Game 25, Mariners at Yankees

May 5, 2007 · Filed Under Game Threads · 412 Comments 

Post about the Julio Mateo situation

Jeff Weaver! In a nationally televised game! Because national broadcasts have to include the Yankees! It’s in the Constitution or something! 12:55 our time.

Another Weaver start! WOOOOO! Oh yeah! I know the Yankees are struggling badly, but if he pitches like we’ve seen so far, that offense could chase him out of the game before the ump calls “Play Ball!”. There’s a chunk of the Yankee lineup that’ll destroy him if he brings that weak sauce again. Hopefully, we get to see something else out of Weaver (who in the last week made comments about needing to be himself, so maybe he’ll be ignoring team instruction, which — well, hey, why not at this point, right?).

Today’s challenge: look at the tiny headshot MLB.com puts up for Weaver. Tell me what that expression is.

Julio Mateo under questioning for assault

May 5, 2007 · Filed Under Mariners · 85 Comments 

Details are vague right now, but this is what we know – Julio Mateo has been accused of assault by a woman from an incident last night at the team hotel. He’s turned himself in and is cooperating with authorities. It is very unlikely he’ll be with the team at Yankee Stadium this afternoon.

The M’s in contention

May 5, 2007 · Filed Under Mariners · 16 Comments 

You may have heard me rant about Pythagorean wins before (if not: I’m not a fan), and here’s how this relates to the M’s being in second place, ahead even of Oakland: all of things that are supposed to indicate a team’s true strength, like adjusted standings or run margins, they don’t matter to a team’s standing any more than a PECOTA forecast matters to a player’s performance. No one comes to the team and says “you’re -6 in RS-RA, so you have to give back three games”.

They’re useful to some degree in thinking about a team’s strength, of course. The BP Adjusted Standings have the AL West as

Athletics 14-14
Angels 14-16
Mariners 11-13
Rangers 11-18

using “third-order wins and losses”.

But the wins are on the board, and it doesn’t matter that the offense is erratic, and the rotation’s been crazy. All they need to do now is play better, and if they push the right buttons, that can happen (if Weaver’s not going to turn around, swapping him for Baek makes the RS/RA entirely irrelevant). The A’s seem hell-bent on having at least half their Opening Day 25-man on the DL, so their RS/RA to date isn’t particularly applicable either.

In first, Angels remain the team to beat (as, uh, we thought it would be before the season once we gave it some thought). And if things continue as they have, yeah, they’d finish about four games ahead at the end of the season. But that doesn’t mean they will, or they will.

Contend, dammit, contend!

That I knew it was coming made it no less painful

May 5, 2007 · Filed Under General baseball · Comments Off on That I knew it was coming made it no less painful 

Chris Snelling's first at-bat with Oakland

Game 24, Mariners at Yankees

May 4, 2007 · Filed Under Mariners · 494 Comments 

Baek vs Igawa, 4:05 pm.

RH no outpitch command guy vs LH no oupitch no command guy. Bombs away!

Indians get smarter

May 4, 2007 · Filed Under Mariners · 83 Comments 

The Cleveland Indians, the team I’ve often described as the best run franchise in baseball, today announced the hiring Keith Woolner away from Baseball Prospectus to manage their statistical research and analysis department. Keith’s a smart guy, and was always very helpful to me, so I’m happy for him. He’s joining a first rate organization.

What does this mean for Mariner fans? Maybe nothing… or perhaps, the Indians are simply preparing themselves for life after Chris Antonetti, who essentially built the department that Woolner will now oversee.

Some team will get to see Antonetti in ’08 become a reality. Here’s to hoping it’s the Mariners.

Game 23, Mariners at Red Sox

May 3, 2007 · Filed Under Mariners · 503 Comments 

Ramirez vs Matsuzaka, 4:05 pm

Fearless prediction – Matsuzaka throws at least one breaking ball tonight that is harder than at least one of Horacio Ramirez’s fastballs. Also, J.J.’s unavailable today, so if the M’s head to the 9th with a lead, we’ll see Brandon Morrow get his first save opportunity.

Raise your hand if you expect to head to the 9th with a lead today, though. Yea.

What Doyle Stands For

May 3, 2007 · Filed Under Mariners · 224 Comments 

So, yea, Billy Beane traded for Chris Snelling last night. Now, this shouldn’t be any huge surprise – Beane is constantly looking for opportunities to make his team better both now and in the future, and when he has a chance to acquire a guy he feels is undervalued, he jumps on it.

Last week, he traded two players to be named later for Chris Denorfia, despite the fact that Denorfia is out for the season. Why? Because Beane believes that Denorfia can help them next year as a fourth outfielder making next to nothing, and he saw a chance to improve the 2008 Oakland A’s.

Then, the next day, he essentially bought Ryan Langerhans from the Atlanta Braves. Langerhans was a good defensive outfielder who has a history of being a decent enough hitter, but was in a terrible slump, and again, Beane saw an opportunity to help the A’s by picking up a guy with useful skills for nothing of value.

Yesterday, he flipped Langerhans to the Nationals for Doyle, who is a classic Billy Beane player. So, essentially, in the span of a couple of days, Beane picked up Snelling for some cash. With the injuries the A’s have suffered, he’ll get some at-bats at DH while Piazza is out and join the outfield rotation down in Oakland. The fact that Beane likes Doyle should be obvious – he can hit, he draws walks, he plays hard, and he was free. Beane looked at the things he can do to help a team and saw a potentially valuable player that cost him nothing.

Injuries have indeed taken a toll of Chris Snelling, and he’s unlikely to have the all-star career we all hoped he would have as he was coming up through the system. We know this. At this point, he’s probably a nifty role player, a guy who can help a team but shouldn’t be counted on as the everyday answer for a contending team. But our Doyle love was never just only about Snelling as a player and a person, but about what he stood for, and still does.

The dual Snelling trades over the last six months are a perfect contrast of two organizations. The Mariners fail to understand market dynamics or get beyond batting average and strikeouts when evaluating a player and make a disgusting deal that limits the franchise’s ability to contend both now and in the future. The A’s exploit the market, identify a player who is more useful than his current organization believes, and pick up a potentially useful player for nothing.

Doyle isn’t going to make the difference between the A’s and Mariners winning the AL West this year, next year, or any year. It’s what Doyle stands for. The A’s are an organization of smart, baseball savvy people who are constantly looking for any small advantage they can get over their competition in an effort to win every single year. The Mariners are an organization that throws money at bad players because of their incompetency and get taken to the cleaners by people who are better at their jobs than they are.

Doyle represents the different states of the Mariners and the A’s. I only hope that someday soon, the M’s may employ people who can turn those dynamics upside down.

Doyle to the A’s

May 2, 2007 · Filed Under General baseball · 101 Comments 

For Ryan Langerhans, word is.

HOOOOOOoooooooooooooooooooooly mackeral.

Attention Vidro fans, Doyle haters: this is not your thread. Seriously.

Game 22, White Sox at Mariners

May 2, 2007 · Filed Under Mariners · 215 Comments 

Danks vs Batista, 12:35 pm.

If you haven’t heard yet, Felix’s scheduled start this weekend in NY has been postponed until next week. The M’s will throw Cha Seung Baek on Friday, Jeff Weaver on Saturday, and Jarrod Washburn on Sunday against the Yankees.

In other words, win today, because this weekend could be unbelievably ugly.

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