Tag Archives: cleveland indians

Non-Waiver Trade Deadline Coming. Who’s Staying and Who’s Going?

Major League Baseball’s non-waiver trade deadline is just 10 days away and that means the teams that believe they have a chance to reach the post-season will try to get better while those that have thrown in the towel will try to get better next year – or sometime in the next decade.

Already this month, the Toronto Blue Jays have moved expensive veteran Juan Rivera to the Los Angeles Dodgers for future considerations and the New York Mets have dealt closer Francisco Rodriguez to the Milwaukee Brewers for two players to be named later.

There is definitely more to come. The question is: Which teams are real contenders and therefore real buyers and which teams will start dumping as many veterans as they can possibly unload?

Most teams, it would appear, are like Cleveland — cautious. A surprisingly good team, the Indians are battling Detroit for first place in the AL Central. However, it’s unlikely they’ll do anything to shake up a good thing even though manager Manny Acta has told www.cleveleand.com that his team “desperately” needs to make a deal.

After all, on Tuesday night in Minnesota, he had to use backup second baseman Luis Valbuena in leftfield (the first time he’d ever played the position) because of injuries to Grady Sizemore and Shin-Soo Choo. Velbuena misplayed a fly ball in the ninth inning that probably cost Cleveland the game and as a result, don’t be surprised if the Indians take a look at St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Ryan Ludwick or Oakland’s Josh Willingham — as long it doesn’t cost them too much.

Meanwhile, other teams that could try to improve by adding a veteran or two are Philadelphia, the Yankees, Boston, the White Sox, Texas, the Angels and Atlanta. The Brewers, meanwhile, might not be done making moves while both the Giants and Arizona could be interested.

On the other hand, watch for Toronto, Baltimore, the Mets and Houston to start ridding themselves of older players.

Here’s a list of 10 legitimate trade rumours. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if some of these rumours actually came to fruition:

1) Florida Marlins: It has been reported in a number of news outlets that there’s “a good chance” closer Leo Nunez will be traded before the July 31 non-waiver deadline. The Miami Herald pointed out that Nunez has one more season of arbitration eligibility, but it’s extremely unlikely the Marlins will want to absorb “an expected salary increase from his current $3.65 million yearly salary.”

2) Arizona Diamondbacks: The D-Backs are expected to try to make a deal for a veteran reliever. Now that Rodriguez has been dealt to the Brewers, Arizona is looking at the Mets’ Jason Isringhausen and the Cubs’ Kerry Wood. Trouble with the Wood rumour is that he has a no-trade clause. The Arizona Republic is reporting that the D-Backs have talked to Toronto about any one of Frank Francisco, Shaun Camp, Jon Rauch, Jason Frasor and Octavio Dotel.

3) Toronto Blue Jays: It’s very likely the Jays will trade a reliever or two. Octavio Dotel is almost certainly going to be traded. Meanwhile, the Jays will try to move Edwin Encarnacion, but they are also talking to St. Louis about acquiring outfielder Colby Rasmus.

4) Baltimore Orioles: The O’s were supposed to be so much better this year and now, as they fade into oblivion, expect a handful of these guys to be trad bait. It’s actually possible (although not likely) that J. J. Hardy, Mark Reynolds, Jeremy Guthrie, Derek Lee, Luke Scott, Nick Markakis and Adam Jones could all be moved by July 31.

5) Houston Astros: This is a team ready to sell — sell it all, in fact. Word out of Houston is that young pitchers Bud Norris, 26, Mark Melancon, 26, and Jordan Lyles, 20, are the only players the Astros would NOT consider trading.

6) New York Mets: Carlos Beltran will be traded. The only questions are: when, to whom and for how much? As well, don’t be surprised if the Mets try to make a deal for Jose Reyes. He’s in the final year of his contract, the Mets are virtually broke and he’ll command a load of prospects. It’s not as far-fetched as it sounds.

7) Atlanta Braves: The Braves believe they have a shot at Philly and also a shot at the Wild Card and they’ll try to add veteran help. Dodgers SS Rafael Furcal will likely be available and the Braves would like to add a veteran at that position (trading away Yunel Escobar was not smart). The Braves also have a couple of decent prospects at Triple A ready to go and they could use Derek Lowe as trade bait.

icon cool Non Waiver Trade Deadline Coming. Whos Staying and Whos Going? Detroit Tigers: The Tigers might be interested in Beltran as a leftfielder if the price is right. However, Detroit really wants a veteran starter. Manager Jim Leyland doesn’t really believe that Charlie Furbush is the answer and there has been some talk that the Tigers would make an offer for Hiroki Kuroda if the Dodgers wanted to deal.

9) San Diego Padres: Closer Heath Bell is a wanted man. In fact, he’s told the L.A. Times already that he figures he’ll end up in the uniform of the Angels, Yankees, Cardinals, Rangers or Phillies. Apparently the Rays are also interested.

10) Colorado Rockies: On the surface, it’s crazy talk. The Rockies are apparently considering trading their ace, Ubaldo Jimenez. The Rockies are, evidently, concerned that Jimenez might be out of their price range when contract negotiations come up next season, so why not deal him now and get something exceptional for him in return. Certainly, the Yankees are interested. I doubt Rockies GM Dan O’Dowd will make a move, but then again, I didn’t think anyone would trade for Vernon Wells and we all know that the Angels pulled the trigger on a guy who is currently making $23 million this season and is hitting .218 with 14 homers and 35 RBI.

What a Saturday! One of Those Days You Don’t Forget.

Donna Chief is one of those people who is hard to forget. Saturday night, I finished the day talking to Donna Chief. People who know her today, know her as  the vice-principal at Seven Generations Education Institute in Northwestern Ontario. But 27 years ago, she was an enthusiastic young woman from Wabigoon Lake Ojibway Nation who gathered the courage to call Roy and Evelyne Holenski and ask if they could use another pitcher on their Smitty’s women’s fast pitch team.

Saturday night, she was inducted into the Manitoba Softball Hall of Fame along with a team called McKay United — nine Metis brothers from Crane River, Man., who made up a national championship team.

“This is a really big deal,” Chief said, just before the official Hall of Fame induction ceremony at the Canad Inns Polo Park in Winnipeg on Saturday. “It’s a big deal because I didn’t realize I had a career.

“Then, when I sat down and kind of put together everything I’d done, it occurred to me that I did have a career. I was 19 and playing for me team from Dryden-Fort Frances and we were playing a tournament that Smitty’s was playing in. I was pitching and we beat the Kern-Hill Jays and I kind of thought that maybe I was good enough to play for Smitty’s.

“So I worked up the courage and called the Holenskis and they said they had room for me. I was so excited. I pitched for them for two years and then something amazing happened. Evelyne got a call from Susan Schultz, the coach at Mayville State University, who asked, ‘Is there anyone on your team who is good and isn’t doing much with their lives,’ and Evelyne said, ‘Yes, Donna.’ Well, I thought I was doing a lot with my life, but it turned out to be the greatest thing that ever happened.’ I pitched in a tournament in Fargo a couple of weeks later and Susan offered me a full scholarship at Mayville.

“I went down there and stayed for 12 years. I also got my degree and became a teacher and now I’m a vice-principal. None of that would have happened without softball and without the Holenskis.”

Talking with Donna was a great way to finish a spectacular Saturday, a Saturday that might be hard to forget:

1. Detroit Tigers righthander Justin Verlander threw a no-hitter at the Toronto Blue Jays. It was a masterpiece: One walk erased by a double-play. 27 Up, 27 Down.

It was Verlander’s second career no-hitter and one senses there will be more. People are already talking Hall of Fame. If he doesn’t blow his arm, there is little doubt.

2. A 20-1 longshot named Animal Kingdom (boy, were the Disney people ever happy with this winner) won the 137th running of the Kentucky Derby. Paid $43. John Velasquez, who was supposed to ride Uncle Mo until he was scratched, gave Animal Kingdom a sensational ride, proving jockeys can win races with courage and skill.

The jocks who ride at the Derby are the big league ballplayers of the horsey crowd. Saturday afternoon, Velasquez proved how good they can be.

3. Manny Pacquiao is now 53-3-2 in his illustrious career after winning a lopsided 12-round decision over Sugar Shane Mosley at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

Pacquiao dropped Mosley with a left hook in the third round and the challenger was never a factor in the fight again. With the easy win, Pacquiao retained his WBO Welterweight title, but more importantly, he also maintained the title of “the best pound-for-pound fighter on the planet.”

4. The Cleveland Indians won again. This time 5-4 at the Big A in Anaheim. The Indians are now 22-10, tied with the Fightin’ Phillies for the best record in baseball. After falling behind 2-0, the Tribe came back to win thanks to big hits by Shin-Soo Choo, who is hitting .226, and Carlos Santana (the greatest name ever for a guy playing in the home of the Rock ‘N Roll Hall of Fame) who is batting .217.

I still don’t believe they will keep this up. But it sure is fun watching no names, has-beens and never-weres eat up Major League Baseball.

5. Speaking of no-names, has-beens and never-weres, how about the Nashville Predators? Sure, the Preds aren’t out of the woods yet, they still trail the Canucks 3-2, but on Saturday night, for the first time in franchise history, they won an elimination game (they were 0-5 heading in).

With a pair of third-period goals by Joel Ward (who?), the Preds beat the Canucks 4-3 in Vancouver and extended the Western Conference semifinal to a Game 6 in Nashville on Monday night.

If Barry Trotz pulls this one off, there will be absolutely no doubt that pound-for-pound, Trotz is the best coach in the NHL.

Lots of Stuff From a Week at Home and on the Road

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — Sitting in the hotel room on a rainy Saturday waiting for the England-USA World Cup match and hoping tonight’s Twins-Braves game is not rained out…

1) Visited $545 million Target Field for the first time last night and it’s better than advertised. A small park with fewer than 40,00 seats, it’s an absolutely perfect place to watch Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau.

The press box is one of the best I’ve ever experienced. Great food — cheap, too — and tremendous working areas.

The concourses are spacious and the Twins Store is beyond belief.

Here are some things to keep in mind if you’re visiting:  (a) If you don’t stay at a downtown hotel so you can walk to the park, do your best to park at an LRT lot and take the train. Parking is crazy near the ballpark and if you pay the big bucks to park near the stadium, you might never get out. (b) Some high seats in the 300 level in left centerfield have obstructed views (you can’t see the warning track). Standing room is a better seat choice than high upper deck outfield seats. As long as you can stand for three hours. (c)  The concessions are expensive ($6 for a small bowl of soup), so eat before you go.

It’s a marvelously beautiful Mankato limestone ballpark that cannot be compared to any other major league stadium — past or present. It’s small, intimate and perfect for a place like Minnesota. Progressive Field in Cleveland used to be my favorite big league park, but it’s Target Field now.

2) Speaking of Cleveland, Indians radio announcer Tom Hamilton had the line of the year this past week. As the Indians were beating the Red Sox 11-0, David Ortiz was called out on strikes and, of course, Big Papi had words for the home plate umpire. Hamilton watched this go on and said, matter-of-factly, “Why is it that all Red Sox and Yankees hitters are in shock whenever an umpire calls a strike on them? Nobody whines as much as Red Sox and Yankees hitters.” Hear, hear.

3) Next weekend, the University of Winnipeg will announce that the brand new Wesmen men’s and women’s soccer programs will begin play in the Manitoba Colleges Athletic Conference this fall. The plan is to play in the MCAC for a year and then join the Canada West Universities Athletic Conference in 2011.

It will be great to have men’s and women’s soccer join men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball at Winnipeg’s downtown campus.

4) Gerrard just scored on Howard. The Liverpool captain scores on the Everton goalkeeper. Time to go watch the match.

Joyce’s Bad Call Once Again Proves Replay is the Only Answer

Wednesday night, I watched the Detroit-Cleveland baseball game from first pitch to last. I grew up 45 minutes from the front door of Tiger Stadium while my wife spent much of her developing years at Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium with her favorite uncle. We are a mixed marriage — one Tigers fan, one Indians fan.

And even she thought Armando Galarraga got jerked over.

Everybody knows the story by now. Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga was robbed of a perfect game on Wednesday night when first base umpire Jim Joyce completely blew an out call on what should have been the final out of a 27-up, 27-out game. There was absolutely no question, even before a thousand replays were shown, that Jason Donald was thrown out, first base-to-pitcher, by Miguel Cabrera with Galarraga covering. Joyce blew the call, plain and simple.

And to his credit, Joyce admitted it. He told reporters after the game: “This isn’t ‘a’ call. This isn’t — This is — This is a history call and I kicked the shit out of it. And there’s nobody that feels worse than I do. I take pride in this job, and I kicked the shit out of it, and I took a perfect game away from that kid who worked his (butt) off all night.”

It was, perhaps, the worst call in baseball history (Huffington Post and the Big Lead called it “the worst call in sports history”), but at least Joyce took responsibility. I still think he should resign, but then again if you watch as much baseball as I do, you’ve long ago come to the conclusion that umpiring is a really, really imperfect science and over the course of a week, there are dozens of bad calls. In fact, the strike zone is a joke. The boys in blue (or is it black now?) make that thing up as they go along.

So I certainly didn’t disagree when commissioner Bud Selig said yesterday that he wouldn’t overturn the call even though it was the worst call in baseball history. I also agreed with Selig when he said he would take a close look at replay and umpiring.

Instituting replay is a simple task. Each manager gets one flag per game. Use it wisely. Balls and strikes are out (computers should call balls and strikes anyway). Jim Leyland could have had a chance to fix the problem from the dugout last night simply with the opportunity to go to the replay — a replay that was available to everyone watching that game in less than four seconds.

Replay would have saved Jim Joyce his torment (and a very funny website called www.firejimjoyce.com) and also give a journeyman starter like Armando Galarraga a real day in the sun (yeah, the Corvette was nice, but if I know the Tigers organization, owner Mike Ilitch would have bought Armando the entire Chevy line if he had “perfect game” on his resume).

Thursday afternoon at Comerica Park everybody kissed and made up, but St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa — as he often does — had the best take on the entire mess.

“I was thinking if the umpire says he made a mistake on replay, I’d call it a no-hitter, perfect game. Just scratch it,” La Russa said. “If I was Mr. Selig, in the best interest of the game. The guy got it and I’d give him his perfect game. But here again, I should just shut my mouth.”

Meanwhile, I have learned one important lesson from this incident: I vow to never again, never ever again, on the Shaw TV telecasts of Winnipeg Goldeyes baseball, to NEVER, EVER again criticize a Northern League umpire. From the horrendous umpiring done in the 2009 playoffs to Joyce’s blown call on Wednesday night, the arbiters in the majors are living proof that the guys in the Northern League are just as good as they are (or just as bad, whatever your point of view).

Fact is, the sad state of major league umpiring is a bigger problem for the game than steroids ever were.

No Wonder Newspapers Are Dying

MINNEAPOLIS — Friday night, we spent a terrific night at the Metrodome in Minneapolis watching the Minnesota Twins turn the American League Central Division race into a real race.

The Twins got a tremendous pitching performance from Brian Duensing, a two-run bomb from Michael Cuddyer and held on in the ninth to shut out the Detroit Tigers 3-0. Great game, great night at the ballpark. And it was nice to have a brief chat with my old friends Larry Fitzgerald Sr. and Chuck Olsen in the press box.

But then, what happens in the cold light of dawn? The Twin Cities Star-Tribune newspaper arrives at my door (it was part of my hotel stay, I can assure you I wouldn’t pay for it) and I read the column by Jim Souhan.

Nice premise: “On their feet, fans grasp the worth of important baseball.” Souhan defended the American League Central Division, the Division that every baseball fan will agree is the weakest of them all, but he did it with a moronic, backhanded shot at the Division that showed his incredible ignorance. The ignorance only possessed by an unthinking mainstream media newspaper columnist in these days of the dying daily newspaper.

Souhan wrote: “Baseball needs a place to hide its weaker teams and the Northern League is full.”

Whether Souhan failed to have the proper size of cojones to rip the American Association where the Twin Cities’ own St. Paul Saints play or he was just rushing at deadline, is not for me to decide. But the truth is this. The Northern League is NOT full and it would gladly accept the American League Central Division’s Cleveland Indians and Kansas City Royals.

Check the roster in Cleveland. This year’s September call-up edition of the Cleveland Indians is not as good as the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks. And frankly, that lousy Class A team is being passed off as a Major League ball club. That’s nothing short of fraud.

But what the hell? Just as columnists make up phony plans for football stadiums (there is NO Plan B if David Asper fails) and others create hockey trades out of the ether, we’ve grown to accept pure, unadulterated mendacity in the mainstream media. I keep kicking myself every day, saying: “Why do I bother to read that stuff?”

No wonder newspapers are dying.

The New Yankee Stadium: A Band Box Joke.

Canwest Park here in Winnipeg, is a gorgeous 7,000-seat minor league ballpark that cost $22 million. It’s dimensions are 325 down the leftfield line, 325 down the rightfield line, 375 to the gaps and 400 feet to straightaway centrefield.

 

The New Yankee Stadium is 318 feet down the leftfield line and 314 feet down the rightfield and that old fashioned “short porch” in right that contributed mightily — more than steroids ever would have — to Roger Maris’s 61 home runs in 1961, has been reconstructed for your historical enjoyment.

 

It is, for lack of a better term, a $1.5 million band box. In fact, in this day and age, it’s a joke and just like those geniuses who built Comerica Park in Detroit had to bring in the leftfield fence, the idiots in New York who built a “porch” that made sense in the dead-ball era will have to do something to make the new Yankee Stadium just a little more than a quirky little joke.

 

For $1.5 billion, the Yankees gave their players and fans all the amenities of a five-star hotel in a ballpark best suited for Senior Amateur Baseball.

 

In the first three games at the new Yankee Stadium, there have been 17 home runs. That could be a result of bad pitching, but as Tim McCarver so aptly put it on Saturday’s Fox broadcast, “It’s April. What’s going to happen in the home run months of July and August?” 

 

Here’s the real problem: Asdrubal Cabrera’s grand slam during Cleveland’s 22-4 shellacking of the Yankees on Saturday afternoon would have been a routine out in every other ballpark in the majors.

 

The new Yankee Stadium is obviously a beautiful piece of modern design and engineering. Outside the actual playing surface. The field’s dimensions make for a less-than-realistic major league stadium. In fact, the size of the playing field of the new Yankee Stadium has been designed for the low minors.