Monday, January 25, 2010

Hot Stove in Honolulu


After what can only be called the most catastrophic end to a season, the Hawaiians have been burning up the phone wires to explore their options. Rumors abound on the internet and its easy to figure out who may be dealt.

With the dealing of Nate McLouth last season, HHA freed up the 5 man outfield logjam only to create another one at shortstop. Its no secret that incumbent youngster Yunel Escobar thought he had done enough to keep his job secure when the veteran Jimmy Rollins was brought in. This move created a clubhouse divided as players took sides on who should be the HHA shortstop going forward. Its clear one needs to go as both are rated as shortstop only.



Another interesting battle has taken shape as youngster Asdrubal Cabrera came on strong late in a bid to unseat Placido Polanco. Its clear that age clearly favors Cabrera but this is the first year that he has put up numbers to make him a serious threat. Like the war on the left side of the diamond, there can be only one winner. Cabrera's versatility to play both 2B and SS make him the favorite to stay when push comes to shove.

In the outfield, the Hawaiians need to figure out what to do with Pat Burrell. His struggles with the glove were tolerated in the past as his bat made up for his defensive miscues. This season though his average slipped and he may be on the block. If Burrell stays, someone needs to go and that may just be Aaron Rowand, a fan favorite. Rowand has been a mainstay in the outfield for several seasons but his decrease in power the past two seasons are a concern for the short porched home field.

On the mound, there Hawaiians have had inquiries about their starters as the NASBL managers always are on the prowl for pitching. Most likely candidates to be dealt are #3 man Carlos Zambrano or #5 starter Andy Pettitte. Both had nice seasons last year and would be in the front end of most league rotations.

It promises to be an interesting offseason for the boys of Aloha as moves have to be made. The only question is if enough moves can be made to bring a title back to the islands.

NASBL Writer's Association Guards the Hall of Fame Gates

25 January 2010

The NASBLWAA has spoken. In a landmark ballot, the Writers have declared that the current 3-man NASBL Hall of Fame will remain the elite and tightly knit group elected on the inaugural HOF ballot.

Coming closest to earning the 12 votes (75%) required for election was lifetime Texas Thunderbird Jeff Bagwell, with 11 votes (69%). The 2000 MVP is in 11th all time in homeruns (326), 7th in OBA (.406), 12th in slugging% (.560), 11th in runs scored (984) and 14th in RBI (948). His candidacy was no doubt hampered by his failure to hit the "magic numbers" of 400 HR, 1000 RBI or 1000 runs scored. In addition, Bagwell had the misfortune to spend his career overshadowed by players such as 5-time Tastes Great MVP Alex Rodriguez of NJT and 4-time MVP Barry Bonds of Dallas-Fort Worth. With players such as Bonds and Sammy Sosa, who twice exceeded 60 HR in a signle season, coming up for election after the 2011 season, the next two years likely represent Bagwell's best chance at induction.

Others receiving votes:
Roberto Alomar - 3 (19%, down from 50% in 2008)
Larry Walker - 3 (19%)
Rafael Palmeiro - 3 (19%, down from 25% in 2008)
Craig Biggio - 2 (13%)
Edgar Martinez - 2 (13%, down from 62.5% in 2008)
Mark McGwire - 2 (13%, up from 6% in 2008)
Rick Reed - 2 (13%, down from 6% in 2008)
Brad Radke - 2 (13%)
Bartolo Colon - 1 (6%)
David Wells - 1 (6%)
Ryan Klesko - 1 (6%)
Jeff Shaw - 1 (6%, down from 13% in 2008)
Ugueth Urbina - 1 (6%)

Thursday, January 21, 2010

2010 NASBL Base Draft Order

With the World Series closed out, and OJW having clinched the 16th overall selection, the base draft order for the 2010 Rookie / FA Draft can now be formally announced.

1. GRK
2. LVI
3. PCM
4. TRY
5. NYK
6. ILL
7. DFW
8. LCC
9. GCG
10. HHA
11. MSU
12. SPR
13. VFS
14. NJT
15. SPL
16. OJW

Overusage played a significant role in re-ordering the draft. GCG's 66 points of overusage (Brian Shouse - 7, Brad Ziegler - 15, Steven Shell - 27, Joe Nelson - 17) dropped them from 6th to 9th in the order. LCC's 8 points of overusage (Takashi Saito - 7, Jose Valverde - 1) were enough to drop them .001 behind DFW in adjusted winning percentage, so they dropped 1 slot.

Of the 1st round playoff losers, MSU picks ahead of SPR by virtue of a lower regular season winning percentage.

Similarly, VFS edges out NJT among the LCS losers, and will select 13th.


As always, the base draft order is irrespective of trades, and does not apply to rounds 3 and 4 of the Rookie / FA Draft, as draft order for those rounds is governed by FA Money.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

In Dead of a New York Winter, Empire Field is Melting Away


(New York Daily Mirror - January 14, 2010)

NEW YORK - With each passing day, Empire Field, the home of the Knights since 2001 and a New York City fixture since the World’s Fair in 1964, disappears from behind the shadow of Knights Field, the team’s new home. In the last few weeks, demolition crews have been ripping down entire sections of Empire Field from both ends of the outfield decks toward its middle. What was once a semi-enclosed bowl with 57,000 seats is now a skeleton of a grandstand.
In the first weeks after the Knights finished their final season at the arena (with a win, their 73rd of the season), crews removed the seats, signs and anything else that could be sold to collectors or reused in city parks. Then demolition crews started knocking out the field level and the concrete decks that made up the loge and the mezzanine. But the structure of the stadium, built for nearly $30 million, was largely intact.
Not so anymore.
Since the beginning of the year, crews have clawed away at Empire’s walls and beams, exposing escalators, elevator banks and air ducts. The stands above Gates A and E have vanished and parts of the neon players that adorned the outside of the stadium are gone, too. Twelve sections of the upper deck still have their concrete floors, but the other sections that remain are outlined only by their steel beams. Unlike stadiums in other cities that have been imploded, Empire Field had to be taken down piece by piece because of New York City building codes and the sensitivities of Flushing residents who still have visions of 9/11 in their minds.

The rat-a-tat-tat of the construction machinery drowned out the noise of the jets taking off from nearby LaGuardia Airport . Tarps on chain link fences say “Almost Home,” a reference to the soon-to-be-opened Knights Field, but also the six-month process of erasing Empire.
In all, nearly 10,000 tons of steel and another 2,500 tons of concrete will be pulled out of Empire. Some of the concrete will be ground up and reused as the base material for the parking lot that will be installed in its place. The lot will include space for 2,000 cars and signs marking where home plate and the pitcher’s mound once were.
Team representatives said that the demolition will be completed some time in the coming weeks, which is not hard to imagine. On Wednesday, lines of dump trucks made their way onto what was once the outfield, weaving around piles of crumpled metal and concrete covered in snow.
Several Web sites have sprung up that have chronicled the destruction of the place where Mike Mussina in his prime once threw en route to a Cy Young Award, Javy Lopez once delivered a 60-homer season and where Jim Thome, the Knights first captain, manned first base. In a way, the sites are a testament to the morbid curiosity of Knights fans, who have endured many morbid Knights teams.

“It’s interesting how they are doing it piece by piece,” said Karl Erhardt, a Knights fan from Babylon, N.Y. “Most old stadia are blown up and it takes just a few seconds. It’s pretty interesting seeing it come apart in pieces over the course of four months.”
Erhardt and several other die-hard fans are organizing a final farewell at Empire at noon Saturday to share stories and take photographs of what is left of the ballpark.

As Empire Field diminishes, Knights Field emerges. While less imposing than Empire, the new stadium, at least from the outside, has an elegance that Empire lacked. Instead of the lattice of concrete ramps that constituted Empire’s exterior, Knights Field is covered in brick and punctuated with arches and an entrance rotunda. Flood lights highlight the outside while klieg lights illuminate what is left of Empire Field.

NASBL play at Empire Field began in the spring of 2001, after the dreadful North Celtic Druids were purchased by Knights Partners, L.P., were renamed the Knights and were moved to New York City as its first (and so far only) NASBL franchise. The family of Knights GM Mitch Pak are thought to be majority owners in the venture but Pak has never discussed his ties to ownership. Certainly his ability to retain his dual jobs as GM and manager after eight losing seasons in nine years, including a 118 loss debacle in 2008, could be explained by a familial relationship to the owners.

Empire Field was the brainchild of legendary New York master builder Robert Moses, who envisioned a grand, ultramodern baseball arena in the swamps of Flushing Meadows in Queens County . Thanks to his nearly unfettered power in New York City politics, Moses was able to launch the multi-million project and begin construction in 1956 despite not having been able to first lure a major league baseball club to actually play there. In early 1957, Moses offered the stadium site and the arena itself to Walter O’Malley, the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers who had become publicly disenchanted with decrepit Ebbets Field in Brooklyn . O’Malley advised Moses in no uncertain terms that unless he was offered a Brooklyn site, he was moving the club to Southern California . Moses remained obstinate, as usual, and after the 1957 season, the Dodgers left for the coast. Empire Field was completed, sans team, in 1959 and remained empty until 1961, when the New York Titans of the upstart American Football League came into being. The Titans, who became the Jets in 1963, called Empire Field home until 1984, when the team owner, Leon Hess, moved the club to Giants Stadium in New Jersey after a dispute with the stadium's owner, the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, over the lack of maintenance of the facility in general and the bathrooms in particular.
Empire Field most famously hosted a Beatles concert in 1964 and was also used for major league baseball by MLB's New York Yankees during Yankee Stadium renovation in 1974 and 1975 and the NFL's New York Giants for one season during the construction of Giants Stadium in New Jersey. It was then sporadically used for concerts, high school championship games and conventions from 1984 until 2001, when the Knights took possession and played nine star-crossed years there.
The Knights themselves were not very sentimental about leaving the old barn. "It was a dump, lets be honest," said Michael Young, the senior Knight who played there the longest. "When we travel around the country and play on the road, I'm always shocked at the modern facilities some of our competitors play in. Empire Field was past its prime. From what I understand, it never had a prime."
The Knights will open Knights Field for the 2010 season by retiring Mike Mussina's #35 jersey on Opening Day. Arrangements for the ceremony are still pending.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Topes Deal Vazquez in Blockbuster

Springfield (AP) – Coach Mike Ditka once traded his entire draft for one player (Ricky Williams) when he was in charge of the New Orleans Saints. It took almost that haul to pry Javier Vazquez from the Springfield Isotopes. In a shocking move, for the second straight season (following Rich Harden last year) the Springfield Isotopes have traded a top of the rotation starting pitcher. On Monday it was announced that the Topes sent Javier Vazquez, Jack Cust, Reed Johnson, Dan Wheeler, its 7th round pick and its last two draft picks to the Seattle Pilots for Jason Marquis, Gregg Zaun, and Seattle’s first three picks in the upcoming NASBL draft.

Vazquez, who came to the Topes in an offseason trade with the Georgia Roadkill in 2005 (via one of the picks Springfield received in the infamous Barry Zito trade), has been an extremely durable and valuable known commodity for the Topes year in and year out. In his five seasons with the Topes, Vazquez compiled a 64-46 record with a very respectable 4.64 ERA and has averaged almost 200 innings per season. This includes a disastrous first season with the Topes in which he went 6-13 with a 6.13 ERA, as Javier had a difficult time transitioning from the big city atmosphere and media of Georgia to the small market of Springfield.

Due to its midseason trade for Josh Hamilton, the Topes were left with few picks in the upcoming draft and numerous sources claimed that a Topes starting pitcher would be moved this offseason to generate additional draft picks. However, the name bandied about was that of A.J. Burnett and not of Vazquez.

“We appreciate all that Javier, Jack, Reed and Dan have done for the Isotopes organization, but believe that the picks acquired in this trade give us the chance to get a little younger via the draft, something we sorely need,” GM Doug Sherlag stated in a Tuesday morning press conference. “Not to mention, it’s not everyday you can add a Jason Marquis or a Gregg Zaun to your squad. I saw Gregg Zaun hit a called-shot home run in the 1999 Hall of Fame Game in Cooperstown. Only two guys I know of have done such a thing and Babe Ruth wasn’t available.”

True Story – Sherlag was one of the 9,773 in attendance on that day.
http://www.rangerfans.com/archives/1999/07/a-measure-of-fame-zaun-calls-h.html

http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070520&content_id=1975879&vkey=news_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor

Sherlag can say anything he wants, but the trade smells like a salary dump to many Topes faithful. It was predicted by many that the Topes would have a difficult time affording its starting pitching staff after the big money long term contracts signed by C.C. Sabathia and A.J. Burnett after last season and this move comes as no surprise to a team known for its frugality.

It is expected that Gregg Zaun’s acquisition marks the first time in six seasons that Brian Schneider hasn’t entered Spring Training as the starting catcher and Zaun represents another hub in the revolving door of catchers that have called the Topes home since 2000 (in the company of Chad Kreuter, Alberto Castillo, Mitch Meluskey, Einar Diaz, Eddie Taubensee, Shawn Wooten, Brad Ausmus, Robert Machado, Tom Wilson, Brandon Inge, Miguel Olivo, Damian Miller, Jorge Posada, Ramon Hernandez, and Schneider)

Jason Marquis’ days as an Isotope may be numbered however. The trade still leaves the Topes with six starting pitchers for next season and it is probable that Sherlag will move either Marquis or Jarrod Washburn before roster cut-down day for another draft pick.

Monday, January 11, 2010

RUDDERLESS WITHOUT PEDRO

The recently incompetent Chin Music in a break with long tradition have traded their number 1 pick for a slugger named Zobrist. He will try to stand his ground at 2b while vegetarian Fielder lumbers around 1b. These 2 power bats are the 1st riff of a return to the rocking style of '98! We will rock you Pocono style despite living in namby pamby Princeton. Power and Pedro! Umm Haren maybe. Let's go Mets!


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Chows add a Big Stick


Illinois Times -- The Chows DH position is no longer vacant. It will be occupied by either Todd Helton or Carlos Pena with the other guy playing 1B. Both Helton and Pena are regarded as good glovemen and will probably share time in both roles.


GM Brad Sherlag said, "We are very excited to add a premium bat to the Illinois line-up. Helton will be a middle of the order guy for us and should help us generate more runs. Any time you can add a guy to your team that appears all over the NASBL career leader boards - well that's a guy you love to add. Chows fans should be able to see Todd drive in his thousandth run this year -- that is an amazing number considering the struggles we have had offensively over the years. His career batting average of .309 is just shy of the Chows single season record of .312."


A player like Helton does not come cheap. Illinois gave up Joe Blanton which leaves a hold in the rotation that Illinois expects to address in the draft. The Chows also gave up their 2nd round draft pick. Does this mean Illinois is going for it this season? "Yeah - well at least for Block I -- we went for it last year too, but started flat in our tough division and ended up holding a fire sale. We will still be taking the best players available in our eyes in Round 1 -- but those guys should also be able to fill in our holes. We have a lot more depth and flexibility going into this draft after getting Helton and Counsell. "


After spending the majority of his career with the Roadkill, Helton is now joining his 3rd team in as many years. "I am surprised, but not as much as last time. Once you get dealt you learn how to deal with it."