IGD: Padres @ Angels (18 Jun 06)

first pitch: 12:35 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4SD
matchup: Chan Ho Park (4-3, 4.15 ERA) vs Bartolo Colon (0-2, 7.07 ERA)
previews: Padres.com | SI.com | ESPN

I didn’t catch any of Saturday’s game but that sure sounds like an irritating way to lose. The good news it that apparently Dave Roberts is okay. He won’t be in the lineup today, but the Padres’ best offensive player this season isn’t expected to miss too much time.

The other good news is that the rest of the NL West lost on Saturday as well, so the Pads didn’t slip in the standings. They remain, along with the plummeting Diamondbacks, one game back of the Dodgers.

San Diego goes for the series victory this afternoon behind Chan Ho Park, who is 2-0 with a 2.41 ERA in June. The Angels counter with Bartolo Colon, who is looking for his first victory since last September 29 at Oakland.

Happy Father’s Day to all the dads out there. Here’s hoping the Padres can win on their day.

IGD: Padres @ Angels (17 Jun 06)

first pitch: 1:05 p.m., PT
television: FOX
matchup: Jake Peavy (4-7, 4.96 ERA) vs Ervin Santana (6-3, 4.29 ERA)
previews: Padres.com | SI.com | ESPN

New hitting coach Merv Rettenmund pays immediate dividends, as he gets Angels closer Francisco Rodriguez to hang an 0-2 breaking ball to Khalil Greene and catcher Mike Napoli to throw away a bunt by Josh Barfield, leading to the Padres come-from-behind-win in the opener at Anaheim. Everyone else in the NL West lost Friday night, which puts the Padres a game out of first place.

Adrian Gonzalez continues to swing the hot bat. He had three knocks, including a solo homer to right in the sixth. Gonzalez is hitting .375/.412/.667 in June. Only four batters in the NL have a higher OPS during the month, and you’ll like the names: Scott Rolen (1194), Nick Johnson (1193), David Wright (1188), and Carlos Beltran (1154). That’s called keeping good company.

Saturday afternoon features a matchup I ordinarily would like, but lately Peavy has been less than Jake. Everyone says he is healthy, and most of his peripheral numbers are solid, but he sure is working harder to get guys out this season.

On the other side, Ervin Santana has gotten off to a nice start in his first full season. He doesn’t strike out many guys, but he also doesn’t walk many and he’s doing a good job keeping the ball in the yard. Opponents are hitting .243/.300/.387 against the 23-year-old right-hander.

That overall total is impressive, but even moreso are his numbers against right-handed batters: .224/.277/.318. Translation: Not a guy you want to see Vinny Castilla face.

The game is televised on FOX, which means the announcers won’t know about most Padres players. Here’s your cheat sheet to guys they’ll know about: Brian Giles (traded for Jason Bay), Dave Roberts (Dodgers, Red Sox), Mike Cameron (Mets), Vinny Castilla (Coorsflation), Mike Piazza (Dodgers, Mets), Mark Bellhorn (Cubs, Red Sox), Geoff Blum (homered in 2005 World Series), Josh Bard (Red Sox), and Chan Ho Park (Dodgers). Maybe Trevor Hoffman (pitched against the Yankees in 1998 World Series).

Time for some vintage Jake. Time for another win. Go Padres!

IGD: Padres @ Angels (16 Jun 06)

first pitch: 7:05 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4SD
matchup: Clay Hensley (4-5, 3.96 ERA) vs Jeff Weaver (3-9, 6.15 ERA)
previews: Padres.com | SI.com | ESPN

The Padres travel north to square off against the team that knows how to market itself and alienate its own community in the process. Clay Hensley, coming off a tough-luck loss against Florida, starts for the Padres, while the Angels counter with Jeff “I’m Here to Buy Stuff for My Little Brother and Make the Padres’ New Hitting Coach Look Good” Weaver.

Go Pads!

Friday Links (16 Jun 06)

Okay, I’m still backlogged from my Hawai’i trip so you’re getting an extra helping of links today. Some of these have been out there for a while, but they’re all good. Enjoy.

  • Mailbag: A catching conundrum? (Padres.com). Lyle Spencer talks about everyone’s favorite three-headed monster, as well as backstop of the future George Kottaras. He also talks a little about the difficult hitting conditions at Petco Park, which seems appropriate during this time of transition among the coaching ranks.
  • Speaking of the coaching situation, gotta love this quote from Dave Magadan in the wake of his dismissal: “Hopefully, I’m the reason and these guys turn it around.” Just for the record, the Padres had an OPS+ of 100 or better in all three of Magadan’s seasons. The team is hitting .252/.322/.391 as his tenure comes to an end, and Dave Roberts has become a legitimate offensive threat under Magadan’s watch. One thing that might make Merv Rettenmund’s job easier: anyone but Vinny Castilla at third base. As for Rettenmund, if the hitters don’t pick up under his instruction, maybe the Pads can look into building a new stadium. Either that or turn back time. ;-)
  • Richard Wade at Friar Faithful is calling for Bruce Bochy to be next in line at the unemployment office. You know what’s great about all this? The Padres are 34-32, two games out of first place. Can you imagine, 10-15 years ago, advocating a shakeup in that situation? This is called progress. People are expecting the Pads to win now. Incidentally, they are 203-187 since moving to Petco Park, so I take back that bit about the new stadium.
  • Ekstrom, Headley and Jamison to represent Storm in All-Star Game (OurSports Central). Great news for all three. It must be nice to have an All-Star third baseman on your team. The game, between the California League and the Carolina League, will be played in Salem, Virginia on Tuesday, June 27.
  • Athleticism the key for Padres on Day 1 (Padres.com). Nice little recap of the recent draft, with quotes from Grady Fuson about each player. There’s also coverage from Day 2 but it’s a little less thorough.
  • Padres Pick a Third Baseman (Voice of San Diego). Speaking of the draft, Tom Shanahan takes an unusual angle on the Padres’ selection of Matt Antonelli in the first round. Shanahan talks to Antonelli’s teammate at Wake Forest, first baseman Allan Dykstra. Kind of a neat perspective, and one that you don’t hear too often.
  • Evolving Draft Strategies (Hardball Times). Chris Constancio assembles some cool graphs showing trends in the draft. The shocker is that the Padres tend to favor college pitchers. Yeah, we knew that already, but it’s neat to see in graphical form.
  • 2006 College All-America Team (Baseball America). Four guys taken by the Padres in the draft are here: Chad Huffman (#53 overall), DH, third team; Wade LeBlanc (#61), LHP, third team; Craig Cooper (#213), 1B, second team; Kody Valverde (#303), C, second team.
  • 2006 High School All-America Team (Baseball America). Three Padres draftees are represented on this one: Cedric Hunter (#93), OF, first team; Kyler Burke (#35), UT, second team; Matt Latos (#333), RHP, second team.
  • Cool interview of Tony Gwynn in the Spring 2006 edition of vice-versa, a literary quarterly published by the University of Hawai’i. It’s a quick read, but we get to find out what Gwynn’s favorite movie is. Thanks to Jeff at Syntax of Things for the heads-up on this one.
  • Speaking of Gwynn, Ed Barnes and Brian Wilmer have an outstanding audio interview with him in their May 31 episode of The Writers Radio. The interview kicks in around the 7 minute mark and runs about 16 minutes. Gwynn talks about the hitters he identified with and emulated as a youngster, his pioneering use of video as a diagnostic tool (hint: he had to buy and set up all of his own equipment for the first few years), the importance of controlling the strike zone, the Hall of Fame, and more. Good stuff — as is the rest of the show.
  • Home Depot Criticized For Pledging $10 Billion To American Cancer Society For Every Padres Home Run (The Onion). Thanks to Tim and Nick G. for the tip. Great quote: “Having your donation depend upon a San Diego player hitting a baseball over 300 feet through the air is not only placing unfair and unrealistic expectations on the Padres, but is equivalent to telling everyone who has cancer to go off and die.”

That’s all for now; more as it happens. Happy Friday to all, and we’ll get the IGD going tonight around 6 p.m.

Magadan Out, Rettenmund (Back) In

As we first noted in the comments to Thursday’s IGD, Dave Magadan has been relieved of his duties as the Padres’ hitting coach. Merv Rettenmund, who held the position from 1991 to 1999, has been named as Magadan’s successor and will join the club in Anaheim for Friday night’s game.

What implications does this have? The one that immediately jumps to mind is that Padres hitters now have one less excuse, so they’d better start getting the job done.

IGD: Padres vs Dodgers (15 Jun 06)

first pitch: 12:35 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4SD
matchup: Chris Young (6-3, 3.25 ERA) vs Chad Billingsley (MLB debut)
previews: Padres.com | SI.com | ESPN

If there’s one thing I learned from Wednesday night’s 5-3 victory over the Dodgers, it’s that you don’t throw fastballs out over the plate to their kids. Those homers by Willy Aybar and Matt Kemp were just crushed.

If there’s another thing I learned, it’s that wins are better than homers. Padres have taken the series and now go for the sweep against Chad Billingsley, who makes his big-league debut this afternoon. Pads counter with Chris Young, one of the hottest pitchers in baseball.

Every team in the NL West has played 65 games. Every team is over .500. Two games separate first from last. Strap yourselves in, folks, it’s going to one heckuva ride.

IGD: Padres vs Dodgers (14 Jun 06)

first pitch: 7:05 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4SD
matchup: Mike Thompson (2-2, 4.67 ERA) vs Brad Penny (7-1, 2.34 ERA)
previews: Padres.com | SI.com

Ten quasi-random observations from Monday night’s victory over the Dodgers:

  1. For a guy who is supposed to stink, Chan Ho Park sure doesn’t pitch like it. As has been the case more often than not this season, Park was in command from the start and took care of business. He struck out Nomar Garciaparra once and J. D. Drew twice, making both look pretty bad in the process. That’s not easy to do.
  2. Tony Gwynn and Matt Vasgersian were pushing Mike Piazza for the All-Star game last night during the telecast. Why not? It’s got to be either him or Chris Young.
  3. Vinny Castilla’s three-run double in the first inning pushed him up to five RBI in 92 Petco Park at-bats this season. He’s cranked his home OPS all the way up to 364.
  4. The ball Castilla hit was a tough play but Kenny Lofton could have caught it. Mike Cameron would have made the play look easy. Dave Roberts might have been able to haul it in as well.
  5. While I’m thanking the Dodgers defense for the gift that was the first inning, I should throw a shout-out to shortstop Rafael Furcal, who made two errors.
  6. Back to Castilla, there are 240 players in MLB with 150 or more plate appearances. All but one has seen at least three pitches per plate appearance. The lone dissenter? Yep, Castilla is at a whopping 2.93. When he swings at that first pitch, I’m actually hoping he misses it.
  7. I know I’ve said I love watching Mike Cameron play defense, but I also love watching him run the bases. Dude was moving on that triple to lead off the fourth.
  8. If it weren’t for the fact that the game ended up being a laugher, I’d be pretty irked that Cameron was left on third after said triple.
  9. Good move bringing Scott Cassidy into a low leverage situation, see if he can get some confidence back. He looked pretty good, although I wasn’t crazy about his sequence to Olmedo Saenz. Got ahead of Saenz with fastballs on the outer half, then tried to put him away out there. I kept thinking a backdoor slider from Cassidy might seal the deal, but everything was away and eventually Saenz drilled one into left for a single. Yes, I know I’m nitpicking. It’s what I do.
  10. Recently signed first-round pick Matt Antonelli dropped by the TV booth and mentioned plate discipline and on base percentage as strengths of his game. He also said he would be starting out at Eugene of the Midwest League. More on Antonelli at Padres.com. LynchMob, we’re counting on you for a full report when he arrives in Oregon. :-)

I’ll be out at the park tonight, so mind the fort while I’m gone. Go Padres!

IGD: Padres vs Dodgers (13 Jun 06)

first pitch: 7:05 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4SD
matchup: Chan Ho Park (3-3, 4.36 ERA) vs Aaron Sele (3-0, 2.33 ERA)
previews: Padres.com | SI.com | ESPN

Padres are 16-18 at home, Dodgers are 16-14 on the road. It’s called “home field advantage” and the Pads don’t use it. They’ve been outscored by 29 runs in 34 games at Petco Park. Two members of the everyday lineup, Josh Barfield (.186/.225/.230 in 113 AB) and Vinny Castilla (.138/.189/.161 in 87 AB), have been completely useless at home. With the division tightening up headed into summer, now would be a good time for the Padres to figure out how to use this park to their advantage.

Series Preview: Padres vs Dodgers

The team just up I-5 from San Diego is in first place, and I’m starting to have some concerns. Aside from the fact that the Dodgers easily have the best run differential in the NL West (+67, well ahead of second-place Arizona’s +25), what bothers me is that each time a hole opens, they are able to plug it from within. And when I say plug it, I mean plug it. This table should disturb anyone who is a fan of a rival team in the division:

Name Pos Age AB BA OBP SLG
Russell Martin C 23 109 .294 .371 .505
Andre Ethier LF 24 92 .315 .385 .522
Willy Aybar 3B 23 89 .303 .404 .472
Matt Kemp RF 21 41 .366 .400 .829
Stats courtesy of ESPN.

This is a small sample, and guys haven’t had to make adjustments yet, so it’s possible that the league will catch up with them, but that is pretty darned impressive. First baseman James Loney (age 22) and infielder/outfielder Joel Guzman (age 21) have had cameos as well, and could contribute before the season is over. On the pitching side, the influx of youngsters isn’t quite so pronounced, with right-hander Jonathan Broxton (age 22) the only one making much of an impact.

Speaking of the pitching staff, what’s gotten into Brad Penny and Derek Lowe? Never mind that, what’s gotten into Aaron Sele? With 2 1/2 legitimate options in the rotation (Sele can’t keep this up), and Eric Gagne once again anchoring the bullpen, this is a pretty solid group. Gagne’s presence means the Dodgers no longer have to rely on Danys Baez for high-leverage innings, which is good for him and the club. And the emergence of Broxton and Japanese import Takashi Saito gives Los Angeles plenty of options to close out games.

On the offensive side, the Dodgers are crushing the ball (.282/.362/.443). We’ve already touched on the kids, but a couple of injury-plagued veterans, outfielder J.D. Drew (.295/.393/.520) and first baseman Nomar Garciaparra (.358/.420/.607), are playing as well as they ever have. Heck, even the ancient Kenny Lofton (.322/.378/.421) is contributing.

And two guys who were struggling earlier in the season have been coming on strong of late. Second baseman Jeff Kent (.256/.374/.423) is scheduled to come off the DL today, and although his overall numbers aren’t very Kent-like, know that he hit .338/.444/.622 in May before injuring his wrist. Likewise, shortstop Rafael Furcal (.252/.334/.339), the Dodgers’ key free agent acquisition this past winter, is finally starting to show why his employer shelled out big bucks to sign him.

The Matchups

Okay, that’s enough about the bad guys. I feel dirty writing so much about them.

  • Tuesday, 7:05 p.m.: Chan Ho Park (3-3, 4.36 ERA) vs Aaron Sele (3-0, 2.33 ERA). Which recently ineffective veteran starter will turn into a pumpkin first?
  • Wednesday, 7:05 p.m.: Mike Thompson (2-2, 4.67 ERA) vs Brad Penny (7-1, 2.34 ERA). A mismatch on paper, though as I like to say — because it sounds cute and folksy — that’d be a mighty big piece of paper.
  • Thursday, 12:35 p.m.: Chris Young (6-3, 3.25 ERA) vs Brett Tomko (5-5, 5.20 ERA). I’ve become a much bigger fan of Tomko’s ever since he left the Padres. Also, did you know that Young is 6’10″?

One game that obviously favors the visitors, one that obviously favors the home team, and one that hangs in the balance. I’d guess that probably describes most series.

In Other News

According to the official web site, the Padres have signed first-round pick Matt Antonelli. Press release says he’ll be at tonight’s game against the Dodgers. Antonelli is the first player taken higher than round 7 (Craig Cooper, 1B, Notre Dame) to sign with the Pads, so hopefully some other names will start to fall now. If you’d like to keep track of who has signed, be sure to check out Baseball America’s 2006 Draft Database.

Get out to Petco Park if you can, otherwise hang out here and chat in the In-Game Discussions. We’ll laugh, we’ll cry, we’ll curse at Vinny Castilla for his complete lack of production and then hate ourselves because he seems like such a nice guy. But we’ll mean it because, really, he’s not doing anything. Ah, the fun we’ll have.

Go Padres!

Five Years of Blogging

We celebrate two anniversaries at Ducksnorts — one for when the site launched in 1997 and another for when the blog launched in 2001. Today marks the five year anniversary of the blog, and I thought since a lot of folks haven’t been here from the beginning, maybe now would be a good time to bust out a brief history of Ducksnorts.

Scratch the Self-Publishing Itch

In the early-’90s I’d made my first venture into the world of self-publishing with a humble literary zine called nerve (complete with affected all lowercase spelling). We had a small but loyal following, with subscribers and contributors all over the country. People sent poems, stories, essays, artwork, and the like, and four times a year I published the ones I thought were best. Over the 2 1/2 – 3 years of nerve‘s existence, thanks to word of mouth and a listing in Novel & Short Story Writer’s Market, we ran some excellent pieces by some surprisingly big names.

It was a labor of love, but eventually, due to printing and mailing costs, the overhead became too much for one person of modest means. We had a great ride, however, and I learned a lot from the experience. One of the things I’d learned about was the World Wide Web. Just before nerve said goodbye, I built a rudimentary web site for it on GNN; I didn’t know much about the web, but in minutes I’d created something that could be seen around the globe — at least in theory — and I was hooked.

Message Boards and Ugly Web Sites

Meantime, GNN was swallowed up by AOL and I discovered their STATS message boards, which I frequented and contributed to as much as possible. After a short time, I found myself wanting/needing a larger audience and so I built the hideously designed Geoff Young’s Baseball Pages. This consisted of things like a directory of “minor league teams and the newspapers that cover them” (I know this seems quaint now, but such things didn’t exist back then), a web page for one of my Scoresheet Baseball leagues, and a “collection of general baseball articles” I’d written called Ducksnorts in honor of a humorous term I’d heard on a WGN broadcast.

Blogs didn’t exist at this time, or if they did, they certainly weren’t called blogs. The articles I wrote ran the gamut from profiles of Padres prospects (some of which were more accurate than others), to comparisons of Andruw Jones and Barry Bonds, to coverage of the California/Carolina League All-Star Game held at Lake Elsinore in 1999, to — well, you get the idea.

Basically I would write whenever the spirit moved me, which was about once a month or so. Even though publishing on the web was much easier and cheaper than traditional print publishing, the tools that existed in the late-’90s were nowhere near as sophisticated as what we have today, and it was still something of an ordeal to build and maintain a web site. (For example, updating the blogroll involved writing and executing search and replace routines across hundreds of static pages and then uploading those files manually via FTP.)

Then at some point I remember reading about blogs in a newspaper article. I checked out some of the sites they listed and thought, if these guys can do it, then so can I.

And I did.

A Blog Is Born — And Grows

I started writing almost daily on June 12, 2001, with a rant about ESPN’s new center field camera angle. Subsequent entries saw me talk about the Padres, because I watched them fairly often, but I talked about other stuff as well. Remember: There were maybe a dozen or so baseball blogs in existence at the time and all could be read in one sitting. Niche baseball blogs weren’t even yet a twinkle in some Apache server’s eye, so pretty much anything went in terms of content.

Later in 2001, I redesigned Ducksnorts as a class project while studying under Thomas Powell at UCSD. There’s a lot that I would do differently now, but I take some pride in the fact that this design still holds up fairly well even after so many years.

The blogging and redesign project ended up opening doors for me that I could not have imagined. I started writing for Baseball Think Factory and also launched a career as a web developer/project manager (to this day, Ducksnorts remains on my professional resume). Later I was approached by media outlets to discuss the blogging phenomenon, and other organizations extended opportunities for me to do more on the baseball writing front.

For various reasons, I turned down those other opportunities, but in March 2005, Ducksnorts moved to All-Baseball.com, where we resided for a year. We gained an even greater following there and I got up to speed on all the latest blogging tools. I had the chance to interview some fascinating folks in the world of baseball, discuss the Padres with many devoted fans, and even found myself doing radio and television appearances. It was a great experience, but after a year, I found that I missed running the whole show and returned Ducksnorts to its indy roots.

This has turned out to be a good move. I’ve enjoyed developing my web skills again, and recently I’ve started doing some blog consulting work for people who are getting into the world of blogging, which is very exciting for me.

Built for the Future

The other exciting development in all this is the proliferation of baseball blogs. It’s no longer possible to read all of them in one sitting, but with so many now to choose from, we all win. Sure, there’s a lot of garbage out there, but there also is some amazing work being done by people who just a few years ago would not have had a way to make their voices heard. From a reader’s standpoint, this means better information is available, and from a writer’s standpoint, this means we all have to take our games to an even higher level.

I cannot begin to tell you how thrilled I am to see the likes of San Diego Spotlight, Gaslamp Ball, and Friar Faithful producing solid content that we all can enjoy. The San Diego Padres deserve quality coverage as much as do many other, more high-profile clubs, and the presence of each one of these sites pushes me even harder, which again means we all win.

Five years is a long time in the world of blogging, but it doesn’t seem that way to me. Assuming folks are still around to read Ducksnorts, I don’t plan on leaving anytime soon. Thanks to all of you for helping to make this site a great place to hang out and talk Padres baseball. I couldn’t have done it without you. Here’s to another five years.

Go Padres!