Posts Tagged ‘Manny Ramirez’
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Beat L.A., Beat L.A.August 14th, 2008
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In a season without playoff promise, each individual game takes on a heightened sense of importance. The San Francisco Giants can’t salvage the year, but they can play to win each game because that’s all that’s left to do.
A string of August or September victories might not mean much now except to slap a bit of polish upon a dismal year, but they could provide a young team a necessary confidence boost for 2009.
The arrival of the Los Angeles Dodgers in San Francisco with new slugger Manny Ramirez for a weekend set gave the Giants a chance to strike a blow against a rival in pursuit of the pennant. At home, against the Dodgers — the three games were playoff-like baseball and the best it would get for a team playing out the string.
After dumping the first game in depressing fashion, San Francisco won Saturday and Sunday in their final at-bat to sting the Dodgers and send a mob of jubilant Giants out onto the field at AT&T Park. The two victories gave the Giants their first winning series against Los Angeles and homestand of the year. Read more
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A Movement Towards YouthAugust 7th, 2008
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The baseball trade deadline expired last Thursday without a peep from the San Francisco Giants (48-65). Sure, second baseman Ray Durham departed for Milwaukee, but the Giants failed to find a home for any of their other veterans. So, what remains will remain unless a waiver deal can be arranged, which is a possibility. In some ways, the lack of trade news is deflating, but with the deadline now in the distance, the Giants have found courage in not feeling obliged to audition older players and can finally proceed with the future.
Friday night in San Diego marked the beginning. San Francisco trotted out a line-up of kids, which delighted many who have clamored for this moment for months. Shortstop Emmanuel Burriss and second baseman Ivan Ochoa formed the Giants’ new double-play combination, which added a much needed dose of excitement and athleticism. Ironically, the Giants won Friday and Saturday with the kids and lost Sunday with the vets. To end Saturday night’s game, Ochoa displayed a bit of fancy footwork as he fielded a ball behind second base, stepped on the bag before a sliding Padre could take him out and zipped a throw to first for the double-play. The game-ending play exhibited a type of dazzling quickness and youth, missing around the diamond. Read more
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Ramirez, Sox End Volatile Relationship: Latest “Manny Being Manny” Antics Swelled Into Selfish Discontent, Forcing Boston To Make A MoveAugust 4th, 2008
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And just like that, he’s gone.
After 1,083 regular season games played, 274 home runs launched into the ether, and 868 runs driven in, Manny Ramirez will no longer stand before the Monster in left field wearing home whites with red embroidery. No longer will he bat behind David Ortiz, forming one of the most prolific offensive combos in the history of the game. And no longer will he stir that fickle cauldron mixed with absolute indignation and pure jubilation.
Just like that. Like so many of the baseballs that effortlessly smacked off the barrel of his bat. Gone. Long gone, in fact.
With just minutes, if not seconds, to go before the clock struck four on Thursday afternoon, the Red Sox sent the disgruntled Ramirez to the Los Angeles Dodgers via the Pittsburgh Pirates in a three-way deal that landed All-Star outfielder Jason Bay—quite fittingly—in the Bay State.
In a move similar to the Nomar Garciaparra trade of 2004—and for largely the same reasons and under eerily equal circumstances—the player, teammates, manager, and front office all agreed: a point of no return had been reached, and Ramirez had to go; and what better place than Frank McCourt’s SoCal Red Sox Retirement Home. Read more
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Teixeira for Kotchman? I Just Don’t Know.July 31st, 2008
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19th in runs scored. 19th in hits. 22nd in home runs. 19th in RBIs. 24th in total bases. 22nd in on base percentage. And 22nd in slugging.
On paper, this doesn’t really sound like a division contending team, let alone the best team in baseball by a fair margin. But when you factor in 8th in ERA, 7th in shutouts, 1st in saves (by ten saves, between first and second), 25th in earned runs against (yes, that’s a good thing), a winning starting rotation, a solid bullpen, a slid defense, a consistent running game, and you get the Angels.
Up until last night at about 5-something eastern time, the Angels were not the media’s favorite team to look at. In fact, the Angels crept slowly into first place without so much as a sneeze. It wasn’t until about three weeks after the Angels took first place that ESPN even took notice on their power rankings. The Angels were clearly the underdogs of 2008, who’s game was so much more old-school than any other teams, besides maybe the Minnesota Twins and a more distant example in the Baltimore Orioles.
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Red Sox Roadkill: Inefficient Offense Away From The Friendly Confines of Fenway (Part 2 of 3)July 27th, 2008
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Just as life tastes better with KFC—well, according to the the ad jingle, at least—the Red Sox offense undoubtedly performs better at Fenway Park.
Hitting .297 with a .376 on-base and .475 slugging percentage at Fenway as a team, the Boston lineup scores an average of 5.8 runs per home game.
But, then, take that same crew away from Fenway: the team average drops; the accumulative OBP dips; and a power sap follows suit. As a result, the offense—prior to the club’s three-game series against the Seattle Mariners at Safeco Field—has produced 4.3 runs per road game, ranking them towards the middle of the pack in the AL in terms of road run production.
Now, it’s no strange occurrence that an offense produces more at home than they do on the road. Various reasons, ranging from ballpark factors to simple creature comforts, play a role in the splits. Yet, despite the seemingly stark contrast between Boston’s home and road offensive splits, the Sox—with a .762 OPS away from Fenway—lead the AL in road average (.266), road on-base (.336), and road slugging (.425) through July 20.
This begs the question: based on the above, just how many runs should the Sox be averaging on the road?
It’s such a pity that there isn’t a way to calculate such things. Oh, wait. There is! Read more
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End of the Road for Boston Woes OR Just the Beginning of Boston’s Road WoesJuly 20th, 2008
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A few short months ago a la October, the Angels were basically running away from Fenway’s bombers with their proverbial tails between their legs. After losing two series ending in sweeps to the Red Sox on two separate post-season occasions since the turn of the millennium, the Angels seemed to have their work cut out for them again in 08 if they wanted any chance at another World Series run.
The Angels have been, in their career, weak against the formidable Boston lineup. It is because of this that so many sports writers have criticized the Angels’ management for not acquiring a more fear-inducing bat for the middle of the lineup to back Big Daddy Vladdy. In fact, despite a successful first half, power rankings on ESPN still give little credence to the team and still stress this same overly-repetitive theme: “The Angels are the clear favorites in the AL West despite an offense that ranks 23rd in the majors in OPS and runs scored. Will they make a run at Mark Teixeira or Matt Holliday, or cling to the hope that starting pitching, a great closer and a flair for one-run victories can propel them deep into October?” (Crasnik’s “Starting 9” on ESPN.com). Though that last little statement, ending in a rhetorical question, seems to be rather connotative of a negative sentiment, I beg to differ, and offer up a definite YES. Great pitching > great hitting. Almost always. Read more
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Halfway Point Revisited: Making The GradeJuly 20th, 2008
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The mid-season report card, better known as the beat writer’s great crutch, remains one of the more pointless routines in baseball journalism. After all, a baboon could regurgiate what a player has already done and fling arbitrary grades around.
So, since we all know that assigning high and low marks to individual players is nothing but a sham, I decided to take a stab at it as well, though with, hopefully, some predictive acumen in certain cases. Read more
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Wrist & Relaxation: Big Papi Out At Least A MonthJune 7th, 2008
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He let loose his typical mighty swing—the type of violent hack meant to launch a baseball into an orbital rotation around the sun, or perhaps even beyond. A tick late on the incoming heater, he instead thundered a seemingly harmless foul ball off to the third base side.
But before the soon-to-be souvenir even found its way into the crowd, David Ortiz heard it: a disconcerting pop in his left hand followed by excruciating pain upon each subsequent movement of his wrist, which sounded off with a noticeable click.
An X-ray after the Monday night game against the Orioles in Baltimore revealed no damage, but an MRI the next day back in Boston would prove to be far more revealing. The extensor carpi ulnaris tendon in Ortiz’ left wrist had slipped from its sheath, which had suffered a partial tear, causing the connective tissue to grind and snap over the bone, hence the pesky clicking sound emanating from the area.
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Still A Bit Doughy, Still Proving Scouts WrongMay 20th, 2008
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He leads the Red Sox in batting average and on-base percentage. And no, his name isn’t Manny Ramirez.
He ranks first on the club in extra-base hits, total bases, and slugging. And if you guessed David Ortiz, you’d be wrong.
In fact, he not only tops the Sox in runs created but also the entire American League through Sunday’s games. And fittingly, in this modified version of Guess Who, our mystery man trails just the Texas Rangers’ Milton Bradley in RC/27 (that is, runs created expressed as a rate stat per 27 outs rather than a raw number; not a droid model from Star Wars).
But does he have any facial hair?
Ah yes, finally, a pertinent factoid. While failing to outdo Manny’s Rastafarian mop and gnarled whiskers, this chap’s bristling goatee still manages to hold its own.
Of course! Our mystery man is no man at all—but rather, a god in the eyes of some baseball brethren.
Dubbed years ago as “Euclis, The Greek God of Walks” by the Oakland Athletics’ front office due to his historical minor league on-base prowess, first baseman Kevin Youkilis is no longer a deity of a single force.
These days, he’s more like “The Greek God of A Little Bit of Everything.” No, certainly not as catchy. And no, he’s not actually Greek, either.
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First Time Since… When???April 26th, 2008
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Boston vs. Angels. Angels AT Boston. Angels at FENWAY. None of that sounds good, at least to anyone who is an Angels fan.
Historically, the Angels have more than SUCKED against Boston’s power-house of offense, the one-two Papi-Manny assault, and even with Drew, Lugo, and YOOOOOOOOOUK… but put it AT Fenway, and it’s twice the horrific scene of brutality.
The best instance? Oh, maybe the playoff sweep in 2007? Oh, maybe the same playoff sweep in 2004? It has been a common plague of the Angels organization for several several years – and the fear for this season was that if something drastic didn’t happen in the off-season, that it would continue… something of a plague maybe?
So it has been the Angels staff’s epic journey to find a way to get passed Boston’s hitter’s game. By acquiring Torii Hunter to fill a bit of the power-bat gap they’ve complained about for the past few years, they looked to match wits, so to speak. I think Garland may have been a bit of a risk, in terms of playing Boston, since Garland’s pitching style lends itself to being hit, which is something Boston does exceedingly well. At least, however, he is a sinkerball pitcher, and can get the balls to stay in the park for the most part. But let’s not forget that Fenway is very much a hitter’s park, with a barely over 300-feet away left field “monster.”
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