Tony Gwynn gear, all sorts of that stuff.”

There is a picture that was taken at Strasburg‘s second birthday party. In it, he is wearing Tony Gwynn sweatbands, a Padres batting helmet and a toothy grin as wide as the 5.5 hole through which the Hall of Famer punched so many of his 3,141 career hits. Gwynn made that 5.5 hole, as he called it, famous: the opening between shortstop (position No. 6 if you’re keeping score) and third base (5). Thus, 5.5.

From the beginning for Strasburg, it was all about the man known as Mr. Padre.

The first time they met, Stephen was maybe eight or nine. His father had played high school basketball with the varsity basketball coach where Gwynn’s son, Tony Jr., was playing.

“My dad knew they were having a good season, and he knew the coach, so we went up there to a game,” Strasburg says. “We’re watching the game, and I look across and see Coach in the stands with his video recorder, recording his son’s game.

“So I went over there after the game and I asked for him to sign my ticket.”

When he wasn’t swinging a bat, video recorders and autographs were the currency in which Gwynn trafficked at that point in the late 1990s. The pioneer of the game’s video revolution, Gwynn used to lug his own videocassette recorder on road trips and record games from his hotel room television so he could study at-bats. Today, every major league club employs its own video personnel, and every clubhouse is stocked with computers for the players to view clips.

A couple of more years passed. Strasburg, now 10 or 11, was playing on a travel-ball team, and one of his teammates was Brett Bochy, son of the then-Padres (and now San Francisco Giants) manager.

When he was home and free, Bruce Bochy would sometimes visit with the team and offer coaching tips. But what was pure magic was when he would invite the travel squad to visit Qualcomm Stadium, where the Padres played before Petco Park opened. There, the kids were granted access to the raggedy old indoor batting cage that could be reached only by taking an elevator up one floor from the Padres’ clubhouse underneath the stands.

Sometimes, when the elevator door opened in the early afternoons, there was Gwynn, swinging away, all alone.

“We’d come in and we’d hear the crack of the bat and there’s Tony, hitting,” Strasburg says. “We’re all like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is awesome watching him hit.'”

On one lucky day, it got even better.

“He asked if we needed somebody to throw,” Strasburg says. “So he threw batting practice for us for almost an hour.”

Yet even with Gwynn taking over the San Diego State program in 2003 following his 2001 retirement, Strasburg was making other plans in high school.

“I worked really hard in school to get into Stanford,” Strasburg says. “There was a tournament in Nevada I was playing in and one of the Stanford recruiters was supposed to be there.

“I don’t think he showed up, and I had a really good game and Rusty Filter (then San Diego State’s pitching coach) was there and saw me and said, ‘We want to get you on a visit.'”

One of the most effective recruiting tactics SDSU employed at the time was using Gwynn as its closer. Once the recruiting process reached a certain point, if the Aztecs program was serious about a kid, Gwynn often would make a home visit and have dinner with the recruit and his family.

“But at that point, I just got back from Nevada and I was in school so it was like, ‘OK, we’ll just meet you there; we’ll do the visit at State,'” Strasburg says. “That’s where my mom and dad talked with him.”


Conversations and reality have a funny way, sometimes, of moving to places other than their expected destinations.

Strasburg was young for a high school graduate, just 17, and he came from a school that didn’t emphasize conditioning. He had zero experience with weight training.

Plus, there was this taco shop near the school, Estrada’s, and Stephen and his buddies were regulars. Strasburg loved the California burrito: carne asada, french fries, cheese, guacamole and salsa, all wrapped up inside a tortilla.

So you can imagine the shock awakening to college ball. As Strasburg struggled in the fall of 2006, there were serious questions regarding whether he was a keeper. Teammates tagged him “Slothburg.” He became acquainted with the nearby ice plant under stomach-churning circumstances.

As assistant coaches barked and teammates razzed, Coach Gwynn would sidle up to his new freshman pitcher and, in that high-pitched, cheerful voice filled with sunshine and optimism, quietly tease.

“What’s going on? Is this a little too tough for you?”

Talk about a complete college education.

“The high school I went to, you just showed up, played the game and went home,” Strasburg says. “Once I got to SDSU, that first week of conditioning, I could barely get through the stretches or the warm-up. I really, really struggled.

“It got better slowly, but it was a long grind.”

Strasburg can still hear the voice: What’s going on? Is this a little too tough for you?

“I think Coach had a good read on individuals,” Strasburg says. “Who needed a kick in the butt, who didn’t.

“I just needed to be shown the process and how to do it. That was one of the things I really learned from him when I got to college: OK, this is the work you’ve got to do, so now it’s your decision. Go do it.'”

At the semester break, Mark Martinez, the assistant who would be elevated to head coach when tragedy struck seven years later, saw him at a local LA Fitness gym every morning.

“What are you doing here?” Martinez asked, surprised, on that first day.

“The weight room’s closed over Christmas,” Strasburg explained. “I needed a place to work out.”

But here’s the twist: alternating schedules—Martinez worked out early and was finished by 6:30 a.m., and then his wife would come in for her workout. And every night, Coach Martinez’s wife would report that Strasburg was still there working when she’d left.

“At some point during the fall, he made a decision that he was going to be good,” Martinez says. “Nobody else made that decision for him.”

“That’s kind of how it was,” Strasburg says. “I did everything to a T. I wanted to do everything they asked me to do.

“Once I lost 30 pounds, I got a little stronger and my velocity started to come up. I always had a pretty good arm, but there was no process to make it better.”

That spring, about a week before the 2007 season started and with the back end of their bullpen still a work in progress, Gwynn and Martinez were talking following one practice, when in walked Filter.

“We’ve got our closer,” Filter announced.

“Who?” Gwynn asked.

“Stephen Strasburg.”

“No way! I don’t know if he’s ready for that.”

“You think closer, you think dynamic personality,” Martinez says today. “Stephen is very soft-spoken. He’s not very animated.”

Martinez remembers the debate lasting for about 20 minutes. He’s not ready to close! Give him a chance and let’s see! In the end, Gwynn was convinced; Strasburg got the ninth inning. As always, the freshman did his talking on the mound.

“I think what Coach did [showing faith in Strasburg to be the closer as a freshman] developed a trust between Stephen and Tony,” Martinez says. “And by the end of the year, he was getting some starts.”


The winter before Strasburg‘s sophomore season—the one that would help seal his position as the only college player invited to play among professionals on the U.S. Olympic team—Tony Gwynn Jr. stopped by his alma mater while preparing for the next season in Milwaukee’s organization.

“At this point, Stephen hadn’t even gotten on anybody’s radar yet,” says Gwynn Jr., 33, who retired last winter following a 13-year professional career and is doing postgame shows for Los Angeles Dodgers radio. “I was trying to get a head start on seeing live pitching; I think it was around November.

“Generally, I didn’t see live pitching until January, but my dad said, ‘Why don’t you hop in.’ I grab a bat, get in the box and Strassy punched me out on three pitches, real quick. I remember walking back to the bench thinking, ‘Who is this guy?’ As I did, I fish-eyed my dad, like, ‘Really?’ And he was already laughing about it. I knew he knew what was going on.”

Now in shape, Strasburg had gone from barely being able to bench-press 95 pounds and yet still throwing 92 mph to adding extra muscle and even more zip on his fastball. Now, it was creeping into the mid-90s, en route to 100.

His baseball curriculum was taking root, and in so many ways. As a coach, Gwynn was old-school, which meant even when the Aztecs won, there was still a right way and a wrong way to do things.

There was the walk-off win against Brigham Young, in which one of SDSU‘s players watched his game-winning homer just a wee bit too long. It was early in the season, the Aztecs were excited and, in the chaos of the celebratory locker room, Gwynn walked in and told them, “Good win, guys.”

But let’s remember something he added.

“He started to go on this talk about acting like you’ve done it before, respecting the game and winning with humility,” Strasburg says, smiling at the memory. “It wasn’t so much a talk as a shouting session.

“But he got so fired up because it meant so much to him, respecting the game, that he kicked the door to the clubhouse and it left this huge hole in the drywall. It was there for the rest of the year.

“We’re college kids, pretty immature; he could have let us do our thing. But it’s always a teaching moment. Even when we had such a good finish to a game, it’s still important to look big picture and instill some good character.”

Another time, during a game at Texas Christian University during his final year, Strasburg became incensed when a TCU batter singled through the hole near second base. And he seemed to become even angrier when his second baseman made a half-hearted dive in which he didn’t come close to nabbing the bouncer.

The kid who once could barely make it through conditioning drills now was so dominant that he became offended whenever anyone coaxed a base hit off of him.

“Stephen was pissed,” Martinez says. “So our catcher comes out to the mound and says, ‘Stephen, that was a base hit.’ So he got mad at our catcher. Then he walks into the dugout after the inning and Tony walks up and says, ‘You know, that was a base hit. You can’t defend that. Good for you for managing the rest of the inning, but it was a base hit.’

“It took a few minutes for steam to stop coming out of his ears.”

Strasburg‘s catcher in the game, Erik Castro, remembers that well.

“Stephen and Coach Gwynn obviously have something special as far as their talent,” says Castro, who reached the Triple-A level in the Astros organization in 2014 before retiring and remains one of Strasburg‘s closest friends. “Tony was one of the best ever, and Stephen obviously was turning into an elite pitcher in the game.

“Stephen didn’t know how to control his competitiveness. When he was 19, 20, 21 years old, he got fired up about everything. And Tony was teaching him how to be professional about things. On the field, you don’t say this or that to your teammates. That was a clear base hit. Just let that one go. Someone got a hit off of you, Stephen, it’s all right.”

It is one of the last of The Master’s lessons that The Pupil continues trying to, well, master even today.

“That’s something I’ve always struggled with. I don’t like giving up hits,” Strasburg says. “When he said that, it’s like, man, if I had [him] on my shoulder telling me that [during some professional games], I think I would have done better in some games, not letting little hits bother me.

“At the end of the day, it really comes down to what you’re going to do next. It’s funny you bring that up. I probably should have listened a little more. I was a little heated at the time.”


The chaos reached its peak during Strasburg‘s junior—and final—season at SDSU in 2009, following Beijing.

Aztecs home games became such carnivals that the school band and cheerleaders regularly performed, entertaining the standing-room-only crowds when folks got bored gawking at the hordes of professional scouts and media.

Everybody in the country knew he was about to become the nation’s No. 1 pick.

“It was ridiculous,” his mother Kathleen says. “Nuts. Crazy.

“It was this feeding frenzy, and one of the things I was thankful for was Coach Gwynn controlling all that so Stephen could do what he had to do.”

With two decades of MLB experience, eight batting titles, 15 All-Star selections and the Hall of Fame induction in 2007, Gwynn was something of an expert on feeding frenzies.

Quietly, he would pull Stephen aside and serve as a sounding board. They would talk baseball. Family. Friends. School. The future. He would ask about this and suggest that, often telling Strasburg, “This is how we’re going to do it, because I’ve been there and I know.”

“Tony never met with Stephen’s dad and I to say, ‘This is what’s going on,'” Kathleen says. “It was just between Stephen and Tony.

“I felt so blessed. Just to have that caliber of a human being in my son’s life, showing him the way and imparting such wisdom. Stephen still cherishes that time. What better can you have than that?”

They were special moments. And yet, much of what Gwynn was doing at the time was behind the scenes, even away from Strasburg. Making sure scouts spoke with him first. Filtering potential agents through his office before they even got to Strasburg.

“It’s really easy in college baseball when you have a horse, or somebody who’s going to be drafted really high, for the coaching staff to say, ‘This is our ticket, we’re going to ride this guy and hopefully win a lot of games,'” Strasburg says. “But I never had that sense from Coach.

“I was in a bubble, to be honest. It was refreshing because the message they sent to every single player, especially the pitching staff, was that they always reminded me that I was just another donkey.

“I wanted to go out there and be a donkey, just go and be that guy who does his job and gives the ball to the next guy. That’s the culture and mentality they tried to create, and I think they do a good job of that even now.”

The Master made sure The Pupil spoke with the right people, and weeded out the wrong ones. Played defense for him with the media. They would chat after practice. Before class. At the stadium. Before a big game. In the clubhouse. Nothing formal. Just lots and lots of little moments.

“Their personalities were very similar, and I think that’s why they gravitated toward each other,” Martinez says.

“I remember my father saying, ‘He gets it,'” Gwynn Jr. says. “I knew him and my dad were pretty close when my dad started to get irritated when Stephen had to deal with so many agents and media his last year. Stephen wasn’t comfortable.

“It reminded me of myself having to deal with it, and my dad feeling the same way. I knew then that they were pretty tight.”

Sometimes, on the way to school or on the way home from practice, Coach would stop by the office of his longtime agent, John Boggs, and fill him in.

“No question, Tony was very proud of Stephen,” Boggs says. “And I think it was because of the work ethic Stephen demonstrated.

“Tony’s main thing was hard work equals success, and Stephen worked very hard and Tony was very proud.

“‘Boggsy,’ Gwynn would say, ‘this kid is the real deal.'”

To Gwynn, there was no higher praise.


So it became official, this graduation from The Pupil into The Real Deal.

Strasburg hired superagent Scott Boras, was drafted first overall by the Washington Nationals in 2009 and signed for a $7.5 million bonus, part of a then-record-breaking four-year, $15.1 million deal.

One year later, on June 8, 2010, amid another feeding frenzy among media and fans on another coast, he made his major league debut against Pittsburgh. It was one of those few occasions when real life lives up to the hype: Strasburg fanned 14 Pirates in seven innings and came away with a 5-2 win.

Up in a suite at Nationals Park that day, right there with Strasburg‘s family, was Gwynn.

“When he agreed to fly to Washington for Stephen’s major league debut, man, that was telling right there,” Boggs says. “I’ve known Tony a long time, and one thing he hated to do more than anything was fly somewhere.”

“And he did all that for Stephen,” Kathleen says. “Bless his heart.”

“It was awesome,” Strasburg says. “He’s really like a part of the family. … They let him come down to the clubhouse before the game, and he’s on my pass list, and here it is, a Hall of Famer sitting with my family watching my debut.

“My family’s never going to forget that.”

Especially Uncle John. Part of a coterie of family members from Kathleen’s side who live in Virginia, Stephen’s great uncle (Kathleen’s uncle) had the good fortune to sit next to Gwynn in the suite that night.

“My uncle knows baseball, but he’s more familiar with football,” Kathleen says. “Tony was giving my uncle inside detail at every moment, and my uncle was just thrilled. I just wish I had a video of it.

“My uncle still talks about it, and he’s 85 now.”

Flanking Gwynn in the suite along with Uncle John was Brandon Ruddy, a former Aztec and one of Strasburg‘s closest friends.

“I still remember Coach saying, ‘Man, there’s more media here than when I played in the World Series,'” Ruddy says.

Today, there are still occasions when visitors to Stephen and Rachel Strasburg‘s home will check out the framed pictures throughout, come back to one in particular from their Jan. 9, 2010, wedding and exclaim:

“Is that Tony Gwynn?”

“To me, you want those you’re close with and those that you love to be there on such an important day of your life,” Strasburg says. “I mean, he was one of them.”

Says Boggs: “God, if he went to everybody’s wedding that he was invited to, it would have been a full-time job. And again, Tony wasn’t a big fan of celebrations, dinners, that kind of stuff. Even going to Stephen’s debut, that was something really out of the ordinary.

“But if you needed one act, that’s the act that explained what his feelings were about Stephen Strasburg.”


The spirit of Tony Gwynn will permeate this year’s All-Star Game because the spirit of Tony Gwynn permeates San Diego. Without him, there probably would be no Petco Park. Possibly, there would be no Padres.

It was only three months after Strasburg‘s debut, and just eight months after his wedding, when Gwynn, then 50, was diagnosed with cancer of a salivary gland. Shortly afterward, he had lymph nodes and tumors from the gland removed, and his battle started in earnest.

That Strasburg, Boggs and so many others still speak of Gwynn in the present tense is not unusual. Though it has been 25 months now since cancer took him, pictures, highlights, stories and memories throughout town keep him with us on so many days.

Just as Strasburg himself does when he frequently references Gwynn.

“Growing up, my parents got divorced when I was five or six, and I did all the baseball stuff with my dad,” Strasburg says. “And it was kind of like in high school, that’s when it started to become I’m on my own. And when I got to SDSU, that’s when Coach Gwynn was a father figure to all of the guys, grooming us to hopefully win some games on the baseball field, but also do the right things off the baseball field.”

Every so often, one of these “second father” quotes makes its way into the Gwynn family world, and though their ache will never fade away, it is momentarily dulled. Most recently, Strasburg did it again in May, at a news conference announcing his seven-year, $175 million extension with the Nationals.

“It makes me extremely happy,” Gwynn Jr. says. “It stirs up emotion, obviously, because he’s talking in the past tense, which reminds you of the situation we are in.

“But it brings so much happiness to know he had such an impact on life and is appreciated. And appreciated so publicly. I wouldn’t be mad if Stephen didn’t say anything publicly. I know from having conversations with Stephen how much he’s appreciated.

“But the fact that he does it publicly, and again when he signs that extension…how long has he been in the big leagues, seven years? Let’s put it this way: Seven years later, it would be easy for him to forget my father. Yet in one of the biggest moments of his life, other than getting married or the birth of his daughter (Raegan, 2), he still mentions my father’s name. And I appreciate it.

“He’s one of the guys carrying on my father’s legacy.”

There are pieces of Gwynn he carries forward with him today. One was visible last month when Strasburg visited a Washington elementary school library to help launch the D.C. Public Library’s summer reading program.

“I try to be the role model that he was,” Strasburg says. “There’s times where it’s tough to have that kind of engagement with fans because…this guy would sign autographs forever. I don’t think my patience is that good.

“His work ethic, I’ve always tried to think that way, how can I get better? One of the things he said to me was something his dad said to him: “Would you rather be batting .200 and having nobody talk to you, or would you rather be hitting .350 and having everybody talk to you?”

These words continue to roll around in his mind, often when things become difficult. Though the man he still calls “Coach” is no longer around, in some ways, Strasburg still can make the connection.

The last time he saw Gwynn was in the SDSU baseball office, just before Strasburg left for spring training in 2014. Though few knew it at the time, Gwynn was entering his final months.

“It was really hard seeing where he was,” Strasburg says quietly. “I just remember his spirits, he was so upbeat. Physically, you could tell he was really battling with it. But he was saying, ‘Yeah, I’ve got some stuff I’m going through but I just want to get back out there with the guys, back out there with the team.'”

Four months later, an off day in June and two days after Strasburg pitched in St. Louis, was when he got the word that Gwynn had died. The Nationals were at home, and when Strasburg picked up his phone, the jarring suddenness of his friend’s text knocked the wind from him.

“It was like, ‘Oh my God,'” Strasburg says. “It hit me. It hit me hard. I was speechless at the time, and I really don’t know what to say now. I remember I was standing right next to the bed. I think I went down to breakfast, then went back upstairs, looked at my phone and my heart just sank.”

How do you fill the gaps when you lose someone who is irreplaceable?

Sometimes, the best you can do is sign an autograph for one kid, read a book to another and keep firing answers to that long ago question The Master pitched to you: What’s going on? Is this a little too tough for you?

The time they had together, even today, Strasburg finds difficult to put into words. He has the memories and the wisdom, but very few physical items.

“I wish I did,” he says. “But when I played at SDSU, I was a little too nervous and I never asked him for an autograph.”

He has a few pictures, one signed ball from when he was a kid and his travel team visited Qualcomm Stadium, and, oh yes, one Tony Gwynn rookie baseball card.

“Saved up all of my allowance to buy it from this card shop,” Strasburg says. “I think it was 85 bucks at the time. So I saved up a lot of money for it.

“Those are my two big Tony Gwynn things, and they were from my childhood.”

Fitting, because beginning about the time The Pupil left him, The Master kept a piece of Strasburg‘s childhood right there in his own life, too.

It was shortly after Stephen’s final game at SDSU when Kathleen dug out that birthday-party picture, the one with her son rocking the Tony Gwynn sweatbands when he was 2, framed it and gave it to Gwynn.

“I didn’t want to give it to him any sooner because I didn’t want anybody to think I was trying to influence Coach Gwynn,” Kathleen says. “But I gave him that picture in a really neat frame, and he put it right on his desk.”

For years after, whenever someone new walked into his office, he would excitedly point to the frame.

“Guess who that is,” The Master would cackle.

Blank look after blank look would greet him. So he would grin, and then he would practically shriek the answer.

“It’s Strasburg!”

     

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Scott Miller’s Starting 9 (+5): Unveiling This Year’s Anti-All-Star Team

If there’s somethin’ strange in your neighborhood, who ya gonna call?

Yeah, yeah, we know. Ghostbusters!

But on the baseball field this time of year, if there’s somethin’ weird, and it don’t look good, who ya gonna call?

Starbusters!

Humbaby, that’s where I come in, and as always here at midsummer, I’ve got operators standing by 24/7, eager to help identify everything about the klutzes, reprobates, miscreants, cartoon characters, underperformers and dirty, rotten scoundrels who have helped us get to this point in 2016.

While the All-Stars are headed to lovely San Diego next week, where the Hotel del Coronado served as the inspiration for the remarkable The Wizard of Oz and the world-class zoo puts all of us in touch with our inner-mountain lion, Petco Park security has been alerted to not let these guys anywhere near the ballpark.

While the All-Stars gobble San Diego’s mouthwatering fish tacos, these guys lean more toward Benjamin Franklin, who once astutely noted that houseguests, like fish, begin to smell after three days.

Coincidence that the All-Star festivities cover three days? Not on your life. So if you’re seeing things running through your head, yes, here comes the annual Anti-All-Star team and the new Ghostbusters reboot, in the same month. Kristen Wiig, you’d better be good. Or, at least, better than some of these guys (and, hey, we’re working on a corporate sponsorship deal with Kentucky Fried Chicken or Chick-fil-A. You’ll soon see why)….

 

1. First Base: Ryan Howard, Phillies

There was a time and a place for Philadelphia’s big, beefy first baseman, and that was 2008 and 2009, when he helped push the Phillies to back-to-back World Series appearances. That time and place was not May 2016, when he produced the worst calendar month in Phillies franchise history.

And being that the Phillies franchise dates back to 1883, that’s a whole lot of months.

In the not-so-merry month of May, Howard went 7-for-69 with 28 strikeouts in 75 plate appearances. Not only was it historically bad by Phillies standards, it was one of the worst months of May in baseball history: In the last 100 years, among players with a minimum of 60 at-bats in the month of May, Detroit’s Eddie Lake went 5-for-61 in 1949 to earn ignominy as the player with the fewest hits in May. Howard barely outdistanced him.

And when Howard eked out a .101 batting average during the month, he avoided joining a list of only four players who batted less than .100 during May with a minimum of 60 at-bats: Adolfo Phillips (.097, 1968), Danny Ainge (.098, 1981), Royce Clayton (.083, 2003) and Lake (.082, 1949).

As it is, Howard now is hitting .151 with a .213 on-base percentage, 11 homers and just 25 RBI.

Among the others considered were Washington’s Ryan Zimmerman (.216 BA, .278 OBP and he stranded 14 runners all by himself in a game in early May) and Toronto’s Chris Colabello, who still has absolutely no idea how those performance-enhancing drugs got into his system, he swears, cross his heart.

 

2. Second Base: Dee Gordon, Marlins

One season after leading the National League in batting average (.333), stolen bases (58) and hits (205), and after signing a five-year, $50 million extension with the Miami Marlins, Dee Gordon tested positive for PE-Dees and was whacked with an 80-game suspension.

He went with the same, tired dog-eared script as Colabello and others, of course, completely dumbfounded as to how those PEDs got into his system, he swears, cross his heart.

In his absence, Derek Dietrich has stepped up to hit .302 with a .395 on-base percentage and steal the hearts of Marlins fans. Now, when Gordon returns from exile on July 29, manager Don Mattingly has a decision to make. And the way Dietrich is playing, ostensibly without those PEDs, it’s easy: The kid has earned the right to keep his job, and good for him.

If it sounds like I’m bitter at Gordon, darn right I am. Because without him, the Dodgers’ Micah Johnson was going to be the Anti-All-Star team’s second baseman. And what he lacks in name recognition he more than makes up for in the goofy injury department: He missed time in February when he needed stitches in his left hand as a result of an accident while he was pitting an avocado. Yes, you read that right: He sacrificed part of his spring training for guacamole.

 

3. Shortstop: Erick Aybar, Braves

Atlanta knew it was downgrading defensively when it traded Andrelton Simmons to the Los Angeles Angels, but wow. Talk to Braves people, and they will tell you that Aybar has lost six or seven games all by himself with his sloppy play at shortstop.

Meanwhile, it’s not like he’s making up for it with his bat, dragging along at .223/.278/.282.

But what sealed his spot on this team occurred at lunch one day in late April: Aybar choked on a chicken bone that had lodged so deep in his throat that he had to be sedated to have it removed. He was out of the lineup for that night’s game, of course.

That’s how bad his season is going. Poor guy.

Now, would you like buttermilk ranch or Buffalo dipping sauce for those nuggets?

Also considered, of course, was newly signed New York Mets infielder Jose Reyes, who has missed almost all of this year while on ice under MLB‘s new domestic violence policy.

 

4. Third Base: Pablo Sandoval, Red Sox

Kung Fu Panda, stuffed to the gills even more than usual, had essentially lost his job to Travis Shaw this spring before bowing out for the season due to left shoulder surgery. Not that Sandoval was enormous, but he made the Ghostbusters‘ Stay Puft Marshmallow Man look positively tiny.

Being that this was only the second year of a five-year, $95 million deal, one of two things must happen going into next year: either Sandoval finds religion in the name of Jenny Craig, comes to spring training in great shape and performs, or Sox president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski goes into overdrive mode working to deal him. Maybe the Fuddruckers’ softball team has interest.

Meanwhile, the Yankees’ Chase Headley was under consideration for this spot early before he played his way out of it in May and June. Not that he’s exactly scorching yet or anything, but man, his April was something to behold. A glimpse, provided by ESPN.com’s Jayson Stark:

Also considered was the White Sox’s Todd Frazier, who would have been our guy but for his 23 home runs. His .210 batting average through Tuesday was the worst in the American League among those with enough at-bats to qualify for the batting crown.

 

5. Catcher: Derek Norris, Padres

A lot of things have gone wrong in San Diego in 2016 after so many things went wrong in San Diego in 2015. In fact, many things have gone wrong in San Diego since the Padres’ inception in 1969, but, well, that’s another story for another day.

So as you can imagine, charting this list has nearly become an impossible task. But when it reaches the point where one of the owners calls out the team for being “miserable failures,” well, then, that’s a conversation-starter.

Especially because Ron Fowler was simply adding to what has become an endearing Padres tradition—their owner chastising the team publicly: At the 1974 home opener, it was McDonald’s magnate Ray Kroc who stunned everyone (especially the Padres players) by storming into the press box, scooping up the public address microphone and ranting that “I have never seen such stupid ballplaying in my life.”

Big Mac, anyone?

After becoming one of the team’s few bright spots in ’15, it’s as if the Hamburglar stole Norris’ bat. His .212 batting average and .269 OBP through Tuesday ranked second-to-last among MLB qualifiers, right there in 166th place.

Also considered was Toronto’s Russell Martin, whose production (.222, seven homers, 34 RBI) appears caught in some bizarre exchange rate issue between Canada and the U.S.

 

6. Left Field: Justin Upton, Tigers

As the Tigers continue to get clocked by Cleveland (10-0 against Detroit this year following a July 4 fireworks-spectacular victory), everyone wonders why Justin Upton continues to hit more like Kate Upton.

Is it because of the pressure of his new six-year, $132.75 million deal? Is it because when he signed with Detroit, Upton thought he was going to the beloved old hitter’s paradise that was the late, great Tiger Stadium instead of Comerica Park? Is the fact that Canada is just across the river distracting him?

What?

As Detroit gamely hangs in there in the division despite playing the bug to Cleveland’s big, bad car windshield, one thing is clear: Upton, a man known as one of the streakiest hitters in the game, is due for a monumental hot streak come the second half of this season.

 

7. Center Field: Jason Heyward, Cubs

With the Chicago Cubs thoroughly dominating the All-Star Game voting throughout the summer, it took hella negotiations to lure a Cub onto our Anti team. But through dogged persistence, the Cubbies are represented.

Across the board, Heyward’s having his worst season since 2011, when the dreaded sophomore slump mugged him. He’s hitting .233/.327/.324, and when a guy’s slugging percentage is that close to his on-base percentage, that spells T-R-U-B-L-E for an Anti-All-Star. (On the actual All-Star team, by the way, they spell that T-R-O-U-B-L-E).

Heyward’s eight-year, $184 million deal was knocked by some over the winter, but it made sense for the Cubs. With Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Co., they need on-base percentage from Heyward more than homers. Heyward’s painfully slow spring fell mostly under the radar behind Chicago’s hot start. But if that OBP doesn’t begin to head north soon, it’s going to get rocky for both Heyward and the Cubs.

 

8. Right Field: Giancarlo Stanton, Marlins

That—whiff!—breeze you’re feeling—whiff!—isn’t the air conditioner, and it’s not blowing in—whiff!—from the Atlantic Ocean. Whiff! No, it’s the shocking strikeout rate—whiff!—of erstwhile Marlins slugger—whiff!—Stanton.

His 102 Ks through Tuesday only ranked sixth in the majors (Cleveland’s’ Mike Napoli and Baltimore’s Chris Davis can strike out with the best of them), but Stanton also had fewer plate appearances than the leaders because Miami manager Don Mattingly finally had to bench Stanton to give the poor guy a chance to clear his head.

The Marlins have had his vision checked and everything is good. They’ve looked at video, taken extra batting practice, tweaked that, adjusted this, given him days off…yet, still, the astonishing punch-out rate continues. While he’s also hitting just .226/.320/.464 with 17 homers and 45 RBI, Stanton’s strikeout rate of 33.6 percent ranks second in the majors to Napoli (34.5 percent). The difference is, of course, Stanton in many views should be an annual MVP contender. Napoli is a grinder—a have-bat, will-travel sort.

Nevertheless, the Marlins remain in wild-card contention, meaning if Stanton can come out of this malaise, look out.

Also under consideration for outfield spots were Cleveland’s two PED twins, Marlon Byrd (suspended for 162 games) and Abraham Almonte (who just returned this month from suspension).

As you might guess, neither Byrd nor Almonte has the slightest idea of how those PEDs could have gotten into his system, he swears, cross his heart.

 

9. Designated Hitter: Adam LaRoche, Free Agent

It’s one thing to aim for Parent of the Year. It’s quite another to walk away from the remaining one year and $13 million on your contract and leave your teammates in a lurch because your bosses told you that while your son is welcome to spend time in the clubhouse, they don’t want your son around 24/7.

That was more than LaRoche could take, so he suddenly retired this spring. The White Sox clubhouse became nuttier than a Christmas fruitcake, with several over-the-top reactions, including this one from Adam Eaton, shared by 670 The Score’s Matt Abbatacola:

Drake LaRoche, by the way, was 14.

So then the season started, and the leaderless White Sox were so crippled that they immediately went out and spent most of April in first place. They’re still over .500. Which means, comparing last year to this, that, you know, they’re actually better off without LaRoche.

Meantime, don’t think Texas’ Prince Fielder (.217/.291/.341, seven homers) wasn’t considered for the Anti-All-Star DH role.

 

10. Starting Pitcher: James Shields, White Sox

True, there was plenty of competition for this spot. And it isn’t like Shields’ entire season has been bad. But when he has been bad, it’s been spectacular.

Whereas, it was Shields who pushed Padres owner Ron Fowler over the top with his putrid May 31 start in Seattle (10 earned runs in just 2.2 innings pitched), resulting in Fowler calling the team “miserable failures.”

Whereas, it was Shields who then was traded to the White Sox later that week, and then was booed off the mound in his first start in Chicago by surrendering seven earned runs in two innings.

Whereas, these consecutive starts resulted in this scary bit of history: Shields then went out and got clobbered for six earned runs in five innings in his second White Sox start, followed by giving up eight earned runs in 1.2 innings in his next start, and now today his ERA is 9.23 with Chicago.

Whereas, Shields also is guilty as charged this summer in surrendering a home run to Bartolo Colon, the first of Colon’s long career, making Colon, at 43, the oldest pitcher ever to homer.

Shields is hereby the poster boy for our Anti-All-Stars.

Ultimately, Kansas City’s Yordano Ventura (for starting another brawl, this one with Baltimore’s Manny Machado), Boston’s Clay Buchholz (for general awfulness), Boston’s Joe Kelly (for being banished to the bullpen) and free agent Mat Latos (for being released by the White Sox) didn’t stand a chance.

Though, it was tempting to clear a spot for Baltimore’s Brian Duensing, who suffered an elbow injury last month while adjusting his bullpen chair.

 

11. Closer: Trevor Rosenthal, Cardinals

Relievers can be less trustworthy than those twisted Pretty Little Liars, and don’t the St. Louis Cardinals know it. That’s why they are scouring the relief-pitching market before the upcoming trade deadline as fervently as a birder tracks a white-winged Scoter.

Rosenthal blew up on the Cardinals this year, couldn’t find the strike zone with a metal detector and GPS, and got demoted—and now here they are, sucking the Cubs’ exhaust fumes while Rosenthal languishes on this team.

The Yankees’ Aroldis Chapman was considered, of course, for his domestic violence suspension. And don’t forget Milwaukee’s Will Smith, who tore up a knee while taking off his cleats after a minor league game this spring. Yes, removing a shoe can be dangerous.

 

12. Stadium: Turner Field

Maybe, as a lame duck, it is lashing back. Perhaps, as a short-timer, it is bitter and nasty.

As a home park goes, Turner Field is about as hospitable to the Atlanta Braves as a severe sunburn. Atlanta has the worst home record in the majors at 13-34. And that’s an improvement. At the time of Fredi Gonzalez’s firing as manager, the Braves were 2-17 at home.

Originally built for the 1996 Summer Olympics, Turner Field—which hosted the 1999 World Series (an Atlanta loss to the Yankees) and the 2000 All-Star Game (where the MLB All-Century Team was unveiled)—gets a gold medal in sticking it to the Braves this year.

Also considered was Chase Field, where the Arizona Diamondbacks couldn’t win if they acquired Clayton Kershaw to go along with Zack Greinke. The Snakes were 15-31 at home through Tuesday night’s game. Clearly, the venom has been removed.

 

13. Virus: Zika

Booo! C’mon, Zika, don’t you think the world has enough issues? The threat of contracting this virus was a serious enough concern for the players union this year that MLB canceled a series that was supposed to be played in Puerto Rico in May between the Pittsburgh Pirates and Miami Marlins. Instead, the clubs played it in Miami in an effort to steer clear of the virus.

 

14. Rock ‘n’ Roll Lyric of the Week:

“Kiss a little baby

“Give the world a smile

“If you take an inch

“Give ’em back a mile

“‘Cause if you lie like a rug

“And you don’t give a damn

“You’re never gonna be

“As happy as a clam

“So I’m sitting in a hotel

“Trying to write a song

“My head is just as empty

“As the day is long

“Why it’s clear as a bell

“I should have gone to school

“I’d be wise as an owl

“Instead of stubborn as a mule”

— John Prine, “It’s a Big Old Goofy World

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Scott Miller’s Starting 9: Struggling Yankees May Still Have Big Say in Playoffs

Wondering what kind of world we’re living in when Cleveland is a championship city and the Miami Marlins surge ahead of the New York Mets in the NL East…

 

1. Why the Yankees Could Influence the Cubs and Nationals in October

In May, the Chicago Cubs walked reigning National League MVP Bryce Harper a Big Gulp-sized 13 times (in 19 plate appearances) in a four-game series, including six times in the 13-inning series finale.

Last Wednesday, the two teams played a fascinating 12-inning game in which Cubs closer Hector Rondon blew a bottom-of-the-ninth save opportunity after Nationals setup man Oliver Perez blew a top-of-the-ninth save opportunity.

Each of those extra-inning games was chock full of meaning as the NL’s two best clubs this side of San Francisco attempt to infuse the 2016 season with the word “epic.”

The Nationals last Monday placed closer Jonathan Papelbon (intercostal strain) on the disabled list for the first time in his career. At the time of the move, Papelbon, 35, had 16 saves while the rest of the Nationals’ bullpen had combined for a grand total of 18 career big league saves.

The consensus regarding the Cubs is their Achilles’ heel, if there is one, is located in their bullpen, where Pedro Strop, Justin Grimm, Travis Wood, Trevor Cahill and Clayton Richard have been good but not dominant in getting the ball to Rondon.

Little more than a month ahead of the Aug. 1 non-waiver trade deadline, that’s where the Yankees come in.

Specifically, closer Aroldis Chapman and setup man Andrew Miller.

In a trade market that’s still taking shape but is expected to be tepid at best, Chapman and Miller, should the Yankees choose to make them available, are two clear game-changers.

At 34-36 after losing at home Tuesday to Colorado, the Yankees aren’t exactly looking like contenders. That only increases the likelihood of them starting to deal.

Chapman is a free agent this winter, so barring either a contract extension or contention (or both), there is a good chance the Yankees will make him available. Miller is in the second season of a four-year, $36 million deal that pays him $9 million annually.

Look no further than that 12-inning game between the Cubs and Nats last Wednesday in D.C., to see why both teams are likely to be interested.

Perez, a lefty, served up a two-run homer to the Cubs’ Anthony Rizzo in the top of the ninth to turn a 2-1 Washington lead into a 3-2 deficit. Rondon then issued a leadoff walk to Harper to start the bottom of the ninth and, three batters later, an RBI single to Wilson Ramos to make it 3-3 and send the game into extra innings. The Nats eventually won 5-4.

It was dramatic, and it was telling.

“I got a lot of calls, a lot of text messages, from people telling me that was the best game they’ve ever seen,” says Nationals manager Dusty Baker, 67, who has been playing or managing in the majors for the better part of the past five decades.

“If you weren’t a baseball fan, you became one that night.”

Or, you could become one in October, if what more and more looks like an inevitable collision course between these two clubs happens.

“We’ve never been crazy about a bullpen-by-committee,” Baker says. “That rarely works. So we’re going to come up with some semblance of an everyday-type situation.”

For now, the Nationals are going with Shawn Kelley as their closer. Maybe that works out just fine, but with only six career saves (including two in the past week), he’s untested.

Acquiring Chapman, who closed for Baker in Cincinnati, would be a dream scenario.   

The Cubs, meanwhile, know that this is their best chance to break their century-old World Series drought, and they will be aggressive in adding whatever parts club president Theo Epstein and general manager Jed Hoyer think they need.

Already, scouts are wondering if a package with injured slugger Kyle Schwarber as a centerpiece could help the Cubs land both Chapman and Miller in what would be a midsummer blockbuster. And by the way, don’t forget the Cubs signed veteran Joe Nathan, who is expected to return following Tommy John ligament surgery sometime in July.

Then there’s Harper. He immediately went into the deepest “slump” of his career after the walkfest in Chicago last month, and when he homered in San Diego last Thursday, it was his first since May 28. Though he is showing signs of breaking out of it over the past several days, having hit safely in 12 of his past 16 games through Tuesday night’s game in Los Angeles. During that stretch, he’s 19-for-61 with two doubles, two homers, nine RBI, eight walks and 10 runs scored.

Undoubtedly, he’s learned a few things, too. On cue, Nationals rivals cribbed the Cubs’ strategy of walking Harper and have thrown more out-of-the-strike-zone pitches to him ever since.

Harper has been patient, leading the NL in walks, but he could be even more patient.

What he’s looking for at the plate remains the same: “Balls I can crush.”

That is pretty much the mentality of both the Cubs and Nationals, as two very good teams set sail through the hot summer toward what each hopes will be a highly memorable autumn.

 

2. The Rose That Is Ichiro

Say this: When Ichiro Suzuki ripped a double to right field in San Diego last Wednesday for combined hit No. 4,257 in Japanese and Major League Baseball, it was a very cool moment.

They threw the ball out of play, the fans rose and gave the legend a standing ovation. It was a nice moment to celebrate.

But look, Pete Rose remains the all-time “Hit King.” There is no way you add Ichiro’s hits in Japan and MLB and try to denigrate Rose.

It’s like comparing Chryslers and Subarus. No way Ichiro’s combined hits compare with Rose.

That said, “Charlie Hustle” is lucky Ichiro spent nine full seasons in Japan before signing with the Seattle Mariners in 2001. Had Ichiro come to the United States sooner, Rose would be in serious trouble.

But Ichiro didn’t, and Rose isn’t.

So while Rose’s quip to Bob Nightengale of USA Today last week was highly entertaining (“It sounds like in Japan they’re trying to make me the Hit Queen”), he also could have at least lobbed some praise Ichiro’s way. Sadly, he didn’t.

“There are too many guys that fail here, and then become household names there, like Tuffy Rhodes,” Rose said, referring to Rhodes washing out in the States yet tying the Japanese record by smashing 55 home runs there in 2001. “It has something to do with the caliber of personnel.”

Talk to any scout who is an expert in international ball, and he will tell you the Japanese League ranks somewhere between Double-A and maybe just a wee bit above Triple-A on the MLB scale. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t all-timers like Ichiro who play over there, and it doesn’t mean Rose should be the one to point out the difference between Japan and MLB.

It’s too bad, because it becomes another clumsy moment for Rose in a lifetime full of them.

Leave it to the philosophical Ichiro to slyly put Rose in his place, which he did while speaking after the game in San Diego.

“I hope that one day…somebody like a Derek Jeter would challenge Mr. Rose’s record and be able to pass him,” Ichiro said through his interpreter. “Somebody that played the game the right way.”

Cool moment before the game: John Boggs, who was the late Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn’s longtime agent, came bearing a gift for Ichiro—an autographed Gwynn bat.

 

3. Fast Times with Mr. Hand

Ever since his major league debut with the Marlins in 2011, pitcher Brad Hand has been something of a Twitter cult hero.

Every time he’s summoned into a game, people of a certain age are quick with an, “Aloha, Mr. Hand.”

This, of course, is a reference to the 1982 film Fast Times at Ridgemont High and a line uttered by Sean Penn, who was legendary in the role of surfer dude Jeff Spicoli. It was directed to a certain teacher whom Penn’s character antagonized, Mr. (Arnold) Hand, played by Ray Walston.

Brad Hand has heard it for all six years he’s been in the major leagues. Heard it from teammates, opponents, coaches, writers, scouts, executives and, yes, on Twitter.

And guess what? He still has never seen the movie.

“Everybody always brings it up to me,” says Hand, now in San Diego’s bullpen after the Padres acquired him in early April. “I’ve never seen the movie start to finish. I’ve seen bits and pieces of the movie.

“Some of the lines are lost on me. The ‘Hello, Mr. Hand,’ I get.”

Well, sort of. It’s “Aloha,” not “Hello.”

Right after the Padres acquired him, they played in Philadelphia, and San Diego pitching coach Darren Balsley sidled up to Hand in the Citizens Bank Park outfield to get to know him a bit.

“He used the pizza joke,” Padres reliever Brandon Maurer says, chuckling. “‘If you’re here and I’m here, doesn’t that make it our time?'”

Says Balsley: “He had no idea what I was talking about. Then I dropped the ‘Aloha, Mr. Hand’ on him and he did. But I kept saying ‘this is our time,’ and he just looked at me.

“I thought later, ‘He must think I’m weird.'”

Hand owns a copy of the DVD because when he pitched at Double-A Jacksonville in 2011, one of the groundskeepers was obsessed with the movie, kept mentioning it and finally gave him his own copy.

“He loved that movie,” Hand says. “He quoted it nonstop.”

Yet the reliever still hasn’t watched the entire thing.

He acknowledges the name “Hand” is unusual. But he hasn’t exactly researched his ancestry.

“I don’t even know what nationality the name is,” he says. “I’m a little Swedish, I think.”

So now Balsley is on a mission.

“Like, four of the pitchers [on our staff] have never seen it,” he says. “I’m going to get a copy of the movie and make them all sit down and watch it one day this season.

“It’s a classic.”

 

4. It Pays to Not Play in Boston

Exhibit A regarding how large-market clubs can make financial mistakes and wash them away, while smaller-market clubs (think San Diego with Matt Kemp and Melvin Upton Jr. or Cincinnati with Joey Votto) don’t have any financial wiggle room once they commit the hefty bucks:

 

5. Giancarlo Stanton and the Bench

Look out for the Marlins. They have won seven of their past 12 games through Tuesday, moved within easy reach of the Mets in the NL East and, as of Wednesday, are one game out of an NL wild-card spot…and they’re doing all of this before slugger Giancarlo Stanton gets hot.

And you know he will get hot. He’s too good not to. But so far this year, he’s struck out in an incredible 33.7 percent of his plate appearances while staggering along at .211/.311/.427 with 13 homers and 32 RBI.

That’s the third-highest whiff rate among qualifiers in the majors this year, according to FanGraphs. Heading into Wednesday, Tampa Bay’s Steven Souza Jr. led the majors by fanning in 35.3 percent of his plate appearances, Cleveland’s Mike Napoli was next at 34.9 percent, followed by Stanton and Colorado’s Trevor Story (33.3 percent) and Detroit’s Justin Upton (33.0 percent).

The Marlins say Stanton’s vision has been checked, and everything is fine. Manager Don Mattingly benched him last Monday in San Diego and again on Wednesday. The manager said he was told when he took the job that there would be a couple of times each season when Stanton is struggling and begins pressing, and that a day on the bench would probably do him some good.

Mattingly thought about giving Stanton a day off in Arizona, preceding the San Diego series, but decided the dry desert air beneficial to hitters (and facing two lefties, Patrick Corbin and Robbie Ray) might help him.

As things turned out, Stanton went 1-for-10 in Arizona with four strikeouts, leading Mattingly to joke he should have gone with his instinct and given Stanton a day off.

 

6. Weekly Power Rankings

1. Summer Solstice: Longest day of the year was Monday. Of course, the Seattle Mariners and Detroit Tigers, who played a 12-inning game that went four hours and 29 minutes, could have told you that. (Justin Upton’s homer won it for the Tigers, 8-7).

2. Cleveland: Cavaliers win the NBA title, the Indians are in first place in the AL Central and a new exhibit, “Louder Than Words: Rock, Power and Politics” just opened at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum that will coincide with next month’s Republican National Convention. Clearly, Cleveland is the place to be this summer (or, ahem, not, depending on one’s politics).

3. Michael Saunders: The Toronto outfielder blasted three homers and collected eight RBI in Friday’s win over Baltimore. Teammate Jose Bautista is still confused as to why Saunders never flipped his bat.

4. Texas Rangers: They own the AL’s best record at 46-26, have gone 36-16 since April 25, 15-5 in the month of June, and are off to their best 72-game start in franchise history.

5. Ghostbusters: Everything you need to know about Milwaukee’s Pfister and St. Petersburg’s Renaissance Vinoy and visiting teams who stay there swearing they’re the two most haunted hotels in the majors. Or…maybe it’s just a reboot of the classic 1984 flick? Opens July 15

 

7. The Key to a Tight Defense in Texas Is….

Communication. Or, on the left side of the infield with Adrian Beltre and Elvis Andrus, it looks more like negotiation. Take a look at how the pros do it:

 

8. Chatter

• More Clayton Kershaw ridiculousness: The Dodgers ace had more complete-game shutouts in the month of May (three) than walks (two).

 On the other hand, the Chicago White Sox have yet to begin receiving returns from James Shields, who has been awful (and that’s being charitable). Shields was clobbered by Cleveland on Saturday, surrendering eight runs and seven hits in just 1.2 innings. In three starts for the Sox, he has been torched for 21 earned runs in only 8.2 innings. Moreover, in his consecutive starts for San Diego on May 31 and for the White Sox on June 8, his teams used position players in mop-up relief roles (Christian Bethancourt and Alexi Amarista in San Diego, J.B. Shuck for the White Sox). According to STATS, that hasn’t happened since 1989 and has only occurred twice since 1971.

 Underrated Pitcher of the Year: Texas starter Colby Lewis is 6-1 with a 3.21 ERA, and the Rangers are 10-5 in his 15 starts.

 Earlier this month, Bob Nightengale of USA Today reported the San Francisco Giants have investigated the possibility of acquiring Milwaukee outfielder Ryan Braun, who would be a perfect fit with Hunter Pence out an estimated eight weeks with a torn hamstring. The Giants, though, do not have a history of big expenditures at the trade deadline, and Braun is owed roughly $86 million through 2020.

 The Giants see an opportunity to separate themselves from the rest of a very weak NL West right now and are seizing it: San Francisco ran its winning streak to eight in a row into this week. The Giants are playing so well, in fact, that there isn’t much incentive for ownership to free up cash to go get a temporary replacement for Pence.

 Where Braun fits perfectly is in Cleveland, where the Indians and manager Terry Francona are desperate for offense to go with very good pitching. Indians right fielders (Lonnie Chisenhall, currently) are tied for 12th in the AL with eight homers, 11th with only 35 RBI and 12th with a .410 slugging percentage, per FanGraphs.

 Even Matt Kemp, whom the Padres are working hard to unload, would fit well in Cleveland. As Kemp’s defense deteriorates, he is the quintessential candidate to finish his career in an AL city where he can DH. However, the Padres still owe him about $75 million.

 The Kansas City Royals are a whopping 25-8 at home, which is the best home record in baseball. But they’re just 13-24 on the road.

 Remember the Philadelphia Phillies’ surprisingly good start? Monday’s loss to Arizona completed an 0-6 homestand for the Phils—their first winless homestand of six games or more since September 1964.

 The Padres scooped up veteran right-hander Edwin Jackson late last week when Jeremy Guthrie opted out of his contract at San Diego’s Triple-A El Paso affiliate. Jackson isn’t expected to pitch in the majors in the near future, but with Tyson Ross and Andrew Cashner on the disabled list and some untested starters in the majors, San Diego needs organizational depth. Currently, none of the five starters in the Padres rotation have ever pitched as many as 100 innings in a major league season, let alone 200.

 Rest in peace, Bob Harrison, the longtime scout most famous for signing Ken Griffey Jr. Harrison died Monday at 95.

 

9. Nunsense and the Phillies

These are not the nuns I had for teachers in junior high school. Those nuns yanked my hair. Rapped my knuckles. Buried me with homework.

Wait, these aren’t real nuns?

 

9a. Rock ‘n’ Roll Lyric of the Week

Ah, Ichiro Suzuki, who, at 42, is swinging it like he’s 22. A touch of gray suits him, anyway…

“I know the rent is in arrears

“The dog has not been fed in years

“It’s even worse than it appears

“But it’s all right

“Cows giving kerosene

“Kid can’t read at seventeen

“The words he knows are all obscene

“But it’s all right

“I will get by, I will get by

“I will get by, I will survive”

— Grateful Dead, “Touch of Grey”

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball. 

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