Padres Deal Kingsale to Detroit for Rivera

So. Seems that all this talk about Eugene Kingsale being the answer in center field wasn’t meant for our ears but for those of Tigers GM Dave Dombrowski. And it seems that Dombrowski believed the message. For that, on behalf of Padre fans everywhere, I thank him.

New Tiger manager Alan Trammell, who cited Kingsale’s work ethic and improved hitting ability, admitted that the move to start his new charge in center might be a long shot. But if nothing else, Detroit has finally filled the void left by Kimera Bartee following the 1999 season.

And in return for Kingsale, the Padres land catching prospect Michael Rivera and thus help shore up one of their biggest trouble spots. Check out Rivera’s MLEs for the past two years. They just scream Bobby Estalella:

Year  AB  BA OBP SLG BB  SO
2001 396 255 310 449 32 101
2002 259 232 317 442 30  67

I’ll grant you, those aren’t great numbers. But this organization doesn’t need a great catcher. They need a serviceable catcher. And between Rivera and Wiki Gonzalez, they may have one. Plus there’s talk (or at least there was before this trade) that the Pads were interested in Phillies’ backup Todd Pratt. A Rivera/Gonzalez/Pratt troika would be pretty interesting, no?

Oh yeah, and rumor also has it that the Padres are pursuing free agent outfielder Orlando Palmeiro to back up Mark Kotsay in center field. Palmeiro hit .300/.368/.354 in 2002 and has hit .281/.361/.348 over parts of eight seasons in Anaheim. He would be an upgrade over Kingsale in my estimation.

The great irony in all this is that now that Randy Smith is with the Padres, he’s able to identify top Tiger minor-league talent. Makes you wonder if the problem lies elsewhere in that organization.

And here’s my favorite passage from the U-T: "Devoid of front-line catching prospects in their farm system, the Padres had sought Tigers catcher Brandon Inge, a defensive standout. But the Tigers wanted Sean Burroughs, or more, in return."

How exactly does that work?

Towers: We’d like your good-glove, no-hit catcher; what’ll he cost?
Dombrowski: For starters, you can give us the best postional prospect you’ve had since Robbie Alomar. Maybe throw us a little something more.
Towers: Um, how about your other catcher: the kid who can swing the bat a little? What do you want for him?
Dombrowski: Sure, he’s available. Got anybody you claimed off the waiver wire lately?
Towers: As a matter of fact, we’ve got just the man for you.
Dombrowski: Great, let’s do it.

Either somebody’s very confused about player valuation or somebody else is lying to the media.

In other news, the big ideas being tossed about on Fanstop (these are not rumors, just thoughts we’ve had) are Dennis Tankersley to the Blue Jays for Felipe Lopez, or Brett Tomko to the Braves for Marcus Giles. The catching situation has been addressed, if not solved; now move onto the other black hole. Solidify the middle infield situation at the big-league level. Buy some time for Khalil Greene and Jake Gautreau. Stay tuned…

What Might the Padres’ 2003 Lineup Look Like?

Catching up on some stuff. As usual, Gary Huckabay over at Baseball Prospectus comes through with a fine column about the art and politics of evaluating talent.

ESPN has compiled a list of the top 50 free agents this off-season. Astute Padre fans will note that their club isn’t expected to be a player for any of them (sorry folks, Royce Clayton doesn’t count). I dunno, maybe they’ll outspend the Yankees for the services of Hideki Matsui.

Sorry ’bout that. Hope you weren’t drinking anything.

So, what would the Padres’ lineup look like if the season started today? Good question. The easy, trite answer is, not good. Unfortunately, the lengthy, in-depth answer ain’t much better. But what the heck, let’s see what we’ve got here.

Catcher

Wiki Gonzalez couldn’t stay healthy and didn’t contribute much even when he did. Tom Lampkin did a serviceable job in way more playing time than he should ever get. There isn’t much in the way of help in the high minors. Wil Nieves is a decent catch-and-throw guy but really isn’t more than a backup for a weak team. The best free agents available not named I-Rod are Sandy Alomar, Kevin Brown, Mike DiFelice, Jorge Fabregas, John Flaherty, Bill Haselman, Steve Lomasney, Adam Melhuse, Greg Myers, Eddie Perez, Todd Pratt, Matt Walbeck, and Chris Widger. Alomar, Flaherty, Myers, and Walbeck all have a Padre past. Alomar will be too expensive based on name recognition. Flaherty can actually catch some and had a pretty good run in his first go-round with the Pads. He might not be a bad option. Pratt is a better hitter but at age 35, he’s never had more than 173 at-bats in a season. He’s even more of a role player than Lampkin. The two guys on this list who intrigue me most, however, are Melhuse and Widger. I don’t know much about Melhuse other than he’s got a pretty good track record as a hitter in the minors. And Widger actually had a couple decent seasons as a starter in Montreal (including a 766 OPS in 1999). But realistically, even if Kevin Towers and company do make a move, there’s not a lot of cause for optimism here. Whoever occupies this spot will bat seventh or eighth.

First Base

This will be patrolled by Ryan Klesko or Phil Nevin, depending on what the Pads decide to do with Sean Burroughs. Whoever plays first will be in the heart of the order. If it’s Nevin, the Padres can only hope he stays healthy and returns to the form he displayed over 1999-2001.

Second Base

The next big question mark. Right now it’s looking like Ramon Vazquez. He had a terrific second half of 2002 offensively (.291/.359/.397) and he slots well at the top of the order. With good on-base skills and a year of big-league experience under his belt, he’s probably the Padres’ best option to lead off. If he somehow ends up at short, then this job could fall to someone like Cesar Crespo, Joe Lawrence, or (dare we hope?) Marcus Giles.

Third Base

Sean Burroughs? Phil Nevin? Let’s be honest, the Padres are aiming toward 2004. Sure, they could do what the Angels did this year and shock the hell out of everyone. But you don’t count on that sort of thing. Not if you’re smart, you don’t. Instead, you formulate a solid plan that puts you in good shape for 2004 and stick to it. Nevin, for all the good he has done in San Diego, is not the future at third base. And that means he really shouldn’t be the present there, either. But that doesn’t mean he won’t be. The talk now is that Burroughs will be handed the keys again and hopefully stay healthy and learn from his rookie season. Burroughs presumably will be back in the #6 hole. It will be interesting to see what effect new hitting coach Dave Magadan has on the youngster. Magadan’s approach is great for an organization that is trying to emphasize plate discipline across the board, but I wonder if it’s the best thing for a kid who already subscribes to that philosophy and who needs to work on driving and lifting the ball. That said, if Magadan is as smart as he appears to be in interviews and is good at passing his knowledge onto others, there’s little downside here. He was one of my favorite ballplayers of the past couple decades, and anything he brings to the table in terms of hitting expertise has to be positive.

Shortstop

By all rights, this job probably should belong to Vazquez. He is the best defensive shorstop the Padres have, and he’s also the best hitter. But there is a disturbing infatuation among some in the organization with Deivi Cruz, who lacks Vazquez’ range and hitting ability. That Cruz drew just 22 walks in over 530 at-bats last year is quite telling. Even more telling is the fact that those 22 walks represent a career high. Plain and simple, Cruz is a drag on any offense and, assuming a team can’t (or won’t) find better options, shouldn’t be batting higher than eighth in a lineup. That he might bat as high as seventh for the Padres in 2003 is a damning indictment of the club’s lack of depth behind the plate and in the middle infield in the high minors. What Padre fans really have to look forward to is the arrival of Khalil Greene, the club’s 2002 first-round pick who manhandled Cal League pitching in his pro debut. There has been some talk that Greene could be ready as early as the All-Star break but personally I’d hate to see that happen, even if he dominated Double-A. But that’s a very lengthy diatribe for another day. Meantime there is talk that the Pads might sign Royce Clayton, who would be a more expensive, better defensive version of Cruz. I guess maybe that would help Brian Lawrence. But it’s still not as good as sticking Vazquez at short and finding a second baseman either within the organization (Crespo?) or without (Lawrence? Giles?) These guys will be cheaper than Clayton and have possible upside. Anyway, I could go on about the middle infield situation for hours but nobody really wants that.

Left Field

Ray Lankford is gone, which leaves Bubba Trammell and possibly Xavier Nady. In a perfect world, Trammell would get about 300-350 plate appearances, mostly against southpaws (last year his OPS against them was 921, as opposed to 665 against righties; over the previous three seasons those numbers were 860 and 747, respectively). But in the Padres’ world, he’s probably going to see closer to the 450+ he’s gotten each of the past two years. And he won’t embarrass himself or the club in left field. But Trammell is really a guy better suited to being a cog in a contending machine, and it wouldn’t surprise me to see him dealt at some point during the season, when teams are less likely to sweat over his contract. If that happens, the job will be Nady’s, assuming he can stay healthy. Short-term, Nady probably won’t put up numbers much better than Trammell, but long-term he’s got 35+ homer power. For 2003, whoever ends up with the left field job will bat fifth.

Center Field

Another bone of contention. Mark Kotsay has shown slow but steady progress as a hitter and does a good job in the field. He gets good jumps, tracks balls well, and has a strong and accurate arm. In other words, he’s pre-longball Steve Finley. He’s only 27 and there’s a good chance we haven’t seen his best yet. So what’s the problem? Well, it seems the Padres claimed a kid less than a year younger off waivers and he had 216 marginally palatable (725 OPS) at-bats in the second half of 2002. Now there is talk that this guy–call him Eugene Kingsale, because that’s his name–may push Kotsay to right field. Kotsay will do fine in right, where he played back in his days with the Marlins, but to move him to accommodate a mediocre fifth outfielder type mystifies me. Where do these guys bat? Kotsay is a logical candidate for the #2 hole. Kingsale I honestly can’t picture in a big-league lineup. I’m guessing that his speed will tempt the powers-that-be to stick him near the top of the lineup and let him suck up outs faster than you can say Tony Womack.

Right Field

This belongs to Klesko or Kotsay. My hope is that Klesko gets the job and that Kotsay stays in center.

The Lineup, Please

A few possible scenarios:

Best-Case
  1. Vazquez ss
  2. Kotsay cf
  3. Klesko rf
  4. Nevin 1b
  5. Trammell lf
  6. Burroughs 3b
  7. Giles 2b
  8. Widger c
Worst-Case
  1. Kingsale cf
  2. Kotsay rf
  3. Klesko 1b
  4. Nevin 3b
  5. Nady lf
  6. Vazquez 2b
  7. Cruz/Clayton ss
  8. Gonzalez c
Most Likely
  1. Vazquez 2b
  2. Kotsay cf
  3. Klesko rf
  4. Nevin 1b
  5. Trammell lf
  6. Burroughs 3b
  7. Cruz ss
  8. Gonzalez c

I don’t mean to be negative but that "best-case" scenario ain’t lookin’ real appetizing. Whatever ends up happening, one thing is clear: There’s going to be a lot of pressure on those young arms in ’03. We’ll take a look at the pitching next week.

Comps for Jake Gautreau

Back from Vegas. Almost bailed out on my excursion to Big Bear due to rain, but figured since it was pouring all over SoCal it didn’t really matter which way I went. So I took a drive through the mountains, and I’m glad I did. Saw one of the more spectacular rainbows I’ve seen outside of Hawaii, and generally had a blast enjoying the relative space that steering clear of the interstates affords. Listened to some great tunes, too. Couple guitarists worth investigating, if you’re into that sort of thing:

Brilliant players, both. Check ‘em out.

As for me, I’m spending way too much time with my new 4-track (yeah, I bought one; it was nice knowing the wife, LOL). But I’m also starting to think about things baseball again, which is a good sign (I’m just not capable of taking that much time off). Caught a little of the rebroadcast of the April 3 Padres/Diamondbacks game the other night. Fun to watch Brian Lawrence serve up all those worm-beaters.

Meantime, over at Fanstop we’ve been discussing, among many other topics, the troublesome catching and middle infield situations for the Padres. To give you an idea of how desperate Padre fans are, there are a bunch of us hoping to land the likes of Miguel Olivo, Dan Schneider, or Javier Valentin. Not good.

As for the middle infield, at least there are some long-term options. Really the only big problem here is that some within the organization consider Deivi Cruz to be an answer to anything. But behind Cruz there are a couple of very promising former first-rounders in Khalil Greene and Jake Gautreau. There has been talk that Greene might be up with the big club by the All-Star break (which in my opinion would be a mistake; what’s the hurry?).

With regard to Gautreau, as those of you who have been following this site for a while know, I’m always looking to find statistical comps between prospects and current big-leaguers at a similar stage of development. Although statistical comps are by no means a panacea, they can be useful in looking at possible directions a particular player’s path might take. That said, here are some comps for Gautreau; stat lines represent how each player did in High-A ball:

Player      Age  AB  BA OBP SLG XBH BB  SO
Fullmer,Br   21 380 303 367 424  35 32  43
Gautreau,Ja  22 371 286 358 426  31 42  86
Koskie,Co    23 338 260 338 420  32 40  76
Morris,Wa    23 494 306 390 470  48 62 100

If Gautreau can develop into a Brad Fullmer or Corey Koskie type offensive player at second base, I think the Padres will be happy. Whether he does, and whether he can play the position at the highest level, remains to be seen. The downside is someone like Warren Morris or Todd Betts (a hitting machine who never quite made it; just rediscovered him the other day while going through Sickels’ 1996 book).

One other point about Gautreau’s 2002 season that bears mentioning is that he was learning to play a new (more demanding) position and he battled a severe stomach ailment toward the end of the year. Here are his splits before and after illness (thanks to Hank at Padre Prospects Report for this gem):

        AB  H 2B 3B HR BB SO  BA OBP SLG
before 271 83 18  1  9 27 63 306 368 480
after  100 23  2  0  1 15 23 230 333 280

It’s a good bet that Gautreau’s drop in power was due at least in part to his physical ailment. We’ll need to see him healthy for a full season to get a better read. How he does at Mobile will tell us a lot about him as a prospect.

One other possibility that’s been kicked around at Fanstop is a Brett Tomko for Marcus Giles deal. With presumably one of Tom Glavine or Greg Maddux not returning to Atlanta, they’ll need another starter until some of the kids (Matt Belisle, Macay McBride, Bubba Nelson, Adam Wainwright, etc.) are ready. And the Braves don’t seem to know what to do with Giles. If they’re not going to use the guy, why not trade him for somebody they will use? FREE MARCUS GILES!!!

Sorry, I seem to have been possessed by a member of the Roberto Petagine Fan Club there for a moment. Anyway, I’ll part by saying that although the BBWAA did a decent job this year, what the heck do those guys have against A-Rod? This is at least the second time he’s been robbed of the AL MVP. Nothing against Miguel Tejada, who is a fine ballplayer. But if he’s more deserving than A-Rod of the award, then I’m a better guitarist than Joe Satriani.

I won’t bother rehashing the stats and the arguments. But it’s becoming increasingly obvious that when the BBWAA makes the right choice (or even a reasonable choice) in doling out post-season awards, it’s almost strictly a matter of coincidence. But then, I’m of the thought that if you’re going to bother giving out awards, they ought to mean something.

I dunno. Maybe it’s me…

Songwriting, Founding Fathers, and Bucksnort

No baseball content today.

Not That Anyone Asked

One of the "real-world" projects I’ve been working on during this hiatus involves the writing of some original songs. I’ve been experimenting with weird chord voicings (things like playing the third or the fifth an octave higher than normal, or playing the same note simultaneously on two adjacent strings for that Byrds/REM jangly sound–always a favorite). Specifically, I’ve been letting the melody dictate the harmony, which is what Western classical composition theory teaches, as opposed to the other way round, which is what hacks such as myself usually do.

The thing is, I tend to write a song (well, parts of a song), play it to death so I’ll never forget it, then let it go for months or even years. Then one day I’ll be practicing scales or learning a piece for my band, and something will remind me of the song. So I’ll try to reconstruct it as best I can from memory (the theory being that if I can’t remember it, then it must not have been very good in the first place). Then I scribble down some notes on the back of an envelope (sometimes it’s even the same envelope on which I initially wrote the piece), play it to death again, then let it go again until the next time I feel compelled to play it.

But lately I’m thinking it might be cool to record some of this stuff. Part of the problem is that many of my songs are really just fragments. They tend to be passable on the music side and something less on the lyric side. One piece that’s been collecting dust for a few years is about picking up a lawnmower at Sears and contains the following line that only a mother (or a bad songwriter) could love:

Merchandise pick-up and drop-off
Took longer than Yuri Andropov
Stayed in office

And that’s one of the more coherent lyrics I’ve written. So, no, I don’t plan on quitting my day job any time soon; thanks ever so much for your concern. On the somewhat brighter side, at least I’m not trying to write a musical based on Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar or the life of Jack the Ripper. Not at the moment, anyway.

At any rate, I’m currently working on a piece that employs some unusual (for me) chord voicings. The lyrics are based very loosely on a line from Sling Blade, which I just recently saw for the first time. I’m guardedly optimistic about it, although what exactly I mean by that isn’t altogether clear to me. I enjoy playing it; it sounds reasonably good to me. Right now that’s good enough. Maybe someday I’ll record so other people can listen to it. Maybe not.

So there’s a little look at what my life is like when I’m not writing about baseball. Pretty exciting stuff, eh?

Founding Fathers

Next, with blatant disregard for such high-minded concepts as the segué and with little bearing on anything in particular, I present the following, which has been spreading around blog circles:




Which Founding Father Are You?

Lucky me. I can only hope I meet a better end than the esteemed Mr. Hamilton.

What-Not

In yet more desk-clearing, transition-ignoring, mind-numbing news, thanks to a poster to Baseball Primer, I’ve found my new mission in life: a pilgrimage to Bucksnort, Tennessee. Man, that’s cool. Anybody been there? Talk to me.

And finally, here are a couple of amusing sites of debatable consequence (kinda like Ducksnorts):

As you can see, I do grow a bit restless when I’m on hiatus. Thanks for indulging and/or enduring me.

Later…

Padres in the Arizona Fall League

New favorite piece of spam: “I have visited your site and I think that design looks not good now.” Note to self: Sending unsolicited e-mail telling a potential customer what a lousy job they are doing is not conducive to doing business. It is, shall we say, “not good now.”

Very briefly, here’s an update on how Padre prospects are doing in the AFL. Xavier Nady has been sent home with a strained quad. Ben Johnson has taken his place on the Peoria roster. Stats are through games of November 3.

             AB  BA OBP SLG BB SO
Bozied,Ta   107 271 345 542 10 19
Faison,Vi    53 321 393 491  7 12
Gautreau,Ja  67 269 306 388  4 15
Johnson,Be   19 263 300 474  1  3
Nady,Xa      31 323 364 516  2  6

            IP  H HR BB SO  ERA
Baker,Br  22.1 21  1 11 28 4.43
Bynum,Mi  22.0 20  5  9 20 3.68
Tucker,Ru  6.0  5  0  1  9 1.50

On a completely unrelated note, while searching for information on the Brock6 projection system, I stumbled onto a couple of interesting pieces:

Search Request of the Day

“hoffy sausage”

Obscure Historical Figure of the Day

Cannibalistic psychopath? Speedy slap hitter? You decide: Hannibal Goodwin

Yeah, I know today’s post is all over the place, but what do you want from a guy on hiatus? Think I’ll go crawl back into my hole now…

Error Pages, Footers, Mastheads, and Driving to Vegas

No baseball, just site maintenance/upgrades to report:

  • Added custom error pages so that when you try to visit, e.g., http://www.ducksnorts.com/spawnofsatan.html you are redirected to a nice little page informing you that there is no such beast on this site, so to speak.
  • Added a link to geoffreynyoung.com in the footer. No explanation other than it seemed like a sensible thing to do.
  • Finally, the most visible change: a new masthead. The graphic incorporates much of the same imagery as the old logo but has a more "dynamic" quality about it (or so says my wife). Also, it’s in the shape of a banner, which seems to be in fashion these days. Plus I kinda like it. Hope you do, too.

More changes are planned. Stuff to make the site more interactive and what not.

Oh, and I’ve settled on a plan for the drive to Vegas. I’m going to hit Big Bear on the way up, and go via Pahrump (toward Death Valley) on the way back. This combines the utter stupidity of my wanting to make a long drive through desert even longer with the sensibility of not taking the entire day.

That’s all for now. I leave you with this obscure historical figure: Sylvan Nathan Goldman.

Looking for Alternate Routes from San Diego to Las Vegas

Well, I won’t be making it to the AFL this year, but I am planning to meet up with family in Vegas later this month. Inspired by Neil Peart’s Ghost Rider (an interesting read for Rush fans but probably not for others), I figured I might try an alternate route. In my quest to find such a passage, I stumbled across these sites, which may aid you in your road trips and/or pique your general interest:

Anybody out there ever drive from, say, Yuma to Vegas via US-95 and US-93? Drop me a line, let me know how it went. Slap me around, tell me I should stick to I-15, if that’s what I need.

Anyway, as I have threatened (promised?), I’ll be taking a brief hiatus from the blogging business. I may pop in every now and again this month, but more likely I’ll be working on other, neglected web and "real-world" projects.

Meantime, if you want to get a hold of me, go ahead and e-mail me at that address down there at the bottom of the page, come over to Fanstop and talk Padre baseball with us, or check out my band Tunesmith down at Janie’s. Or, if you have nothing to say to me, why not visit one of those excellent sites listed there at the right?

Otherwise, I’ll see you when I see you…

Angels, Emmitt Smith, and Six-Year Minor-League Free Agents

Good gig Friday night. The guy who usually handles our sound was out of town this weekend, so it was a rough start, but once we got going, things came together for us. Thankfully we had a very enthusiastic crowd and they helped pick us up. I can’t begin to stress how much of a difference that makes.

Saturday went well, too. Lots of cool costumes (turned out we were the judges for the contest). I recycled my Cardinal Ximenez costume from last year; unfortunately everyone seemed to think I was Little Red Riding Hood, nevermind the fact that I wasn’t wearing a hood. Ah, well…

Congrats to the Angels for battling back and winning the World Series. I missed most of Games 5 and 6, but caught almost all of Game 7. That was some terrific pitching by a bunch of guys who started the year in the minors. Great series; too bad one team had to lose. I really hate to see Barry Bonds come that close to a trophy and not come away with it, but at the very least we shouldn’t have to hear a bunch of bitter writers whining about his post-season failures anymore.

Congrats also to Emmitt Smith on breaking Walter Payton’s all-time NFL rushing record. Payton was one of my favorite football players back in the day, and it hardly seems real that he’s gone. I don’t know much about Smith, but he seems like a pretty gracious fellow. I like to believe that Payton would be comfortable seeing his old mark in such worthy hands.

In other news, I was rummaging around Baseball America the other day and noticed that Alberto Concepcion, the Padres’ second-round pick in 1999 who didn’t sign out of high school (seems to be a problem with the Pads: Todd Helton, Troy Glaus, etc.), was drafted by the Red Sox in the 21st round and did okay (.225/.354/.359) in short-season ball. Poor batting average but decent secondary skills. Especially intriguing is the fact that he played a lot of catcher and third base. Keep an eye on this kid.

Speaking of Baseball America, they’ve published a list of six-year minor-league free agents; many interesting names there, some of which could do a team like the Padres a world of good. Among the more intriguing possibilities are the following:

Pitchers

  • Lorenzo Barcelo
  • Paxton Crawford
  • Vic Darensbourg
  • Kane Davis
  • Sean DePaula
  • T.J. Mathews
  • Tony McKnight
  • Todd Noel
  • Luke Prokopec
  • Wilfredo Rodriguez
  • Wascar Serrano
  • Amaury Telemaco
  • Josh Towers
  • Steve Woodard

Catchers

  • Kevin Brown
  • Steve Lomasney
  • Adam Melhuse
  • Brandon Rogers
  • Vic Valencia

Infielders

  • Mike Caruso
  • Stubby Clapp
  • Kelly Dransfeldt
  • Joe Lawrence
  • Keith Luuloa
  • Chad Meyers
  • Warren Morris
  • Adam Riggs
  • Nate Rolison
  • Julio Zuleta

Outfielders

  • Billy McMillon
  • Ntema Ndungidi
  • Jon Nunnally
  • Curtis Pride
  • Ryan Radmanovich

Personally, I’d love to see the Pads take a chance on a pitcher like Barcelo or Telemaco, and maybe Lawrence and McMillon among the hitters. I like Lawrence’s on-base skills and defensive flexibility (he can play anywhere on the infield and behind the plate), and McMillon would be a better option for a bench spot than Eugene Kingsale. Even someone like Dransfeldt would do as well as Deivi Cruz, and for less money. Zuleta could have Bubba Trammell’s career if someone would give him a chance.

Incidentally, a kid by the name of Ambiorix Reyes is on the list. I mention him because somebody searched for "Ambiorix" at Ducksnorts a while back and it turns out there is a minor-leaguer with that name. Who knew? I wonder if he was named after the historical figure.

Okay, I’ve gone on a bit longer than I’d intended. To those of you still with me, there’s a good writeup on the AFL over at PDX Beavers that you might want to read. Hasta…

Radiohead and the 2002 World Series

Radiohead. Hadn’t listened to OK Computer in years. Engaging songs (well, except for “Electioneering” “Fitter Happier”; did we learn nothing from “Revolution #9“?), good production. I’d forgotten how adroit the guitar work was on this release. Yeah, a lot of it is due to really cool sound engineering — “Subterranean Homesick Alien” sounds like it could’ve been lifted from an undiscovered Pink Floyd album. But Jonny Greenwood definitely is doing some interesting stuff with his axe. From the searing intro riff on “Airbag,” to the frenetic and sometimes abrasive soloing just this side of Bill Frisell on “Paranoid Android,” to the atmospheric fills on “Subterranean…,” his playing captures the imagination, smacks it around a little, and never really lets go. A genuine sonic treat.

[Geoff Young is not a music critic, but he plays one on his baseball web site.]

So, is anyone else surprised at how well the Giants have handled the Angels the past two games? I really didn’t think Kirk Reuter could contain those bats, but he did. His pitching and a few odd bounces in the fifth inning were enough to overcome anything the Angels could muster. And it was good to see Benito Santiago finally come through after an intentional walk.

My one complaint about the World Series so far: What’s up with those early start times? I could understand that if the two New York teams were playing each other. Heck, start those at 3 PM as far as I’m concerned. But is it honestly more important that somebody in, say, Philadelphia be able to stay up for the end of a game played by two teams across the country than to let someone who lives less than two hours from one venue and a day’s drive from the other sit down to watch the first pitch? Getting home in time to catch the start of the third inning stinks.

Enough of my whining. Here’s a cool site: BallparkGuys.com

Finally, it’s shameless plug time once again. My band Tunesmith is playing tonight and tomorrow night at Janie’s in Chula Vista. If you’re in the area, come check us out. We don’t suck (unless specifically asked to do so; we’re pretty accommodating fellows). Mention “Ducksnorts” and the first beer is on me (stage right, Hawaiian shirt, Elsinore Storm cap). Saturday night is a Halloween party. I’ll be wearing red. Lots of red. First set starts at 9 PM and we play till closing, so there’s plenty of time to swing by after Game 6.

Okay, I’m outta here. Talk to ya soon…

Brock2 Projections for Eight Rising Stars

Once again, I’ve been playing with Bill James’ Brock2 player projection system. Thought I’d take a look at some young, up-and-coming hitters and see what the future might hold for them. As always, bear in mind that even James acknowledged that this system is more of a toy than a tool. But it’s a heckuva lot of fun to play with.

So without further ado, here are eight players who were 25 or under this year and who have 400 or more big-league at-bats under their belts. The two sets of numbers are pretty self-explanatory (peak refers to age 27 season). I’ve also thrown in the name of a player who would compare well statistically if the projections hold true. General assumptions are that offensive levels will remain more-or-less constant over the next 15-20 years old, players are really the age they claim to be, and nobody will move from their current primary defensive position. YMMV…

                 2003         Peak         Comp
              AVG OBP SLG  AVG OBP SLG
Dunn,Ad       265 401 523  289 428 617  Brian Giles
Johnson,Ni    247 335 413  270 362 485  David Segui
Lopez,Fe      256 312 430  278 344 496  Miguel Tejada
Patterson,Co  248 275 385  282 320 461  Steve Finley
Pena,Ca       257 336 486  270 351 544  Shawn Green
Pujols,Al     329 405 609  350 431 702  Manny Ramirez
Soriano,Al    283 314 497  311 347 588  Jeff Kent
Wells,Ve      292 325 477  310 351 541  Preston Wilson

As long as we’re playing with stuff like this, let’s take a look at what Chris Reed over at ProspectReport has to say about the peak performance of this group of players (his numbers were generated before the 2002 season and use a different methodology):

  • Dunn: .307/.411/.690
  • Johnson: .284/.396/.502
  • Lopez: N/A
  • Patterson: .273/.317/.512
  • Pena: .270/.373/.547
  • Pujols: .346/.416/.652
  • Soriano: .291/.328/.488
  • Wells: N/A

Good article over at Baseball America on Tagg Bozied in the AFL. In case you’ve missed it, Bozied is now hitting .274/.357/.548 in 62 at-bats.

Finally, we’ve been bouncing some ideas around over at Fanstop on how to improve the Padres next year. One thought is to talk to the Rangers about San Diegan Hank Blalock, who may be available due to the presence of Mark Teixeira. Using the Carlos Pena deal (Texas received Jason Hart, Gerald Laird, Ryan Ludwick, and Mario Ramos for Pena and Mike Venafro) as a barometer, maybe something like Jake Gautreau, Dennis Tankersley, and Brett Tomko for Blalock and Laird might work? The idea is that Blalock would play second base, with Sean Burroughs returning to third, Ramon Vazquez to short, Phil Nevin to first, and Ryan Klesko to right. Something to ponder…