ELEPHANTS IN OAKLAND
an Oakland Athletics Blog:
Pitching, Defense and the Three Run Jimmy-Jack


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Friday, July 28, 2006
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27 JULY 2006

Before the media round up of yesterday's game, the Rangers and Brewers have completed a trade. It's surprising as the A's have had a long and lingering interest in Kevin Mench.


BREWERS
RANGERS
FRANCISCO CORDERO
CARLOS LEE
KEVIN MENCH
NELSON CRUZ
LAYNCE NIX
JULIAN CORDERO



Carlos Lee, I thought, might be something the A's could go after. He is a free agent at the end of the year, too. But looking at the splits, Mench is one of those Eric Byrnes players; kills left-handed pitching but struggles against right-handed hitting. Lee crushes right-handed hitting more so that left-handed pitching with nearly 100 points difference in OPS. Lee doesn't exactly suck against lefties, and this year he has improved a lot.


Still, this may end up being the year that the A's do a whole lot of nothing at the trade deadline. But, they might consider doing something at the waiver wire when darn near everyone is floated out on waivers.


Here's a run down on what some of the media outlets had on yesterday's game; and A's win, 5-2 over the Blue Jays.



SYNOPSIS:


"Fat Joe" Blanton was effective and once he got into the Blue Jays batting order a third time, his change-up and breaking ball were even better as the Blue Jays were coming out of their shoes. Many were curious why Blanton was yanked after 7 innings and fewer than 90 pitches. One; he had gone through the Blue Jays line up three times - that's enough. Two; the bullpen is not as rundown as Ken Macha like to think it is and a recent closed door meeting with David Forst and Billy Beane may have involved smacking Macha around re: bullpen usage. Three; Blanton has been inconsistent and any time a pitcher throws seven innings and fewer than three runs, leaving with the lead, you want to secure a positive outing and build upon that.


The A's worked Ted Lilly over, waiting out his flights of fancy and poor pitch selection by Benji Molina. Lilly got himself in trouble by hitting Frank Thomas after Blanton had hit Troy Glaus. The A's blew several scoring opportunities and left 9 men on base. Defensively the A's turned two double plays. The A's are second in the American league in hitting into and inducing double plays. They are also 6th in leaving mean on base.


CRITICAL SEQUENCE:


OAKLAND - BOTTOM OF 2ND
Score 
Ted Lilly pitching for Toronto
TOR
OAK
F Thomas hit by pitch.
0
0
J Payton walked, F Thomas to second.
0
0
N Swisher flied out to left.
0
0
E Chavez grounded into double play, second to shortstop to first, J Payton out at second.
0
0
0 Runs, 0 Hits, 0 Errors



The A's had runners on 1st and 2nd without the benefit of a hit. Jay Payton walked for crying out loud. With nobody out and Nick Swisher with a 3-1 count, the A's blew a golden scoring opportunity within seven pitches. A Swisher pop-up and a Chavez GIDP. One of the curious mentions by the media is how 'clutch' Chavez was. In point of fact, it was Chavez' third groundball and this one had eyes making it to the outfield. Chavez has not 'turned a corner'.


NOTES:


The A's 6-7-8 batters of Swisher, Chavez and Crosby are all homegrown A's and supposed to be superstars. That is a bad thing.


The Hawaiian Punch-Out, Shane Komine, makes his major league debut on Sunday. Expect a similar style to Jason Windsor. A lot of pitches to set-up batters. Not a ton of K's but can get overly aggressive hitters to chase. Komine throws half dozen pitches from two dozen different arm angles and this might be an issue with Jason Kendall. I would not be surprised to see Adam Melhuse catching. Perhaps showcasing him for a trade at the same time?


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Thursday, July 27, 2006
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DEPECHE MODE - 101

STRIPPED



S T R I P P E D



As promised, the next 7 days leading up to game 108 I'll run down the A's 2006 season as read thus far.


I do want to make a note, as I am posting this, today Bobby Crosby left the game due to another apparent back injury, Mike Rouse was NOT in the lineup for Sacramento in their game with Albuquerque. That might be a precursor to a roster move. Or a trade. Or a big fat coincidence.

THE MYSTERY OF DEPTH PERCEPTION


Currently the A's are underperforming. There is no debating that. Apologists and Pollyannas will bleed from the woodwork and blame a majority of the A's woes on injuries.


SHAME!


The injuries the A's have racked up and time accumulated on the DL have neither been unexpected or particularly burdensome. I'll explain because I just heard a rush of, "Pfffft".


Who are the injured A's of which we speak?
  • JUSTIN DUCSCHERER



  • Justin Duchscherer went down. Not a surprise. He gets a handful of epidurals a year to alleviate problems with his back. There were elbow issues as Ken Macha was calling down to the bullpen for Duchscherer so often that Duchscherer's contract should include a clause that gets him a dollar for every pitch he throws before the 7th inning. The boy would be rich.


  • RICH HARDEN



  • Rich Harden. Really, who did not see this coming? Harden had off season surgery, was involved in the World Baseball Classic (though he didn't pitch for Team Canada) and was to miss the first few weeks of Spring Training - possibly missing his first two or three starts in April. No, there he was on the mound, starting Game 2 of the 2006 season.


  • BOBBY CROSBY



  • Bobby Crosby. Again, who didn't see this coming? Crosby is going to be one of those players that is infamous for injuring himself getting dressed or filming a commercial. As of right now, his name is been penciled in on that list of guys who won the Rookie of the Year and didn't pan out.


  • JOE KENNEDY



  • Joe Kennedy. Whew. That took everyone by surprise. The guy with a history of arm troubles the A's traded for as a starter, gets overworked in the bullpen and heads to the Disabled List for most of the summer. HUGE surprise.


  • JAY WITASICK



  • Jay Witasick. It actually was a blessing when Witasick went down. Also, not unexpected.


  • FRANK THOMAS



  • Redundant.


  • MILTON BRADLEY



  • Ditto.


  • MARK ELLIS



  • At least it wasn't Bobby Crosby injuring him this time. Ellis went out with a hand injury sliding into second base. Many were surprised an A's batter knew that there was a second base.


  • BOBBY KIELTY, MARK KOTSAY AND HUSTON STREET



  • Kielty and Kotsay have a history of injuries and missed time because of them, but no time on the DL. Street missed time due to overuse by a manager who thinks it is a good idea for closers to get work when the team is behind by several runs. Why does the closer get work but the back-up catcher can't get an AB?



This is not hindsight 20/20. This was all prophesized in the EiO BOAT (Book Of All Things).


The point is: The A's can not blame one single loss, inning, play in the field or pitch due to injury.


I'm going to extrapolate a bit because many have not understood this point, no matter how often it is explained, and it causes the others no end of frustration.


Injuries are part of any sport and professional sports, as a business, is set up to have players step in when players ahead of them are injured or can not perform (or produce, HINT, HINT). One of the many comments hanging over the A's for the last several years was that their roster lacked depth. And because their roster lacked depth, they might be lucky enough to get to the playoffs but they would never advance because they don't have a pinch-hitter that can come off the bench or a utility player who makes a great play at the right time.


Yes, yes, it's a bunch of TV broadcaster bullshit. For 162 games the team didn't need a pinch hitter or secondary utility player and won 100 games - but because they didn't have those players in October they can't win 11 games and a World Series?


On another front, though, having a roster with players that can platoon and step in just to give regulars a day off seems to make sense. The A's, however, do not ascribe to that theory. Eric Chavez, Bobby Crosby, Jason Kendall...the lineup has always been rather consistent, Ramon Hernandez, Miguel Tejada, Scott Hatteberg...It has rarely been a situation where a player gets a day off a week for rest. Usually it is a lingering injury that keeps a regular off the field.


When the predictions came out for the 2006 season what many pointed to as the saving grace for the A's was their depth. Depth in the starting rotation, depth in the bullpen stocked with 3 other starters, depth in the outfield with five options and three for centerfield, depth with utility players like Marco Scutaro and Antonio Perez. The inference was that the A's could rest guys and not have to worry about a drop in performance. Even if an injury did occur, the A's would be okay because they could dip into that minor league system and charge on to 95-98 wins.


What the hell happened?


Mismanagement of the lineup, mismanagement of the bullpen - somebody forgot to actually look behind the pantry door because the damn thing was near empty.


AAA Sacramento currently has two players that Beane traded for and had considerable success in other organizations at the major league level, only to fail miserably in AAA Sacramento (Charles Thomas and Keith Ginter - hell, throw Antonio Perez in there, too).


Of the three starting pitchers the A's drafted in Sacramento there's a guy only two years removed from Tommy John Surgery (Shane Komine) and another who was shut down last year three times because of bicep tendonitis (Jason Windsor) and another who is coming off Tommy John surgery (Ben Fritz). The A's 'best' relief pitching prospect aged three years over night and has already failed to impress with several call ups over the past three seasons.


None of that should really matter because the A's 25 Man Roster had such 'depth'. Yes, depth, character, intangibles and the little things, too.


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Tuesday, July 25, 2006
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24 JULY 2006

Here's a run down on what some of the media outlets had on yesterday's game.



SYNOPSIS:


Where were all the regular hack beat writers? They seemed to be off for this Monday game.


Zito hangs a few pitches and the Red Sox hang a half-dozen and one on the board. The A's have their chances and blow them. But you wouldn't know that from reading the articles above.


Both teams had 12 base runners (hits+walks+hit batters). The Red Sox hit into zero double plays, the A's three. The A's left six men on base, the Red Sox five. Yet, the Bostons scored seven runs, the Oaklands just three.


CRITICAL SEQUENCE:


Oakland - Bottom of 6thScore 
Josh Beckett pitching for BostonBOSOAK
J Kendall walked.71
M Kotsay singled to right, J Kendall to third.71
M Bradley singled to right, J Kendall scored, M Kotsay to third.72
F Thomas grounded into double play, shortstop to second to first, M Kotsay scored, M Bradley out at second.73
J Payton grounded out to shortstop.73



The A's could have cut the lead to two in the 6th. Or the 7th. Or the 8th. They scored one run despite having eight batters reach base in three innings.


NOTES:


Instead of calling out Eric Chavez' drop in the batting order lunacy, the media and the A's are trying to make us feel sorry for him. I've said it for several years; Eric Chavez is the most overrated player in baseball. The A's would be wise to look to trading Chavez to the Yankees for A-Rod and just eat the salary difference. Move Crosby out of town or to 3rd base. Crazy? As per the alternative of reading stories about Chavez' unexplainable injury?


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MORE URBAN BACKPEDALING

Mychael Urban, Assface to those in the know, has already begun backpedaling. In his mailbag (hopefully that's not his male bag, or coin purse, although Urban does talk out of his ass and spends enough time down there to be referred to as 'Assface') Urban was asked, "Is Milton Bradley insane?".

Urban's tactically anything-but-urbane response:


"No. He actually seems to be a pretty bright guy when he's in the mood to talk. But those times are few and far between, so I don't know him any better than I know most guys on National League Central rosters."



What a worthless waste of DNA A N D a media whore.


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HAS IT REALLY COME TO PASS?

Harold Reynolds has finally been removed from the airwaves at ESPN. Of all things he was not fired for his comments on air. Deadspin has some information on the most likely reason he was fired.


Now, if only ESPN would investigate Joe Morgan's porn stash.


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Monday, July 24, 2006
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ASSFACE: THE LAST SEASON (HOPEFULLY) OF MYCHAEL URBAN



The San Francisco Examiner was formerly held by the Hearst Corporation. The Hearst Corporation now owns the San Francisco Chronicle. Just wanted to try and fit something in there about 'yellow journalism'. Which brings us to Mychael Urban's latest piece posted in the San Francisco Examiner. Urban tends to push 'Fort Knox Gold' journalism that can only benefit the A's organization and its wishes.


If Susan Slusser is a 'tool', Urban is a Craftsman distribution warehouse. Urban isn't a 'company man' because he isn't directly employed by the A's. He is an employee of MLB.com. And we all have come to know and love the communication and media abilities of MLB.


Urban is the definition of hypocrite and despite his 'insider' access, tends to fawn over the same players, miraculously enough, that are 'Billy's Boys'. Chastising the rest. Hey, didn't Urban have Bobby Crosby as an AL MVP candidate this year? Chavez last year? Nick Swisher winning the ROY? Harden winning a Cy Young? If the A's need Urban to discredit a player and their abilities, he's ready and willing with a hatchet job. This week Urban attempted a dual fisted hatchet job on Milton Bradley.


Let me be clear, there are many avenues for this article and I want to present it first in its published form prior to stripping it down.


Please, go read the article and then come back. If you have read the article, read it again.




The article is an attempt to kiss both Michael Lewis' ass and kiss up to Billy Beane at the same time. Urban recently had an article in the Examiner where he makes snide comments toward Bill Beane's off season ventures, never analyzing, but allowing himself enough slack to reel him back to minion of Beane status if need be. Just good ol' fashioned, roll up your sleeves hard work. The article is not available online; the Examiner does not seem to have an archive available.


I'm going to walk through the latest article and create a working framework as we progress. Urban opens the piece with the 10 billionth reference to Moneyball in an article on the A's. Well done. Urban, of course, still doesn't get Moneyball, only the version of Moneyball he wants.


Moneyball was about a story, it wasn't the full story. Moneyball tries to give a drive-by view of the Oakland A's attempt to analyze, recognize and exploit undervalued areas of the baseball talent market. The A's hit upon On Base Percentage (OBP) not necessarily because it was undervalued at the time. OBP is simply the most important skill a hitter in baseball offers. You can't score runs unless you get on base.

The A's weren't just stocking up on players with high OBP, they were stocking up on cheap, available players at the major league and high minor league level because there were other things 'wrong' with those players. What wasn't wrong with the hitters, is that they seemed to have a penchant of getting on base. The A's have pitchers, too. Lewis, for the most part, did not cover pitchers as in depth as hitters. Again, not the full story.


Back to Urban. I want to present what appears to be the main idea behind Urban's piece.


"Now that Beane's success has increased the value of OBP, he's looking for weaknesses elsewhere, and what he's apparently discovered is that so-called "problem players" are undervalued."



Two paragraphs in and Urban is already begun a faulty premise for an argument. OBP has always been a valued commodity in baseball. Before Bill James. Before Branch Rickey. It's how the commodity of getting on base is presented. The batting average has historically been what is reporting in newspapers and the on screen graphic. But even guys with high batting averages tend to get on base a lot. The New York Yankees didn't create a new dynasty in the last two decades because they went with a bunch of fast guys who could sacrifice and had good gloves up the middle. They went with high OBP hitters. Most they bought, but still...


Problem players - Jose Canseco must not be with a MLB team because he priced himself out of the market, right? Along with John Rocker. Steve Howe and Ken Caminiti both recently passed away but they were problem players in their time. Albert Belle. What about Barry Bonds? Those guys were and are pretty damn good players.


Here is where Urban tries to provide the support for his argument, Billy Beane signed a few problem players in his quest to stay ahead of the curve and mine the undervalued in the marketplace:


"One of Beane's problem players is Milton Bradley, and he's becoming a bigger problem by the day"



Frank Thomas was run out of Chicago because he was a "problem player" - he was signed in the off season by the A's. Jay Payton has recently been accused of making his seasonal clubhouse grumblings. Nick Swisher is the constant 'star' for A's beat writers because the guy can't shut up. Swisher also happens to be the player (along with Joe Blanton) recently outed by Susan Slusser as having way too much of a social life that entails late nights, a lot of drinking and carousing.


    Here's a quick aside because it needs consideration; does Urban not realize that he runs the risk of singling out three African-American players - Bradley, Thomas and Payton as problem players? Swisher and Blanton are just 'young guys' and 'young guys' will do that stuff? Eric Chavez and Bobby Crosby are performing so poorly the A's sent down Dan Johnson as a distraction.



Urban foolishly tries to associate the Oakland A's as having "ongoing success" because they are currently and precariously atop the AL West. If the A's were in 2nd place, 3rd place or dead last would Urban try to find a way to lay the blame at Milton Bradley's feet? Until recently all of the A's foibles have been blamed on 'injuries' - not the failure of the A's players and coaching staff to produce on the field. Let's take 'injury-prone', note that and tuck it away for later.


Here's where Urban ultimately attempts to shunt facts with his own brand of 'Truthiness'. I am using minor editing to shorten rather than distort; again, go read the article.


"Bradley, as everyone knows, came to Oakland with more baggage that a trans-Atlantic luxury liner...No big deal, Beane told everyone...Bradley himself told us he was simply misunderstood...Both men were wrong. Dead wrong."



I am guessing that would then place a marker on Urban as 'dead stupid'? If you just skim past the next two sentences in the piece, you might not realize this: this is the epitome of how much Urban does not know about baseball, sports, writing or critical analysis.


"Bradley has five-tool talent, which is what enticed Beane into trading away his top outfield prospect, Andre Ethier, to get him. But he also has about seven screws loose."



Profoundly stupid, eh?


So many questions and outrages emerge. Bradley isn't a prospect. His 'talents' are skills. He is an established player and performer at the major league level. The five-tools are generally reserved for minor league players and more specifically prospects. Once you are proven, the tools have been used. I can rehash the Moneyball blabber here, but I am sure most of you have already entered that in by yourself.


Let the hatchets begin to swing.


"Until Saturday, Bradley had been on his best behavior. Of course, it's easy to behave when you're on the disabled list, which is where Bradley has been for most of the year."



Wow. I don't even know if I need to point out how stupid this is. Even the language is condescending; 'best behavior' and 'behave'. A grade school tisk, tisk task master is Urban.


"And then came Saturday in Boston...A's manager Ken Macha didn't play him the next day, offering the lame reasoning that Bradley had been on the bases so much Friday that he needed to give his legs a rest. The truth is that Macha didn't want Bradley to have to deal with the Boston fans again."



There it is, there's that word, 'truth'. Is that TRUTH, is it fact or is it, "the most likely scenario is..."? The fact is, Urban didn't bother to find out, or at least provide readers any comments on the situation that points to his 'truth'. So is he lying here when he calls it truth or are we to assume he is a hack beat writer for MLB.com because he did not question the move in his write up of that game? Or both? Wonder if he Macha knows Urban called his reasoning, "lame"?


Looking at Urban's write up following the game in question, though, it looks like Urban didn't bother to call Macha's on his 'lame' excuse. He saved that for an article in the Examiner, not MLB.com.


"So on the A's moved to Baltimore, where the Orioles fans aren't exactly known for being harsh. But they certainly got under Bradley's skin, and Bradley gave them plenty of material with one of the weakest acts seen since the World Cup ended."



Ugh huh. As I understand it, the fans in Baltimore are quite courteous, kind and well kempt. There have never been any issues with fan behavior in Baltimore, all of the fans look just like the image portrayed by the media for Cal Ripken, JR. In fact, I believe Baltimore is a dry town. The city streets are patrolled by stereotypical police officers who often stop to counsel young men through the wisdom of Irish proverbs.


"After stumbling while rounding first base on Wednesday, Bradley appeared to be injured, and badly...There must have been some kind of medical magician in the dugout, because Bradley was back out on defense the next inning, even diving for a ball."



A few of us were watching the game via MLBTV and keeping up the banter in the EiO Webchat. Watching the replays of Bradley's turn at first base you could clearly see his right lower leg become silly-putty on the first step. Before hitting the bag his right foot takes a nice right-handed turn while the rest of his body is going left. The Oriole broadcasters winced as they saw the replays. Score a low blow for Urban.


In the meantime, during the chat I offered the best case scenario is that Bradley stretched a tendon in his ankle. It would not have been unlikely that Larry Davis took a look at the ankle, gave a quick stress test and the ankle was wrapped in tape or re-wrapped if he already had his ankle taped. Bradley may have even been sporting an ankle brace and it needed to be adjusted in the dugout.


As for the play in the field, maybe if Bradley was 100% he would have got the ball, hence, no need to dive? Maybe Bradley dove because his ankle injury was actually pretty serious and trying to slow down or stop is more painful than starting to run in the first place? That's the most likely case. That and Bradley saw that he had back up on the play and could afford to dive and not worry so much about a sudden stop.


Having played sports as a kid and through college, suffering injuries upon injuries, surgeries, stitches and more hours in the training room than on the field, there is magic that happens when it comes to trainers in dugouts and on sidelines. How good are trainers at their craft? I know in football in several instances where players have had ankles taped up so quickly that they missed just one play - less than a minute from the first rip of the tape roll. I've seen players knees buckle like bran cereal in a blender and be ready to roll in a matter of minutes after hitting the sidelines. When you're a QB and your only offensive weapon is on the sideline getting taped up after 1st down you know exactly who to thank when the player is back in the huddle on 3rd and long.


A professional trainer like Larry Davis would be able to assess a player's injury or even discomfort by the time he walked back with, or helped the player off the field. A's fans have become used to ignoring Larry Davis as he rarely has anything useful information as he is under constant gag order. And he often is used as a punching bag when it comes to the A's training room looking like the Battle of the Somme (too soon?). In reality Davis can only provide his thoughts to management and the administration as they truly are the powers that be.


"He sprained his ankle," said assistant athletic trainer Steve Sayles, who treated Bradley after the incident. "It was already taped; we just reinforced it a little bit."



Here is the brink, the ledge, the precipice - we're about to knock it up a notch.


"So the fans let him have it, and rightly so."



Because fans, especially A's fans, so rarely try to provoke visiting players. There have been zero fan incidents at the Oakland Coliseum in the last several years. None at all. It has not been an issue. Or in baseball in general. All of those police officers, private security and stadium employees in point of fact employed for player and fan protection alike are there because of some vast conspiracy theory involving the mob and the "Baseball Security Union". I am just supposing here, no need to start linking conspiracy theories.


"...and while none of his teammates would go on the record (nor would Bradley, who didn't talk after the Boston game, either), it was clear that they are tired of Bradley's act."



Bradley also didn't want to talk when the season started. He is not a big fan of the media.


WOULD ANYONE LIKE TO VENTURE A GUESS, AT THIS POINT AND TIME, AS TO PERHAPS WHY?




Urban not only insults Bradley in this case, he insults Bradley's teammates and the Oakland A's organization. He calls them out as 'cowards' for not going on the record with him that they are indeed "...tired of Bradley's act." Either that, or there really is nothing to go on the record about. Most of the quotes surrounding Bradley from the last week had to do with his 'fire' and the way he approaches the game.


"Kotsay said he didn't think Bradley was becoming a distraction, adding that he likes "the fire he brings to this ball club." Kotsay then suggested reporters talk to Thomas, who has played with "fiery guys" such as Carl Everett and Tony Phillips in the past.


"You've just got to leave them alone and let them be who they are," Thomas said. "All the fiery guys I've played with, they play better when they're like that."



Well, whoever got those quotes doesn't think that Urban has a leg to stand on. Oh, wait, those quotes are part of an article Urban wrote. Sorry, didn't mean to use Urban's words against him.


"They're also tired of Macha playing the role of enabler."



As A's fans we're also sick of MLB playing the role of enabler and allowing Urban to be employed.


"Beane is a very good GM, but he swung and missed big with Bradley - Ethier is batting .340 for the Dodgers, while Bradley is batting .249 and causing headaches. So it's on Beane to do what Macha should have done and sit Bradley down."



Let's dip into Mychael Urban's Mailbag from around the time of the trade:


"Did it hurt to give up Ethier? Sure. But let's remember that he's played only a handful of games above Double-A. And don't forget that the A's picked up a pretty solid big-league backup infielder in the deal, too. If Mt. Milton doesn't erupt and helps get Oakland past the first round of the playoffs, the trade will look like a steal no matter what Ethier ends up doing for the Dodgers."



Didn't Urban start the piece with something regarding On Base Percentage? Oh, that's right, Moneyball. Wasn't Bradley on the DL? Kind of hard to improve any of your numbers, including batting average, when you can't get into a regulation MLB game, isn't it?


"For a guy who's so big on track records, it's puzzling why Beane would ignore Bradley's. It was never a matter of 'if' regarding blowup. It was 'when?'"



Beane also has had Jose Guillen, Randy Velarde, Frank Menechino, the Giambi brothers, Arthur Rhodes, Eric Karros, Mark McLemore, Mark Redman, Tom Wilson and Cory Lidle come through in the past few years. It's not like anyone in that group of guys were working part-time in a monastery during the off season.


"And when is now."



Huh. I'd like to know 'when' Bobby Crosby and Eric Chavez are going to perform like the upper echelon players Beane and his minions, such as Urban, they are painted out to be. I'm wondering 'when' Jason Kendall is going to perform up to the level Urban keeps establishing for us to just 'wait for'. I'm wondering 'when' there's going to be an explanation of Esteban Loaiza, 'when' are we going to find out why Dan Johnson was sent down, 'when' is Marco Scutaro going to find his way to another team, 'when' are we going to see the Antonio Perez that was supposed to be the bonus in the Bradley/Ethier trade, 'when' are we going to see the benefits of Brad Halsey, Kirk Saarloos, Joe Kennedy and Jay Witasick. I'd also like to know 'when' we can watch the A's without dreading how Ken Macha is going to screw things up - like bringing in your closer for the 9th inning when you are ahead by four runs. I'd like to know 'when' the A's ownership will quit their bitching about San Jose and stop trying to sell the idea of a baseball village built with private money. 'When' that baseball village is owned by A's ownership, 'when' the profits and benefits go nowhere the city of Oakland and the county of Alameda and 'when' the private money is actually hundreds of millions of dollars in tax loopholes that screws the public.


Indeed 'when', 'when' indeed.


You really have to stand back and wonder what the hell Urban was trying to accomplish with this piece.
  • Is Urban trying to show Bradley in a poor light to instigate a response from Bradley?



  • If he is trying to get a response from Bradley; is it so show that Bradley is above such things by not responding or if he does respond, begin a media feed of Bradley the 'problem player'?



  • Is this an attempt by Urban to get national media attention with a violent outburst by Bradley?



  • Is Urban pissed off because the A's clubhouse has begun to shun the media following the Swisher/Blanton/Loaiza/Sauerbeck/Bradley flare ups?



  • Has the laid back style of the A's clubhouse now become a place where the media lapdogs have to actually 'work' to get a usable quote?



  • Is there a hint on the horizon that the days of relative freedom are coming to an end; are the A's going to begin limiting the access allowed to the media?



  • Is Urban working for Billy Beane on this or is Urban really this stupid?






Over the past week, Bradley has been hearing it from fans in Boston and Baltimore. Go figure. Bradley has a reputation that follows him along thanks to the wonderful media who reference. A typical article on Bradley follows up with what is, for all intents and purposes, a rap sheet. If Bradley sneezes and fails to cover his mouth in time, articles can be penned and picked up nation and worldwide. "Bradley inconsiderate of teammates". Toward the end of the article it will recount anything deemed negative about Bradley and not put those events in context.


I'm really having a hard time reconciling what Urban is trying to get to with this article. To me he's an assface trying to use his job with MLB.com and influence in the A's clubhouse to write fluff for MLB.com and play hatchet man at a media outlet with a very low readership. Coward. Assface. Stupid.


Bradley had issues in Montreal. So did the rest of MLB. SEE: Jeffrey Loria, Felipe Alou, Bud Selig, Florida Marlins, John Henry, Boston Red Sox, RICO lawsuit, Washington Nationals. Bradley had issues in Cleveland. So did the rest of Cleveland and their three managers in 18 months. Bradley had issues with Jeff Kent and the Los Angeles media as a Dodger. The L.A. Media was able to get Paul DePodesta fired and hounded Bradley because he and Paul LaDuca "the heart and soul of the Dodgers" had a run-in years before.


Personally, I was hoping the A's would pick up Bradley when he was on the outs in Cleveland. I had a poll on the blog and it seemed most didn't care about any of the 'baggage' either. Bradley is the kind of player Oakland fans love. This is the city who cheered on Lyle Alzado, Lester Hayes, Jose Canseco, Rickey Henderson and Dave Kingman. How else would a blue collar area react to a player who has stood up to authority and refused to take crap because it's the status quo? They'd make him a picnic lunch and ask him to beat the snot out of their boss at work, what else?


With the trade to Oakland, the only fuss I made was that the A's gave up too much to get a player the Dodgers no longer wanted a part of. Andre Ethier was a player the A's drafted twice times; once out of high school and once out of college. Ethier is a tremendous hitter, the only knock being his lack of power and too few walks as a minor leaguer despite a decent strike out to walk ratio. Ethier has a .530 slugging percentage for the Dodgers with a .915 OPS, yes better than any Oakland Athletic. He's only 24 years old and could still develop the 'power' or continue to hit doubles - he hits an extra base hit one out of every 10 AB's.


I just don't get where Urban gets off. Hopefully, this is where; MLB needs to fire his ass for gross incompetence and conflict of interest.


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23 JULY 2006

HOLDING

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22 JULY 2006

HOLDING

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21 JULY 2006


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20 JULY 2006

HOLDING

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Thursday, July 20, 2006
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19 JULY 2006

Here's a run down on what some of the media outlets had on yesterday's game.



SYNOPSIS:


Frank Thomas and Milton Bradley do that thing, you know what I mean, that thing that guys in the 3 spot and 5 spot in the batting order should do...produce. That's it. Produce runs. Zito snaps around, allows only six base runners through 7, and gets jacked up with Mark Kotsay's primer for how to make a bad situation worse. Zito only struck out two, but the Orioles were swinging early and often in the count. Zito has also shown a knack for getting groundballs when he needs to. The A's turned 3 double plays yesterday. The bullpen allows one base runner in two innings. Scott Sauerbeck is used correctly...in a situation with a four run lead against a team that just wants to get inside and jump in the cold whirlpool.


CRITICAL SEQUENCE:


Top of the 1st: Frank Thomas' single with two outs following a much too typical failure at the plate by Eric Chavez. At least he moved the runners up 90 feet. The first four hitters took the first pitch. Thomas leaped at the first pitch and fouled it off.


Top of the 6th: Milton Bradley stroking a double to deep left, then scaring the BLANKING BLANK out of me as his right ankle looked like Silly Putty in a tube sock.


NOTES:


Too much of the fan stuff with Bradley as the A's beat writers haven't been bothering to pay attention to actual play in the field. How about a mention of the three double plays, the low K rate...no, it's Bradley vs the Fans, Kotsay's misplay and Nick Swisher.


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Wednesday, July 19, 2006
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18 JULY 2006

Here's a run down on what some of the media outlets had on last night's game.



SYNOPSIS:
The A's benefit from weather; Loaiza wobbles out of the gate, A's fail to maximize their advantage over Russ Ortiz, Payton 'triples' on poor outfield play, Crosby homers, Ellis homers. Rain Delay. Loaiza pitches better, Eddy Rodriguez does not pitch well for Baltimore. A's bullpen trio of Calero-Duchscherer-Street pitch three scoreless innings allowing only one base runner and slam the door.


CRITICAL SEQUENCE:
Idiot-Boy Macha calls for a bunt that cripples a chance for insurance runs.


OAKLAND  TOP of the 9th
SCORE
LaTroy Hawkins pitching for Baltimore
5-4
Bobby Crosby singled to center.
5-4
Mark Ellis sacrificed to first, B Crosby to second.
5-4
Jason Kendall grounded out to second.
5-4
Mark Kotsay grounded out to third.
5-4
0 Runs, 1 Hits, 0 Errors
5-4



NOTES:
Anyone else curious why Eric Chavez does not have wraps on his forearms despite 'tendonitis' in said forearms? Yah, me, too.


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Tuesday, July 18, 2006
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17 JULY 2006

Here's a run down on what some of the media outlets had on last night's game.