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Monday, August 13, 2007

Pickoff Moves, Lunchtime Edition

The Urgency (Or Lack Thereof) Of Mike Napoli's Return

I recall a couple days ago that the Angels broadcasters relayed Mike Scioscia's equivocation on Mike Napoli as the team's starting catcher upon his return. I've spent the last couple days with this thought in the back of my head, and it's hard to square this with the fact that he'll be coming back without a rehab stint first. Possible scenarios: The latest in the Times is that Napoli's return date is now next weekend following an unsuccessful attempt at running full speed on Sunday.

Roster Notes

How Chone Figgins Got His Swing Back

I saw this piece about Chone Figgins and how he got his swing back after a miserable April and May in the Sunday Times and forgot to link to it:
Nothing worked.

His fingers felt strange. His swing felt funky.

He groped, lurched and looked lost. He swung hard and just knew that this would be the hit that broke his slump. Then he watched, horrified, as another baseball smacked off his bat and curved into an infielder's glove.

Since 2002, Chone Figgins has been an Angel in Anaheim. He was doing well, and he was ready. This would be his breakout season. Instead, what he got was a nightmare.

First, he hurt his right hand. Then, all at once, he could no longer get a hit. Fans started calling for his head. There were rumors that the Angels would get rid of him. A trade.

His numbers told the story. On May 1, his batting average stood at .125. Twenty-eight days later, it had climbed -- by .008.

One hit for roughly 10 times at bat. Great odds for the lottery, awful for a baseball player.

Worst of all, Figgins, who pronounces his first name like Shawn, simply had no clue.

What was wrong?

We've all been there: nothing going right, no end in sight. Maybe there was something here all of us could learn.

Some baseball players don't like to talk about things like this, good or bad. If they're cursed, then talking about it might make things worse. On the other hand, if they're charmed, then talking about it might make the magic disappear.

Figgins isn't like that.

We sat in the empty stands at Anaheim last week, just before batting practice. Figgins is 5 inches less than 6 feet tall, unimposing enough that you could easily mistake him for a dentist. But his brow was furrowed, his voice anxious. He sounded like a skier talking about a chain-reaction collision at Mammoth. "Man," he said, "it just snowballed.

"I'd have a good at-bat, and then I'd tinker. I'd think, 'Oh, if I get out in front of the ball a little. . . ,' or, 'Oh, if I stay back a little.' It was like I was sort of lost."

Eric Gagne: Game Over, Over?

Eric Gagne isn't getting it done in Boston, having failed at his appointed middle-relief task in his last two appearances. There were suggestions in the BTF thread on this article that his WHIP rate is up from his glory days with the Dodgers. In fact, it's a perfect 3.00 with the Red Sox, and a 1.259 overall, a figure he hasn't approached since 2001 when he was still thought of as a starter. That the O's, hardly a big-hitting team, knocked him around made the failure even more painful.

OT: You Oughta Write A Book

Matt Welch did, this one about John McCain, the man who would be President. You can pre-order the thing on Amazon (link above); Welch engages in some self-promotion at his blog.

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Comments:
Matt Harvey was not the top Angel pick in the draft.
 
Thanks, Rob!
 
with the two Mikes and Jeff, Angel catching i don't think will even be a blip on my 'concerns' radar screen for the next 10 years or so.

Whatever Mike does with his two youngin's is fine by me - that's the last thing i'd second guess Scios about.

btw, there was "news" about Harvey, but you are correct - the news was "there was no news", and i'm sure that's what you meant.

i'm glad the McCain book is done - hopefully this will give Matt more time to write about baseball.
 
This is a knock on the the Times and its puff piece on Figgins: his first name is not pronounced like "Shawn," it is pronounced like "Desmond." His nickname is pronounced like "Shawn."
 
I knew I should have double-checked Harvey's draft position. Corrected.
 

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