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Friday, November 17, 2006

Pickoff Moves

Today's Birthdays

Jim Brewer LAN,CAL b. 1937, played 1964-1976, All-Star: 1973, d. 1987-11-16. Came up with the Cubs, but the Dodgers stole him — and another player — for Dick Scott, an unremarkable reliever. The Dodgers finally traded him midseason 1975 to the Angels, where he pitched very well until his retirement. Musta been that screwball.

Ray Chadwick CAL b. 1962, played 1986. Lost all the decisions (five) he got in seven 1986 starts, he's now coaching baseball for Thompson Rivers University, a small school in British Columbia, Canada.

Dave Frost CAL b. 1952, played 1978-1981. He came to the Angels in a trade with the White Sox along with Top 100 Angel Brian Downing, a terrible trade for the Chisox but a great one for the Angels. Went 16-10 in 1979, the first year the Angels ever won a division; never before and never after would he win as many as 10 starts. Elbow problems limited his effectiveness in the last three years of his career.

Aubrey Gatewood LAA,CAL b. 1938, played 1963-1965

Bill Harrelson CAL b. 1945, played 1968

Joe Hatten BRO b. 1916, played 1946-1951, d. 1988-12-16

Brad Havens LAN b. 1959, played 1987-1988

Lew McCarty BRO b. 1888, played 1913-1916, d. 1930-06-09

Dan Osinski LAA b. 1933, played 1962-1964

Orlando Pena CAL b. 1933, played 1974-1975

Sam Post BRO b. 1896, played 1922, d. 1971-03-31

George Stallings BRO b. 1867, played 1890, d. 1929-05-13

Ben Weber ANA b. 1969, played 2000-2004. Ben's out of baseball now, which is too bad; I liked him on the Angels. Every team, the Angels especially these days, need guys like him who crawl their way to the Show and hang in for a few years of super-competence. Never devastating, just lots of groundball outs. Sayonara, Osama.

Mitch Williams CAL b. 1964, played 1995, All-Star: 1989. Nicknamed "Wild Thing" because of the large number of plunked batters early in his career, he pitched for six teams over eleven seasons, with a K/BB rate that approached unity most years. His fielding was awful, too, made worse by a followthrough that left him in a bad place to field his position. Yet somehow, he managed to save thirty or more games three times in his career (probably scaring the customers in the process). He was involved in one of the worst trades the Cubs ever made, one that sent Rafael Palmiero and Jamie Moyer to Texas; he also gave up the series-losing home run to Joe Carter in Game 6 of the 1993 World Series.

Bullety Stuff


Comments:
The best part of the 2nd Place Shares is that the Blue Jays, not the Red Sox, got some tangible reward for coming in 2nd place.

The 10 grand is a lot to rookies and minor league callups with pro-rated salaries.
 
That supposed Angels-ChiSox deal makes literally no sense whatsoever. Sounds like a writer simply making things up so he can fill space. They mention Garcia's impressive record at Angel Stadium, but fail to mention that Santana is 19-5, 3.09 career at the Big A, which is no less impressive than Garcia's 8-1, 2.99.
 
If i were working for Frank McCourt, I would be looking for players that aren't looking for the biggest payday too, because God knows none of the additional revenue they are generating with the dodgers is going into payroll.
 

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