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OZZIE CONTAINS MULTITUDES


“What have I seen from Rios? A lot of outs. The only batting ninth guy making $5 million was me. This motherf— is making $10, $12, $14 million, he ain’t going to be batting ninth. I’m going to make sure he earns his money. But right now I have to put him there because he’s struggling. Next year, if we have Rios batting ninth we’re in deep shit, once again.”

White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen, on outfielder Alex Rios.


“I mean, you’re not going to take anything away from the pitching staffs that we’ve faced, but we’ve been facing some pitchers this year it’s like, ‘Who the [expletive] is this guy? They don’t even belong in the [expletive] big leagues, and they just kicked our ass.’ I’m not going to lie to anybody. I know who beat us, and I know who should beat us. We’ve faced some guys where they’ve called him up, faced us, and get him back to [expletive] Double A, get the [expletive] out of here. That’s how bad we’ve been.”

-Guillen


“On February 15 or whatever day it is I report, I’ll be in as good of shape as anybody and be ready to pitch and expect nothing less than what I’ve done in years, which is giving my team a chance to win and work 200-plus innings. That’s where I stand.”

-White Sox starter Jake Peavy, who has yet to pitch for the team since being acquired for four players this year.


“I put J.D. [Jermaine Dye] down at six, and it didn’t help. And when this team doesn’t score, this team looks very, very, very bad. Very slow, no energy, but it’s not because we don’t have that, it’s because we’re not hitting. When we hit it’s like, ‘Oh, OK here we go.'”


-Guillen (Joe Cowley, Chicago Sun-Times)


WHAT KIND OF JOKER CHOOSES COLLEGE OVER THE AL WEST?


“We were very disappointed that we made a miscalculation in what it would take to sign our number one draft pick. His slot was $1.8 million. We were prepared to pay up to $4 million, which would have been the third-highest bonus ever given to a high school player. That was something we thought he would agree to do.”

-Rangers owner Tom Hicks, on first-round draft pick Matthew Purke opting to play for TCU rather than sign with the Rangers in August.


“We were disappointed that the family insisted on $6 million. The Texas Rangers were not willing to do that. It had nothing to do with MLB restrictions. There is a clear misimpression we didn’t sign Matt Purke because MLB wouldn’t let us-that’s not true. We didn’t because of Tom Hicks, Nolan Ryan, and Jon Daniels. We were not willing to go to $6 million.”

-Hicks, on the negotiations with Purke that eventually broke down near the signing deadline.


“As far as Kevin Millwood is concerned, we never gave any consideration to that. We need him to be one of our leaders down the stretch. There have not been any thoughts or discussions with MLB about Kevin’s contract for next year, nor will there be. We expect Kevin to be in the rotation next year and have a strong finish to his contract.”

-Hicks


“No. Why? That’s an odd question.”

-Rangers pitching coach Mike Maddux, asked whether the team would sit down Kevin Millwood. Millwood’s option can be voided if he falls short of 180 innings this year.


“That’s not going to happen. I would never do that to him. I don’t believe it’s anything that anybody is thinking about.”

-Rangers president Nolan Ryan, on Millwood and the 180 IP threshold. (T.R. Sullivan, MLB.com)


YOU CAN START BY LETTING SOMEONE ELSE READ THE NAMES YOU CAN’T PRONOUNCE


“We need to change the draft. I understand it won’t be easy. But I also think it’s imperative. It’s imperative for the health of the game. I feel very strongly about that. … The draft from time to time has wavered from (its original purpose). The draft should be to level the playing field. Everybody knows that. There ought to be a spirit of fairness. We need to do that. I have a lot of faith in the clubs’ ability to draft. But those are two major changes (slotting and the worldwide draft) that I believe, for the health of the sport, must happen.”

-MLB Commissioner Bud Selig


“Are there other tweaks on the economics? Yes, there is other work to be done. We’re doing a lot of studying on it. I know I’ve been spending a lot of time by myself just going over things.”

-Selig


“Well, I like the unbalanced schedule. I’m the father of that, I guess. We went to divisional play in 1969. I always said-and I believe-that you ought to win in the division. There were a lot of complaints about the balanced schedule, by the way, and I had no complaints when we went back to an unbalanced schedule (in 2001). You can’t play more games outside your division than in. Then you’ve got to ask yourself, ‘Why did you go to divisional play in the first place?’ But there are things we’ll look at. As you go on in time, you see things that happen that you didn’t predict. It’s up to us to try to change that.”

-Selig (Ken Rosenthal, FoxSports.com)


CALL US WHEN HE HAS 4,000


“What can you say? I’m tickled for him. When you start saying names like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, guys like that, it’s pretty amazing. Back in the beginning, I had no idea he’d be doing things Gehrig did. Anything Lou Gehrig did was out of sight for anybody. Even with his abbreviated numbers, a guy who played every day like that. It’s tough to do that anymore. Players rarely stay with one team for their careers.”

-Former Yankees manager Joe Torre, on Derek Jeter‘s claiming the record for hits as a Yankee.


“This kid came with his ‘A’ personality all the time. His competitiveness just never stopped. That’s something you have to admire.”

-Torre


“I was on second base, and he came over and said, ‘If you played us 162 games, you’d hit over .500.’ I’ve had some success against the Yankees; that’s a team I’ve enjoyed playing against. Anyway, he asked me how I was doing. Then he said, ‘No matter what happens, stay positive.’ Then he said it again. From that day on, he’d come over and talk to me like I was a veteran, a peer… There was another time we were facing Mike Mussina in New York. I stayed on a cutter and hit it to right field. He came over and said, ‘Nice swing. Not a lot of hitters would have stayed on it that long.’ Something like that means a lot to a young guy.”

Angels second baseman Howie Kendrick, on Jeter.


“I still don’t see Derek playing anywhere but shortstop. He’s in tremendous shape, he’s got great legs and he moves well. I project Derek being a shortstop from the first day until he’s done.”

-Former Orioles shortstop/third baseman Cal Ripken Jr., on Jeter’s position.


“With the wear and tear on major leaguers’ bodies and the number of games he’s played since ’96, I’m amazed he’s able to do what he does.”

Royals manager Trey Hillman, on Jeter’s feat. (MLB.com)


HIS HALL OF FAME SPEECH WILL BE DELIVERED AS 200 SEPARATE HAIKUS


“One thing I was preparing for was for Junior not to get the 200-hit ball because he would write silly things on it. But he did get the ball, and he did write silly things on it.”

Mariners outfielder Ichiro Suzuki, after reaching 200 hits in nine straight seasons.


“When I break a record, I never feel satisfaction. I strongly feel expectation from Japan and my records are things that I feel Japan [believes] they must have. I always want to feel satisfaction, but when I accomplish a record, I only feel relief.”


-Suzuki


“I believe you [US media] guys have seen the situation here with the [Japanese] media and the expectation. I think you can tell that. For me, it has not allowed me to not accomplish [the record]. That is why I feel this way.”

-Suzuki, on his feat and the attending pressure from his home country’s fans. (Jim Street, MLB.com)


UPSIDE…POTENTIAL…GURGLE


“The answer to that, I would say, is no. I can’t give you an example of something we would do differently. I think we have to fairly give Jason Heyward a chance to be Jason Heyward. I think he is his own person, with his own personal makeup… with the similarity that they’re both hometown guys.”

Braves farm director Kurt Kemp, on the progression of outfielder Jason Heyward through the team’s farm system.


“We can try to prepare Jason Heyward for what’s coming. I think one of the things that we have going for us is Jason is a very level-headed kid. I think he’s able to handle just about anything. That’s not to infer that Jeff [Francoeur] wasn’t. I just don’t know that we can manage it to the degree that we would like.”

-Braves general manager Frank Wren, on the difference between his past and future right fielders.


“We definitely feel that, with all respect to McCann and those guys, that Jason can be the face of that organization in the future. He wants to give back to the community. I think with the percentage of African-Americans in the major leagues now being low, that definitely is important to Jason. Obviously being in Atlanta, I think it will help. If you look at him and you have the likes of Hank Aaron, Terry Pendleton, and David Justice before him, he’s the up-and-coming prospect.”

Victor Menocal, Heyward’s agent. (Matt Winklejohn, BaseballAmerica.com)


THE REST


Evidently, he was carried at one year in all his records up until the point we were notified. It’s not an Astros mistake, but something from his background. It’s not a big deal to me at this point in time. He’s still a premium closer. Adding that extra year to his age at this point of time is of no great consequence.”

-Astros manager Ed Wade, about a year mysteriously added to closer Jose Valverde‘s age. (Brian McTaggert, MLB.com)


“I never doubted he was hurt. The only thing I had a problem with was his work ethic. If you’re hurting, you can still go outside and run. You can still attend meetings. You can help young kids on how to pitch certain guys. You can be on time. That’s all. He didn’t go to meetings. He didn’t do anything.”

Dodgers third-base coach Larry Bowa calling it the way he sees it, even making up with Giants starter Brad Penny before this weekend’s series with the Dodgers. (ESPN.com)


“An [sic] ‘One Baseball’ column last week by Tyler Kepner, the Times’ Yankees beat writer, confirmed the newspaper’s new journalism. In a previous analysis, Kepner had used the unusable (for reporters) word ‘I.’ In his more recent column he confirmed that the Times was no longer playing by its long valued standards. Kepner seemed to go out of his way to use ‘I’ to show that he could. In his first sentence, he wrote parenthetically, ‘I wish I remembered who.’ The sentence added nothing to the column; the column would not have suffered without it. At least two editors read that sentence and left it in the column, demonstrating the freedom Times reporters now have in the decline and fall of a once-great newspaper.”

-Freelance baseball writer Murray Chass, who retired from the Times in May 2008, writing on his website. (MurrayChass.com)


“I feel like I’ve been throwing the ball real well-it’s just a little discomfort. It gets tight on me the day after I throw.”

-Yankees reliever David Robertson, on his arm problems this year. (Joel Sherman, New York Post)


“The day I become mediocre on a regular basis, I’m probably going to ride off into the sunset. Because I don’t have fun playing the game at the level I’m playing at now.”

-Braves third baseman Chipper Jones, on whether he plans to play next season. (David O’Brien, Atlanta Journal-Constitution)


“He wants to be liked, and he gets along so well with his teammates because he doesn’t say anything negative to them. It’s as if he validates them, a player of his state saying only positive things to them, so they must belong here.”

-Dodgers manager Joe Torre, on Manny Ramirez (T.J. Simers, Los Angeles Times)


Alex Carnevale is a contributor to Baseball Prospectus.

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kjgilber
9/14
Wow, could Heyward's aganet pile a little more pressure on him?
Oleoay
9/14
Hypothetical question... if people consider Ichiro's career in Japan in context of his Hall of Fame candidacy, do we give similar consideration to Hideki Matsui who is accumulating quite a few home runs? Not that I think Matsui belongs in the Hall, but I can see the debate coming for some other future Japanese star...
invictus
9/17
Thing about that is that what is clear about Japan is that it is much easier to hit home runs there. If you cut Ichiro's HR in Japan in half (which is approximately the right adjustment, according to work by Dan Szymborski), his career looks all of a piece, and his value seems generally undiminished: he hits for a high average, and is a great baserunner.
But if Matsui's big pull as a HoFer is his accumulation of HR, well, we need to consider the comparative ease of hitting HR in Japan, and I guess I think we should (and likely would) come down comfortably on the 'no' side.
Oleoay
9/17
Seems its easier to hit in general in Japan... not just home runs, but also base hits. You do have a point, though... a Quad-A or bench player in the US goes over to Japan and ends up hitting a ton of home runs.
mhmosher
9/14
Alex Rios just sucks. As a Mets fan, I sat back in horror as many of my fellow fans hoped and prayed Omar would get this guy. I'd rather have Jeff Francoeur, who you know is just average, than a guy like Rios who's a supposed future star.
Oleoay
9/14
Only a Mets fan would think Francouer is average.
mhmosher
9/14
Whatever pal. He's hit since he's been a Met.

And FUCK YOU to your slight of Mets fans - asshole.
eighteen
9/14
Grow up, Mets fan.
mhmosher
9/15
Look...I didn't start anything. But I'm not going to be insulted by a condescending asswipe.
rawagman
9/15
You only feel condesceded to because you have taken a pure "homer" stance. Francouer is not average by most means and measurements. *Only* a homer fan of his team would consider him average. For a while, the same would have been said of Braves fans. And when Francouer finds a new hometown, those fans will also likely think of him as average for a short while.
harderj
9/15
I don't care one way or another about Francouer, since I don't have him on my Strat team and am not a huge Braves or Mets fan, but I thought I'd look at the claims that caused such an outburst by Guns and Butter.

Francouer was traded on July 11, so looking at his post-ASG numbers is a good proxy. He *has* hit for average, at .303, albeit with a somewhat pedestrian on base percentage of .333, and a respectable slugging percent of .483. He's managed a 33 to 9 strikeout to walk total in that time. On the season as a whole he's also been much better against lefties, with an .834 OPS vs. .668 against righties.

Defense (especially arm) aside, there may be a number of starting right fielders who are better. But a casual look at my two favorite teams, the A's and the Giants, suggests that while Ryan Sweeney of the A's probably keeps his job, the Giants could surely have used Francouer over the likes of Randy Winn, Andres Torres, or Nate "the Great" Schierholz.

So I looked at the whole National League. Here's a quick list of post-ASG slash stats for N.L. right fielders, or who had at least played RF at some time in the past (did I miss anyone?).

Francouer .303/.333/.483

Clearly better:

Andre Ethier .330/.407/.601
Justin Upton .308/.374/.501
Garrett Jones .302/.366/.566
Jayson Werth .272/.366/.528
Will Venable .284/.342/.503

Better on base, but not slugging:

Kosuke Fukodome .275/.384/.440
Elijah Dukes .282/.383/.419
Milton Bradley .280/.380/.429
Ryan Church .278/.371/.444
Brad Hawpe .242/.363/.404
Corey Hart .275/.359/.435
Lastings Milledge .299/.342/.396

Better slugging, but not on base:

Johnny Gomes .248/.311/.540
Hunter Pence .270/.324/.500

Not as good as Francouer:

Eugenio Velez .285/.335/.464
Brett Carroll .259/.323/.444
Cody Ross .265/.310/.441
Brandon Moss .216/.289/.371
Randy Winn .247/.315/.309
Andres Torres .237/.326/.395
Nate Schierholz .255/.286/.418
Ryan Ludwick .286/.333/.413
Colby Rasmus .228/.288/.336
Rick Ankiel .274/.306/.470

So depending on how you value on base vs. slugging (or vs. average, for that matter), and again, defense (and salary) aside, his performance with the Mets suggests better than some, worse than some, kind of "average," in the context of the National League post-All Star break in 2009, even if his career numbers can't make that claim. And, he's only 25...
harderj
9/15
Apologies to Kosuke Fukudome and Jonny Gomes for misspelling their names in my previous post.
Oleoay
9/16
That was a nice breakdown, though I'd add in the addendum that a few of those "Not as good as Francouer" players and some of the in-betweeners played some CF as well. Either way, Francouer has a fragile skill set and is a risk to invest money in, whereas a team like the Mets should be able to find and afford better.

It has been awhile since the Mets had a full quality outfield.. maybe, generously, the Gilkey days? Or the random LF/Dykstra/Strawberry days?
mhmosher
9/15
Good input - thanks guys.

Look - I know Frenchy is nothing special and I'm sure I was being a homer. But he's been playing hard and when you've gone through a season like this, that counts for a lot. I know I got too testy - but the Mets have been piled on all summer and I'm sick of it. OK - people hate them - great, I get it. But at some point - enough is enough. If you had to sit through a season of watching a AAA team play all the while your incompetent GM makes a fool out of himself at every turn, you might have a short fuse too.