IGD: Padres vs Cardinals (28 Jul 2005)

first pitch: 12:35 p.m., PT
television: none
matchup: Tim Stauffer (3-5, 4.81 ERA) vs Chris Carpenter (14-4, 2.26 ERA)

The Padres are now 51-50. That’s insane. Or maybe just awesome and innovative. Don’t worry, I don’t know what I’m talking about either. Breaking an eight-game losing streak will do that to a guy. It’s like speaking in tongues, or dancing with wolves, or stumbling for metaphors.

Stauffer gets the rubber game against the Cards, in an afternoon affair that isn’t televised. Among other things, Stauffer has found Petco Park to his liking so far. Opponents are hitting just .268/.307/.401 against him at home. One trouble spot for Stauffer comes when runners get on base:

              AB   BA  OBP  SLG
Bases empty  185 .222 .276 .362
Runners on   117 .350 .421 .564

On the flip side, Carpenter has been amazing this year and is a legit Cy Young contender. Also, he’s completely destroyed right-handed hitters (.192/.221/.258 in 260 AB); figure Mark Sweeney will get the start at first. Check out Carpenter’s numbers since June:

G   IP  H R ER HR BB SO
9 73.2 44 6  6  3 13 71

He allowed half of those six runs in one start. In no other start did he allow more than a single run. Ridiculous.

Other Stuff

  • Interview with Bob Scanlan (Mirl.com). Brian Wilmer talks to the current Padres broadcaster and former big-league pitcher “about steroids, the future of the game, and his rather unusual workout routine.”
  • Burk’s Beaver Tales. Portland Beavers announcer Rich Burk joins the blogosphere. It’s great to see someone in a more “official” position getting into this. I look forward to reading Burk’s tales.
  • Surgery for Hernandez (Padres.com). Ramon Hernandez will undergo surgery on his left wrist Friday and is expected to miss 3-6 weeks. Robert Fick and Phil Nevin will split time behind the dish in Hernandez’ absence.
  • Here’s a stupid internet trick. Why not.

Breaking the streak was nice. Taking the series would be even nicer. Go Padres!

Streak Struck, Fick F…

…lared a base hit into right-center with one out in the ninth, scoring Damian Jackson to break the eight game losing streak Wednesday night. A few quick thoughts from the ballpark:

  • Jake Peavy looked awesome. Haven’t seen him pitch like that in a long time. Ten punchouts. Very nice.
  • I hear the umpires blew the call on the appeal at first when Giles tagged on a deep fly to center. Too bad, that was a real heads-up play by Giles.
  • I don’t know if you could see this on television, but when David Eckstein struck out to end the seventh, he would not leave the batters box. Evidently he thought he’d fouled the ball off. All four umpires got together and conferred, but nothing changed. Eventually someone handed Eckstein his glove and cap, but the guy basically stood at the plate with a bat in his hands during the entire seventh inning stretch. Weird.
  • Was anyone else stunned that Jason Marquis was allowed to throw 132 pitches? I’m not a big pitch-count guy, but it seems to me the Cards should’ve had somebody up in the bullpen at least. When Marquis intentionally walked Joe Randa to get to Fick in the decisive showdown, I kept looking down to the bullpen to see if Ray King or Randy Flores was getting ready, but all was silent. Jason Isringhausen had been throwing during the top of the ninth but when the Cards failed to take the lead, he returned to his seat. Anyway, it all seemed more like something out of Dusty Baker’s book than Tony LaRussa’s.

It feels good to win again, no?

IGD: Padres vs Cardinals (27 Jul 2005)

first pitch: 7:05 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4
matchup: Jake Peavy (8-4, 3.42 ERA) vs Jason Marquis (9-7, 3.88 ERA)

I’m tired of analyzing stuff. I’ll be out at the game tonight. Later…

IGD: Padres vs Cardinals (26 Jul 2005)

first pitch: 7:05 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4
matchup: Woody Williams (5-6, 4.57 ERA) vs Mark Mulder (11-5, 3.98 ERA)
preview: Padres.com

Phil Nevin remains a Padre for now and takes a seat on the bench. First base? Should belong to Xavier Nady, IMHO, but Mark Sweeney probably will see a lot of time there as well because he’s been around the league longer. As for Nevin, I don’t know that there’s much anybody can do at this point. He’s not good enough to start, he’s too expensive to sit, and he doesn’t want to leave. There isn’t really a good answer to that. The best we can hope for is that Nevin is able to help the team off the bench and that the Padres stop signing guys to bad contracts. I don’t know about the former, but I have a pretty good feeling with Sandy Alderson onboard about the latter.

Meantime, life goes on in the Hot Potato Division. Perhaps the Padres’ new battle cry should be, “At least we had May!”

        non-May         May
      W  L  RS  RA   W  L  RS  RA
LA   34 37 303 315  11 17 120 150
Ari  32 41 313 387  16 12 127 143
SF   31 40 329 370  11 16 104 138
SD   28 43 272 325  22  6 160 117
Col  26 43 306 389   9 20 118 156

Padres return home and try to break a seven-game losing streak against the best team in the league. Maybe all the activity over the past few days will galvanize the club and help push them beyond themselves. Yes, I realize this is wishful thinking, but somebody has to win the division and it might as well be the Padres. Here’s to better days…

Exasperated

Many years ago I worked with a guy who had been fired from a supervisor position. He sued the company for wrongful termination and ended up getting rehired at a much lower level. He hated the new job, hated the company, and was generally a pretty miserable fellow. I found myself irritated at his attitude a lot of the time, but after a while I mostly just felt sorry for him. It wasn’t really a good way to be going through life.

. . .

I don’t know what more to say about Phil Nevin at this point. In case you missed it, he has vetoed a trade that would have sent him to Baltimore for Sidney Ponson.

Presumably Nevin is doing what he feels is best for himself and his family, and it’s hard to fault him for that. It’s hard to fault anybody for that. But he’s not doing much to help the Padres, and he isn’t particularly wanted by them. I hate to admit it, but there’s a part of me that respects the hell out of Nevin for sticking to his guns and staying where he wants to stay.

But most of me is just baffled by his rejecting another trade so that he can remain and take on a reduced role in an organization that evidently doesn’t see him fitting into their plans. I realize this is where his family is, and where he wants to be. But at some point you have to get up and go back to work. I dunno, I haven’t walked in the guy’s shoes, but I imagine it’d be tough to find much pleasure in doing my job after my employer had made it clear that they no longer needed nor desired my services.

How can I even be mad at the guy? I’m mad at the situation, and exasperated with him. But right now I mostly feel sorry for Nevin. And I suspect that this story is far from over. Should be an interesting summer in San Diego…

Interview: Jonathan @ PDX Beavers

PDX Beavers bills itself as the “Unofficial Portland Beavers Web Page”; several talented and dedicated writers keep tabs on everything that’s going on with the Padres’ Triple-A affiliate. Recently I had a chance to chat with Jonathan from PDX Beavers. We talked about everything from top prospects that have passed through Portland, to Portland’s chances of landing a Major League franchises, to the virtues of broccoli.

Ducksnorts: Thanks very much, Jonathan, for taking the time to speak with us. I see that Clay Hensley is headed to the big club. His numbers are pretty darned good this year; how’s he looked?

PDX Beavers: I really like Hensley – the guy just keeps throwing all of his pitches for strikes. Been very consistent all season, even though the team doesn’t score for him. Had a quick conversation with him before the PCL all-star break and he was annoyed that he wasn’t starting the game – good window into what kind of a competitor he is I thought. Good guy too, smallish, and I’m thinking that’s the single biggest reason he’s not showing up on prospect lists, because the numbers have been there his entire career. Of all the pitchers I’ve seen with the Beavers in the past 5 years, the season he’s having ranks right up there among the best and certainly most consistent I’ve seen. I hope he gets a real chance to show what he can do with the Pads.

DS: Several former Beavers have come up to establish themselves with the big club over the years, including Sean Burroughs, Brian Lawrence, Xavier Nady, and Tim Stauffer. Who are some of the best players you’ve seen at Portland (I seem to recall you mentioning Alex Fernandez at one point)?

PDX: I did a ranking of the 2001-2004 Beavers top 10 for the yearbook this season and I ranked Jason Bay, Khalil Greene and Xavier Nady as the top 3. I loved watching Bay hit – the guy had a plan at the plate every at-bat. You’d see him take a few pitches in his first at-bat, clearly gauging the opposing pitcher. Next at-bat, he was up there looking for his pitch, whether it came right away or a few pitches in. Just a smart hitter. Great athlete too, played some center field here and did fine and was a very successful base stealer. Was very disappointed that San Diego dealt him – I’m afraid it’s going to be a [Jeff] Bagwell for [Larry] Andersen deal for the Padres over the next decade or so. (And before your readers are offended by that comparison, note that Andersen was very good for the Red Sox while he was there.)

Greene was phenomenal defensively – and after watching a lot of Donaldo Mendez before Greene, it was a delight watching Khalil. The last 2 months of 2004, Nady had the most dominant offensive stretch I’ve seen in Portland. He looked like he was on a mission to show the Pads he was ready to play in the majors and based on his 2005, it sure seems like he is to me. Number 4 on that list was Freddy Guzman, who, top to bottom, was my favorite Beavers player to watch. The game changed when he got on base – he made the entire lineup so much better last year with his base stealing abilities.

Burroughs was very good here, but he never hit for any power. I read a lot of folks speculate that the power would come with him, but I was always skeptical. I suppose it still might, but I see him more in the mold of a Jeff Cirillo type. Stauffer was good last season, but he was never the best pitcher on the staff in 2004. Struggled to finish guys and struggled with the long ball. [Dennis] Tankersley, [Justin] Germano and Brian Sweeney were all better. This year though, Stauffer was dominant and he’s been solid for the Pads. I remember Brian Lawrence began the 2001 season in the back of a rotation that featured guys like Junior Herndon, Stan Spencer and Jeremy Powell (PCL pitcher of the month in April 2001 before signing with a Japanese club). He’s really gotten the most out of his abilities, a great story.

As for Alex Fernandez, I always had a soft spot for the guy. Zero strike zone judgment, but an amazing arm. I love guys that can throw and he probably has the top-5 best throws I’ve seen in Portland all to himself. Last I checked, he was in Double-A with the Reds.

DS: Justin Germano is putting together a solid season this year. One encouraging sign is that he’s striking out more batters than in seasons past. What are your impressions of Germano?

PDX: Justin’s strikeouts are up because of his cutter, which he just developed this season and started throwing in May. He’s having some solid success with it. He’s had some of the best outings by any Beaver pitcher in the last 5 years – last year, he had the only two complete game shutouts for the staff and his last outing (July 19) he threw his first complete game shutout of the year against a good Sacramento club. His fastball tops out at 90/91, but his location is usually good with the fastball. The question with him is his curve. He’s got a great curve ball, if he’s throwing it for strikes, he pitches well. I’ve seen him get squeezed on the curve though and if he’s falling behind with the curve, he has to come with the fastball or cutter. If the location is off with those, then he gets hit – like most guys without dominating fastballs.

DS: A lot of us have been watching Josh Barfield for a while. The power seems to be a little down, but he’s still pretty young. How has he looked at Portland?

I think Josh needs another year down here. Burroughs seemed to be more advanced his first year through the PCL (2001) than Josh is, and Sean ended up spending quite a bit of time here in 2002. Sean was 21 in 2001, Josh is 22 this season. I think Josh will be fine. I don’t think Josh is a 25-30 HR guy in the majors, but I think he’s a 15-20 HR guy and if he’s doing that at second base, that’s a solid asset for a club. Defensively, I don’t think he’ll win any gold gloves, but he’s clean with the stuff he gets to.

DS: We’ve talked about Hensley. Who are some of the other guys on this year’s squad that have impressed you but who maybe don’t get a lot of play as prospects?

PDX: I didn’t know what to expect with Ben Johnson, but he’s been dynamite. Typically, like all Beaver hitters, it seems, he goes to San Diego and wastes away on the bench, but down here, he’s been stinging the ball. Started slowly and then got red hot in mid-May and has kept up with that pace since then. Compare Ben and Josh’s numbers – Ben, not Josh, is doing what you’d expect from a top prospect. Ben has more than twice the homers, SLG is over 150 points higher, OBP is 40 points higher. Ben has more walks and fewer strikeouts in 50 fewer at-bats. The kid is not quite 24 years old; when you’re talking about the top hitters in the system, it’s time for Ben’s name to be at or near the very top of the list.

I’m partial to Jon Knott as well, another guy who got a call-up last year and never played. He has a good shot to hit 35 HRs this season. His strikeouts are a little high, but he has legit power and can play the corner outfield spots and first base well enough. I’d like to see him get a real opportunity in the majors. J.J. Furmaniak is another one – nothing wrong with having a guy who can play three infield positions and has some pop in his bat. I think he could be a quality reserve in the majors.

DS: Portland has been looking to bring Major League Baseball to town. What is the current status of that effort, and how do you like your chances?

PDX: I don’t want Major League Baseball. This may sound crazy, but I honestly wouldn’t trade what we have in Portland with what you have in San Diego – and I’ve been to that new park and I loved it. I really have grown fond of the minor leaguers, the guys battling for that opportunity to make it through Portland and make it to the majors. There’s something pure about it which seems to evaporate a bit at the major league level.

There are some quality, smart, dedicated folks still hard at work trying to figure out how to bring MLB to Portland. They cast their leering eyes at teams like the Twins, A’s and D-Rays and hope that there’s a chance that Bud Selig’s “Extortion Across America” Tour (stealing a line from the late, great Doug Pappas) will make another appearance in the Rose City sometime soon. I don’t see it. The political will that was there to some degree over the past few years seems to have faded. I actually think Las Vegas is ahead of Portland in line. And anyone who tells you that Portland could do it without a domed stadium hasn’t attended enough Beavers games in April, May and June.

DS: My wife is a huge X Files fan. I see that Chris Carter called a Beavers’ game on radio back in May. How did that go?

PDX: Rich Burk is the Beavers play-by-play announcer and he set that up. Rich is a great guy and my understanding is that it went pretty well. It’s tough to bring in folks who have no experience doing something like baseball play-by-play and make it work smoothly, but Rich is such a pro (speaking from experience, as I’ve had the pleasure of sitting in with Rich a few times).

DS: One of the many things I love about the minor leagues is how unpredictable games can be compared to at the big-league level. What is the most unusual thing you’ve seen at a Beavers’ game?

PDX: There haven’t been any real unusual moments but there have been a bunch of interesting ones. I saw Tacoma manager Dan Rohn throw a fit that would have made Lou Piniella blush after ex-Beavers utility guy Shane Hopper hit an inside the park home run. Rohn thought the ball was caught. I remember Sean Burroughs and Edmonton second baseman Jay Canizaro almost getting into a fight after a hard slide from Burroughs at second base back in 2002. Tagg Bozied blowing out his knee jumping on home plate after hitting a walk-off grand slam last season and having to be carted off the field was probably the most unusual and certainly the saddest.

One of the most unusual moments in minor league baseball history actually happened in Portland back in the early ’90s. The classic video of Vancouver outfielder Rodney McCray running through the fence tracking a deep fly ball happened in Portland. I wasn’t living in Portland then, so I didn’t see that happen. Chip Hale hit that ball and he’s now Tucson’s manager. He and I talked about that play last season, and he still gets asked about it every now and then.

DS: Broccoli or cauliflower?

PDX: No doubt, broccoli. I actually find fresh, well-cooked broccoli to be quite tasty. My wife has a knack with “underrated veggies” like broccoli, asparagus and zucchini. A little seasoning, some parmesan, maybe some olive oil and they can be a solid addition to any steak.

Interesting, I’ll have to give that a try. Thanks again to Jonathan for stopping by and chatting with us. To read more of his work and to find out all the latest on the Portland Beavers, be sure to visit PDX Beavers.

IGD: Padres @ Phillies (24 Jul 2005)

first pitch: 10:35 a.m., PT
television: Channel 4
matchup: Brian Lawrence (5-9, 4.13 ERA) vs Brett Myers (7-5, 3.32 ERA)
preview: Padres.com

Padres have lost six straight, including all five on their current road trip. Still no news on the rumored Phil Nevin for Sidney Ponson deal. I’ll open a new thread if and when something happens.

This is a really weird time for the Padres. And it appears to be spreading throughout the system. Saturday night at Elsinore, I saw a guy trotting to first on a walk get nailed by a throw from the catcher.

Anyway, I guess the Joe Randa era begins today. Hooray, Joe Randa.

Padres Acquire Randa

Padres have acquired third baseman Joe Randa from the Reds for minor-league pitchers Travis Chick and Justin Germano. To make room for Randa, the struggling Sean Burroughs has been optioned to Triple-A Portland.

Randa has hit .286/.342/.429 over 10+ seasons. He is having a career year so far in 2005, hitting .289/.356/.491, with 13 homers. Randa’s high-water mark in homers is 16, in 1999 and again in 2003, both while with the Royals.

Chick, acquired last summer in the Ismael Valdez deal, has struggled this year at Double-A Mobile after being skipped over Elsinore to start the season. Germano was the Pads’ 13th round draft pick in 2000 and was pitching at Triple-A Portland this year. Chick and Germano were rated the Padres’ #4 and #7 prospect, respectively, by Baseball America prior to the season.

The Friars overpaid for a guy who becomes a free agent at the end of the year, but I suppose when you are in first place and sinking fast, you need to do something.

Meanwhile, the Padres supposedly are close to moving Phil Nevin to the Orioles for Sidney Ponson.


Update. Other reactions around the blogosphere:

IGD: Padres @ Phillies (23 Jul 2005)

first pitch: 12:15 p.m., PT
television: Fox
matchup: Pedro Astacio (2-8, 6.08 ERA) vs Robinson Tejeda (1-2, 3.30 ERA)
preview: Padres.com

Five straight losses? Astacio pitching in a bandbox? Fox TV? Gee, I think I’ll sit this one out. Have fun…

IGD: Padres @ Phillies (22 Jul 2005)

first pitch: 4:05 p.m., PT
television: Channel 4
matchup: Tim Stauffer (3-5, 4.42 ERA) vs Vicente Padilla (5-8, 5.61 ERA)
preview: Padres.com

Tim Stauffer warming up before game, July 17, 2005

This is a composite of a few shots I took of Stauffer warming up before his last start at Petco against the Diamondbacks. I hadn’t been that close to a big-league pitcher in a very long time. The sound his pitches made on hitting the bullpen catcher’s mitt was pretty awesome.

. . .

I just picked up a book called The Last Best League by Jim Collins. It chronicles the Cape Cod Summer League’s Chatham A’s over the course of their 2002 season. I’m only about 40 or so pages in, but so far it’s a very enjoyable read. One of the key players on that squad was Stauffer. From the book’s Prologue:

Tim played catch with his dad most nights before dinner, sometimes after dinner, too, and always with a purpose. They called one of their games “What If?”

“What if there are runners on first and second and no outs?” the father would ask. “Where would you throw the ball if it’s hit to you?”

“What if you’ve got an oh-two count on a hitter, and you’ve thrown him two fastballs down and in? What do you want to throw on the next pitch?”

They played the game incessantly. More than once, they played “What If?” during the family’s entire seven-hour drive to an uncle’s beach house on the Delaware shore.

The boy learned to command his pitches. He wasn’t flashy, not a kid anyone looked at and thought This one’s special. Except that throwing is an unnatural motion. And even in Little League–in Little League, where ten-year-olds are still working out the coordination to throw a baseball near home plate–Timmy Stauffer threw strikes. He had an easy, loose motion to his arm and a feel for situations that eluded most older players.

In a very short time, Stauffer has become one of my favorite Padres. Like Khalil Greene, he is a young kid who carries himself with dignity. Not brash or flashy, just projecting quiet confidence.

Other Stuff

  • Thank You, Dave Roberts! (Joy of Sox). Nice little article and pics from a Red Sox fan who got to meet Roberts and thank him in person for his contribution to Boston’s World Series victory last year.
  • A Tale of Two Third Basemen (Hardball Times). Fascinating look at Sean Burroughs and Mark Teahen, two highly touted young third basemen who haven’t quite lived up to expectations. Dan Fox attempts to answer the question of whether these big, strong kids will ever develop usable big-league power.
  • One guy’s scouting reports on the 2004 and 2005 Lake Elsinore Storm (via this article at Baseball Analysts, which mentions George Kottaras).