Tag: Oakland Athletics

Oakland A’s Uncertainty and a Little Drama Surrounding Offseason

The Oakland A’s offseason has been a bit of a soap opera.

Since what looked like a full blown fire sale by shipping off three good young pitchers (Cahill, Gonzalez and Bailey), things have taken a different turn.  Billy Beane pulled the trigger on Yoenis Cespedes, the hot prospect from Cuba, telling A’s fans that he is willing to spend some money to go along with the youth in Oakland

Although, don’t forget about the huge contract he gave Cahill last year, as we know all too well with Beane, he is very impatient when he spends big bucks.

 

Drama

Manny Ramirez is bringing his show to Oakland along with a 50-game suspension and some legal issues.

Coco Crisp doesn’t seem happy with the notion that he may have to move to one of the corner spots in the outfield, due to the signing of Cespedes, so fans will have to wait and see how that plays out.

Crisp should just relax until we find out if Cespedes’s big numbers in Cuba are any indication of how good this kid can be in “The Show.”

 

Question Marks

Without boring you with a list of names that A’s fans are well aware of, I will just mention a few spots that remain a mystery in Oakland.

Closer Andrew Bailey is gone, so who will step in and win the job?  The outfield is definitely not settled, and the DH spots and first base are a traffic jam to say the least.

 

What We Know

Kurt Suzuki, Coco Crisp, Cliff Pennington, Jemile Weeks and Scott Sizemore are pretty much locks for their respective positions and Brandon McCarthy, Bartolo Colon and Dallas Braden will fill the top three spots in the rotation.

 

My Two Cents

The A’s are a young team and there are a lot of ifs as we begin spring training.  I like what I see in Jemile Weeks—there will be no sophomore slump here.  If Cespedes works out, I like the potential one-two punch of the speedy Crisp and Weeks at the top of the order.

The competition for the closer spots and the three or four guys vying for the last two spots in the starting rotation could be good for business, as these guys will leave it all on the hill in order to secure a spot.

OK, I’ll stop dancing around the real issue in Oakland.

The Oakland A’s couldn’t score runs in 2011 and this needs to change. Cespedes, Manny and a huge stable of young unproven talent is supposed to solve that problem.

So, if the A’s are a soap opera, let’s hope it’s not the “Young and the Hitless.”

I’m just saying!

 

This article can also be viewed at SportsandMoviestuff.com

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Oakland Athletics: Sh*t A’s Fans Don’t Say VIDEO

CHAMPIONSHIP!

Next in our “Sh*t __ Say” series…another look into the lives of Oakland Athletics fans.

Because it really does not matter how many of these videos you have already seen.

Sometimes it’s fun to look past a team’s flaws and just have a good time joking around. Some of these will never happen at any point during the life of an A’s fan. Other quotes may just not be a part of the conversation for the next year…or two.

Once again, Fan Fest in Oakland gave a great glimpse of the Athletics’ fan base. Solid bunch.

Without further ado, we bring you “Sh*t A’s Fans Say.”

Click Here to go to our follow-up video: “Sh*t A’s Fans Say!”

 

Produced and Written By:

Ally Williams:

Twitter: @itsallyduhh

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/ally-williams/20/9a0/8b4 

Josh Eisenmann

Twitter: @Eisenmann89

Max Schreiber

Twitter: @baseballrodent

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/max-schreiber/1a/ab7/a17

Sunny Boparai

Twitter: @Sunny_sf

Email: Sunny_sf@hotmail.com

 

Get ready for next week: “Sh*t Giants Fans Say/Don’t Say”

Contact any of us with ideas for future installments!

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Oakland Athletics: Sh*t A’s Fans Say VIDEO

“Should we go see a Rivercats game to see what the team is going to look like next year?” 

You’ve seen plenty of the videos. Whether you love them or hate them, they’re everywhere. Still, in spite of all the viral spin offs circulating around the Internet, there are very few that depict the lives of sports fans. This is where we come in.

What is it like to be a lifelong A’s fan? Well through the past few years, it hasn’t been that easy. Still, there are still plenty of Oakland faithful that show up to the games. Even more that show up to Fan Fest!

We took a trip up to Oakland during Fan Fest and came back with a little view into what it’s like to root for the Athletics. Regardless of the players, management, or this season’s standings, A’s fans flocked to o.Co Coliseum to support their team. Note: It was the first time I’d ever felt awkward wearing my Giants gear.

Enjoy our video, and leave your comments below. Did we miss some? Nail a quote right on the head?

Without further ado, we bring you “Sh*t A’s Fans Say.”

Click Here to go to our follow-up video: “Sh*t A’s Fans Say!”

 

Produced and Written By:

Ally Williams:

Twitter: @itsallyduhh

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/ally-williams/20/9a0/8b4 

Josh Eisenmann

Twitter: @Eisenmann89

Max Schreiber

Twitter: @baseballrodent

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/max-schreiber/1a/ab7/a17

Sunny Boparai

Twitter: @Sunny_sf

Email: Sunny_sf@hotmail.com

 

Get ready for next week: “Sh*t Giants Fans Say/Don’t Say”

Contact any of us with ideas for future installments!

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Manny Ramirez: Oakland Athletics Lose No Pride by Signing Ramirez

The Oakland Athletics would be smart to sign Manny Ramirez to a one-year contract if and when the former major leaguer makes a return to the big leagues. It’s a no-brainer.

Oakland, reported to be heavily interested in signing Ramirez, is known for acquiring former sluggers like Frank Thomas, Mike Piazza and Hideki Matsui in their autumn playing days.The thing is, Ramirez has only produced positive results for performance-enhancing drugs twice. He retired days after the test results were made public.

What’s the big deal if the Ramirez project fails? He goes away. Oakland has players that can fill the designated-hitter slot, but Ramirez has produced power numbers that no one else on the roster has come near.

Do A’s fans want more utility players platooning at designated hitter, or would they rather watch someone who’s known for having potential pop in their bat?

Which has more appeal? That shouldn’t even be a question.

Commenters on a story that was posted about the Ramirez-A’s connection yesterday said “Yes, it would be a bad decision,” “He’ll be a cancer in the clubhouse” and “The A’s don’t have any pride.”

To commenter No. 1, the only bad decision in this case would be if Oakland did absolutely nothing to try to sign Ramirez. Baseball is a business and the risk versus reward in this case is too good to pass up.

To commenter No. 2, who’s there for Ramirez to have problems with in the clubhouse?

 

 

He’s going to be a designated hitter. It’s a one-person position. He’s not going to have to catch Dallas Braden or relay throws to Chad Pennington from the outfield. He can be a loner. As long as the production is there, nobody is going to care what he does. If there’s no production, he gets cut.

Simple.

The A’s cut Jason Giambi when he faded away a few years ago.

To commenter No. 3, how can the A’s lose PRIDE when they’re already near rock bottom?

This is an organization that PRIDES itself on covering off the third deck of its stadium and boosting the prices of its mediocre second-deck seats on every day other than Wednesdays.

This is a club that PRIDES itself on FedEx-ing any player that has a promising future to a team that’s willing to pay for it.

This is a team that PRIDES itself on signing aging stars and making them their power hitter, and that’s the case with Ramirez potentially coming here. He’d be here to swing a bat, not play the outfield or first base.

Not to be forgotten, he has to serve a 50-game suspension (reduced from 100) once he returns, but that won’t be a problem in Oakland. Something tells me that if he signs with the A’s, fans will be begging for him to be batting cleanup come game No. 51 of the regular season.

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Oakland Athletics: 5 Bold Predictions for the 2012 A’s

Oakland Athletics fans have grown accustomed to offseason fire sales in the past decade. They’re used to seeing the “next big thing” on the roster get shipped to a big-market team or consistent contender. 

When Gio Gonzalez, Andrew Bailey and Trevor Cahill were all shipped elsewhere in the past two months, it was nothing new, but it was depressing to fans witnessing yet another annual winter clearance.

Also, Josh Willingham signed with the Minnesota Twins instead of re-signing with the A’s. The man can’t be blamed for wanting a real chance to reach the postseason.

In exchange for them, once again, are prospects. The A’s are also reportedly chasing two veteran outfielders: Jonny Gomes and Manny Ramirez. Yes, that Manny.

What A’s can actually make a name for themselves this year despite the changes to the 25-man roster?

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2012 MLB Free Agents: Ancient Bartolo Colon Provides Little Hope for Oakland A’s

The Oakland Athletics are reportedly negotiating with journeyman pitcher Bartolo Colon, but the 38-year-old right-hander won’t change Oakland’s fate in 2012.

Colon resurrected his career in 2011 with the Yankees, pitching better than his 8-10 record suggests. Prior to last season, he hadn’t thrown a pitch in the majors since July 2009. Striking out 135 and posting a 1.29 WHIP in 26 starts however, he had a solid year for New York.

Colon was reliable for the Yankees, and with Gio Gonzalez and Trevor Cahill leaving in recent trades, the A’s need to bring in someone.

Oakland’s rotation has weakened and they have done little to improve a lineup that finished 20th in runs, 22nd in on-base percentage, 24th in batting average and 25th in slugging percentage last season.

Meanwhile, the Angles have added Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson, and the Rangers will be as dangerous as ever. Sure, the A’s can beat up on the Seattle Mariners again this season, but I would be shocked if they win more than 66 or 67 games.

Again, Colon was decent last year, but A’s fans would be foolish to expect him to return to greatness. The 2005 AL Cy Young winner is just 22-31 since 2006.

He can still be productive and it’s never bad to have a veteran option at the back of your rotation. Still, there is a bleak cloud hanging over Oakland’s 2012 season, and the addition of Colon will do little to change that.

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Oakland Athletics 2012 Team Calendar: A Symbol of Frustration

Do not buy the Oakland Athletics 2012 team calendar for anything other than humorous reasons. 

As an avid fan, let me explain why. 

Recently, I was at a Barnes and Noble doing some last-minute holiday shopping, along with what seemed like everyone else in the Bay Area. The store was packed and the shelves barren. I found myself wandering into the calendar section, the only place that didn’t look destroyed by Hurricane Procrastination. 

Scanning the available stock, I was sorely disappointed with myself—socks and calendars rival each other as the most thoughtless gift to give someone. 

But on Christmas Eve, anything becomes a possibility. 

Top shelf, at eye level, a green and gold one caught my attention. It was the A’s team calendar for 2012, with four players gracing the cover: starting pitchers Brett Anderson and Trevor Cahill, closer Andrew Bailey and catcher Kurt Suzuki. 

At the time, half of those players had already been traded away. Before the year even started!

Needless to say, I got a good chuckle. It was an LLOL moment, I literally laughed out loud at the item that stood before me. That was followed by the dejected realization that the club had once again parted ways with more proven players in exchange for unproven prospects. A pattern us fans have sadly grown accustomed to. 

The calendar not only represents 2012, but the past decade of frustration as we’ve watched several quality players develop in an A’s uniform only to be traded or allowed to walk away as they enter their prime. 

The growing list includes Jason Giambi, Miguel Tejada, Tim Hudson, Dan Haren, Carlos Gonzales and plenty more. The trend has continued this offseason with the dealing of the organization’s three most recent All-Stars (Gio Gonzales, Bailey and Cahill) and outfielder Josh Willingham, the only power-hitter in an otherwise impotent lineup.

It’s a merry-go-round that seems to have no end. 

So, once again, purchase the calendar at your own risk. The remaining two on the cover may be traded while you stand in line at the local bookstore. 

Then again, you didn’t need me to tell you that, as fans have adopted the frugal philosophy of Billy Beane’s front office. 

Good thing the calendar is probably at a heavily discounted price by now—at least half off. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Report: Oakland A’s Granted Permission by MLB to Move to San Jose

Bob Nightengale of USA Today tweeted this morning that the MLB is very much leaning towards allowing the Oakland A’s to move to San Jose, overriding the San Francisco Giants‘ territorial rights to Santa Clara County that the team has had since the 1990’s.

This is the potential first step of a two-step program in getting the A’s to San Jose, as the team reportedly prefers.

Mayor of Oakland, Jean Quan, is adamant in her stance to keep the A’s—and the Warriors for that matter—in Oakland, and even went as far as to propose a location for a future A’s ballpark near Jack London Square along the water.

The City of San Jose has made great strides in securing a professional sports team in their city over the past few years. They bought land in downtown San Jose for over $25 million and have offered it to the A’s for just under $7 million. This has caused an uproar among some groups in San Jose, which created several anti-A’s ballpark movements in the city.

With the MLB reportedly allowing the A’s to move to San Jose, the last step is a city vote of whether or not the area would like a professional baseball team in their area.

The MLB’s announcement of approval is set for February 2012, which should set up the San Jose vote for early Summer 2012.

Check out my Bay Area Sports Talk blog for more information on the Oakland A’s potential move to San Jose

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Oakland Athletics: MLB Will Reportedly Allow Move to San Jose

With the Oakland Athletics operating under a $55 million budget and losing two of their top starters, Trevor Cahill and Gio Gonzalez, they’ve been adamant about moving to a new stadium, using the Cleveland Indians as a blueprint.

Until now, they haven’t been able to set things in motion because MLB hadn’t approved a move to San Jose, the Athletics’ desired destination.

Well, according to Bob Nightengale of USA Today on Saturday, the Athletics will be granted permission by February to move.

The Athletics went 74-88 last season, ending up 22 games behind AL West champions the Texas Rangers.

In 1994, when the Indians moved to Progressive Field (then Jacobs Field), their fortunes turned quickly. Their first season, they were one game behind the division-leading Chicago White Sox before a strike wiped out the season. They then proceeded to go 100-44 in their second season, making it to the World Series. They went to the World Series again two seasons later.

Said Athletics general manager Billy Beane, via FoxSports.com:

“The most successful organization opening a stadium was still the Cleveland Indians.

“For me, they provide the model entry into a new facility—not just having a good stadium, but having a good young team that you can sustain over a long course of time. That’s what we’re using as a blueprint.”

That blueprint appears to include San Jose.

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MLB Trade Rumors: Did Billy Beane Give the Oakland Athletics the Deepest Farm?

Last season everyone was talking about the Kansas City Royals. All you have to do is look at Baseball America’s list of top 10 prospects for 2011 and you’ll know why: That was one deep farm system.

But over the course of 2011, the farm diminished. Eric Hosmer, Mike Moustakas, Aaron Crow and Lorenzo Cain all saw a lot of time at the major league level. Kansas City still boasts a deep system, but four of their top prospects are moving on (with Hosmer and Moustakas being two of their best).

As we head in to 2012, it is time for another team to take up the mantle of best farm system in Major League Baseball. The Atlanta Braves have a lot of pitching, the Washington Nationals have Bryce Harper, while the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees are stacked as always.

However, neither of these teams win the farm system title. Well, not as of yesterday, that is.

 

Scratching the Surface: Oakland’s Trades

This year’s deepest farm has to go to the Oakland Athletics. It’s about time. It seems like Billy Beane has been turning players over forever.

Earlier this month, the Oakland Athletics traded Trevor Cahill to the Arizona Diamondbacks. Just yesterday they moved Gio Gonzalez to the Washington Nationals. What did they get in return?

For starters, we have to look at the pitching. It’s pretty drool worthy.

For Cahill, Oakland acquired Jarrod Parker. Parker was drafted in the first round of the 2007 draft and shot through the minors, He got one start as a 22-year-old last year with Arizona. Parker received a no-decision in that contest, but pitched 5.2 innings of no run ball.

In return for Gio Gonzalez, the Athletics received Brad Peacock and Tom Milone. Peacock had two starts last season, going 2-0 with a 0.75 ERA. Milone went 1-0 in his five starts in 2011, posting a 3.81 ERA.

So, we’re just scraping the surface here, and already Billy Beane has turned two established starters into three MLB-ready starters—all under 25 years of age. Seriously, just scraping the surface.

Also received in these deals: Collin Cowgill, Ryan Cook, Derek Norris and A.J. Cole.

Cowgill is another MLB-ready prospect. He has great discipline (.383 minor league OBP) and is a power and speed threat. If he bats behind Jemile Weeks, Oakland could have a devastating 1-2 combo at the top of the order.

Ryan Cook projects as a solid major league reliever and could be a closer candidate. He pitched between AA and AAA in 2011, posting a 2.21 ERA, 19 saves and a 9.1 K/9. Like the other four prospects, Cook is ready for the major leagues.

Derek Norris is a catcher with high upside. He opened eyes as a 20-year-old at A ball, when he hit .286/.413/.513 with 23 home runs. Norris has fallen off the map in the last two seasons; he posted a .838 OPS in 2010 (high-A) and a .813 OPS in 2011 (AA). However, he’s stayed patient and the power continues to develop. Once he establishes some consistency, he could be a great major league catcher.

The final guy to talk about is A.J. Cole. Cole was drafted in the fourth round of the 2010 season, and put up solid numbers last year at A ball. The 4.04 ERA wasn’t amazing, but the 10.9 K/9 and 4.50 K/BB certainly were.

Guess what… we’re still only on the surface here. Let’s recap: So far, Oakland has three major league-ready starters, a major league-ready closer, a possible lead off candidate in the outfield, a high-upside catcher and a young power pitcher.

And, we still haven’t even touched on the prospects Oakland already had!

 

Oakland’s Farm Prospects

Topping Oakland’s farm are prospects such as Grant Green, Chris Carter, Michale Choice, Michael Taylor and Sonny Gray. Let’s start from the bottom up.

Michael Taylor, 25, has dealt with injuries the last couple seasons. However, 2011 was a step in the right direction as he hit .272/.360/.456 at AAA with 16 home runs and 14 stolen bases. Taylor is another lead-off and two-hole candidate who could be a starting outfielder for Oakland in 2012.

Then there’s Chris Carter. Carter’s power is legendary, as evidenced by his 170 home runs in seven minor league seasons. He struggled last year with Oakland, but didn’t get much of a shot (only 44 at bats). His defense stinks, but he makes a great DH candidate with Ryan Howard-esque power.

Sonny Gray was drafted by Oakland in the first round of last year’s draft, and was able to make five AA starts before the end of the season. A product of college baseball, Gray looked polished. He went 1-0 with a 0.45 ERA, 8.1 K/9, and 3.00 K/BB.

Michael Choice was Oakland’s No. 1 pick in 2010 and he looked great in 2011. In a full season at high-A, Choice posted a .918 OPS with 30 home runs. Did I mention he’s only 21?

Finally, we have Grant Green. Green is an athletic 24-year-old who originally projected as a shortstop. Because of poor defensive play, Green moved to the outfield in 2011. The power dipped a bit in 2011, but that can be expected with a move to AA. He still has great upside and athleticism, and could be in Oakland as soon as next year.

And, those are just the names worth writing home about. Oakland still has a lot of lower level talent with high upside.

 

Beane Has All the Pieces

The Athletics have been really aggressive with their prospects, and a lot of these guys could be seeing AAA/MLB time as soon as next year. What does that mean? Oakland could finally return to relevance as soon as the 2013 season.

For the first time in a long time, Billy Beane finally has all the pieces to field a stellar team. With a potential move to a new stadium, things can only get better for the Oakland Athletics.

Having the MLB’s deepest farm system doesn’t hurt either.

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