Tuesday, October 17, 2006 |
Pickoff Moves
Today's Birthdays
Pete Cimino CAL b. 1942, played 1967-1968
Pop Dillon BRO b. 1873, played 1904, d. 1931-09-12
Seth Etherton ANA b. 1976, played 2000. A first-round pick in 1998, Etherton was a College World Series star out of USC who had four quality pitches he could throw for strikes, finishing his senior year with a 3.23 ERA, a 13-3 record in 18 starts, and leading the NCAA in strikeouts. He signed for a $1.075M bonus, and started in AA, where he was immediately overmatched. Repeating AA the next year, he had problems with the longball, giving up 21 in 28 starts spread between AA and AAA. He came up in 2000 at a point when the rotation consisted of Kent Bottenfield, Brian Cooper, Jarrod Washburn, Scott Schoeneweis, and Etherton at the back end; his debut game against the Royals went well until he gave up consecutive homers to Jermaine Dye and Mark Quinn, but it was exactly the sort of outing he was likely to have as he continued his major league career. He's been with seven organizations, and hasn't stuck with any of them yet.
Jim Gilliam LAN,BRO b. 1928, played 1953-1966, All-Star: 1956, 1959, d. 1978-10-08. Nicknamed "Junior" because he was so much younger than the other players on the Baltimore Elite Giants of the Negro League. Bill James has him ranked as the 27th best second baseman in history (as of 2000), but in fact he often played third base to allow other players in at that position, and even spent a little time in the outfield, mostly in his early career. James tells this story about Gilliam:
Gilliam's nickname on the Dodgers was "The Devil"; he was a good-natured guy with a wicked underside. In 1963 Don Dillard of the Braves slid into second base trying to break up a double play, and Maury Wills hit him right between the eyes with the throw, knocking him out. Everybody gathered around Dillard, afraid he was dead, except Gilliam, who retrieved the ball and tagged Dillard, lying flat on the ground, to make sure he was out. According to John Roseboro in Glory Days with the Dodgers, "That's the first time I tagged out a dead man," chuckled The Devil.Gilliam retired three times and came out of retirement twice to resume his playing career with the Dodgers; he stayed on with the team as a coach until his untimely death in 1978, of a sudden brain hemorrhage, just before the World Series.
Update, and geeky aside: Don Dillard faced the Dodgers, and likely was involved in the play as described, on May 30, 1963, a 7-4 loss to the Braves.
Mark Johnson ANA b. 1967, played 1998
Johnny Klippstein LAN b. 1927, played 1958-1959, d. 2003-10-10
Mike Sandlock BRO b. 1915, played 1945-1946
Driving Forward By Looking At The Rear-View Mirror
I haven't generally paid much attention to the Kamenetzky brothers' blog at the Times, but there was such a howler there today that I couldn't pass it up. Regarding the Dodgers' retooling, brother Brian has this to say:What the Dodgers don't want to become are the Angels, who have not only been stingy in giving up prospects, but have watched the value of their guys drop once they've hit the bigs and struggled. Dallas McPherson and Casey Kotchman, for example, won't fetch now what they might have a couple years back before the "can't miss" label was removed from their names. Could they still be good? Absolutely, but when a player struggles, whether at the big league level or a higher minor league class, it wipes some of the shine off that guy's value. The Angels have prospects blocking their prospects. The Dodgers aren't quite that rich, but have currency to spend. Often GMs will hold on to guys because they're terrified that young player will turn out to be the next Jeff Bagwell or Ryan Howard. But they generally don't.Wow, so of a sudden you don't give guys who make the All-Star team at every minor league level a chance to play? News to me. Confronted with a player about to get really, really expensive, a player who has a significant injury history (Troy Glaus), do you give that chance to the kid in AAA (Dallas McPherson)? Well, of course you do. Kamenetzky here is happy to use hindsight to condemn Bill Stoneman, but the decision at the time was perfectly sound. We'll find out how sound Ned Colletti's furious trading is in three years or less.
Bullets
- The Lou Piniella-led Cubs are now supposed to make a hard run after A-Rod (via BTF).
- Bud Selig is rooting for the Mets to get into the World Series, from a ratings perspective.
- Steve Lyons will keep his part-time job with the Dodgers. Unfortunately. I didn't think that what he said was all that problematic, so almost certainly his firing was about something else.
- The Giants will talk to Bud Black about their managerial opening.
- In that same article, Giants trainer Stan Conte has resigned. "Conte said his departure was his call and not the result of any conflicts with front-office personnel or any rift with Bonds."
You mean Gilliam retired three times?
1) Where did I ever say that? My point is that the Dodgers weren't especially impressive; one-and-done isn't anything worth bragging about, especially seeing as how they couldn't even defend a division lead going down the stretch.
Why is it assumed it is a tougher division?
Even walking away from the idea that the AL is a stronger league than the NL (and there's a fair amount of evidence for it), the collective record for the AL West is 308-340, for a .525 winning percentage; the NL West is 385-404, or a cumulative .512 winning percentage. So, yeah, a stronger division.
That is so funny to hear Angel fans still hanging on that one World Series. It's been years now guys! You ain't going anywhere with Stoneman at the helm.
It's so funny to read cowards like you (who show up here and don't bother to put your name to anything) pretending that one postseason win by Jose Lima since 1988 is anything better. The Angels under Stoneman have done a lot more than anyone the Dodgers have put on the throne.
Given that, what would Izturis have given the Dodgers in 2006 and going forward had they kept him? As it's likely he would have been a three-million dollar defensive-replacement/pinch-runner, the answer is, "Not Much." What they got instead in trade was 12 more-or-less strongly pitched games in which they went 6-3. Pitch those games with Tomko, Hendickson, or Sele and you're looking at a team that misses the playoffs.
I've had this argument with Rob before, typically regarding the Dodgers' farm system. My position is that a prospect/young player has two values. The fist is the value of that player to contribute to your team ("real value") and the other is that players ability contribute as percieved by other teams ("trade value"). Due to the imperfect nature of scouting and forcasting the future, these two values are rarely in lockstep. That's why trades happen.
Methinks you put too much real value in slappy shortstops.
I also think that you should look at these comps because comps for what is to come are somewhat more enlightening that comps for what has come already.
His ND's were in a 1-0 win over SF (no run support, very well pitched), a 4-2 win over Colorado (ditto, well pitched), and a 9-7 loss at Arizona (4 runs in 5 IP, but left leading).
So even in the games in which he NDed, he had a positive impact, for the most part.
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