Tag: AL East

Mikie Mahtook Injury: Updates on Rays OF’s Hand and Return

The Tampa Bay Rays announced Monday night that outfielder Mikie Mahtook suffered a fractured left hand in their 7-4 defeat to the Cleveland Indians

Continue for updates.


Mahtook Placed on 15-Day DL

Tuesday, June 21

Mahtook injured his hand after getting hit by a pitch from Indians starting pitcher Josh Tomlin in the top of the second inning. He briefly remained in the game before being replaced by Taylor Motter in right field in the bottom of the third.

The Rays announced Tuesday they placed Mahtook on the 15-day disabled list, with Nick Franklin taking his spot on the active roster.

The injury comes at a terrible time for Tampa Bay. The team already has three outfielders—Brandon Guyer, Kevin Kiermaier and Steven Souza Jr.—on the 15-day disabled list. The Rays are also in the midst of a five-game losing streak. Baseball Prospectus gives them an 11.2 percent chance of reaching the postseason.

“We’re shaking our heads,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said, per the Associated Press and ESPN.com. “It’s a frustrating time right now, there’s no doubt about it.”

Jaff Decker is the likeliest candidate to take over for Mahtook in right on a temporary basis. Franklin and Motter will also be options for Cash going forward.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Yoan Moncada Can’t Stop the Hype: ‘He’s Got a Following Everywhere We Go’

SALEM, Va. — Children are everywhere.

Some are running on the grass behind the first base stands at Salem Memorial Baseball Stadium. A handful are playing whiffle ball inside a miniature version of Fenway Park, complete with a diminutive Green Monster, near the main entrance. Others are eating ice cream and hot dogs.

A few are even watching baseball.

The Salem Red Sox are offering the irresistible Carolina League allure of potential future superstars, reasonably priced family fun, Friday night fireworks and Mayberry Deputy Night. A Chamber of Commerce evening in this city of 25,432 at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains has helped generate the second-biggest crowd of the year (5,727).

The main attraction on the field on this June 3 is Salem second baseman and leadoff hitter Yoan Moncada. Red Sox general manager Mike Hazen likened the muscular 6’2″, 205-pound Cuban-born Moncada to Bo Jackson this past March.

By the time he bats in the bottom of the seventh, Moncada has raised his batting average 22 points to .309 in just over 27 hours. Moncada dynamited his way out of a 4-for-30 slump by slamming seven doubles over three games, reaching base 11 times and scoring six runs.

Boston Red Sox principal owner John Henry’s $63 million investment appears sound.

The “Legend of Yoan Moncada,” meanwhile, continues to prosper.

Back on this at-bat in Salem, Moncada draws a walk on four pitches. He scores the tying run as Salem erases a six-run deficit in an 11-10 victory. He finishes the game 3-for-3 (all doubles) with two walks and his 32nd steal of the season.

“He’s in scoring position when he’s on first base,” said Salem shortstop Mauricio Dubon, who hopes to become the first Honduran-born player to reach the big leagues since Gerald Young. Moncada and Dubon earned spots on the Carolina League All-Star team that will play its California League counterparts in the Golden State on Tuesday. But he won’t play in that All-Star Game. Instead, he’ll be with the Class AA Portland (Maine) Sea Dogs after being promoted Sunday night. 

“I love running. It’s one of my biggest assets. Believe it or not, I practice running during the day and during batting practice. That’s what I do. I run, run, as far as I can,” said Moncada, who was born in Abreus, Cuba. “Growing up, I was always the fastest one among my friends and classmates.”

He told B/R in March his goal for the season is to “steal 100 bases.” 

After this game, the switch-hitting Moncada is missing from the clubhouse. He has decided to stay in the dugout to watch those promised fireworks and then sign autographs for fans and would-be entrepreneurs who found the fortitude to stay through it all.

A week after his 21st birthday, he’s the biggest kid in the stadium.


Legends are often born from a mixture of fantasy and reality.

Moncada’s past and potential offer a tantalizing mix of both.

Playing baseball in Cuba as a teenager, Moncada made $4 each month and walked or hitchhiked to his games with Cienfuegos. Moncada did not defect. Rather, he received the necessary clearance from Cuba’s Serie Nacional, the Cuban military and the Castro government before leaving his home country. His “mysterious” journey to the United States included a stop in Guatemala.

Moncada wasn’t offering any more details on how he left Cuba. His current agent, Gulfport, Florida, CPA David Hastings told B/R in March he did not come to represent Moncada until after his arrival in the United States in 2014.

The Red Sox smothered the Dodgers and Yankees by offering Moncada a $31.5 million signing bonus in 2015. Boston’s cost then doubled because it exceeded its international spending pool. The topic of money and his well-documented affinity for customized luxury cars follows Moncada throughout the Carolina League.

When he comes to the plate during games at nearby Lynchburg, Virginia, Pink Floyd’s “Money” blares over the stadium’s PA system.

“He’s got a following everywhere we go,” said Salem manager and former major league catcher Joe Oliver. “That’s very unique for a minor leaguer.” 

Before all three Salem games B/R was present for, Moncada signed autographs for anyone who asked once he finished batting practice.

One autograph seeker was 13-year-old Nick Nauseef, who came to watch the Red Sox from his home in North Carolina with a family friend. Moncada autographed a game-used bat from another league contest for the young teen before a scheduled doubleheader.“He’s big,” Nauseef said.

Most legends are.

Red Sox Nation has a strong foothold here. Among the players on the current Boston Red Sox roster who once played in Salem are Xander Bogaerts, Mookie Betts, Jackie Bradley Jr., Travis Shaw and Christian Vazquez.

The hype generated by Moncada swept through the Carolina League, infecting fans from just outside the Washington Beltway in Woodbridge, Va., to the bustling South Carolina beach burg of Myrtle Beach. Neither Portland nor the rest of the Eastern League stand a chance against this Cuban-born contagion. 

Red Sox fan Ray LaPrade lives near Salem. 

He captured Moncada’s initial Carolina League grand slam on video.

The hype surrounding Moncada and former Salem outfielder Andrew Benintendi has drawn LaPrade and his wife here several times this season. “People are realizing that Boston is actually utilizing the farm system, and we’re going to see future MLBers playing in Salem,” he said. “I think a lot of folks, including myself, haven’t really paid a ton of attention to minor leaguers until they’re at [Triple-A] Pawtucket [Rhode Island].”

He and his wife had a chance encounter with Moncada at a restaurant in nearby Roanoke after a recent weekend game.

“I recognized him instantly. I shook his hand, told him I couldn’t wait to see him at Fenway, which prompted a huge smile,” LePrade said. “He was really nice. I recalled notes about his physical stature, and it really set in being that close. Twenty-one-year-olds weren’t built like that when I was 21. He’s really filled out and has quite a set of arms. This guy looks more like a strong safety enforcer than a baseball player.”


Legends are never perfect.

In 61 games with High-A Salem this season, Moncada slashed .307/.427/.496 with 25 doubles, 36 steals and 57 runs scored. He’d also struck out 60 times in 228 at-bats and made 11 errors. He would homer in his Class A finale Sunday.

“He’s improving on both sides of the ball,” Red Sox director of player development Ben Crockett told B/R via email. “He’s been really focused to his cage routines to keep him consistent offensively where he can impact the game with his on-base skills, power and speed, while staying committed to his daily defensive work to maximize his great athleticism at the position.”

Moncada reiterated in two interviews during B/R’s three-day visit to Salem the importance of practicing the same routines daily. Dubon and coach Angel Berroa translated his conversations with B/R.

“I’m working hard every day and trying to get better. I am doing the same thing in the cage every day. I’m just trying to be consistent on the plate and keep working. There are no real difficult or specific areas where I think I have failed,” Moncada said. “The level of baseball this year is harder, but it’s the same baseball game. I’m not changing anything but trying to be better.”

Oliver said Moncada’s natural swing “is to the center of the field.” Of the seven aforementioned doubles, he hit two to left field, three to center and two to right. A 20-foot-high wall runs across the entire outfield here. “To hit the top of the fence in the opposite field [referencing a double to left that bounced atop the fence past the 325-foot mark] shows you how strong he is,” Oliver said.

That same double would have landed in the Monster seats at Fenway Park.

Moncada’s love of running has gotten him in trouble. He was thrown out trying to go from first to third on a ground ball during one of three games watched here. Two nights later, he scored the game-winning run on a wild pitch in the ninth inning.

“It’s a learning curve. He’s coming over here, and he’s starting to find out there are good ballplayers on every club we play,” Oliver said. “He’s still trying to find himself as a player. He has the potential to be a power guy. He’s already a speed guy. He has to get acclimated to the speed and abilities to a lot of the other teams. Now, his speed is just outrunning it. He’s up to speed in two or three steps. It’s just amazing how quick he’s able to get going.”

Curating and developing Moncada’s still-raw abilities and talent remains the priority for the Red Sox. Salem wrapped up the first half of the Carolina League season with a 43-26 record and clinched its first first-half Southern Division championship since 1988.

“Our main job is to develop. Winning is kind of secondary. Right now, these guys are playing well together, and we’re winning. But the ultimate goal is to develop. We’ve already moved some guys up to Portland, and these guys haven’t missed a beat,” Oliver said.

Transitioning the ball out of his glove to make a flip to second or a throw to first consistently remains a shortcoming with Moncada. Berroa begins his pregame fielding drills with Moncada by rolling the ball toward him and having him shovel it toward second base.

Crockett hinted Moncada may not be a second baseman forever.

“We believe Yoan can be a very good defender at second base with tremendous athleticism. As most players progress in their minor league career, we commonly expose them to multiple positions as they reach the highest levels in an attempt to make them versatile to fit major league opportunity,” Crockett wrote to B/R. “At this point, we are focused on second base with Yoan, but like others in our organization, I wouldn’t be surprised to see some versatility down the road.”

Barely 21 and with a scant 142 professional games in the United States, Moncada spreads the ball with authority to all fields and follows with torrid speed to each base.

“We have some pretty good young players playing in Boston now who possessed raw tools and had much success during their ascent to the big leagues, but certainly Yoan has a physicality and unique skill set of speed and power that can impact a game,” wrote Crockett, a Harvard University grad and former minor league pitcher once drafted by the Red Sox. Crockett has been with Boston’s front office since 2006.

Outfielder and designated hitter Benintendi got his call-up to Portland from Salem after just 34 games this season, thanks in part to his .976 OPS and then-Carolina League-leading 46 hits.

“Many factors are taken into account for promotions, including performance and dependability in all facets of the game, physical and fundamental, progress on a specific adjustment, etc.,” Crockett wrote. “Each case is taken individually. Yoan has been focused on improving his defensive consistency and two-strike approach.”


Some legends fly. Others, such as Moncada, are still earthbound.

In Salem, Moncada drove a modified BMW X6M Lumma widebody from his apartment to the players’ parking lot behind LewisGale Field.

In what may be the best omen of a future in Boston with the Red Sox, Moncada cruised past a Dunkin’ Donuts, a Massachusetts icon, during his 18-minute commute to and from the ballpark. Likely more important to Moncada is the fact there are three Chipotle restaurants in Portland, including one located less than a mile from Sea Dogs Park.

Chipotle is his favorite eatery.

Teammate Carlos Mesa, 28, is also from Cuba. He and Moncada shared a two-bedroom apartment in Salem with Deiner Lopez, a native of Venezuela. Moncada and Mesa each have their own bedrooms. Lopez sleeps on the couch.

Mesa is the resident cook.

“I’m not a very good cook,” Moncada said. “Mesa. Mesa. Mesa. He cooks for us.”

“Yoan likes rice and beans every single day,” Chef Mesa said. “And the meat is either chicken, beef or pork. No spices. Yoan doesn’t like spices.”

But he does love the flavor of Chipotle. Their Chipotle of choice is less than 10 minutes away.

“The first time me and Yoan went for the Chipotle, we were in a rush and had to get to practice. I said we need to get some fast food. I told him we should try it. He asked if it was spicy. Yoan ate some, and he said, ‘Ahh, it’s too spicy. I don’t like it,’” Mesa said.

Fast-forward a few weeks. “Now, Yoan likes the Chipotle every single day. Every day. Since it’s close to the apartment, Yoan will say: ‘Carlos, are you cooking today? I can go for the Chipotle.’ Yoan loves Chipotle now.”

Salem boasts a rarity in Southwestern Virginia—an authentic Cuban restaurant called El Cubanito. It’s become a trendy spot on the Carolina League dining circuit. On the day Moncada failed to show for a scheduled noon meeting, about a dozen members of the visiting Myrtle Beach Pelicans coincidentally pulled up in the team bus for lunch.

“When he goes there, he eats the same things: rice, beans, pork, plantains. It’s very nice,” Mesa said.

Moncada apologized unprompted by the Red Sox for missing that meeting. “I overslept,” he said through Berroa. “I was so tired from [the previous night’s] doubleheader.”

The tree-lined, multi-two-story-building apartment complex where Moncada lived was spartan by $31.5 million signing-bonus standards. It is flush with families, single people and retirees. It has a pool. Three schools are nearby. It’s well-maintained and sprawling but otherwise unremarkable. It could just as easily be in Salem, Oregon; Salem, New Hampshire; or Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Two-bedroom units run about $850 a month, but the complex is offering a $200 move-in special. Luckily for Moncada and his roommates, short-term leases are available.

Moncada spends his down time either sleeping, playing video games, surfing Instagram, watching TV or eating. PlayStation is the unofficial console of choice for the Salem Red Sox. FIFA 16 and MLB The Show 16 are played almost exclusively. Moncada said he usually goes solo, but his teammates will play against each other. Dubon reigns as the Salem Red Sox PlayStation FIFA 16 champion.

“I’ve practiced with him a long time. I’ve pitched for him. I have a good relationship. He’s my best friend,” Mesa said of Moncada. Mesa spoke almost exclusively in English, with some assistance in translation from Berroa. “I help him with baseball. I help him get going in the morning and make sure he’s ready and on time for practice. Everything. Every time.”

Mesa has been officially on Salem’s seven-day disabled list all season and has yet to play in 2016. 

Moncada and Mesa share the same agent, and the Red Sox signed them at the same time. Mesa came with a $300,000 price tag. Moncada initially lived with Hastings and his wife, Jo, after coming to the U.S. Mesa frequented Jo Hastings’ Habana Cafe restaurant near St. Petersburg, Florida, during spring training when he was with the Pirates.

That connection with Jo Hastings led to the friendship between Mesa and Moncada. Eventually, Mesa and his family joined Moncada in living at the Hastings’ Gulfport home, which included an unused apartment. Moncada and Mesa now have their own Florida homes nearby.

They, however, are not necessairly a package deal if now that Moncada has been called to Portland.

“Yoan has good coaches and trainers here. We are like a family,” Mesa said before Sunday’s callup. “And he will have good coaches in Portland or Pawtucket. Portland will be a great opportunity for him. This is all about him making it to the majors. That’s what we all want.”

Added Crockett, “We see each player individually, and they’ll follow their own best path.”


Legends speak with deeds. Moncada, however, remains determined to learn English.

“I learn a lot by listening. I’ve learned more by having conversations with the American players that I know well and feel comfortable with. I don’t know a lot yet. I feel more comfortable speaking English with people I know,” Moncada said.

Deanna McNaughton, 22, is a Red Sox fan who grew up in New Hampshire. She majored in Spanish and graduated from Roanoke College in Salem. During his time in Salem, she taught English as a second language to Moncada and three teammates (schedule permitting) between six and eight times a month. Each class lasted about an hour.

“I love watching baseball. I love the Red Sox. For me, dream job doesn’t even begin to describe it,” she told B/R. The players—Moncada, German Taveras, Franklin Guzman and Rafael Devers—range in age from 19 to 23. They are contractually required to make an effort to learn English.

“They’re all so young. Sometimes it’s hard to keep them on track. But they understand why they’re in the class. They know they can’t play major league ball if they can’t talk to the media. They are so motivated. They will try to repeat anything and everything. If I say something ridiculous, they will repeat it,” McNaughton said. “When you hear them talking, you know they are frustrated. There are things they want to say in English but can’t. They’re also looking for better communication as teammates and friends.”

In one recent class, the topic was naming body parts and how to properly explain injuries and other ailments to coaches and trainers. “Saying things like: ‘They hurt.’ ‘They burn.’ ‘I think something may be broken.’ Important things they can communicate with trainers and coaches. It’s important to know the difference between ‘knee’ and ‘elbow.’”

McNaughton said Moncada has been a solid student and, at times, knows more than he demonstrates.

“His biggest challenge is not being shy. We’re working on building up confidence when he uses English. When he’s unsure about something, you can tell. When he’s comfortable and confident, he won’t hold back. He puts a lot of pressure on himself. Which can be good or bad.”

Tavares, Guzman and Devers are from the Dominican Republic. Not all versions of Spanish are created equal. “There’s a lot of difference between the Spanish spoken in Cuba and the Spanish spoken in the DR,” McNaughton said. “A lot of it has to do with the influence of Haitian and Creole. There are different accents. Different words for the same thing. There’s also a difference between the rural versus urban.”

The classes were held around lunchtime and before the players have to report for the day. Often, Moncada and the others would arrive with takeout from Sheetz, a regional convenience store/gas station chain that offers on-site items prepared to go. “They eat so much. They’ll walk in with bags of food. Stuff like burritos. And coffee.”

There are no grades or formal evaluations. The players will write a sentence after each class to show what they learned using as much of that day’s vocabulary. There’s also homework.

“A lot of the English words derive from Latin roots, and a lot of those words are in Spanish. With English, there are certain things you learn just because English is that way. There’s no logical or common sense,” McNaughton said. “They want to learn the baseball-related vocabulary and how to make a conversation out of isolated words.”

Oliver speaks “Spanglish.” The Salem manager’s biggest concern is that nuanced meaning of what he may say to a player doesn’t cross the linguistic divide. “The inflection of things. Maybe you’re taken out of context,” he said. “Typically, you try to find a coach, or better yet a player, who can translate and find the exact message you’re trying to make. Words cannot translate sometimes.”

Dubon, 21, was educated in a bilingual school in Honduras and played high school baseball in California. He was the in-house translator of choice for Moncada and remains so for his Spanish-speaking teammates.

“I know it’s hard coming from another place. Different place. Different languages. I try to make the job easier for them. It’s hard,” Dubon said.

“Yoan is doing really well. When he came here last year, he had no clue. I told him not to be afraid and that he will make mistakes. I still make mistakes. I tell him not to worry,” Dubon said. “The clubhouse is incredible. You have American guys trying to speak Spanish. You have Latin guys trying to speak English. People don’t see that. That’s why our chemistry is so good.”

Nuance is important, though, even among friends. “The jokes are hard. There are certain things they can joke about,” McNaughton said. “It’s very hard to say something sarcastically. There is a very different sense type of humor in Latin American countries. When they’re speaking English, a lot of it is establishing that it is a joke.”


Legends generally walk alone.

There was no visible friction in the Red Sox clubhouse between the multimillionaire Moncada and his not-so-multimillionaire teammates. “We all get along,” Moncada said. “There are no problems.”

Those closest to Moncada’s heart live hundreds or thousands of miles away from the Salem Red Sox clubhouse. They will be even further away when Moncada is in Maine.  The short list includes his parents and sister in Cuba, his surrogate family of David and Jo Hastings in Florida, and his 22-month-old son, Robinson.

The boy was named in honor of Robinson Cano, who is Moncada’s baseball role model. He lives with his mother, Nicole Banks, in West Covina, California.

Yoan Moncada has not seen his parents in two years. He said they have never seen him play professionally in the United States either live, on television or via the Internet.

“All they have are the videos I send them,” he said.

Moncada speaks to his family in Cuba and Jo and David Hastings daily, either by phone or Skype.

“With my mom, I always ask her how she feels. And how are things going,” Moncada said. “With my dad, it’s different. He always asks me about baseball stuff. So I talk to him more about what happens on the field.”

Moncada’s sister will have her quinceanera in August. This special celebration of a girl’s 15th birthday in Latin culture dates back 2,500 years. It’s on Moncada’s mind in 2016. “Yoan is a good son,” Mesa said.

“When he speaks with [his sister], he’ll be asking: ‘What do you need? Do you have good shoes? Do you need a dress?’”

Expect the Moncada family quinceanera to be a blowout.

Moncada FaceTimes with his son two or three times a week. He is limited because of the time difference between Virginia and California, and his schedule.

“Yoan is 21. But when he FaceTimes, it’s like two little boys on the phone,” Mesa said. “The boy will yell ‘Hey,’ ‘Hey,’ and Yoan will say ‘Hey,’ ‘Hey’ right back,” Mesa said.

“When he’s had enough, Robinson says no and hangs up,” Banks added.

Moncada hasn’t seen his son in person since January. There were plans for him to see the boy this week given that the Carolina-California All-Star Game will be played in Lake Elsinore, an hour south of West Covina “Yoan is very disappointed. They were both looking forward to seeing each other,” said Banks before learning of Moncada’s call-up. She also has a six-year-old son.

Robinson Moncada can rake.

He doesn’t turn two until Sept. 11.

“The apple doesn’t fall from the tree,” Dubon said.

“Robinson literally is a spitting image of his father,” added Banks. “Both in his looks and his personality. He has so much drive. Robinson is out there practicing with [my son’s] six-year-old team. I can’t keep him off the field. When he’s at home, he’ll go into the garage. He puts the ball on the tee himself. He hits. He does it on his own. He went through three buckets of balls in 90 minutes the other day. At my [older] son’s practices, we call him the Bat Bandit. He will go through everyone’s bat bag to find one he can use.”

Banks said her youngest son also shares his father’s proclivity for flashy attire. “Yoan is very showy. Robinson is into shoes and clothes. It’s just his being. It’s funny. My older son is like me. This one is exactly like him.”

Banks’ name surfaced in several stories when Moncada arrived in America in 2014 and again when he was signed by the Red Sox in 2015. She worked with a California marketing company helping international players, including Cubans, complete and process the paperwork required to emigrate from their homelands with the hopes of eventually playing in the United States. 

Banks maintained to B/R she was not professionally associated with Moncada’s exit from Cuba and never formally worked with him. Her name remains on the incorporation papers of a player-marketing firm in Florida called “Baseball Divas” in Gulfport. Jo Hastings co-owns it. Banks told B/R she is no longer actively involved with the company.

“My relationship with Yoan was strictly romantic,” she said. The couple met in Rotterdam, Netherlands, in 2013. Moncada, then 18, was playing with the Cuban national team in the World Port Tournament. “Some things are meant to be. It’s weird how fate works,” she said.

In West Covina, Pony League play begins at age three. The players hit pitches from a machine.

“All the coaches at the pony park are fighting over who gets him next year,” Banks said.

Note to John Henry: Start saving now.

“Robinson is destined. He has that star in him,” his mom said. 


The greatest legends last forever.

Even with his rapid progression through the Red Sox farm system, Moncada’s baseball career will have a time limit. He does, however, have one special long-term goal before its over.

“I want my son to play professional baseball. I hope to be around long enough to be there when he comes up,” Moncada said.

“Like Ken Griffey and Ken Griffey Jr.?” he is asked.

Moncada smiles.

“Si.”

No translation necessary.

 

Bill Speros is an award-winning journalist who covers baseball for B/R. He can be reached at @BillSperos or @RealOBF.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


AL ERA Leader Steven Wright Filling Red Sox’s Need for Co-Ace with David Price

This seemed to be the state of the Boston Red Sox‘s starting rotation at the outset of 2016: a true ace in David Price, a few guys they hoped could be his co-ace, and a knuckleballer who figured to be neither.

This is yet another reason there’s a file marked “Can’t Predict Baseball.”

That knuckleballer is Steven Wright, who’s blurred the line between merely being Boston’s co-ace and being Boston’s true ace. He took a 2.22 ERA into his Monday start against the Chicago White Sox at Fenway Park, and he lowered it even further with nine innings of one-run ball.

Had the Red Sox scored enough runs to avoid a 3-1 loss, that would have been a league-leading fourth complete game for Wright. But his performance still kept Boston’s bad rotation ERA of 4.49 from getting worse.

Wright’s own ERA, meanwhile, is now the best in the American League by a comfortable margin:

  1. Steven Wright: 2.01
  2. Danny Salazar: 2.23

If this feels familiar, that’s because it sort of is. As the folks at Inside Edge noted, Wright’s start to 2016 closely resembles that of the last knuckleballer to win a Cy Young:

Mind you, Wright’s knuckler is not an exact replica of the one R.A. Dickey had in 2012. It was known for velocity that sat in the high 70s and could climb higher. Wright’s knuckleball is more of a traditional floater, sitting in the low- to mid-70s and occasionally going slower.

Likewise, Wright’s results are not identical to those Dickey had at the same point in 2012. Wright boasts inferior walk and strikeout rates, meaning he’s needed more good fortune on balls in play. Because his .246 batting average on balls in play is well below the major league average of .295, a certain set of eyes could see him as a prime candidate for regression.

Another set of eyes, however, sees Wright as a guy whose knuckleball won’t get any easier to hit.

To a couple of extents, Wright’s knuckleball has been harder to hit than the one Dickey had in 2012. Per Brooks Baseball, the 31-year-old is holding opposing batters to just a .210 average and a .275 slugging percentage with his knuckleball. Both are better than what Dickey’s knuckleball did to opposing batters (.219 AVG, .348 SLUG) in 2012

That this is happening despite the fact that Wright has had more balls put in play suggests either a great amount of luck or a great amount of soft contact. Today’s fancy-pants stats point toward the latter.

According to Baseball Savant, Wright’s batted balls average 87.5 miles per hour. That is safely below the MLB average of 89.2 miles per hour and close to the average exit velocity boasted by Jake Arrieta (87.2), who’s otherwise known as the Contact Management Supreme Leader.

Courtesy of Daren Willman, MLB.com’s director of baseball research and development, we know lower exit velocities tend to lead to more outs. This leads to a classic “Well, duh!” conclusion: If hitters want to do better against Wright, they should hit his knuckleball harder.

But, yeah. This will be easier said than done.

As Jeff Sullivan of FanGraphs noted a few weeks ago, Wright gets a good chunk of his contact on pitches outside the strike zone. That’s still true, as he has one of the AL’s highest out-of-zone contact rates at 70.7 percent (No. 11).

Regarding Wright’s exit velocity, prior to Monday, that’s had exactly the kind of effect that league-wide figures suggest it would:

Knowing this, the obvious advice to give hitters is that they not go fishing when Wright’s knuckleballs dance outside the strike zone. But that would essentially be asking them to do better at anticipating the movement of his knucklers. That’s like asking party-goers to anticipate where Bill Murray will show up next.

What looks a lot flukier is the .229 BABIP Wright is holding hitters to on pitches inside the strike zone. That’s far below the MLB average of .314, and therefore suspect.

But though that figure probably will come up, it may not be very far. Wright’s exit velocity on in-zone pitches is 90.0 mph, which is below the average of 91.8. His BABIP may be a little too low, but he is earning his better-than-average BABIP on his in-zone pitches.

Besides which, hitters have to put Wright’s in-zone pitches in play to raise his in-zone BABIP. That might be the biggest challenge of all. Among all qualified AL pitchers, nobody has a lower rate of contact in the strike zone than Wright’s mark of 76.8 percent. Even when his pitches are good to hit, they’re not so easy to target. 

That’s because Wright’s knuckleball can do things like this:

As well as things like this:

It’s hard to describe in words what makes a knuckleball good. Images like these are a reminder that a good knuckleball is something that can really only be seen. And when Wright pitches, you’re going to see a lot of good knuckleballs.

And not just you, for that matter.

“Oh, my God, the hitters, the umpires—all of them, every game,” Red Sox catcher Ryan Hanigan said of the reactions he hears to Wright’s knuckleball, via Evan Drellich of the Boston Herald. “It’s unbelievable the stuff you hear.”

This offers a fair bit of hope that Wright’s knuckleball won’t go the way of Dickey’s, which hasn’t been the same since it started leaking velocity after 2012. Wright’s dominance is based not on velocity, but on good, ol‘ fashioned ball-on-silly-string movement.

The Red Sox don’t have to call Wright their best ace. He’s new to this whole dominance thing. Price, on the other hand, has been playing the part for the better part of a decade now. And with a 2.47 ERA over his last eight outings, he’s playing the part again now after a slow start.

But the way he’s going, Wright is at least a co-ace alongside Price. And with his knuckleball, he should be able to keep that label.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Rusney Castillo Clears Waivers, Sent to Triple-A: Latest Comments, Reaction

Less than two years after lavishing Rusney Castillo with a $72.5 million contract, the Boston Red Sox placed the Cuban outfielder on waivers. Castillo later cleared waivers and was outrighted to Triple-A Pawtucket.

Brian MacPherson of the Providence Journal reported the news of Castillo’s demotion on Monday. Jon Heyman of Today’s Knuckleball originally reported the news Sunday.  

Castillo, 28, has appeared in only nine games this season. He’s recorded two hits in eight at-bats and spent most of the year in Pawtucket. 

Castillo is owed the balance of his $10.5 million contract in 2016, followed by $46 million over the next four seasons. Billed as a five-tool superstar in the making after defecting from Cuba in 2014, Castillo has ranked among the worst free-agent signings in recent Red Sox history.

He raked the ball in a brief stint toward the end of 2014, hitting .333 with two home runs and six RBI in 10 games. His performance fell off a steep cliff over a larger sample last season, with Castillo batting .253/.288/.359 with five home runs and 29 RBI. Despite being an excellent defender, Castillo had double his wins above replacement (0.8) in that 10-game sample than he did in 2015 (0.4), per FanGraphs.

“My thing is, I just want to be playing baseball,” he said through translator Daveson Perez earlier this month, per Jason Mastrodonato of the Boston Herald. “This in itself is a dream for me. The goal for me is to support this team in any way that I can. I’m not thinking about trades, I’m not thinking about where my career might take me next. I know that I want to play good baseball and I want to help the Red Sox.”

The reality here is that Castillo isn’t that bad of a baseball player. He would probably be useful in a platoon for the Red Sox as they await the returns of Blake Swihart and Brock Holt. 

But much like Pablo Sandoval, who was roundly criticized before undergoing shoulder surgery, the disappointment over Castillo’s performances is clouding how he’s viewed. If Castillo were making the minimum, his replacement-level numbers wouldn’t bat an eye. The Red Sox would likely be fine having him man left field for the time being given the ground he covers. 

Even if he’s a half-win above replacement, that’s still a net positive. But Castillo’s making the salary of a solid everyday starter and producing like a platoon player. No team bit on his contract, and it appears the Red Sox are going to have to eat a whole lot of it to even move on.

 

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Michael Saunders’ 3-HR Burst Showcases Driving Force Behind Resurgent Blue Jays

The Toronto Blue Jays always had this in them, and it’s why they always had to be considered a serious factor in the American League East.

Michael Saunders always had this in him, too, and it’s why the Blue Jays wanted to get him. It’s not just because he’s Canadian, although the one major league team north of the border always does like the idea of having a Canadian star.

Saunders was a star Friday night, with three home runs and eight RBI in the Blue Jays’ 13-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles. The same day the Jays put Jose Bautista on the disabled list, they scored double-digit runs for the fifth time this week.

Yes, five times in a week, and you can’t blame it all on the Philadelphia Phillies. Only two of the double-digit outbursts came against the Phillies; the other three came against an Orioles team that has spent 58 days in first place in the American League East.

The top of the AL East standings are getting crowded, with the Blue Jays and Boston Red Sox both a game back of the Orioles. The way the Blue Jays are hitting, you have to like their chances of staying near the top.

Friday, they didn’t have Bautista and they didn’t have Troy Tulowitzki, who remains on the DL with a quadriceps injury. Tulowitzki wasn’t contributing much even when he was playing this season, but plenty of other Blue Jays have—especially over the last week.

Edwin Encarnacion had six home runs in six games before Friday, and while he didn’t leave the park in this game, he did go 2-for-3 with three runs scored. Josh Donaldson is 18-for-38 (.474) over his last 10 games, with four home runs and 16 RBI.

And then there’s Saunders, the guy who could always look so good in small stretches but could never stay healthy or consistent enough to be a real star.

Maybe that’s changing now.

Saunders had homered three times in the seven games before Friday, and his big night in Baltimore left him with 15 home runs for the season. It also left him with a .999 OPS for the season, second to David Ortiz (1.147) among all major league hitters.

As Gregor Chisholm wrote on MLB.com, no Canadian player ever had a night for the Blue Jays like the one Saunders had Friday. Not all that many American players had, either.

Carlos Delgado had a four-homer game for the Jays, but he only drove in six runs. The only Blue Jay with three homers and as many as eight RBI in a game had been Encarnacion, who drove in nine last August against the Detroit Tigers.

The only Canadians to hit three home runs in a major league game were Justin Morneau, Joey Votto and Larry Walker. Only Walker did it while driving in eight runs.

“Those are guys that I grew up watching and idolizing,” Saunders told reporters, including Chisholm. “It’s a proud Canadians kind of thing. Getting to know them over the years, they’re great people. I’m close friends with all of them, and it’s good company to join.”

Saunders’ arrival has come just in time for a Blue Jays team that wasn’t scoring all that many runs early in the season. The Blue Jays were tied for 13th in the majors in runs in April, which isn’t awful but isn’t anywhere near what they expect.

That’s all changed now. The Blue Jays are 20-8 since May 19, and they’ve done it by scoring 161 runs in the 28 games. If you don’t have a calculator handy, I’ll help you. That’s nearly six runs a game.

They’ve homered 52 times in those 28 games, or nearly twice a game.

Until Friday, the Orioles had actually outscored Toronto this month, 93-91, with no other team in baseball over 90. Add in Friday’s 13-3 pounding, and the Blue Jays have 104 runs in 16 games in June.

That’s 6.5 runs a game. And yes, it’s the most in baseball.

The run of double-digit games is impressive, too, especially when you realize the Blue Jays never scored in double digits five times in a week last year (when they had a major league-high 26 double-digit games). Two teams (the Atlanta Braves and Minnesota Twins) haven’t scored double-digits in any game this season.

The Blue Jays have done it five times in a week.

The Jays still have questions to answer. Marcus Stroman’s ERA (4.76) is a lot higher than you’d expect, and not at all fitting the ace he could be. The rotation could be an issue, and the bullpen could be a bigger issue.

But when Saunders is hitting like this, and Donaldson and Encarnacion are hitting like this, the Blue Jays can hit their way past most of the questions. They can hit their way right into the AL East race, which is basically just what they’ve done.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Ted Williams ‘Would Have Loved’ David Ortiz Hitting Home Run No. 521

The greatest hitter who ever lived” gave Claudia Williams a batting clinic that spanned two decades.

The only surviving child of Boston Red Sox Hall of Famer Ted Williams has emerged as a caretaker of his magnificent and complicated legacy. She, better than anyone else, can speculate with credibility on what her dad would think of Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz matching Williams’ career record of 521 home runs. 

Ortiz hit the milestone home run Friday night at Fenway Park during an 8-4 loss to the Seattle Mariners

“I see a lot of things in David Ortiz that I know my dad would have just loved,” Williams told Bleacher Report the day after she participated in a ceremony that retired Wade Boggs’ No. 26 in Boston. “Congratulations to him. I think it’s awesome.”

Being a child of Ted Williams, Claudia Williams wrote in Ted Williams, My Father: A Memoir, presented a tidal wave of challenges. They were the result of her parents’ divorce, Williams’ drive for perfection in everything and everyone, a volcanic temper and intense, profanity-filled outbursts at those closest to him.  It also gave her unmatched insight into Williams’ personality, character and, eventually, unfettered access to his brilliance when it came to hitting baseballs and catching fish. 

“People don’t realize it, but the daughter of Ted Williams watches swings. He’s got a great game. He’s got a great swing,” Claudia Williams, 44, told B/R when asked about Ortiz. “My own father taught me the importance of getting ahead of your hands and swinging up. He takes a nice, wide stance. My dad would describe him as being ‘stronger than an ox.’

He’s got arms on him like Goliath. He’s got a little bit of an upswing. And I like the way he cocks his hips and he puts that power through his midcore. He’s a power hitter through and through. We see that every time he hits a home run. They don’t just go over the wall, they go way over the wall. Beautiful swing. Beautiful depth. Great strength.”

Ortiz also tied Hall of Famers Frank Thomas and Willie McCovey with home run No. 521. When he spoke one-on-one to B/R prior to hitting his 500th home run in St. Petersburg, Florida, last September, Ortiz deferentially brushed off any comparisons to Williams as “crazy talk,” noting Williams’ military service in two wars that would cost him 727 games over five seasons. 

“Historically, you know how great Mr. Ted Williams was. It’s wonderful talking about the greatest hitters of the game and your name being mentioned with them,” Ortiz added after Friday’s game. 

After his milestone 500th home run, he spoke of Williams and others in the 500-home run club as players whom he could only watch “in cartoons” as a child. “The whole world knows it’s not easy to get,” he added.

Claudia Williams concurs. “If you hit over 500 home runs, you’re doing something right,” she said. “There’s a ton of arguments out there. This is happening this season, it didn’t happen then. It’s not like [it] was then. The pitchers are this or that. I don’t care what people say.”

In 2003, Ortiz and Ramirez tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug during a pilot testing program. In 2009, the New York Times reported the results, which were supposed to be anonymous. Ortiz continues to deny knowingly using any banned substances.

He told Bob Hohler of the Boston Globe in March 2015 it would be “unfair” if anyone denied him a Hall of Fame vote because of the 2003 positive. “I was using what everybody was using at the time,” he added. When asked about the PED results by B/R in 2015, Ortiz deferred by saying, “I only want to focus on the positive.”

 

The Kid vs. Big Papi

The “Ortiz vs. Williams” debate, for as much as it does exist, is mainly drawn upon generational guidelines. For those who were either old enough to see Williams play (he retired in 1960 and died at age 83 in 2002) or grew up in a household where he was idolized (this author included), his place as the first among equals on the Red Sox Mt. Rushmore is unquestioned. For many who grew up in a post-2004 world, they saw Ortiz pile up World Series rings before ever hearing of Williams’ baseball, fishing and military exploits.

Among those in Williams’ corner: Red Sox Hall of Fame outfielder Carl Yastrzemski. He replaced Williams in left field in 1961. When asked who was better, Williams or Ortiz, Yaz was brief. “It’s got to be Ted, he told Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughnessy in May. “I mean, he was the greatest hitter who ever lived. And he missed all those years serving his country in two wars.

Yaz is joined on the Williams side of the ledger by Gordon Edes, the Red Sox historian who covered the team over 18 seasons for the Boston Globe and ESPN.

“Baseball lends itself to comparing stars from different eras much better than, say, basketball, where no one would dare suggest George Mikan could play with LeBron James. Baseball differs in that we can fairly debate the relative merits of [Babe] Ruth, [Hank] Aaron and [Barry] Bonds, say, while of course noting the differences in the environments in which they played,” Edes told B/R via email.

“It’s reasonable to discuss Ortiz relative to Ted Williams, and the fact they played different positions hardly matters, given that the comparison revolves exclusively on their hitting,” Edes continued. The ‘debate,’ such as it is, is a short one: ‘Mr. Williams,’ as Ortiz calls him, dwarfs anyone else who ever played for the Red Sox as a hitter. Ted is the all-time franchise leader in the alphabet soup of BA, OBP, SGP and OPS, as well as the team’s all-time leader in home runs.”

In addition to being the last hitter to bat over .400 (.406 in 1941), Williams produced the two highest season batting averages in Red Sox history. Among the other categories in which he dominates, as Edes noted, he posted the top nine seasons in OBP in Red Sox history, five of the top seasons in SGP and eight of the top 10 seasons in walks. 

“The chasm between Ted and runner-up is large, but Ortiz has certainly thrust himself into a favored spot relative to Carl Yastrzemski and Wade Boggs, with Jim Rice and maybe Manny [Ramirez] another rung below,” Edes wrote.

On the day he turned 40 last November, Ortiz announced he would retire after the 2016 season. Ortiz reported to Red Sox camp this spring considerably leaner than he was in 2015. Whatever he did in the offseason has worked. Thus far, he’s making a bid for league MVP. In his first 59 games this season, Ortiz slammed 17 home runs. drove in 59 runs, and led the American League with 29 doubles, a .423 on-base percentage, .715 slugging percentage and a stat-nerd-baffling 1.138 OPS.

Ortiz remains on pace for arguably the greatest offensive season in big-league history for any ballplayer over 40. 

Williams won the 1957 AL batting title at age 39, hitting .388 with 38 home runs, 87 RBI and a haughty 1.257 OPS. A year later, he became the oldest player ever to win a batting crown at 40 with a .328 average and 1.042 OPS. Williams slashed .316/.451./645 with 27 HRs in his final season of 1960 at age 42.

A lifelong Red Sox fan, Dave McCarthy, 63, was a New Hampshire State Police officer for more than 25 years and worked details for top state politicians and visiting past presidents such as Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. That job eventually led to a relationship with Williams and a longtime spot as Williams’ personal security man. McCarthy is now the executive director of the Ted Williams Museum and Hitters Hall of Fame, housed inside Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg.

“Bush Senior almost fell down the stairs in a rush to meet him in New Hampshire,” McCarthy told B/R. The two had met during flight training school when they were both in the Navy in World War II. “Of all the presidents and people I’ve met, none of them had the effect on people as Ted Williams did. It’s as if baseball makes everyone an eight-year-old kid. Even Matt Damon couldn’t believe it when I introduced him to Ted.

“Ted would have loved to see David tie and break his 521 mark. He would be brief and praise him,” McCarthy added. “Ted would always defend the new players. When it appeared that Nomar [Garciaparra] was going to [be] the patriarch of Boston, he loved the kid.”

Williams campaigned for Bush in New Hampshire during the 1988 GOP primary campaign, drawing huge crowds and helping the then-vice president capture a pivotal state victory.

 

‘Boston’s Mr. October’

Ortiz, who took an infamous selfie with President Obama at the White House in 2014, has cast a similar spell over Boston thanks mainly to his postseason fireworks and Broadway-like October timing. His postseason slash line of .409/.553/.962 is buttressed by 17 home runs and 60 RBI in 295 at-bats. In 2013, Ortiz captured World Series MVP honors with a .688 average and a Thor-like .760/1.188/1.948 slash line.

His postseason home runs are the stuff of schoolchild legend across New England.

There was his walk-off, 10th-inning blast off Jarrod Washburn that capped Boston’s three-game sweep of the Anaheim Angels in the 2004 American League Division Series.

There was Big Papi’s Game 4, 12th-inning big fly against the New York Yankees in 2004 that provided a rocket boost for Boston’s historic comeback in the American League Championship Series. 

And, of course, there was that grand slam against the Detroit Tigers in Game 2 of the 2013 ALCS that not only tied the game 5-5, but also sent Torii Hunter sprawling over the wall and turned Boston bullpen cop Steve Horgan into a local celebrity.

For Ted Williams, there were no postseason heroics. He hit .200 in his lone World Series appearance in 1946. He was nursing a bruised elbow suffered in a pre-World Series tuneup game. In those seven games against St. Louis, he went 5-for-25 with five strikeouts, one RBI and no home runs. “And I did poorly, and I don’t know why today,” he told the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2000.

“The biggest way Ortiz’s career impacted the Sox differently than Ted’s is the team’s success on the field,” explained Edes, who called Ortiz “Boston’s Mr. October.” Ortiz has a .455 career average and three home runs in his 14 World Series games. “His postseason play offers a powerful supporting argument to his claim that he belongs in Cooperstown,” Edes wrote.

Williams and the Red Sox rolled to the World Series with 104 wins as the American League champions in 1946 when baseball was back at its pre-war strength. Until 1969, the American and National Leagues each sent one team to the World Series. That was baseball’s entire postseason.

To see how Williams could have benefited from the playoff expansion that players like Ortiz enjoyed in the post-wild-card era, B/R examined the final American League standings during years in which Williams’ play was not impacted by military service.

Splitting the then eight-team American League geographically into Eastern and Western divisions and adding just one wild card in comparison to the two of 2016, Williams and the Red Sox would have reached the postseason nine more times in his career. Those seasons would have included 1948 and ’49.

The 96-win Red Sox lost 8-3 to the Cleveland Indians in a one-game playoff in 1948. In 1949, the Red Sox again won 96 games, and again fell one game short of the World Series—losing the pennant to the Yankees in the final weekend of the season.

 

Beat the Press

Ortiz and Williams have much in common.

Both Ortiz and Williams played in Minnesota before coming to Boston. Williams starred for the minor league Minneapolis Millers before joining the Red Sox as a rookie in 1939, while Ortiz was signed by the Red Sox in 2003 as a free agent after being released by the Minnesota Twins.

They share Hispanic heritage, Ortiz was born in the Dominican Republic, while Williams’ mother was Mexican-American. Both showered the right field bleachers in Fenway Park with home runs from the left side of the plate, they both committed a tremendous amount of their time and treasure to charitable endeavors for children and, at their core, they desired the love and adoration of the masses.

“Williams’ relationship with the fans and media experienced far more ups and downs than Ortiz, who generally has received favorable press,” Edes said. The harshest critiques of Ortiz have been centered around the lingering question of PED usage, early-season slumps (not an issue this year) and flare-ups about his contract situation that seemed to become an annual spring training ritual.

Ortiz’s smile and benevolence have become defining traits. “I just want to make everyone happy,” Ortiz told B/R before he hit No. 500 last September. “You’re not always going to make everyone happy. A lot of people who follow your career and are on the positive side, that’s all you’ve got to care about.”

Ted Williams, who was born in San Diego in 1918, battled with the press and negative fans throughout most of his career, taking much of the criticism on a personal level.

As Claudia Williams notes in her book:

He absolutely fell victim to the fickle love of the crowd and the criticism of the press. … Expectations were high, and in only his second year in the major leagues some fans and the press began to ride him for disappointing them—they wanted more—the start of what would be a career-long battle. Some players might have shrugged it off, but Dad was too driven, too intensely focused on being the best and wanting to impress. When he lashed out at sportswriters, he earned new nicknames like ‘Terrible Ted’ and the ‘Problem Child.’ Even when he hit a home run and the whole crowd cheered, he was still angry with them for criticizing him and refused to tip his cap as he rounded the bases. When he was rejected, it angered him, hurt his feelings, but it also made him even more determined to prove them wrong. … ‘The Kid’ emerged. The way he verbalized as an adult was a mix of playground expressions and childlike wonderment, beaten and aged with rough-guy sarcasm and dugout swearing. … It’s as if his life was played out on a big playground. Dad hated the press because they were his punishers, the bullies on his playground, and, as he would put it, ‘They were always trying to blow things out of proportion, stir things up, and rip you.’ The knights of the keyboard took control and manipulated a lot of Dad’s career just by choosing what they did or didn’t write about.

To wit, Ted Williams won the Triple Crown in 1942 and 1947 and failed to win the MVP award (as chosen by the writers) both times.

“No wonder Dad held a grudge against the press for his entire life,” Claudia Williams added.

The fans, too, felt his wrath. The “Splendid Spitter” expectorated toward the fans in Boston’s left field on Aug. 7, 1956. He had dropped a fly ball hit by Mickey Mantle in the 11th inning that led to two runs and was booed for his efforts. Williams was fined $5,000 (5 percent of his salary) but was unrepentant. “I’m not a bit sorry for what I did,” Williams said at the time. “I was right and I’d spit again at the same fans who booed me today. Some of them are the worst in the world. Nobody’s going to stop me from spitting.”

On the flip side, when encouraged by the crowd, Williams was at his best. He wowed the Boston crowd with his Old-Timers Day fielding performance in 1982 and would eventually tip his hat to the Fenway crowd on “Ted Williams Day” in 1991. By the time he made his storybook appearance at the 1999 All-Star Game in Boston, Williams had been fully embraced by the citizenry of Red Sox Nation as their Founding Father.

Claudia Williams discussed the change in her father’s demeanor toward the public in the later years of his life in her book, as well:

Even at death’s door during his last public appearance, Dad was able to acknowledge the crowd when they stood and applauded for him. He was always trying to make up for some shortcoming the press had written about or make up for a poor performance on the field. What I believe made Ted Williams great at home plate was his ability to take all his anger, all his hurt, and channel it with supreme discipline and control right into his wrists, the grip, the bat, the precise connection with the ball, blasting it exactly where he wanted it to go, shoving it right down the throats of sportswriters.

Both Claudia Williams and McCarthy said Williams spoke without any filters of what would be considered “political correctness” today. “My dad was brutally honest and sincere. That was the thing I admired the most about him. He wasn’t afraid to speak his mind,” Claudia Williams told B/R.

It was that sense of speaking out against what he saw as injustice that led Williams to lobby for the inclusion of “great Negro ballplayers” like Josh Gibson and Satchel Paige into Baseball’s Hall of Fame during his 1966 Cooperstown induction speech. 

McCarthy said Williams didn’t have the benefit of a PR coach or someone who might have counseled him to temper his remarks to avoid public backlash.

“Ted grew up in a tough life. He had a heart a mile long. He was a perfectionist working on his craft. He wore his heart on his sleeve. You had guys like ‘Colonel’ Dave Egan who would rip him. Ted would lash out and tell them what he thought. That led to a lot misunderstandings and a lot of slanted stories. Ted was an emotional kid. And the press loved it. It made for a great story. The press won every time,” McCarthy said.

“Ted just couldn’t understand. He poured his heart out to this guy and he rips him. It hurt him.”

 

The Right Stuff of Greatness

Williams and Yankees second baseman Jerry Coleman were among a handful of baseball players who served in both World War II and the Korean War.

McCarthy said that historic gap makes any comparison between Ortiz and Williams nearly impossible. “Two completely different eras. How do you compete with a generation that went to war? It’s tough. One of them was brought up in a really unique time in this country when there was a world war. He, along with so many others like Joe DiMaggio and Bob Feller, lost prime years of their career when World War II started. That’s the stuff legends are made of country-wide, not just in sports.”

Williams enlisted in the U.S. Navy Reserve’s aviation program on May 22, 1942, after, Edes noted, he was given a draft exemption—3-A as the sole support of his mother. It was later changed to 1-A, but Williams appealed and had it reversed to 3-A. That stirred a public uproar. Williams spent his service time in World War II stateside training naval pilots, including the aforementioned George H.W. Bush.

Williams fiercely resisted being sent back into active duty with the Marines in Korea. His 39-0 record as a Marine Corps pilot remains the most durable mark in Boston sports history. He flew 39 ground-attack combat missions during the Korean War as a U.S. Marine Corps pilot in his F9F Grumman Panther. He and his squadron mates risked life, death and capture at the hands of the Chinese and/or North Koreans 39 times. He returned safely, if not always fully intact, all 39 times. Captain Williams’ plane crash-landed on his initial mission in 1953 after being hit by ground fire.

“Williams’ military service did not impact evaluations of him as a player, but of course enhanced his image as a larger-than-life figure, a Duke Wayne in flannels,” Edes wrote.

Ortiz enhanced his image as a larger-than-life figure with his succinct speech and “F-bomb” at Fenway Park on April 20, 2013. It was the first Red Sox home game following the Boston Marathon bombing and subsequent manhunt that shut down the city and several surrounding suburbs.

“This is our f–king city. And nobody is going to dictate our freedom. Stay strong,” Ortiz said.

Claudia Williams said her father would have approved of what Ortiz did and would have offered similar sentiments toward those who had bombed Boston had he been given the same opportunity. “I’ll take the Fifth,” she said when asked if Ted Williams would have used the same language.

She does have one issue with Big Papi. “The only think I spank Ortiz on is him saying that Dad’s home run (a 502-foot blast at Fenway Park in 1946 now marked by a red seat 37 rows up in right-field bleachers) didn’t go as far as it did. I bet you anything my Dad did that.”

When asked about it in 2015 by the Boston Globe, Ortiz said with some laughter: “The red seat? Cough — bull — cough … I went up there and sat there one time. That’s far, brother.”

Ortiz’s torrid start has kept fans, players and media types asking if he will actually walk away after this season. But Ortiz told WEEI.com’s Rob Bradford on May 20 he is “100 percent sure” 2016 will be the final year of his career. 

When it came time for Williams to retire, McCarthy said Williams told him the decision was easy. “I asked him one night how difficult it was for him to take off the Red Sox uniform for the final time. His answer was simple. ‘I’ve had enough, I was ready to do something else. I’m glad I got out when I got out. It was enough.'”

By the way, Williams homered in his final at-bat.

One more challenge for Ortiz.   

 

Bill Speros is an award-winning journalist who covers baseball for Bleacher Report. He met Ted Williams when he was 14 and still has the autographed ball to prove it. He tweets at @BillSperos and @RealOBF

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Jose Bautista Injury: Updates on Blue Jays Star’s Toe and Return

Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Jose Bautista suffered a toe injury when he ran into the wall during Thursday’s game against the Philadelphia Phillies. While X-rays were negative, he was placed on the disabled list on Friday. It’s unclear when he’ll return to the field.

Continue for updates.


Bautista Injury Details Revealed

Saturday, June 18

Bautista underwent an MRI on his left foot on Friday, and the Blue Jays are giving the results to a specialist for further examination, according to Arden Zwelling of Sportsnet, who added Bautista is currently in a walking boot. 

On Saturday, Gregor Chisholm of MLB.com reported Bautista will travel to Charlotte on Monday to be evaluated by a specialist.


Bautista Sent for X-Rays

Thursday, June 16

Chisholm reported the outfielder was experiencing “left big toe soreness” and was “sent for precautionary X-rays.” 

Bausista indicated he hyperextended his toe hitting it against the wall and knew he would be headed to the disabled list as soon as it happened, per Zwelling.

Bautista was noticeably limping after hitting the wall:


Bautista Remains Essential Piece to Blue Jays Lineup

Bautista has become one of the league’s most feared power hitters since joining the Blue Jays in 2008, highlighted by six straight seasons with at least 25 home runs. It’s allowed him to win three Silver Slugger awards while serving as a crucial cog in Toronto’s lineup.

The 35-year-old has remained mostly healthy in recent years, appearing in at least 150 games in each of the past two seasons. The last time he missed an extended stretch came in late 2013, when he suffered a hip injury. He also dealt with a minor thigh issue earlier this month.

If Bautista misses action, Ezequiel Carrera figures to pick up most of the extra playing time in the outfield. While he won’t be able to fill the power void, he gets on base at a solid clip and gives the Jays a little more speed on the basepaths.

While the Toronto offense is probably going to see a dip in production during Bautista’s absence, it has enough depth to prevent a major drop-off. The team will hope he’s able to return to his usually durable ways once he’s back to full strength.

 

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Ike Davis to Sign with Yankees: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

Hours after the Texas Rangers released Ike Davis from his minor league contract, the first baseman agreed to ink a major league contract with the New York Yankees, according to Today’s Knuckleball’s Jon Heyman

Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News confirmed the report.   

Following four seasons with the New York Mets, Davis was dealt to the Pittsburgh Pirates a few months into the 2014 season. While he was afforded the opportunity to shine over the course of 397 plate appearances, he floundered to the tune of a .235 batting average, 10 home runs and 46 RBI. 

The Oakland A’s acquired Davis in a trade with Pittsburgh the following November, but his struggles at the plate continued.

In 74 appearances, he batted just .229 with three homers and 20 RBI. The first baseman was also bothered by a left hip injury that sent him to the 60-day disabled list before he underwent season-ending surgery. 

The Yankees have been dogged by injuries to first basemen Mark Teixeira, Greg Bird, Dustin Ackley and Chris Parmelee already this year, so they’ll hope Davis can at least stay healthy as he tries to recapture some of the 2012 form that saw him blast a career-high 32 home runs. 

But even if Davis does turn back the clock, the Bronx Bombers can’t count on him to produce consistently at the plate. He is a career .239 hitter, and he’s tallied at least 100 strikeouts in three of the four seasons in which he played at least 100 games.

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Aroldis Chapman Trade Rumors: Latest Buzz, Speculation Surrounding Yankees RP

The New York Yankees boast one of MLB‘s deepest bullpens, and teams are reportedly starting to do their homework on reliever Aroldis Chapman in advance of the July 31 trade deadline.

Continue for updates.  


Cubs Keeping Tabs on Chapman

Sunday, June 12

According to the New York Post‘s George A. King III, the Chicago Cubs sent scout Jason Parks to Yankee Stadium over the weekend to take a look at closer Aroldis Chapman as well as star relief arms Andrew Miller and Dellin Betances. 

King added the Yankees “likely will listen on Miller and Chapman. Meanwhile, “dealing Betances also isn’t out of the question” if the team isn’t in prime position to clinch a playoff spot when the trade deadline rolls around. 

The Chicago Sun-Times‘ Gordon Wittenmyer cited a source who said “the Cubs have made it known they’re prepared to strike early to add pitching.”

A four-time All-Star, Chapman has been solid for the Yankees since returning from a 30-game domestic violence-related suspension. Over the course of 15 appearances, he has tallied 11 saves, 21 strikeouts and just three walks while posting an ERA of 1.93. 

But despite the success Chapman has experienced in a small 14-inning sample, the Yankees could conceivably ship him to the Cubs or another interested party and get some return on their investment before he becomes a free agent this winter. 

According to King, “Chapman is making $11.325 million this year, is a free agent following the season and not likely to return to the Yankees.”

As for the Cubs, adding Chapman would bolster an already strong bullpen. Chicago’s relievers rank fourth in the National League with a 3.41 ERA, and their opponents’ batting average of .205 clocks in at No. 2 overall among all NL clubs. 

Reliever Hector Rondon has successfully carried out all 11 of his save opportunities this year while posting a 1.40 ERA, and adding Chapman would give the Cubs a left-handed fireballer to pair with their steady right-handed reliever. 

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CC Sabathia’s Rebirth Is Most Pleasant Surprise for Yankees

What Alex Rodriguez was for the 2015 New York Yankees, CC Sabathia has been for the 2016 New York Yankees.

That is to say: seemingly against all odds, a hugely productive player. 

Because the 35-year-old left-hander entered the year fresh out of rehab and with three straight bad seasons and a balky right knee to overcome, there was really no telling what the Yankees were going to get out of him. But 10 starts in, there’s Sabathia with a 2.28 ERA.

He led the Yankees to their fifth straight win with his latest effort, firing seven shutout innings in a 4-0 victory over the Detroit Tigers at Yankee Stadium on Friday night. To the highlights!

At the moment, Sabathia’s ERA ranks 10th best among major league starters who’ve logged at least 50 innings. According to Jeff Quagliata, the research manager for the YES Network, it’s also the best ERA he’s ever had through 10 starts.

Perhaps even more impressive is this:

Considering that we’re talking about a former Cy Young winner who was arguably the best left-hander in the sport for a while there, this is saying something.

You can be forgiven if your only reaction to Sabathia’s current dominance is utter shock, complete with a stupefied and/or dumbfounded look on your face. Although he was one of the best pitchers in baseball once, that was before he put up a 4.81 ERA between 2013 and 2015. In the meantime, his physical health and personal well-being fell apart along with his numbers.

But in 2016, Sabathia does indeed look like a new man. And a new pitcher, for that matter.

Sabathia’s decision to go into a rehabilitation program for alcohol abuse last October caught everyone off-guard. But by all accounts, it was both totally necessary and totally worth it.

Sabathia communicated openly to the New York Post’s George A. King III in spring training about how good he was feeling and expounded when he wrote in The Players’ Tribune: “[Now] that I’m on the other side of things, I feel at peace. I feel good about myself. I feel good about my body. And I’m really looking forward to coming into this season with a new frame of mind.”

Sabathia also came into the season with a new way to keep his right knee from being a pain in the, well, knee. He committed to wearing a knee brace, and is apparently benefiting from it.

“I think his knee has not been an issue because of the brace,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi told Jared Diamond of the Wall Street Journal, “and I think it’s changed who he is.”

However, just because Sabathia is better off in mind and body doesn’t mean he’s the same pitcher he used to be. The power fastball he once had is still long gone. Going into Friday’s start, FanGraphs had his average fastball velocity at just 88.2 miles per hour, six miles per hour slower than his peak of 94.7. In a related story, his strikeout rate is still well below his peak levels at 7.5 per nine innings.

But who needs velocity when you have movement? As Brooks Baseball can show, Sabathia has scrapped his straight four-seam fastball in favor of more sinkers and a lot more cutters:

Adding a cutter to his repertoire is something Sabathia toyed with back in 2014, when he was trying to learn the pitch from Andy Pettitte. But this time, he turned to Mariano Rivera.

“Just talked about how he throws it, seeing what I could pick up from him,” Sabathia said this spring, per Brendan Kuty of NJ.com. “His was the best one ever.”

Whatever Mo taught him, it’s working. Sabathia’s new cutter can be glimpsed at the 0:20 mark in the above highlight reel, which shows its late glove-side action. And entering Friday, it was holding right-handed batters to a .210 average. They’d also managed only four extra-base hits against it.

In general, hard-hit balls have been tough to come by against Sabathia. According to Baseball Savant, he entered Friday with an average exit velocity of just 85.7 miles per hour. He was also limiting hard contact with the best of ’em:

  1. Tanner Roark: 20.5 Hard%
  2. Scott Kazmir: 21.9 Hard%
  3. Jake Arrieta: 21.9 Hard%
  4. CC Sabathia: 23.0 Hard%

As such, going for a movement-first approach has allowed Sabathia to become the kind of pitcher he needed to become once his strikeout rate started going the way of his velocity. That was a wake-up call for him to learn how to pitch to contact, and he’s finally done it.

Of course, pitching to contact effectively also usually requires good luck. Sabathia’s .275 batting average on balls in play suggests he’s gotten more than his fair share of that. As noted by Corinne Landrey at FanGraphs, he’s also been a bit too good at keeping fly balls in the park. Once these two things regress, his ERA will take a hike.

Nonetheless, the 2.28 ERA Sabathia has now feels awfully reminiscent of the .842 OPS and 33 dingers the Yankees got out of A-Rod in 2015, following his year-long suspension in 2014. It’s production that can be nitpicked, but it’s also production that can’t be ignored and can certainly be enjoyed.

Sabathia is allowing the Yankees to say hello to an old friend they probably thought they’d never see again. They should be (and presumably are) savoring every second of it.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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