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Friday, September 15, 2006

Pickoff Moves

Today's Birthdays

Jim Barbieri LAN b. 1941, played 1966

Doc Bushong BRO b. 1856, played 1890, d. 1908-08-19

Bud Clancy BRO b. 1900, played 1932, d. 1968-09-26

Todd Fischer CAL b. 1960, played 1986

Fritz Ostermueller BRO b. 1907, played 1943-1944, d. 1957-12-17. Once walked 12 Washington Senators in a single game as a rookie. The Dodgers sent Bobo Newsom (q.v.) to get him from the Cards; his stint with the wartime Dodgers represented a nadir of his career, no doubt what he meant when he said that he didn't learn to pitch until "I lost all my stuff and had to start thinking." The Dodgers were about to send him down to the minors (not sure if players were DFA'd in those days or not), and the Pirates somehow ended up with him. It was quite a deal for them, as he went 11-7 down the stretch as a starter with a very solid 2.73 ERA for a second-place team.

I always thought that Don Newcombe was the first black pitcher in the majors, but it turns out that he was the first good one; it was really Don Bankhead, who pitched for the Memphis Red Sox in the Negro Leagues and later the Dodgers, who broke the color barrier on the mound. On August 26, 1947, Bankhead homered in his first major league at bat, the only dinger he was to record in his brief, three-year career; Ostermueller surrendered the tater.

After Ostermueller retired, he operated a motel, which maybe tells you about the difference between those days and now; today, you'd probably read about a player owning a chain of motels.

Rich Robertson ANA b. 1968, played 1998

Charley Smith LAN b. 1937, played 1960-1961, d. 1994-11-29

The Southpaw Gambit: Cubs 6, Dodgers 5

I just realized the only way the Dodgers are going anywhere in the postseason, if they can get there now that their division lead has shrunk to only a half a game: run their lefties hard and often. Looking at how clubs hit them, the Dodgers are very good against southpaws, while all their conceivable opposition isn't. Of course, at some point the Dodgers have to bring out some relief, and Brett Tomko seems to serve up a lot of straightballs, like the one he gave up to Aramis Ramirez. If the Dodgers go 1-3 in this Padres series, they end up a game and a half back of the division, and probably near the top for the Wild Card. They'd better hope for a split. Stay tuned.

ESPN BoxRecap

Nothing Learned: Angels 2, Rangers 1

The Angels, fresh off a Freddie Garcia disaster, looked no better. Seriously, weren't we at this place last year? Relying on a homer from your reserve catcher. Tsk.

ESPN BoxRecap

Roster Notes


Comments:
I don't think it was a slight by Stoneman, but most people are over mono after a few months. Your article alluded to the same although it stated some may feel the effects for years.

I wonder if Kotch has been looked at intensely by the doctors to determine if there's something else wrong. The Angels were killed by the trifecta DMacMathisKotch this season.
 
If Kotch isn't back in shape by spring training, it's time to cut the lad loose. I think.

I'm beginning to wonder when there's ever been such a troika of complete busts in the history of Baseball America.
 
Yeah, the Angels did check out Kotch for the possibility of another illness, including, Tom Kotchman said, the possibility of a brain tumor, which really scared the family.
 
Even BA is acknowledging the disaster of DMacMathisKotch:

Steve Balboni from KC, MO asks:
How good is the Gordon-Butler combination now, and how good can they be in the future? Do they profile as perennial All-Stars? What pair of position prospects from the past are they comparable to? Mauer-Morneau? Teixeira-Blalock? Thome-Ramirez?

A: John Manuel: An honor, Mr. Balboni . . . great question. Both those guys are all-star caliber hitters. That's pretty good. Butler's also gotten better defensively, and Gordon isn't just a masher, he's got some all-around game. That's one of the things I like most about Gordon. As for prospects from the past . . . that's a great part of this Q. You know, McCann-Francoeur is a pretty nice tandem, particularly because they are roommates. I'd also throw out Austin Kearns and Adam Dunn, the Reds 1st-and 2nd-rounders in 1998. The one with a lot of hype that hasn't panned out, I'm sorry to say, was the Angels trio of Kotchman-Mathis-McPherson. Injuries haven't helped, and Mathis' bat hasn't kept pace, but two years ago, when they all started at Double-A Arkansas, we thought very, very highly of that group.

http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/minors/news/262432.html
 

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