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Thursday
Jul262012

Fun With Twitter

Sometimes, Twitter is an enormous waste of time. Sometimes, it just pisses you off.

But, sometimes, it brings great works of art to life.

Michael Young riding a bear with a Trout in his mouth.

It's so beautiful.

Thursday
Jul262012

Jim Bowden Proposes A Trade!

Five trades, in fact, one of which involves the Rangers:

Tampa Bay Rays send James Shields and B.J. Upton to the Texas Rangers for Cody Buckel, Craig Gentry, Leury Garcia and Luke Jackson 

The Rangers get another solid starter in Shields, who is still striking out almost a batter per inning and on pace for more than 200 innings in a "down" year. Upton solidifies center field, thus allowing Josh Hamilton to move full time to left field -- his best position -- so he can concentrate on getting his bat back to the dominating form he had in April and May. Rangers brass is convinced that Gentry is a breakout player whose success has been stunted because he’s been mixed and matched in the lineup rather than slotted in as an every-day player. In Tampa, Gentry would get that opportunity as the Rays’ every-day center fielder. The Rays also would control Gentry for the next five years, as opposed to Upton, who will be a free agent in October. 

Buckel gives the Rays another future impact starter, and Jackson simply adds to their stockpile of good young arms. Garcia would rival Hak-Ju Lee for the title of the Rays’ best shortstop prospect; the Rangers can deal Garcia only because they have Elvis Andrus and Jurickson Profar. The Rangers also would be able to hold on to all three of their top prospects in Martin Perez, Mike Olt and Profar while upgrading their starting rotation for another shot at a world championship, and the Rays make a sacrifice today for another shot at tomorrow.

A couple of remarks:

(1) I wonder who "Rangers brass" encompasses here, because one of the big lines of thought on Gentry seems to be that a big reason for his success is that he HASN'T been overexposed -- that is to say, that his overall value would be undercut if he were to be transitioned into more of a full-time role, and that him being selectively utilized as a part-timer has benefited him on the whole. So, it's interesting to see a remark about the limited scope of his playing time actually being deleterious.

(2) What is an "impact starter?" Is it a front-line guy? Is it a mid-rotation starter on a good team? Because the latter is what Buckel could prove to be, and, to be clear, he's a very nice pitching prospect, but I tend to think of "impact" starters as guys with front-line capabilities, and I'm not sure Buckel's upside is sufficient to merit that label. I'm open to persuasion on this point, though. I don't profess to have the greatest feel in the world on Buckel. I defer to the gurus like Parks and Cole and the like on him.

(3) I haven't decided how I should feel about James Shields as of yet.

Tuesday
Jul242012

Tonight's .GIFs Of The Night

Kiss your damn computer good bye.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jul242012

The Death Of #CookieTalk

Well, about 40 days after I decided that it had become a big enough "story" that it was worth writing about (and the state of the broadcast booth at large), #cookietalk died a peaceful death last night, as Tom Grieve explained that, in essence, people were inundating the booth with so much food that they had to put the kibosh on the on-air shoutouts and move all the words of appreciation to a special section on the FSNSW website called "Tom's Treats":

(As an aside, TAG mumbling uncomfortably near the very end of this clip is funny to me.)

They also provided a suitably informative graphic!

I've received a lot of requests to write something about this today, but, honestly, I'm not sure what else there really is to say about this. I have no reason to believe that TAG isn't being honest about this; I imagine the quantity of food flooding into the booth actually had gotten out of hand, and I suspect that TAG felt guilty about not being able to shout out every single person who had sent something up there, so taking the shoutouts online kills two birds with one stone -- they will probably get less food now that people can't squeeze a free on-air shoutout out of the deal, and they can properly thank everyone who does still send stuff. It's a win-win.

It's also a win for the telecast and for the viewership at home, although I must admit that, for me at least, #cookietalk had made the unexpected transition from annoying to amusing, because it was still a ripe breeding ground for Twitter bits, and, since Buzz has jumped to the television side, we really haven't had another incident where TAG droned on about food for nearly 10 minutes over the span of several half-innings, or where #cookietalk noticeably interfered with the call of the game. The telecast itself has also improved overall since Buzz was called over from the radio side to cover for Dave Barnett (who we all hope is improving), so, you know, there's that.

I'm also not under any delusions about the impact (or probable lack thereof) of the #cookietalk post itself. FSNSW and the Rangers knew that the people inclined to complain about the shoutouts were the diehard fans who weren't going to turn the game off anyway, so, from a ratings standpoint, that wasn't a concern. It wouldn't totally surprise me, though, if certain high-ranking people with the network/team had themselves noticed how obstructive the shoutouts had the tendency to be at times, and if they made it known that TAG rattling off names for minutes at a time wasn't something they were necessarily on board with.

So, yeah, honestly, I'd be shocked if that post was even slightly responsible for affecting any change on the telecast. But I also know that people employed by the Rangers and by FSNSW read BBTiA and the rest of the Rangers blogosphere, and I know that voices were heard on the matter ... so if you want to call that a victory, well, there you go.

Tuesday
Jul242012

Joey Gallo Murdered A Baseball Last Night

Again, from last night:

(Click to expand)

As Scott Lucas notes, Gallo went 442 feet at Petco Park last year, so adding another 30-something feet in a homer-conducive Arizona environment isn't too shocking ... but good grief. 

(And, yes, we all get that there's more to power-hitting than being able to drive the ball a really long way ... well, I think we all get that, at least.)

Tuesday
Jul242012

T.R. Sullivan On The Rangers' Pitching

His latest:

Roy Oswalt said he expects to return to the rotation on Sunday against the White Sox. He said his back is “100 percent better.”

Ron Washington said Scott Feldman is expected to start again on Monday against the Angels.

Mark Lowe said he could go out on a rehab assignment as early as Sunday. He has passed pitcher Koji Uehara as far as being closer to returning off the disabled list.

Big start for Neftali Feliz tonight in Round Rock. The Rangers have told Feliz they want to start seeing something from him.

Good news on Oswalt's back, although I'm (understandably) still skeptical on where he'll be from a health standpoint in a few months. No surprise on Feldman. Good news on Lowe.

And an interesting, if slightly ominous, statement on Feliz ... I don't imagine the Rangers are going to be too overjoyed if he implodes in the first frame of tonight's rehab start like he did his last time out.

Tuesday
Jul242012

Rest In Peace, Sherman Hemsley

He was 74. I didn't realize he lived in El Paso.

Such a genius actor. Long live The Jeffersons.

Tuesday
Jul242012

Today's Colby Lewis .GIF Of The Day

After the jump, we have the .gif of the Colbra's final strikeout of the 2012 season, and the last of his 458 strikeouts since Opening Day 2010 ...

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jul242012

Update: The Mariners Have Optioned Justin Smoak To AAA

From Dave Cameron's morning post on U.S.S. Mariner:

A month ago, I wrote that I was ready to give up on the idea of Justin Smoak as a core part of the team’s future, and start exploring alternatives at first base. Since I hit publish on that post, Smoak has hit .128/.200/.244 in 85 plate appearances, with his slugging percentage only getting over .200 because he faced a stretch of Triple-A pitchers in Kansas City last week. Smoak is completely and utterly lost at the plate right now, and his season line has sunk to .191/.255/.323, which grades out as the second worst offensive performance of any full time player in baseball this season. For comparison, Justin Smoak’s wRC+ (60) is essentially the same as Brendan Ryan‘s (59), and only one of those two provide any defensive value.

It’s time to send Justin Smoak to Tacoma. If he’s fixable, having him get embarrassed by big league pitchers on a nightly basis isn’t helping anything, and he’s a massive liability in the line-up right now. With Carp coming off the DL, the team has the opportunity to make the switch, and they should take advantage of it. Maybe a 6 week stint in Tacoma will help him get back on track. Maybe he’ll continue to be exposed as a guy without as much offensive talent as everyone thought he had. Regardless, the organization needs to use those six weeks to see whether or not he can respond to a change of venue and a chance to hit minor league pitching again. 

It's fascinating -- albeit in a sad sort of way -- to take note of what has happened to Smoak, and to realize that his career is basically fishtailing out of control right now. He's still comparatively young, yeah, but this is his age-25 season and he's just going further and further backwards, and while we used to look at Smoak and believe that his floor was near league average, this is now looking more and more like a case of his developmental ceiling being league average. I imagine the Mariners would be thrilled to get a league-average, 2.0-2.5 WAR first baseman out of Smoak at this point

I also realize that Smoak's been plagued by injuries and personal setbacks (e.g. the death of his father last year), and I imagine that all has taken a major toll on him and hindered his development to some extent, but, geez, you wonder if the Rangers had any inkling that Smoak would still be wallowing around in sub-replacement level hell a couple of years later when they made the decision to include him in the Cliff Lee deal and squeeze the trigger.

Update: The Mariners optioned Justin Smoak to Triple-A Tacoma last night. So it goes.

Saturday
Jul212012

Are We All Done Freaking Out About Josh Hamilton? No? Okay!

Tim Cowlishaw does a good job mining for quotes here, and he comes up with some hits:

Now, obviously, we don't have the full, unabridged quotes from Wash here, and Twitter's space limitations do carry an inherent risk of lost context ... but doesn't Wash's last sentence on Josh seem kind of damning? I'm not the only one who's a bit taken aback, am I? He's not explicitly throwing Josh under the bus here, but it seems apparent that he's fed up, and if the manager feels that way, I wonder how many other people on his coaching staff and/or within the upper levels of the organization share Wash's growing sense of disgust.

This is a troubling situation.

Saturday
Jul212012

Differences Of Opinion

MLB.com's Christina Corona has a report on Neftali Feliz's latest rehab start (1.2 IP, 4 R, 1 ER, 3 H, 2 BB, 1 K, 2 WP, 1 BK) that features some interesting quotes from Feliz and Round Rock pitching coach Terry Clark:

"Overall, I feel like I had a good game," Feliz said. "I know there were a few balls that they got the bat on, but I'm not upset. Overall, I feel like I had a good game."

Feliz, who went 3-1 with a 3.16 ERA before being placed on the disabled list with right elbow inflammation May 21, will start again Wednesday against Albuquerque. The plan is for Feliz to throw four innings and 65 pitches. His fourth rehab start would be July 30, but he doesn't think it will be long before he's back in the big leagues.

"I think one more outing and I'll be there," Feliz said. "I'll probably make another start here. But I'm not sure. They'll probably let me know tomorrow what they need me to do."

"He can't just go out there and throw like he did today," said Express pitching coach Terry Clark. "That's not big league pitching. For him, his fastball is everything. The other stuff just comes off the fastball. If he can't throw his fastball for strikes, he's not ready."

I didn't actually see Feliz pitch, and, obviously, it's hard to render an objective or informed opinion on something that you didn't actually see with your own eyes, so I won't delve too deep into that aspect of this matter. Scott Lucas did watch Feliz's effort in person, however, and at first tweeted that Feliz was just "awful," before later amending that statement to say that he actually did throw some great pitches that he didn't really catch until he watched the videos he had recorded ... Scott's two high-definition videos of Feliz can be viewed here, incidentally. 

[Edit: Scott's minor league report of the day just dropped, and here are his comments on Feliz: "Scheduled to pitch three innings, Neftali Feliz was pulled after 1.2 and 47 pitches.  He retired five of eleven batters (partly the defense's fault), allowed three hits and two walks, unleashed two wild pitches (one aired LaLoosh-style to the screen) and committed a balk.  I simply tweeted "he was awful" when he departed, but I need to modify that statement.  He really was awful while I simply sat and watched; for example, drifting an uncurving curve across the center of the plate and walking a batter on four pitches that included three neck-high fastballs.  That said, I was shooting video during part of his outing, and on further review, he threw more good pitches than I realized.  But, on the whole, his fastball control and command were sorely lacking.  He topped out at 95."]

Anyway, this strikes me as an interesting contrast between Feliz (who, on the surface at least, has made it known that he believes he pitched well and that he's very close to returning to the majors) and Clark, who stops just short of saying that Feliz sucked, and who clearly doesn't believe that he's ready to return to the majors. You don't typically see such a stark difference in opinion between a player and coach on the exact same performance, and while I think it's very important for Feliz to be confident in his craft and his abilities, there's a fine line between confidence and delusion. In that respect, this article -- and its accompanying quotes -- cast Feliz in a strange sort of light, and almost make it seem like he just doesn't get it ... that he doesn't really comprehend the magnitude of the problems that sabotaged this particular rehab start.

I hope that's not actually the case, and, frankly, I doubt that's actually the case, because Feliz, for all of his talent, wouldn't have been a successful big league pitcher over these last few years if he lacked the capacity to process his failures and make the necessary adjustments to improve his game ... but, yeah, that's a strange, and vaguely disconcerting, little collection of quotes.

Saturday
Jul212012

Today's Boring Rangers Transaction

Boring in the sense that we knew it was coming, at least:

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