Tuesday, June 10, 2008

We could see it coming

This, unfortunately, was a foregone conclusion:
The Orioles announced today that they have designated right-handed pitcher Steve Trachsel for assignment and selected the contract of first baseman Oscar Salazar from Triple-A Norfolk.

Trachsel, 37, was 2-5 with an 8.39 ERA in 10 games (8 starts) this season.
I have no earthly idea why they brought up Salazar, of all people, a guy who hasn't played in the majors in six years. Nor do I have any idea why they didn't call up an infielder who was already on the 40-man roster (Eider Torres, Scott Moore), another left-handed hitting outfielder (Jeff Fiorentino) or add somebody more useful to the 40-man roster (Mike Costanzo, Chris Roberson).

Sad to see Trachsel go, but the pitching staff is developing just fine and there is really no need for him to take up any more space on the active roster...

Labels: ,

Saturday, May 31, 2008

YES! YES! YES!

This may be the most important news for the Orioles yet:
After 36 years, it appears as if the city's name will make a return to the Orioles' road uniforms.

The Sun
has learned that the Orioles are in the process of filing the required paperwork with Major League Baseball to add "Baltimore" to their road jerseys, replacing the nickname of the club that has adorned the away uniforms since 1973, according to a source with knowledge of the plans. The uniform change would go into effect for the 2009 season.
Words cannot possibly describe how important and awesome this truly is. All I can say is that it's about damn time......

Labels: ,

Saturday, May 17, 2008

That's 7 of 8.....

.....and it just makes you want to sing (I'm just happy I finally found this in a form that can be embedded):

Labels: ,

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Quarterpole

We are one-fourth of the way into this pretty surprising Orioles season, considering even eternal fans like this guy were prediction doom, gloom, and 107 losses.

What is shocking about the Orioles 21-19 start has less to do with the fact that this team is 2 over .500, but the fact that this team is far from firing on all cylinders:
  • Nick Markakis is only hitting .261, and is 1 for his last 17
  • Ramon Hernandez has been hurt off and on, and is hitting .211
  • The .246 team batting average is third worst in the American League
  • Luke Scott has the highest average on the team at .271.....despite hitting .198 in the last month, hitting .133 against lefties, and .194 on the road
  • Steve Trachsel......'nuff said.
The fact of the matter is that despite that, this team can win ball games, even if they spot the defending champs a 3-0 lead two nights in a row. The bullpen has been mostly phenomenal, the starting pitching has done its job (keeping us in games) and the team is playing with confidence. It has been a fun group to watch.

Now, at the quarterpole, let's talk about the Most Valuable Orioles for 2008:

  1. Dave Trembley: Sure, he isn't an active player. But it is hard to argue with the impact he has had on this club. Remember, the preponderance of players on this 2008 team were also on the 2007 team; that team was nine games out 40 games in, and was 11 games under .500 when Sam Perlozzo got canned. Trembley has had a year and a Spring Training to implement his philosophy and his system with his staff and his players. It's working.
  2. Jim Johnson: Where would the bullpen be without this guy? He was a starter in the minors and had brief cameos in '06 and '07, but he has been the stopper out of the bullpen this year, including his amazing duel with Manny Ramirez on Tuesday that ended with a 1-2-3 double play to kill a Red Sox rally.
  3. George Sherill: Sure, it hasn't been pretty, but Sherill has stepped into the closers role and gotten the job done when it counts.
2008 has been more than we can ask for. Let's hope it keeps up. But remember this: the 2002 overachieving squad got to 63-63 on August 23rd, only to go 4-32 down the stretch, so we're not even close to seeing this team be where it needs to be quite yet...

Labels: ,

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Bad Planning

Just because Andy MacPhail is in charge doesn't mean mistakes don't get made:
For one day, Adam Jones will get to pay homage to a hero. Jones, Baltimore's 22-year-old center fielder, was chosen as his team's representative to wear No. 42 Tuesday on Jackie Robinson Day, a tribute to one of the game's greatest legends. Jones, who has read several books about Robinson, termed the opportunity "a tremendous honor."
Good for Jones. Why is this a mistake? It's not Jones' fault. It's just the fact that Tuesday is Adam Jones t-shirt night, so the player of honor will not even be wearing the number that he normally wears, the one that will be on the t-shirt being given out to fans.

Most years, the O's would get beat up for such a mistake, but having the best record in baseball helps...

Labels: ,

Saturday, April 05, 2008

Good Things to Come

See the future:
(Matt) Wieters, the fifth overall pick out of Georgia Tech last June, homered in each of his first two official professional at-bats after walking in the opening inning, leading the host Keys to a 7-3 win over Lynchburg in the Single-A Carolina League opener for both teams.

While his first homer, an opposite-field shot down the right-field line, barely cleared the fence, his second - a shot to left - sailed over a 28-foot fence behind the outfield wall.
Awesome...

Labels: ,

Sunday, March 30, 2008

55-107

You can never really discount the optimism one has on Opening Day, when all 30 teams and all of their fans can wax poetic about how this is their year to win the World Series. Of course, if you are a realistic Orioles fan, you've probably come to grips with the fact that this is not going to happen in 2008. Or 2009. Or probably 2010.

I for one, wouldn't have it any other way. Finally, despite my own worries, andy MacPhail has is fully in charge of baseball operations. This is his project. He is the one who got a load of prospects and players for both Erik Bedeard and Miguel Tejada, and hopefully soon Brian Roberts as well. MacPhail is calling the shots and for once, the Orioles rebuilding project looks like it is going in the right direction.

It is going to come at a short term price, however. The team is going to be bad this year. The starting pitching from top to bottom is suspect. Beyond Roberts and Markakis, the hitting his worrisome. Luis Hernandez as the starting shortstop troubles me given his play in the spring. We still have $13 million tied up in albatrosses Aubrey Huff and Jay Gibbons. This season is going to be rough, and I think 55 wins is probably the most one can reasonably expect from this team. I hope they prove me wrong.

The future is where the focus should be on. We've got Markakis, and we've got Adam Jones. But we also have a load of prospects on the way: Radhames Liz, Hayden Penn, Cory Doyne, Chorye Spoone, Bob McCrory, Brandon Erbe, Chris Tillman, Billy Rowell, Brandon Snyder, Nolan Reimold, and of course Matt Wieters. We are fortunate that we have this future to look forward to it what is going to be a rough and tumble present...

Labels: ,

Monday, March 03, 2008

Attention Getter

If there is one thing that Orioles OF Luke Scott (left) is known for, it has little do with his baseball prowess. Acquired from Houston in the Miguel Tejada trade, people know Scott less for the fact that he hit 31 homers for Round Rock in the Pacific Coast League in 2005, and more for the fact that Scott chooses to avail himself of a fundamental Constitutional right.

So it was probably only a matter of time before we saw a story like this from Sun reporter Jeff Zrebiec:
Orioles manager Dave Trembley knew about the intensity, all-out hustle and powerful uppercut swing. But he still had one question about his new left fielder, so he approached Luke Scott while Scott was shagging fly balls last week.

"Talk to me about the gun situation," Trembley said to Scott.

Trembley, who has never fired a gun and joked that he wouldn't know the difference between a water pistol and a BB gun, had read about Scott's thoughts on gun control and about how the player almost always carries a concealed firearm...

..."He very quickly said to me, 'Second Amendment, right to bear arms,' " Trembley recalled. "He said it's not a big deal. He'll never have one here. To me, it's a nonissue."
Obviously it's an issue to somebody on Calvert Street, or else the story would not have wound up in the paper.

To be fair to Zrebiec, he at least went out to detail some of the reasons that ballplayers just might want to be prepared to defend themselves:
[Nick] Markakis said he was at a gas station in Georgia five or six years ago when somebody who was armed tried to force his way into his truck. Markakis, who didn't have a gun in his car, got away unscathed, but the day left an impression on him.

A similar incident helped persuade Scott to obtain a handgun. Scott, then a student at Indian River (Fla.) Community College, was at a party in Delray Beach when somebody pulled a gun on him....

....Scott told of one situation several years back when he was at a Houston gas station and was confronted by a man carrying a shank.

"I didn't pull my gun on him," Scott said. "I would have if he had gotten close enough, and I would have shot him if he wouldn't have backed off. But all I had to do was lift up my shirt and put my hand on [the gun] and I said, 'Can I help you?' He stopped in his tracks. Who knows what that saved me?
Scott's position on guns was also chronicled a few years back on an ESPN story about athletes and guns.

I take solace in the fact that ballplayers are exercising their Constitutional rights and that the Orioles have several players like Scott, Markakis, and Jamie Walker who are willing to speak out about their experiences and why they choose to protect themselves. I just find it somewhat puzzling that the story about Scott's outspoken view on gun rights and self-defense drew attention now, in the middle of Spring Training, as opposed to back in December when the trade happened.

Labels: , ,

Monday, February 11, 2008

I'm lumping three sports topics together

Orioles: Orioles bring back Steve Trachsel. Well, that's the move that'll put us over the top in the AL East.

All kidding aside, we needed a veteran starter, and he came cheap. No harm no foul.

NFL: Steelers to keep grass. That's completely ridiculous, because I think the Pasadena Chargers play youth football on a better field over at Lake Waterford Park than the Steelers play on at Heinz Field. It's a completely bush league situation.

Baseball: John Rocker says Selig knew he was on steroids. Enh. It's John Rocker. How credible is it?

Labels: , ,

Friday, February 08, 2008

Our long national nightmare is over.....

Erik Bedard is finally a Seattle Mariner:
Erik Bedard, the Orioles' first true ace since Mike Mussina, was traded today to the Seattle Mariners for five players, including promising young outfielder Adam Jones.

The Orioles also will receive left-handed reliever George Sherrill and three pitching prospects -- Chris Tillman, Kam Mickolio and Tony Butler.

The move caps months of trade dialogue surrounding the 28-year-old Bedard, the left-hander who attracted inquiries from more than 10 teams after a season in which he went 13-5 with a 3.16 ERA and set a single-season franchise record with 221 strikeouts.
And for once with an Orioles deal, everybody loves the trade.

Now, we unload Brian Roberts to the Cubs as I mentioned before, and we can finally, after ten years, allow the rebuilding to begin...

Labels: ,

Friday, February 01, 2008

Maybe things are looking up

If the Orioles can ever getting around to sealing the deal on this godforsaken Erik Bedard to Seattle trade, maybe things really will start to turn around down at the Yard. Check out what Jayson Stark says:
One other thing we should mention: Every baseball man we've polled rates the Orioles' return for Bedard as being vastly superior to the Twins' return for Johan Santana, assuming the rumored names are correct.

Adam Jones "oozes tools," said one scout. Another had this review: "I think he'll be a very good offensive player, with exceptional defense." Jones has been compared to both Torii Hunter and Mike Cameron. But the second scout said: "He could be better than either one of those guys." And the primary pitching piece, Chris Tillman, is such a scout favorite that one says: "When it's all said and done, he'll be the one guy in this deal everybody talks about."
We can only hope. But I still prefer unloading Bedard a year early and getting good to great prospects in return than taking him into the season and trying deal him before July 31st during his walk year, or even worse getting nothing for him but a compensatory draft pick if he were to leave in free agency.

But having Adam Jones in center and Nick Markakis in right for the next ten years sounds like a plan to me...

Labels: ,

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

So long, farewell, auf wiedersehen good bye

And Good Riddance:
Two years after he first suggested that he'd benefit from a change of scenery, Orioles shortstop Miguel Tejada finally got his wish as he was traded to the Houston Astros today in president of baseball operations Andy MacPhail's boldest move to date.

In return for the four-time All-Star, the Orioles will get outfielder Luke Scott, pitchers Matt Albers, Troy Patton and Dennis Sarfate, and third baseman Michael Costanzo.
And the best news of all:
The Astros will assume the $26 million left on Tejada's contract.
This is fantastic. Of course, I said trade him two years ago when he started fussing about wanting out. His value was certainly higher then.

Kujan is happy, and notes that if Bedard and Mora also get traded that it means that we'll get a great haul of prospects to build for the future. If MacPhail can trade Melvin Mora for anything useful, we should have a parade given the amount of money Mora still has on his contract as his usefulness continues to decline...

Labels: ,

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Gee, never saw this coming....

....or, maybe we did:
Major League Baseball today suspended Orioles outfielder Jay Gibbons 15 days, beginning with the start of the 2008 season, for violating the league's drug policy. Gibbons admitted to The Sun today that he had used hGH.

Gibbons had not previously addressed allegations that he received a shipment of steroids and hGH from a raided Florida pharmacy. Gibbons and Kansas City Royals outfielder Jose Guillen, who was also given a 15-day ban today, are the first players to be suspended without failing a drug test.

"I am deeply sorry for the mistakes that I have made," Gibbons said. "I have no excuses and bear sole responsibility for my decisions. Years ago, I relied on the advice of a doctor, filled a prescription, charged the hGH, which is a medication, to my credit card and had only intended to help speed my recovery from my injuries and surgeries. I hope that my family, teammates, fans and [Orioles owner] Peter Angelos and the entire Orioles organization will accept my apologies and that we can all move on."
Now if we can only get out from under that contract....

Labels:

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

The greatest Orioles news in forever

And it's because of this:
The Florida Marlins and Detroit Tigers have agreed in principle on a trade that will send Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis to Detroit for key prospects, sources told ESPN's Peter Gammons on Tuesday.

The Tigers would send outfielder Cameron Maybin, pitcher Andrew Miller, catcher Mike Rabelo and minor league pitchers Eulogio De La Cruz, Dallas Trahern and Burke Badenhop to the Marlins.

The deal is expected to be announced Tuesday night when the physicals and paperwork are completed.

Why this does this matter to us? It means that, with Detroit coming out of nowhere to consummate the Cabrera trade, that the Angels, Dodgers, and a few other teams still are in the market for a right-handed hitting infield bat. And that means that the likelihood of a trade sending Miguel Tejada out of Baltimore are very, very good at the moment.

But if they send Erik Bedard to the Dodgers or to Toronto, they better get a massive haul (let's just say Matt Kemp and Jonathan Broxton good; anything involving A.J. Burnett, bad....)

Labels: ,

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

The Cabrera Bunch

Daniel Cabrera and Fernando Cabrera combined to give up 13 runs, 11 of them earned, during tonight's 18-6 blowout by the Angels.

This season cannot end soon enough...

Labels: ,

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Good Grief

It was nice that the Orioles had not been shut-out all year coming into the day. But did we really have to get no-hit by a kid making his second major league appearance? Did we really need that after the season we have had?

And yes, if you are an O's fan you've seen this movie before...

Labels: ,

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

It wasn't cute the first time

Following up last week's 30-3 debacle with an 11-run 8th inning against Tampa Bay, turning a 6-3 lead into a 14-6 deficit, is probably not what anybody associated with the Orioles franchise needed. Trust me, it wasn't cute last week and the continued bullpen debacles are really losing their novelty...

Labels: ,

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Augustus Minimus

The Orioles are getting into this uncanny habit of having really bad Augusts:
August 1998: 14-14
August 1999: 12-16
August 2000: 14-15
August 2001: 11-16
August 2002: 14-16
August 2003: 11-20
August 2004: 13-15
August 2005: 11-17
August 2006: 12-14
August 2007: 8-15
Unsurprisingly, the last time the Orioles play over .500 baseball in August was....1997. Hard to go wire-to-wire and not play .500 in August.

And August, 2002 was a special case since the time sat at 14-6 on August 23rd, and not only finished the month under .500, but went 4-32 to finish the year...

I'm not even sure how to fix it. Certainly, it is not impeding their ability to compete for playoff spots, however it is somewhat indicative of the last ten years of mediocrity O's fans have been subjected to...

Labels: ,

Friday, August 24, 2007

Panic Mode?

Is this a desperation move?:
Right-hander Radhames Liz will make his major league debut Saturday, starting for the Baltimore Orioles against the Minnesota Twins.

It will be the first time in his three-year professional career that Liz will pitch above the Class AA level. The 24-year-old is 11-4 with a 3.22 ERA this season with Double-A Bowie. He leads the Eastern League with 161 strikeouts (in 137 innings) and pitched a no-hitter on June 1 against Harrisburg.

I know that it's hard to call a move to call up a 24-year old rookie from AA a desperation move for a team that has lost four in a row and is 14 games out of the Wild Card. And it's not like there were any alternatives on the 40-man roster. But it seems that purchasing the contract of a starter from Norfolk such as 35-year old Tim Kester or 27-year old Aussie Craig Anderson may have made more short-term sense than the still raw Liz. Particularly given how late-season, emergency starters such as Hayden Penn, Brian Sackinsky, John O'Donoghue, etc. have worked out over the years....

Labels: ,

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Wow

Ravens had a tough go of it today, getting plastered 30-3....

...wait a minute, that was the Orioles score? Good grief. I can only hope that the pitching gave up all of their runs for the month of August and September and got them out of the way in one game. And poor Burres, Bell, and Shuey had to stand there and take it in order to keep some semblance of order in place for the second game of a doubleheader.

It happened, so let us never speak of it again...

Labels: ,

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

More on Wild Bill Hagy

A 1979 WJZ piece about Wild Bill....

Labels: ,

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Cutting it Close

Talk about brinkmanship...
Matt Wieters was prepared to sign a contract Wednesday night that would make him part of the Orioles' future, the franchise catcher that has eluded them. He also was prepared to return to Georgia Tech for his senior year and re-enter the draft in 2008.

With less than an hour left before the midnight deadline to sign Wieters, the Orioles and Boras were nearly $6 million apart, according to baseball sources. Andy MacPhail, president of baseball operations, said an agreement was reached at 11:51 p.m.
I mean, I'm ecstatic that the Orioles finally got the deal done. Because the best way to start off the MacPhail Era in Baltimore would not have been to allow our 1st round pick in the draft to go back to school over a financial issue. But good grief, could they have possibly waited any longer to get this done?

Labels: ,

Friday, August 10, 2007

Watching the Wheels Fall Off

Here is the O's season in a nutshell. Erik Bedard pitches seven and two-thirds scoreless, gets unlucky on a seeming swing that was called a check-swing, a generous ball 2 call on a fastball at the knees, and all of a sudden everything goes straight to hell.

No, Jim Hoey is pitching, still with two outs in the eight, and Boston has a 5-1 lead.

Watching the Orioles, watching the wheels fall off, is still like watching a slow-motion train wreck...

Labels: ,

Sunday, July 01, 2007

Amzazingly Few Complains

When I heard that Brian Roberts was the lone Orioles all-star representative, and that Erik Bedard and Jeremy Guthrie had been passed over, I was somewhat skeptical. I was waiting to see which undeserving pitcher made the roster.

But take a look at the team:
Josh Beckett, Boston
Dan Haren, Oakland
Bobby Jenks, Chicago White Sox
John Lackey, L.A. Angels
Gil Meche, Kansas City
Jonathan Papelbon Boston
J.J. Putz, Seattle
Francisco Rodriguez, L.A. Angels
C.C. Sabathia, Cleveland
Johan Santana, Minnesota
Justin Verlander, Detroit
You really can't argue with any of those selections. So maybe there is no actual reason to complain that the two pitchers, both deserving of all-star game selections, got left off. And while Guthrie certainly ptitched better than a guy like Gil Meche...well, somebody had to go from the Royals.

Now the selection of Angels RHP Kelvim Escobar over the two for the final vote selection...that's another story.

Labels: ,

Friday, June 22, 2007

Maybe this should have happened Yesterday...

Miguel Tejada goes on the disabled list. Couldn't that have happened without yesterday's embarrassing scene?

Labels:

Misfocused

No wonder the Orioles can't get it together; Peter Angelos' head is in other matters:
Out to raise some cash for the Democratic Party, Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos is inviting select baseball fans — those with big wallets — to join him and Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean in the owner's box at Camden Yards on Wednesday night, when the slumping Birds take on the New York Yankees.

Becoming a game "chair" will cost you $28,500; a "host" pays $5,000; or come as yourself for a mere $1,000.
Maybe if Angelos took some time off from being a Democratic Party hack and took some time to run his business, perhaps the business wouldn't be suffering so badly.

What's worse? What more cynical way to draw people to a fundraiser at Camden Yards than to make sure that the event is held when the Yankees are in town...

Then again, if he was that good at business, why would he be a Democrat?

Labels: ,

Thursday, June 21, 2007

There is no "I" in Team...

...but there is "ME":
Orioles shortstop Miguel Tejada appeared just long enough to extend his streak of consecutive games played to 1,152, the fifth-longest in big league history. Tejada, who got hit on the left wrist by a pitch from reliever Doug Brocail on Wednesday night, bunted in his only at-bat in the first inning. Roberts was forced at second on the play, and Gomez then pinch-ran for Tejada.
For a team and a town that saw Cal Ripken and his streak extended only in legitimate fashion, this is a sad, sad commentary on both Tejada and the state of this franchise...

Labels: ,

Less than stunning development

Joe Girardi spurns Orioles.

If you were Joe Girardi, and a lot of high profile and better run organizations than the Orioles likely will have managerial vacancies this offseason (including the Yankees), would you try and come in and put this mess back together?

Next on the agenda: Dusty Baker (please no), Davey Johnson, and Rick Dempsey. I have a funny feeling that by the All-Star Break, either Rick Dempsey will be managing the team, or Dave Tremblay will still be the interim skipper...

Labels: ,

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Seeing is Believing

"I'm absolutely responsible for baseball operations,"
- Andy MacPhail

Let's hope so. I cannot actually trust that to be the case until I see Peter Angelos letting MacPhail do his job the way he needs to do his job. Until then, he's just another face stuck in the revolving door of Orioles management types.

Peter Schmuck is giddy:
For once, they didn't have to open the windows on the sixth floor of the B&O Warehouse to get some fresh air.

New Orioles president of baseball operations Andy MacPhail took the podium this morning and took charge of this floundering franchise and, cynics be damned, it sure felt like a new day in Birdland.

It started with the structure of the media conference, in which club counsel (and Peter Angelos surrogate) Russell Smouse made the introduction instead of executive vice president Mike Flanagan. It started with Smouse acknowledging that ownership finally has gotten the message from the club's disgusted and diminished fan base and announcing unequivocally that MacPhail would have "full and ultimate responsibility" for the operation of the team.

Smouse was speaking for Angelos, who should have been there himself, but let's not quibble at a time like this. The Orioles -- for the first time since they hired Pat Gillick -- have a baseball operations czar with the kind of juice to affect dynamic change inside the organization and repair the team's broken image in the community and around the major leagues.
And I hope he is right. I was four years old in 1983, when the Orioles knocked off the Phillies. I cling to (and still wear regularly) my "1997 Eastern Division Champions" t-shirt, because it's the only thing I have left that signifies playoff success. I hope that, by next year, I have a reason to switch out that portion of my wardrobe.

Labels: ,

Monday, June 18, 2007

That was the other shoe

Nobody is surprised that Sam Perlozzo was fired . A month ago we knew that, for better or for worse, Perlozzo's head was on the gallows and that it was just a matter of time before Boris dropped the floor.

Here is the real surprise of today's proceedings; Andy MacPhail:

Meanwhile, the same sources said Andy MacPhail has reached an agreement to be the Orioles' chief operating officer.

MacPhail and Girardi overlapped in Chicago during MacPhail's tenure as Cubs president and CEO of the Chicago Cubs, which began in 1994 and ended in 2006. Girardi, who managed the Florida Marlins in 2006, was the Cubs' catcher for two stints totaling six seasons, the last from 2000-02.

MacPhail won two World Series championships as general manager of the Minnesota Twins in 1987 and 1991.

And that probably makes Mike Flanagan and Jim Duquette very nervous campers right about now. MacPhail has a pedigree for winning; they don't, and this year certainly does not help their cause.

The question is this: will MacPhail be given the ability to do his job properly? Remember that Pat Gillick only lasted three years as the O's GM before bailing out of town.

Maybe, just maybe, Peter Angelos has finally seen the writing of the wall and understands that, like George Steinbrenner, sometimes being hands off works out a little better than being so hands on. Maybe Angelos realizes the free agent bounty that awaits in the coming off season and that MacPhail, with the backing of the Angelos checkbook, can rebuild this team into an honest to god contender.

Now, let's hold our breath and see if Joe Girardi really wants to be here....

Labels: ,

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Guthrie: ND

Jeremy Guthrie tonight: 7 IP, 1 ER, 4 H, 5 K, 2 BB. And he leaves in a tie game....

Can't this guy catch a break?

Oh, and Chad Bradford allowed a run three batters after entering the game....

We're going to have to be the 1980 A's in order to compete at this point...

Labels: ,

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Would It Kill Somebody to score runs for Jeremy Guthrie?

Take a look at Jeremy Guthrie's last 6 starts:
5/13 @ BOS: 8.1 IP, 1 R, 0 ER, 3 H, 0 BB, 2 K
5/19 @ WAS: 7 IP, 1 R, 1 ER, 4 H, 0 BB, 10 K
5/24 vs TOR: 7 IP, 3 R, 3 ER, 7 H, 2 BB, 3 K
5/29 @ KC: 7 IP, 2 R, 2 ER, 3 H, 2 BB, 2 K
6/3 @ LAA: 8 IP, 2 R, 1 ER, 3 H, 0 BB, 4 K
6/9 vs COL: 8 IP, 2 R, 2 ER, 6 H, 1 BB, 6 K
Guthrie's record over this span: 1-0

That's ridiculous. 7+ innings in six straight starts, no more than two walks in any start (and no walks in two starts). And the team can't score any runs for him, and the bullpen can't hold any leads for him because the O's are 2-4 in those six starts.

Jeremy Guthrie has a 3-1 record, and the poor guy should be at least 7-1 or 8-1 thanks to the O's ineptitude to hold a lead for him. The guy should be a leading contender for Rookie of the Year and, dare I say, the Cy Young Award. Instead he just, is a fourth starter on a mediocre team.....

Labels: ,

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Talking about what's on Everybody's Mind...

...the status of O's skipper Sam Perlozzo.

The fact of the matter is that Perlozzo is not entirely to blame for the Orioles woes. Sure, he has made some boneheaded decisions, such as removing Jeremy Guthrie from the May 13th game against the Red Sox with one out in the 9th after only 92 pitches, and allowing Denys Baez to remain the setup man for way too long. Is Sam Perlozzo the perfect manager? Maybe not.

But there are two distinct things to remember when discussing his job status as to why this is not his fault:

Injuries: 3/5 of the projected starting rotation (Kris Benson, Jaret Wright and Adam Loewen) are on the shelf, and only Loewen may ever wear and Orioles uniform again. Steve Trachsel, Brian Burres and Jeremy Guthrie have done yeomen like work to pick up the slack. Problem is that the bullpen got overtaxed while Burres and Guthrie were stretching out their arms as starters. Also, don't forget Ramon Hernandez was on the shelf for most of April, too.

The Front Office: Perlozzo can only deal with the hand his dealt as far as personnel. The front office improved the pitching, but gave no help to the offensive situation. While Jay Payton and Aubrey Huff were adequate additions, neither player scares anybody with the stick. Combine that with the lack of power production from Miguel Tejada and Jay Gibbons and its amazing that the offense has scored as many runs as they have. That's not Perlozzo's fault. It may not even bey the fault of Mike Flanagan and Jim Duquette, since those personal decisions are made at a higher level.

The one thing to remember about Perlozzo's job status is this: what is accomplished by firing him now? You wind up with a placeholder manager through the rest of the season, then need to go about hiring a new manager when it will be impossible to get the kind of "name" manager that Angelos will demand come in and work for him. It's not going to happen.

Hopefully, the offense can turn it around and save us from further discussion of the issue.

Labels:

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

OK, we gave them time...

...but MASN's pregame Orioles coverage is not particularly good. Of course, MASN itself has some issues given the fact that so far the audio and video still is not particularly well synched.

Labels: , ,

Monday, March 12, 2007

I Don't Get It

Jay Gibbons has played 90 games in his career at 1st Base. He's played 26 games in left field. So why is the Sun referring to his "experiment at 1st Base" being over? Why does he have to "concentrate more on left field?" The terminology Jeff Zrebiec uses is weird.

This is not like moving Javy Lopez to 1st Base last year, with Lopez having played 2 innings at 1st his entire life? Why does Gibbons know have to relearn the position, and why is it an "experiment?"

Labels: ,

Monday, February 12, 2007

Backwards from the Start

It is not a good idea when you lose a pitcher like Kris Benson before Spring Training even starts. Particularly so when he is the veteran leader of a young pitching staff, and good for about 190 innings per year when he is healthy.

Orioles brass panicked after hearing the news. Within hours, the club had signed Steve Trachsel to a deal paying him at least $3 million this season. Whether that was a good knee-jerk decision is up in the air. True Trachsel's numbers show a pitcher who has averaged around 200 innings per year in a stretch from 1996-2004. But he's also a pitcher who has only thrown 201 2/3 innings the last two seasons, as well as a pitcher who last year had a 4.97 ERA and the highest WHIP ratio of his career, all pitching for a Mets playoff team (in the National League). He's also 36, joining Jaret Wright as the "graybeards" of the starting rotation.

This is not a good start for the 2007 season. Particularly since management decided to focus on the bullpen (as we previously noted) rather than address the starting pitching. A fivesome of Erik Bedard, Wright, Daniel Cabrera, Adam Loewen, and some combination of Trachsel, Hayden Penn, Garrett Olson, and Jeremy Guthrie. But I bet they wish the Rodrigo Lopez trade had not of happened right about now...

Labels: ,

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Remembering Games that Mattered

MASN is showing the full telecast of the July 15, 1989 Orioles game against the California Angels. The game where Mike Devereaux hit a 3-run game-winning home run down the left field line at Memorial Stadium that was so controversial that Angels manager Doug Rader was ejected for arguing the call during the exchange of lineup cards for the next day's game. This was during the "Why Not" season of 1989, my favorite Orioles season I can remember. (I turned four during the Orioles 1983 World Series run, so it's not something I actually remember).

It reminds me of why, despite my love for Ravens football, baseball remains my favorite sport. I hope one day again sometime soon, the Birds can actually play games that are meaningful in July again...

Labels:

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Well Deserved

That Cal Ripken was elected to the Hall of Fame today was not exactly a shock; we made reservations for Cooperstown months ago. However, I am stunned, amazed and disturbed that eight people did not vote for him (and 13 didn't vote for the much deserving Tony Gwynn, either).

Thankfully, most of them are not like Chicago gloryhound sportswriter Paul Ladewski, who was out to get his 15 minutes of fame for submitting a blank ballot. And has gone on and on and on about how righteous he is about it.

At least Mark McGwire only got 23.5 % of the vote...

Labels: ,

Monday, January 08, 2007

O's ditch WBAL for HFS

The Orioles have surprisingly abandoned longtime radio home WBAL for WHFS. This is kind of a surprising move given that the Orioles, for most of their history have been on BAL. Want to know who really loses in this equation? Believe it or not, distant Orioles fans who live in the northeast and the southeast. BAL's 50,000 watt flamethrower allowed fans in those distant locales to listen to WBAL at night on most nights given a clear signal. That's not going to work on HFS, which is barely audible once you get to DC. That's why when WQSR was the Ravens flagship station, they swapped signals with WQSR swapped signals from 105.7 to 102.7 for additional DC coverage.

What this does to modern rock on WHFS is anybody's guess...

Labels: ,

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Still Going