Tag: Oakland Athletics

Ben Sheets, $2.5 Million into the 2010 Season

We are now a little over a quarter of the way through the baseball season, and the Oakland Athletics’ Ben Sheets is the center of attention. In the off-season, Sheets signed a one year, 10 million dollar contract with Oakland. Almost unheard of in the scheme of Billy Beane’s makeup for the A’s.

Now, it is my intention to grade the overall performance of Sheets up to this point.

The 10th overall pick of the Brewers in the 1999 draft has appeared in 10 games this season. Within that stretch, he has had two 6 inning, shutout games, including his most recent outing against the crosstown Giants, which he won 3-0. That being said, he has a 5.04 ERA.

Not what you expect from a man who is supposed to be the leader of your team.

This has resulted in only a 2-3 record for Sheets. I will give Sheets the benefit of the doubt that his ERA has spiked from his April 27th and May 2nd outings. He gave up eight and nine earned runs in those starts, respectively.

What can’t be forgotten is that he has no decisions in his four starts against the division. That means he is simply not showing up in the most important games of the early season.

Right now, the Athletics stand at 23-23, 2.5 games back of the Texas Rangers. If Sheets can continue to work himself back into form, the Athletics will be right there, fighting for the division.

The Rangers and the A’s cannot forget about the Los Angeles Angels, of course. They have had a slow start, but have the ability to run off a streak of wins to take hold of the AL West.

With all of this put into play, I give Sheets a C- so far for his ability to keep the A’s in games, though this grade could improve steadily. It will be intriguing to see if he can pick it up or if the rest of the starters will have to carry the load.

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Oakland A’s: The Chris Carter Query

There is much hype surrounding the impending promotion of Stephen Strasburg of the Washington Nationals to the big leagues. Deservedly so. If he wasn’t hyped up enough before being drafted by Washington, he’s proved his mettle in the minors this season, specifically with his spotless 0.00 ERA after 18 1/3 innings at Triple-A Syracuse.

But what of the A’s most hyped prospect? First Baseman Chris Carter is nowhere near as acclaimed as Strasburg. However, a team as power-starved as the A’s can’t help but look to Carter to help bring balance to a team excelling with it’s pitching staff.

The A’s pitching staff managed to allow just one run to the struggling San Francisco Giants over the weekend, but you can’t expect them to turn in a performance like that the rest of the season.

The scrappy A’s survive by manufacturing runs, but if they want to contend in September, they need some power in the line-up, a bat pitchers are truly afraid to face.

In 2008, Chris Carter, freshly acquired by the A’s in the Danny Haren trade with the Arizona Diamondbacks, put up remarkable power stats with the Single-A Stockton Ports: 39 home runs and 104 RBI to go along with a modest .259 batting average. As excited as the A’s must have been to finally have a true power bat in their minor league system, the .259 batting average and a strikeout total of 156 had to be worrisome.

In 2009, Carter started the season with the Double-A Midland RockHounds, and finished with the Triple-A Sacramento River Cats en route to a career season. Carter totalled 28 home runs and 115 RBI to go along with a much improved .329 batting average.

Carter learned better plate discipline and overall became a force to be reckoned with. After this accomplished season, Carter added a MiLB Player of the Year award to his trophy case.

So of course, heading into the 2010 season, there was a lot of hype surrounding Carter as a future franchise player. The power has returned as Carter currently has collected nine home runs and 36 RBI.

I’m a little troubled by Carter’s .235 batting average and .328 on-base percentage. Granted, it’s only two months into the minor league season, and there’s plenty of time for Carter to improve, but it’s his threat as a hitter, as well as a power hitter, that needs to catch up.

Fortunately, or unfortunately depending on how you look at it, Daric Barton is finally living up to some of his own hype at the major league level. Barton has flashed the glove of a gold glover and the patience at the plate to become a hitter the A’s truly wouldn’t mind having at the plate for a crucial at bat.

Barton’s competence buys time for the A’s to take their time with Carter.

In a perfect world, the A’s play well down the stretch, Barton stays healthy and Carter can mature some more at Triple-A Sacramento.

The conundrum facing the A’s is if everyone’s healthy, Carter is dominating Triple-A and can help Oakland, where do you put him in Oakland?

Barton’s a quality first baseman. At DH, you have Jack Cust for the time being, hitting competently in the role. I’ve been conditioned to be pessimistic about any Eric Chavez return, but if he does return from his latest injury, it’ll just be one more roster hurdle for Carter.

Carter’s debut in Oakland this season will most likely come at the hands of an injury or a trade. I’m finally starting to enjoy Barton’s performance, I’d hate to lose that bat.

Cust likely is in Oakland to stay pending any return from Eric Chavez. If they A’s don’t want to lose any players prematurely via health or trade, they must consider that Carter might not debut until September when rosters expand or when the 2011 season begins. At least then Chavez’ contract will be up, the A’s can again choose to non-tender Cust and open up a 1B/DH spot.

I hope nothing rushes Carter to the big leagues. The A’s need to see him recapture that dominant batter’s box presence before they start selling Carter T-shirts and jerseys.

The 2009 Chris Carter is the man I want to see in Oakland.

He has the power… is it too much to ask for more?

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Watered Down Baseball: What Happened to My Game?

On May 1, 1920, the Major Leagues would witness the longest game in the history of the sport. The Brooklyn Robins battled the Boston Braves in a game that would eventually end in a 1-1 tie, due to the fact that it was getting dark out, and stadiums were not built with lights at the time.

The two starting pitchers are names that are not really recognizable now, and they are Leon Cadore and Joe Oeschger. The amount of innings to be played that night fell just short of the equivalent of three games, at twenty-six innings. What is even more remarkable is that both starting pitchers finished the game. That’s right! Twenty-six innings pitched by each one of them, and surely they did it proudly, trying to earn their team a win.

Nowadays in baseball, if a pitcher goes six innings we give him a medal, but back then, pitchers were actually expected to finish the game that they started.

This is a feat known as pitching a complete game, a stat that is a rarity today, except for the likes of Roy Halladay, who was probably born in the wrong time frame. People make such a big deal about him because he eats up innings and has led the majors in complete games year after year. But had he played even just thirty years ago, baseball fans and analysts would be saying, “So what?”

This is not a knock on Halladay, more like the highest of compliments. It is truly a shame that this sport does not have more of him. But the fact of the matter is, this league we all love and watch now is watered down baseball, ruined by the owners and general managers by dolling out huge sums of cash to the players, and ruined by the managers for not playing real baseball.

What do we consider a solid season by a starting pitcher in present time? Maybe two hundred innings and ten to fifteen wins. If any pitcher consistently puts up those numbers, they will earn a major contract, be on the all-star team, and be looked at as a top pitcher. But fifty years ago and beyond, those stats were nothing major.

A pitcher today is considered a freak if he goes above and beyond those numbers. So what’s wrong with this situation is that we award them for doing something that was considered normal in the early days of baseball.

Let’s take a look at Christy Mathewson, one of the first inductees into the Baseball Hall-of-Fame. In the 1908 season, he threw thirty-four complete games, while amassing 390.2 innings, all while winning thirty-seven games. Quite remarkable, don’t you think?

Want to know what is even more shocking than that? His arm did not fall of during the season. And Mathewson was not alone; in 1903 he set his career high with thirty-seven complete games and was not even the league leader.

That is the major problem: managers being too protective of their pitchers. Today if a pitcher goes six innings, we pat him on the back saying he did the best he could, and then the men in charge of baseball had to worsen the matter by awarding him a stat; that ridiculous piece of new-age garbage known as the “quality start”.

A quality start is categorized as if a player pitches six or more innings and gives up three runs or less (which makes the ERA 4.50, not a great number in itself), he is awarded that. So now already the pitcher has in my mind that once he gets to the sixth, he can come out of the game. Fifty years ago if a pitcher wanted to come out that early in the game, either he had to be dying or his wife was giving birth.

But this problem did not just evolve on its own, in fact, it all started when closers became a mainstay in baseball.

Saves had always been a stat, but they were rarely used because teams really did not have much of a bullpen back then. As a manager you had your five starters (sometimes teams opted to go with only a four man rotation) and maybe two or three pitchers to have in case of emergency. If those relievers were not available, then you just used a starter to come in and finish the game.

Take a look at pitching stats from the early days of baseball. You will see that most pitchers have saves, but none hardly ever have more than ten. That is because these pitchers were workhorses, and saves were meaningless to them. Getting back to Mathewson, in 1908, he started forty-four games as the team’s ace. But he would also make twelve relief appearances and earn five saves.

Most likely those saves were the kind earned when one pitches the final three innings of a game and the team wins, a situation hardly seen in baseball today.

The Oakland Athletics are really the team to blame, as they started the whole movement of a pitcher pitching solely to close out the game, and that is where the term closer came from. It all started with Rollie Fingers and then Dennis Eckersely, and by the time the latter replaced the former, a league wide hysteria had caught on.

All of a sudden managers realized that they did not need their starters pitching every inning. Originally it was not that bad. Closers were there to pitch two, maybe three innings. But then managers got another idea into their heads; the set-up man.

If one situational reliever was not enough, they now had one for the eighth inning, and some even had another one for the seventh. Shortly, “lefty specialists” would become a mainstay in every bullpen, in addition to the above lunacy.

Closers were not all that bad, and in fact, I was fine with them until a few years ago when I realized just how over-hyped they are. Just listen to what people say:

“Not just anyone can be a closer.”

“It takes a special pitcher to close out a game.”

“You need to have a certain mindset to work the ninth inning.”

It has gotten so bad in recent years that closers have started to believe them. They have to have a special song when they run on the field, grow crazy facial hair to be intimidating, and come up with some manipulated version of the sign of the cross to jump around and do upon getting the final out.

When people argue that it takes a special person to be a closer, what about all the “star” closers that get injured every season and some journeyman nobody comes in and pitches lights out?

Take Dustin Hermanson for example, a middle of the pack starter and a below average reliever. After he left San Francisco in 2004 to join the Chicago White Sox, this sub par pitcher became the team’s closer and was lights out, saving thirty-seven games with an ERA of 2.04. The next season? He appeared in six games before being demoted to the minors, where he has never returned from.

Then there is Ryan Franklin, who bounced from the majors to the minors for his entire career, and last season becomes the most feared closer in the game. He even had to grow a crazy goatee to try to scare people. And what happened when the playoffs rolled around? How elite was he then?

The final example of this counter argument saying that anybody can close comes with David Aardsma of the Seattle Mariners. This was a player who played on four different teams in four years, and a guy who could not hit a cow if he was standing on the milking stool. Yet last season, he saves thirty-eight games and this season he finds himself owned by 86% of all fantasy baseball managers.

All of this hype for one inning wonders, and they only pitch one inning because they want to come into the ninth with a nice fresh, clean slate to pitch on. All this build up of closers only being able to pitch one inning has made them mentally unstable to come in during the eighth inning. How many times do we see elite closers come in early with men on base, only two allow them all to score before getting the outs?

And why does a save only have to come in the ninth inning? Tell me, what is more valuable; a closer coming in with nobody on base in the ninth inning and getting three outs, or a reliever coming into the seventh inning with the bases loaded and getting the outs he needed?

Why can’t the save be awarded to the pitcher who actually “saves” the game? It could be a discretionary stat, decided by the official league scorers. But then again, that would not be fair to the closer, because he is getting paid the big bucks to pitch his one, glorious inning.

So now the middle relief pitchers got upset, and Major League Baseball had to instill the biggest travesty this sport has ever seen, with a little stat known as the “hold”.

According to this fantastic stat, if a pitcher enters the game with a lead and exits with the lead, he is awarded the stat. These are two scenarios that can lead to a hold. Please tell me what is wrong with them:

1. Pitcher A enters the game with a 10-0 lead and retires three batters. His team wins the game and he is awarded a hold.

2. Pitcher B enters the game with a 10-0 lead and gives up nine runs. His team holds on for the win and is awarded a hold.

How on earth can baseball award a pitcher for a poor performance? It is because everything has to be individualized, and everyone must have a stat. There have been instances where a pitcher has come into a game, walked a batter, and left being awarded a hold. A pitcher not even recording an out and getting a positive stat?

Managers are even losing games or putting them at risk because of over-reliance on their bullpen. Take yesterday afternoon, for example. The Athletics were leading the Giants 1-0 after eight innings. Gio Gonzales had pitched all eight innings, allowing only two hits and one walk. He only had ninety-five pitches, but was lifted in favor of closer Andrew Bailey, who in his one inning would throw thirty pitches and allow two baserunners.

Although the A’s still won the game, how come Gonzales could not finish it out? Was it because he was approaching 100 pitches?

This is the new thing now, pitch counts. When I first started watching baseball in the late 90′s, I don’t remember them being mentioned. Now the hysteria has even gotten so bad as the YES Network now has a pitch count display on the main scoreboard, so that every second in the game you know where your pitcher is.

I don’t see this as counting up pitches, I see it as counting down to how much longer a pitcher has left to go. At the hundred pitch mark, apparently, a pitcher’s arm will just fall off. It is taboo to allow someone to throw much more than than that. Why, I ask? Why?

Take the New York Yankees and last season’s embarrassing treatment of Joba Chamberlain.

Starter, reliever, starter, reliever.

It got so bad that it seemed like almost every month they were changing him around. Then it got worse and they created the “Joba Rules”, which monitored his pitch counts and innings totals. Eighty pitches, and he was done. Getting close to the innings limit? Skip his starts every few weeks and only allow him go four when he does. (Thank God for bullpens!)

Chamberlain is now the set-up man for Mariano Rivera, the spot he should have been in all along. But it is safe to say that the Yankees ruined what was their most promising pitching prospect since perhaps Mariano himself.

Not only that, but he was built like a brick you-know-what. At 6-2, 230 pounds, Chamberlain was not some frail little stick. Let him pitch, or will his arm just fall off? Why couldn’t they let him mirror Tim Lincecum who is big enough to be confused with the bat boy? All he has been able to do in two seasons pitching without a leash is win two Cy Young awards.

He came up from the minors gunning it at 99-101 MPH. How he is lucky if his hardest fluctuates between 94-96. He struggled as a starter last season, and he is struggling now, with an ERA of 4.50. (But that’s okay, cause he has nine holds)

So I ask, what happened to this great game? Starters no longer pitch to help the team win, but they pitch to earn wins themselves. Closers do not pitch to seal the win for their team, they pitch to earn a save. And now relievers do not pitch to help out the team, but to get a hold.

All of this individualized, and all of it for the stats. There is no longer any winning for the team, just winning for personal stats. It will only get worse, and in years to come I wonder how many more will be invented so we can give another mediocre pitcher his own stat.

The way this game has dipped in recent years is embarrassing. What happened to durability in players? In the 1900′s when players were overweight chunks of fat whose only off-season exercise consisted of raising a beer glass to their mouths, they never got injured. Now players have personal trainers and a staff of team doctors and there are more injuries now than ever before. This really is cause for another article, but it adds to how watered down this sport has become.

Give me back the real baseball players we once had.

Give me back my game.

Please visit my blog, “From New York to San Francisco” .

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San Francisco Giants vs. Oakland A’s: 2010 Bay Bridge Series Starts Perfectly

Friday marked the sixth time Bleacher Report and I have been welcomed into the press box at the Oakland Coliseum. My five previous trips were all stellar experiences, but this one felt different the minute I crossed the parking lot’s threshold.

Generally when I arrive around 3:30 pm, the lot is dotted with one hand’s worth of early birds. Today, the number was closer to triple digits.

Barbecues were in full smoke, games of catch featuring both footballs and baseballs were breaking out, and there was a general air of festivity hanging over the scene.

Once inside the stadium, the special atmosphere only got thicker.

More than a few t-shirts amongst the media members had been replaced by suits and ties, glitterati from the Bay Area press were out in full force, and there was even a cluster of representatives from a Chinese television station that were clearly there for the spectacle and nothing else.

When you’re pulling dudes to a baseball game who have to ask what a perfect game is, you know you’re a big deal.

To remove any doubt that the day was unique, Oakland manager Bob Geren was downright jovial in his session with the media. Heretofore, I’d only seen a no-nonsense version face the barrage of questions.

This time, however, he was hamming it up with Kate Longworth of CSN Bay Area and kidding around with other reporters in the pool.

Sure, the pregame ceremony celebrating Dallas Braden’s perfect game had something to do with the warm-fuzzies.

The southpaw was already popular with Oakland Athletic fans, but he vaulted into “adored” status following the stout defense of his pitching mound from the onrushing hordes (yes, a juiced up Alex Rodriguez counts as a horde). Consequently, the perfecto he twirled on Mother’s Day launched him into even more cherished territory.

Possibly divine.

So more than a few of the faithful were there to see the home team honor Stockton’s favorite son. Furthermore, baseball history typically puts a smile on the organization that authors it.

Nevertheless, this was more about the main event—the first game of the 2010 Bay Bridge Series between the A’s and their cross-Bay rivals, the San Francisco Giants.

For many baseball aficionados in the City and Oakland, this is as good as it gets on a diamond.

Major League Baseball’s Northern Californian constituents have met 74 times since Interleague play began and rarely fail to deliver a tense, exciting game. To that end, familiarity has only nurtured contempt bred by the 1989 Bay Bridge World Series—at least as far as the fans are concerned.

The green and gold leads the regular season confrontations with a 39-35 record as it does the postseason meetings (13-5). All is not gloom and doom for the Orange and Black, though, as it has taken seven of the last eight contests, so it’s a nip/tuck type affair.

The current iteration promises to bring more of the same.

Both franchises come into the series deploying a similar formula to win—superlative pitching, solid defense (better than that in Oaktown’s case), and timely hitting. If matchups make a metaphoric fight, this three-gamer should be a bloody knuckle war of attrition because both sides have had success with the approach.

Granted, some of the attrition has already started as the pair comes in scuffling.

San Francisco has fallen all the way to third place in the National League West, courtesy of a recent jag that’s seen the fellas lose eight of their last 13 games and three of four. As has been the case all year, los Gigantes had a devil of a time navigating local waters—dropping six of those eight to NL West foes in the San Diego Padres and Arizona Diamondbacks.

Meanwhile, the smell emanating from the Elephants’ dugout is no sweeter.

The Athletics have eaten L’s in seven of their last nine trips to the yard, including two straight after a couple of victories over the Seattle Mariners broke a five-game slide. Coincidentally, all five were against American League West opponents.

In other words, it was the classic “something’s got to give” scenario.

Give it did as the Athletics touched up a resurgent Barry Zito.

The Junior Circuit reps used some very well-placed, bloop doubles to conjure up a trio of runs in the bottom of the third inning and didn’t look back from there. The Gents’ lefty pitched well before tiring in the seventh, but the knocks came in bunches and the result was a six-spot on the scoreboard before he hit the showers.

Ex-Giant Rajai Davis, who tipped his hand early with a loud batting practice, was the main culprit. The speedster landed the most crippling of the bloopers in the third, stole third base, and notched a sacrifice fly to plate the third of his three RBI from the No. 9 hole.

On the mound, a suffocating blend of Trevor Cahill, Brad Ziegler, and Craig Breslow kept the San Francisco lumber in check—an increasingly easy task at the moment. In fairness, the visiting offense did manage to bang out eight hits.

Alas, the Oakland hurlers were able to sprinkle the damage harmlessly throughout the nine frames (only John Bowker tallied a run for SF) and secure a much-needed W.

In so doing, the home team tied a neat bow on an ideal evening for the organization.

And it ruined one for the San Francisco Giants.


**www.pva.org**

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Athletics Enthusiasts: In the Era of the Bandwagon Fan, They Remain Genuine

As a proud Minnesotan I will always be a Twins fan, but I have to tip my hat to baseball enthusiasts in Oakland.

The residents of the East Bay who attend Athletics games may be few in number, but they remain faithful to a team that was once dominant, but has recently fallen from grace, now that big-market teams like the Yankees and Red Sox have commandeered the MLB, setting it on a collision course that can only be avoided with a drastic change in league management.

On my original visit to Santa Clara University, which I have attended for the past two years, I went to a San Francisco Giants game.

AT&T Park has a lot to offer. It is a well-maintained facility, is always filled with faithful, passionate fans and is located on the beautiful San Francisco Bay, creating an outstanding atmosphere for baseball.

The stadium is easily accessible.

From the Santa Clara CalTrain station students can get to San Francisco in an hour and the park is located minutes away from the final stop.

The Oakland-Alameda Coliseum, which serves both the Raiders and the A’s, is a dilapidated facility that is located in industrial Oakland.

It is difficult to get to.

Residents of San Jose must take the CalTrain to a stop in San Francisco and take the Bay Area Rapid Transit subway to Oakland. It adds extra time onto the trip and is an additional cost.

Like any good baseball fan I aspire to visit as many ballparks as I can during my lifetime, but it is virtually impossible to get anyone from Santa Clara, which has a relatively affluent student body that is indifferent its own baseball team, to travel to Oakland for an A’s game—especially because AT&T Park is seen as a better alternative.

Recently, however, my friend’s brother was in town to visit. The Kansas City-native and loyal Royals fan expressed interest in seeing an A’s game and asked me to go because his younger brother articulated little interest in visiting a park that is borderline unsuitable for baseball.

I accepted.

On Monday, May 17 we traveled to the Oakland-Alameda Coliseum to watch a division rivalry game between the Oakland Athletics and the Seattle Mariners. The A’s faithful who attended the game may be small in number, but they were genuine, ardent fans and created an incredible atmosphere in an otherwise shoddy milieu.

Sports enthusiasts in the East Bay have a reputation of being inhospitable to outsiders, but it seemed like everyone in The Coliseum complimented my team as I walked through the concourses wearing my Twins sweatshirt.

There is plenty of reasons for A’s fans to despise the Twins: The Twins eliminated The White Elephants in the 2003 ALDS, have an expensive new ballpark, don’t have to compete with a big-market neighbor who has a better facility, et cetera.

However, instead of focusing on the differences between the two teams, they reinforced the struggle of our economical, homegrown teams against the expensive, free agent saturated rosters of the big-market teams.

Oakland joins Baltimore and Toronto in a list of cities that at one time supported a loyal baseball following, but now have a sea of empty seats in their ballpark. Teams in smaller cities are no longer able to compete with big-market franchises on the East Coast and in Los Angeles that are located in large cities and are able to carry six-digit payrolls.

The Orioles and Blue Jays are trapped beneath the behemoth Red Sox and Yankees in the AL East. The Angels, who compete in a four team division with the A’s, have won the AL West five of the last six years.

True baseball fans have become a rare breed. Fleeting are the fans that speak of the games they attended with their family or recall ballpark memories with friends. Although Santa Clara is located in California and a majority of the student body comes from the West Coast, many students talk about how they were raised a Yankee fan in a city that already has a team or the time their dad went to Boston and brought home a Red Sox hat for them.

Interestingly, many of these hats were purchased after 2004.

The game of baseball is hurting because of the recent influx of big-market bandwagon followers. Dallas Braden pitched a perfect game for the A’s in a Mother’s Day contest between Oakland and the Tampa Bay Rays.

Both teams are having outstanding seasons, the Rays had the best record in MLB and Oakland is in contention for the division lead, but less than 10,000 people witnessed the nineteenth perfect game in MLB history.

Baseball is falling out of favor in America because of steroids, slow games, and a lack of parody.

Baseball enthusiasts like the ones who surrounded me at the A’s game should be praised, rewarded by MLB, not deserted and left to deteriorate like the stadium they watch the game in.

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On the Field With the Oakland A’s: 10 Highlights For True Baseball Fans

One of the greatest things about receiving a press pass is the on-field access that comes with it.

Since I’m not allowed in the clubhouse—the Oakland Athletics were extremely gracious to extend the credential to Bleacher Report and (indirectly) me in the first place, but they didn’t take COMPLETE leave of their senses—the time on the field before the game is my only chance to soak in a perspective of Major League Baseball that most aficionados never get.

The press box is definitely cool, but it’s not all that different than watching a game with some of your most critical/passionate buddies.

In truth, I actually think the pre-game field experience is preferable to the locker room—that is the team’s territory and I never like trespassing where I don’t belong even when invited.

Plus, it’s kind of like a zoo where the attractions are on display and they know it.

Even the most genuine interaction feels a bit artificial and the responses carefully calculated.

Granted, my exposure is limited to my first visit at the Oakland Coliseum when the powers-that-be forgot to eliminate my clubhouse access and I wandered through it accidentally (that might sound preposterous, but the tunnels all look the same and it was my maiden voyage—I walked up some stairs and was suddenly in a carpeted locker room).

By comparison, the diamond is more of a middle ground.

Yes, it belongs to the men in uniform, but there are enough interlopers roaming the grounds that ownership can’t be considered exclusive (until the first pitch, that is).

More importantly, the field is like a safari—the stars still know they’re on display, but the remoteness of the observation allows for a more comfortable and organic experience.

And it reminds me of all the reasons I absolutely love Major League Baseball.

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The Oakland Athletics: What They Need To Win the AL West

The Oakland A’s are in a familiar spot this season just like most of the decade. There’s a need for a big bat in the lineup.

So, far in the young season, the A’s have been hovering near or been in first place in the American League West. 

If the A’s are to win the division, there’s no question of what needs to be addressed for this team, and that is to bring in a big bat to anchor the lineup.

The A’s are currently on a four game losing streak. Over the span of those games the team has faced three left handed pitchers and one right handed pitcher.

So far in the losing the streak, the A’s have managed just five runs against Derek Holland, C.J. Wilson, Joe Saunders, and Ervin Santana. 

It’s the lineup that was brought out against those three left handed pitchers that make the A’s lineup look more like a Minor League team rather then a Major League team.

Here’s what the first game against Holland looked like. 

1. Cliff Pennington

2. Adam Rosales

3. Daric Barton

4. Kevin Kouzmanoff

5. Ryan Sweeney

6. Jake Fox

7. Landon Powell

8. Josh Donaldson

9. Rajai Davis

 

The game against Wilson saw a lineup of

1. Pennington

2. Rosales

3. Barton

4. Kouzmanoff

5. Fox

6. Powell

7. Donaldson

8. Gabe Gross

9. Davis

 

Third games lineup was

1. Pennington

2. Rosales

3. Barton

4. Kouzmanoff

5. Fox

6. Powell

7. Donaldson

8. Gross

9. Davis

 

None of these lineups would scare any Major League pitchers.

In the fourth game against Santana the A’s lineup was a lot better and here’s what that line up was: 

1. Pennington

2. Barton

3. Sweeney

4. Kouzmanoff

5. Eric Chavez

6. Jack Cust

7. Rosales

8. Eric Patterson

9. Powell 

 

Still, for the A’s the lineup isn’t that strong. As seen by the fact that Patterson is tied for the team lead in homeruns with just four. It also shows the problem with the A’s in games where they don’t score many runs. 

When the A’s score four or more runs, the A’s are 17-1, and when the team scores less than four runs, the team is 1-18.

That’s a big problem because as the season progresses the A’s are going to play in games where they will be scoring four or less runs. 

That means the A’s need to bring in a big bat to the lineup to put some fear into the opposing team’s pitching staff.

Right now the A’s two leading homerun hitters, who both have only hit four balls out of the park, are Patterson and Kurt Suzuki. Unfortunately, Suzuki is on the DL with an injury and has missed the last 20 games. 

Now more than ever is the time for the A’s to bring in a big hitter.

There are a couple of names the A’s should and could acquire in trade especially with their talented minor league prospects.

If it means giving up a big name prospect, then that’s the chance the A’s should take. It shows A’s fans that the team looking for a new ballpark is serious about winning.

One name to consider is Prince Fielder from the Milwaukee Brewers.

He’s a free agent at the end of the year and could sign anywhere. He would bring a huge bat into the middle of the A’s lineup and could offer the protection that has been lacking for Kouzmanoff, who has struggled with the bat this season for the A’s. 

Another possibility to consider would be trading away Tyson Ross, Daric Barton, who has been the best A’s hitter so far this season, Michael Taylor, and one of the young starters the A’s have such as Trevor Cahill, Vin Mazzaro, or Clayton Mortensen. 

Another name that has come up who more than likely will not sign with the San Diego Padres is Adrian Gonzalez.

If the Padres continue to win he maybe untouchable. 

If the A’s were to somehow pry away Gonzalez from the Padres they would have to give up players like Ross, Barton, Cahill/Mazarro, and Chris Carter who is the best prospect the A’s have in terms of power hitting ability. 

Manny Ramirez is another possibility, but his baggage may not be what the A’s want on this young team. But, his ability to hit would definitely add another dimension to the A’s lineup.

Ramirez also knows what it takes to win, something the A’s have had not had since the early part of this decade. 

However, there’s already a rumor that the Mariners may try to trade Cliff Lee for Ramirez because of the Mariners woeful offense.

For the A’s to get Ramirez, a trade for Ross and Mazzaro would be negotiated because it gives the Dodgers young pitching talent that the team has been desperately seeking.

Again, Ross is projected as a solid starter once he gets settled in at the Major League level and Mazzaro is very talented Triple A prospect. 

Lastly, another option for the A’s would be to bring in Jayson Werth from the Phillies.

He’ll also be a free agent at the end of the year and there is a rumor that Werth may cost too much money for the Phillies to retain. 

If that is the case, the Phillies will want to get something for him.

Maybe it means bringing back Michael Taylor, Adrian Cardenas, and Henry Rodriguez. Werth would give the A’s versatility in the outfield because he can play all three positions and he adds a big threat to the lineup. 

There’s one thing for sure and that is that the A’s need a bat in the lineup.

With an addition of the big bat in the lineup it would benefit the pitchers because now they would be able to make a mistake and not have to think about it for very long.

In the 19 losses this season the A’s have managed 38 runs! That’s an average of two per game. 

When the A’s win though, it’s a different story, the team averages 5.4 runs per game in the wins.

That’s a huge difference between the runs scored in losses and the runs scored in wins and with an addition of a big bat into the lineup it gives them a chance to win low scoring games as opposed to losing them. 

Just maybe with the addition of a big bat to the lineup it would excite A’s fans to come to the ballpark and watch this young team compete on a regular basis. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Fantasy Baseball Inbox: Week 7 Spot-Starters: Leake, Sheets, Holland or Chacin?

Continuing our mailbox segment properly titled Fantasy Baseball Insiders’ Inbox, our Insider will answer a question posed by one of our loyal readers.

If you have a pressing question for the Insider, whether it be a trade proposal or a spot-start question, drop him a line: nick@fantasybaseballinsiders.com .

This week’s question: Looking ahead to week seven, who is the best option among the following starting pitchers? Mike Leake , (who I currently own) Ben Sheets , Derek Holland , or Jhoulys Chacin ?

Mark (Chicago, IL)

Thanks for writing the Insider, Mark.

Of the four pitchers you mentioned, Mike Leake has been the best thus far. In six starts this season, he’s posted five quality starts and owns a sparkling 3.10 ERA and 1.20 WHIP.

If we’re speaking solely on his week seven value, however, his one start at Atlanta (5/20) disqualifies him from the discussion.

In weekly leagues, Sheets, Holland, and Chacin owners have the benefit of two starts each.

Derek Holland pitched exceptionally well in his season debut against Oakland on Wednesday , tossing six shutout innings while striking out seven. He will face the Angels (5/17) and Cubs (5/22) next week, both in Arlington.

Angels’ regulars hit .300 (18-60) against Holland last season. The Cubs have yet to see the 23-year-old, but are hitting .279 (82-for-294) against southpaws in 2010. For these reasons, Holland probably isn’t your best bet.

Jhoulys Chacin opened the season with a 15 1/3 scoreless inning streak, but was rocked for six runs in five innings Thursday night against the Nationals .

The 22-year-old Chacin will pitch against the Cubs (5/18) and Royals  (5/23) next week, both on the road.

Young pitchers without much major-league experience are generally very inconsistent, making them poor spot-start options. Because we have limited history to judge Chacin’s worth, he’s probably not the best choice in week seven.

Ben Sheets ‘ 5.70 ERA through eight starts thus far is somewhat deceiving, as most of the damage against him has come in two starts at Toronto and Tampa Bay. In his six remaining outings, Sheets has posted five quality starts.

The 31-year-old will match up against the Mariners (5/18) and Giants (5/23) in week seven, both starts being in Oakland, where Sheets is 2-1 with a 2.31 ERA and 1.29 WHIP this season.

Seattle regulars are 10-for-49 (.204) in their career against Sheets, though four of those hits have come off the bat of Ken Griffey Jr. Only five regulars on the Giants’ roster have seen Sheets, collecting a combined .260 (6-for-23) lifetime average.  

All signs point to Ben Sheets  as the best spot-start option in week seven. As tough as it may be to dump Leake (just for next week), it’s the right move. Scoop up Sheets and enjoy his two-start week!

Do you have a question for the Insider? Shoot him an e-mail: nick@fantasybaseballinsiders.com   

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Dallas Braden’s Perfect Game: Longoria’s Code Violation

 

 

Dallas Braden has been all over the media by pitching only the 19th perfect game in the history of major league baseball on May 9th, 2010.

 

The accomplishment rightfully overshadowed a possible code violation, but it should be pointed out.

 

Braden was in the middle of a perfect game when yet another player disrespected him. In the fifth inning, Oakland was beating the Tampa Bay Rays 4-0. Evan Longoria might have committed a violation of one of baseball’s unwritten rules by attempting to bunt his way onto first thus ending Braden’s perfect game.

 

Longoria’s accused bush league antic sent him to the dugout. His bunt went foul and forced him to go down swinging. There were plenty of fans who were aware of his attempted breach and let Longoria hear it as he left the plate.

 

 

Joe Maddon made the following statement on MLB.com:

“We’re trying to score runs there,” Maddon said. “We’re not just trying to permit him to go into the record books. Our intent is to win the game. And actually if he gets it down, who knows what could have happened. That’s one of those other unwritten rules that I’m not a subscriber to.”

Just because someone doesn’t believe in an unwritten rule doesn’t mean they have the right to violate them.

 

In Alex Rodriguez’s head Braden wasn’t A-list enough to call him out when he ran across the mound. That doesn’t negate the fact that he knew he was violating the code.

 

The situation might have been overlooked had it been Ichiro Suzuki with the attempted bunt merely because it’s a common strategy used by the Japanese star. But Longoria is an elite power hitter that never bunts for hits. The fact is the Rays did not want to be the victim of a perfect game.

 

 

Longoria stated to the Tampa Tribune:

 

“I figured I’d try to take the opportunity there, maybe it stays fair and we get a runner on. At that point, you’re really not thinking about the guy’s perfect game or no-hitter; you’re just trying to get back into the game. It was a manageable game. Get somebody on and try and score.”

 

Critics often question the unwritten rules of baseball often missing the point. Baseball is played with grace and some acts are considered classless. The majority of players adhere to this code of conduct.

 

The violation would be more clear if it was in the eight or ninth inning. Dallas Braden doesn’t seem to be bothered by it but that might be only due to the fact it did not break up his perfect game.

 

 

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2010 Oakland Athletics Starting Pitchers: The JaMarcus Russell Edition

After the Oakland Raiders traded for the Washington Redskins’ Jason Campbell, the speculation in the swirling rumors of JaMarcus Russell’s imminent demise was replaced with inevitability.

The big man with the even bigger contract was due $9.45 million in the upcoming season and, by all accounts, nothing about the kid warranted rolling the dice when that kind of money was at stake.

And so the axe fell on May 6th, putting Russell firmly in the running for the title of Biggest Bust in the History of the National Football League.

That’s gotta sting.

The news has been fodder for numerous punchlines and snicker-inducing jabs around the country, but it’s not creating as many laughs in the Bay Area. The city across the Bay from the City is, shall we say, displeased.

So, to hopefully lighten the mood of some very disgruntled Oaktown residents and fans (or at least to give them an outlet for anger), I thought it’d be fun to bring the 510’s success story into the fray—the Oakland Athletics.

More than a few Major League Baseball players have been former college quarterbacks so what if the A’s starting pitchers traded rawhide for pigskin?

What current NFL signal-caller does each mound maestro most closely resemble?

Obviously, we’re not talking looks here—I’m a heterosexual man and everyone knows we don’t make aesthetic distinctions when it comes to our fellow fellas. This is strictly about a mix of on-air personality, body of work, age, and a healthy dose of gray area for the sake of convenience.

Or idiocy—you decide…

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