Posted on
March 17, 2010 by
Todd Civin

Jason Grilli as he prepared to make the roster of the 2010 Indians
Over the past several months, one of my wildest baseball dreams has been realized. Not blessed with an overabundance of skill on the baseball field, it is beyond my greatest expectations that I’d ever have the chance to rub elbows with one of the chosen ones who has been dually blessed with extraordinary baseball skills.
As surreal as it seems to me, Cleveland Indians pitcher, Jason Grilli, and I became buddies last November through our work with the award winning children’s baseball book, A Glove of Their Own, and have become good friends over the six or so months that have passed.
Nearly every morning, the phone rings at my house in rural Massachusetts, and the name “Jason Grilli” pops up on the Call ID. I scratch my head in amazement that a “real live baseball player” would be calling ‘lil ol’ me, answer the call and hear the voice of a bonafide major league pitcher the other end of the line. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: Baseballcleveland indiansinjuryjason grillimlbperfectpitch marketingWildpitchmarketing
Category
Baseball
Posted on
March 16, 2010 by
Richard Marsh

The Mets must decide where Jenrry Mejia will start the season.
This is the time during Spring Training that all Major League teams starts to cut down on its rosters sending some players down to their Minor League affiliates while others are sent on their way right out of the organization.
The funny thing about this process is that there are very few surprises as to who stays and who goes. Sometimes a young player with just a little minor league experience makes such an outstanding impression the management feels that he is ready for the big leagues and they can’t see him not being with the parent club.
Steven Strasburg of the Washington Nationals comes to mind this year as he has not allowed a run in three appearances so far. It was expected that the number one overall player in last years draft would start the year perhaps even as high as AAA. He did have an advantage of playing college ball under Hall of Fame great Tony Gwynn but still there would seem to be no real reason to rush him into the fray. It’s not like the Nationals will be in the playoff hunt this year.
On Sirius/XM Radio yesterday Rob Dibble, who I love as a color commentator and sports talk show host, said when he was in his first couple of years of Spring Training and he knew he wasn’t going to make the Reds big club he actually asked the team to cut him early enough so he could get more work in the level he would be playing at. Amazing. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: 2010 Spring TrainingNew York Mets
Category
2010 Baseball Previews, Baseball
Posted on
March 16, 2010 by
Don Spieles
Yesterday, Buster Olney of ESPN became the story when he posted an article stating that a “sources” had informed him that there had been internal discussion within the Phillies organization about trading Ryan Howard to get Albert Pujols. Since then, lesser media outlets and the blogosphere has erupted with everything from “professional” condemnations to personal insults and attacks leveled at Olney.
So, we have journalists, both amateur and quasi-professional, accusing Olney of being unprofessional by casting insults at him? That’s the kind of irony that inspires Alanis Morissette songs!
The reaction over an utterly reasonable article seems to be prompted more by the fact that Olney is a nationally read writer for ESPN, the network that is the undisputed king of sports news. The story, in and of itself, lends nothing incredible and is, in fact, much more professional than many of the rebuttals.

While evidently not likely, a trade of Pujols for Howard is not without it's logic, regardless of which side of the table one looks from.
Some points to be clear on:
- Olney did not say there was discussion between the Cardinals and Phillies.
“It’s not fully clear whether the Phillies actually have approached the Cardinals with the idea”
- Olney immediately contacted Ruben Amaro, Jr., the Phillies GM and included his denial in the article.
“Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro flatly denied that the internal discussions have taken place. “Lies,” he said. “That’s a lie. I don’t know who you’re talking to, but that’s a lie.”” Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: Albert PujolsCardinalsopinionPhiladelphiaphilliesRyan HowardSpring TrainingSt. Louistrade rumors
Category
Baseball
Posted on
March 14, 2010 by
Richard Marsh

When Carlos Beltran and Jose Reyes will be available is a early question for the Mets.
Here it is, one day before “The Ides of March” and the so called pendents as well as the vast majority of the New York Mets faithful are in full panic mode and have come to bury Caesar long before the body is cold.
Come on everybody 2009 was officially over on Oct 3rd or if you believe in the Julius Caesar calendar how about 11:59PM and 59 seconds on December 31st.
Just because two out the top five players will not be in the starting lineup on opening day and the so called starting rotation has looked a trifle bit shaky three weeks into spring training, it doesn’t mean we should holding our Hari Kari swords about 18 inches from the point of entry.
It’s true that I have been a Mets fan since opening day 1962 and believe me there were years that the season was over before the first pitcher threw a their first fastball in February.
It wasn’t until the spring of 1968 did any Met fan on the planet see this team with the possibility of showing some real competition between the lines. Seaver and Koosman were young arms with a world of potential and the manager was a patient man who was going to observe his team very carefully for the entire season and make the adjustments to turn them into a perennial winner and contender for years to come. Read the rest of this entry →
Category
2010 Baseball Previews, Baseball
Posted on
March 13, 2010 by
Dean Hybl

Legend has it that future Hall of Fame center Jim Ringo (51) was traded by the Packers after bringing an agent to contract negotiations.
If he were still alive, I wonder what NFL Hall of Fame center Jim Ringo would think about the concept of an “un-capped” NFL salary structure or of the multi-million dollars in guaranteed money being given to players with only average NFL pedigrees.
As legend has it, Ringo, an All-Pro center and anchor of the Packer’s vaunted offensive line, brought an agent with him to contract negotiations with Green Bay Packer head coach Vince Lombardi prior to the 1964 season. Lombardi then excused himself and when he returned five minutes later told Ringo and his agent that they would have to go to Philadelphia to discuss his new contract because he had just been traded to the Eagles.
Some historians claim that the actual incident between Ringo and Lombardi is just a myth, but what isn’t a myth is the sacrifice that many athletes from the past made to ensure that the players of today are able to freely negotiate and sign lavish contracts.
For more than a half-century, the contract of every player in Major League Baseball included what was known as the “reserve clause”, which bound a player, one year at a time, in perpetuity to the club owning his contract. Basically, it meant that the player was tied to the team until the team chose to trade or release the player and he had no opportunity to pursue employment with another organization on his own terms. As professional sports leagues started in football, basketball and hockey, owners in those leagues essentially emulated baseball’s “reserve clause.” Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: Cliff BattlesCurt FloodJim RingoNFL Salary Cap
Category
Baseball, Football, General, Sports History
Posted on
March 11, 2010 by
Don Spieles

Nomar Garciapara was star from the get-go in Boston.
Yesterday marked the end of the line to Nomar Garciaparra. He announced his retirement from baseball at the age of 36, after playing 14 14 Major League seasons. In a twist that will forever endear him to Red Sox Nation, Nomar signed a one day minor league contract so that he officially retire with the team where he began it all back in 1994 as a first round draft pick.
But besides the praise he’ll get from Boston faithful after a teary press conference and after throwing out the first pitch of a Grapefruit League match-up, the question now will be asked whether “Nomah” will be a possibility for Cooperstown and the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Pros
Garciaparra has some seriously good statistics in his favor. He batted .313 for his career. His 229 home runs seems sort of low, but remember that Garciaparra was predominantly a shortstop. The AL record for homers by a short stop is Cal Ripken, Jr.’s 345. In the NL, the record is held by Ernie Banks at 277. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: Boston Red SoxNomar Garciaparra
Category
Baseball, General