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Thursday, March 22, 2007

Pickoff Moves

Today's Birthdays

Glenallen Hill ANA b. 1965, played 2001

Ramon Martinez LAN b. 1968, played 1988-1998, All-Star: 1990

Rich Monteleone CAL b. 1963, played 1988-1989, 1995-1996

Jimmy Sebring BRO b. 1882, played 1909, d. 1909-12-22

Overton Tremper BRO b. 1906, played 1927-1928, d. 1996-01-09

Terry Wilshusen CAL b. 1949, played 1973, d. 2000-12-01

The Cost Of Doing Business: Angels 8, Diamondbacks 3

Joe Saunders had one bad inning in him — the second — in which he was unable to squelch a two-out rally by the Snakes. Instead, he found out all about the bat of reserve catcher Miguel Montero, who cashed in ex-Angel Alberto Callaspo and Chris Young; the thing came to a halt when Reggie Willits fielded Orlando Hudson's single and returned it to Jose Molina for a comic end to the inning, as Montero was out by feet.

Otherwise, the game had plenty of diversions; Jose Molina stole a base against Montero, who made a number of mistakes during the game. The string of failed or dubious catching prospects for the Snakes continues apace, and it seems that if this game is representative at all, the rest of the division will be running against him, early and often. Baseball America recently ranked him the team's fifth-best prospect ($), and cited improved defense as a reason for the rating; if yesterday's game was any indication, he's got a ways to go before he knocks Chris Snyder out of the starting job.

The rest of the Snakes' roster was also shaky, and in particular, the outfield. Robby Hammock, the former catcher, has been converted to a super utility guy, and lost a routine fly in the seventh that eventually put Tommy Murphy on third with a credited sac fly and a two-base, one-run error. The Angels compounded it with a three-run eighth against Jorge Julio, an erstwhile relief ace with the O's in 2002 who's never been as good before or since; he's carrying a 5.40 ERA this spring, and all the pitchers the Angels faced today had spring ERAs higher than that, even.

But my favorite moment of the game had to be watching converted shortstop Warner Madrigal come in to pitch the last out of the ninth. Greg Jones got himself in some trouble, walking the bases loaded after an Alberto Callaspo single, and then giving up an RBI sac fly. Scioscia had seen enough, and called in Madrigal; what was hilarious was that this was, to my knowledge, the first time he has ever appeared in a game with major leaguers, though not against them. Madrigal had once upon a time been considered an outfield prospect, but his bat vanished in 2005 and 2006, and so he was converted to the mound, to some (limited) success — 2-1 with a 3.75 ERA over 12 innings. He got Carter to fly out meekly to left, ending the threat. I still wanna see Madrigal do it more than against a few low-A hitters. More, I don't see how they could have thought he was anything but a first baseman or a pitcher based on his incredibly thick middle; if he's an outfielder, it's in the Albert Belle mold, but you can think of a dozen active pitchers with his build, including guys like David Wells, Brad Penny, Bartolo Colon, and so on.

Recap/Box

News

Jon's Five Questions About The Dodgers

Jon prognosticates about the Dodgers at Hardball Times:
Despite losing offense with the departure of Drew, the Dodgers are slightly better on paper this year thanks to the ongoing maturation of the kids and the increased depth on the mound, but they also had some things break their way last season in unexpected fashion: Saito's debut, Kemp's seven home runs in his first 15 career games, the clutch hitting, and will need similar strokes of good fortune to keep pace with the San Diego Padres and improving Arizona Diamondbacks. (On the bright side, Odalis Perez's collapse and Cesar Izturis starting at third base are distant memories.)

Basically, the team's entire season rests within the infamous margin of error, and I'm not going to try to fool anyone by pretending to know where it will land. You like a good mystery? Pick up the Los Angeles Dodgers in paperback.

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Comments:
good thing i was sitting down when Elvis Mickey said 'walks'. heh.

Madrigal looks like a linebacker, doesn't he?

I saw Snyder play at Rancho when Mathis caught for us the same game - i'm still thinking they're at the same spot developmentally as they advanced through the minors more or less together. we are fortunate to have good catching situation and prospects - we didn't have to throw Mathis into a job like Snyder.

re: Erstad - Ozzie has to have the quote of the day "..good thing the season doesn't start today." lol!

finally, i'm mainly an Angel fan because the parking situation at Dodger Stadium, as even in the '60's my dad didn't like go there just because of their parking lot (i don't think its so bad once you figure it out), so we went to Anaheim instead, even though it was a bit further. i'm not an expert and can't speak with certainty on this topic, but when i read about the changes coming in the times, my first thought was McCourt was gonna hose it up.
 
Not only does Angel Stadium have a rail link, but if/when the new development ever takes hold in that area, the train station is supposed to be upgraded, with possible new service to areas like Riverside/points east. This is all good news for the Angels -- unless Arte squashes any development plans.
 
I can remember a time when Metro, back when it was RTD, had a couple of bus routes that passed through the Dodger Stadium parking lot. I know because I took it once, when I was in junior high or high school, & didn't have a car. Why that has been discontinued is a mystery.

Now, perceptions change over time, but I've been going to Dodger Stadium since I was six. They've probably always had the same number of cars, but the traffic problems seem to be getting worse each year - and I can remember when they had to build the additional parking lot where there was once a baseball diamond to accommodate Fernandomania.

Perhaps my childhood experiences were different because we were usually using someone's season tickets with parking, and I've been doing general admission parking most of my adult life. But even that seems to have gotten worse in the past decade.

I don't know if it has anything to do with closing a couple of the neighborhood gates to appease the community (Scott was a favorite of mine). I question whether this new plan will work. I don't know how many spaces are in each of the designated areas, but it would not surprise me if the demand at certain entrances exceeds capacity, while other lots have more open spaces but fewer vehicles coming in. I trust that their traffic consultants have this all figured out.

The steep price increase is just so...McCourt. And for a while, it looked like they were really starting to get it.

This is why I'll spend 45 minutes in the car to get to Angel Stadium. I don't feel like Arte's squeezing every last nickel out of me. I'm already put off by the day-of-game premium tacked onto the tickets. The food's more expensive, and so is the beer. And for the privilege of paying an extra twenty bucks or so for my evening's entertainment, I probably still get to sit in a parking lot for 45 minutes on my way home.

There's a couple of Gold Line stations in close proximity to Dodger Stadium. They really should have DASH shuttles running between them.
 

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