Monthly Archives: July 2012

Five Fun Facts About Yesterday’s Mets Victory

This isn’t going to be a daily thing or anything, just five fun facts about a game I find interesting enough. These will mostly be dramatic victories or heart-breaking losses (if Mets fans hearts could break anymore).

1. Yesterday was the first time Jason Bay reached base three times since April 18th of earlier this year. That was a 14-6 loss to the Braves.

2. The Mets won their first extra-inning game since April 29th against the Rockies. They had lost four other extra-inning games since then, including two by five runs.

3. Manny Acosta picked up the save by giving up one run in one inning. He also lowered his ERA to 10.25.

4. The Mets scored four runs off Sergio Romo in last night’s 8th inning. Romo had previously allowed four runs all season.

5. Scott Hairston is the only Met to hit a homerun in extra innings this year (doing so twice). The last Met to hit a homerun in extra innings was Jason Pridie on September 11th of next year.

Posted in Atlanta Braves, Colorado Rockies, Extra Inning Struggles, Five Facts, Jason Bay, Jason Bay's Contract Is So Big It Requires It's Own Tag, Jason Pridie, Manny Acosta, New York Mets, San Francisco Giants, Scott Hairston, Sergio Romo | Comments Off on Five Fun Facts About Yesterday’s Mets Victory

Five Fun Facts About Yesterday’s Mets Victory

This isn’t going to be a daily thing or anything, just five fun facts about a game I find interesting enough. These will mostly be dramatic victories or heart-breaking losses (if Mets fans hearts could break anymore).

1. Yesterday was the first time Jason Bay reached base three times since April 18th of earlier this year. That was a 14-6 loss to the Braves.

2. The Mets won their first extra-inning game since April 29th against the Rockies. They had lost four other extra-inning games since then, including two by five runs.

3. Manny Acosta picked up the save by giving up one run in one inning. He also lowered his ERA to 10.25.

4. The Mets scored four runs off Sergio Romo in last night’s 8th inning. Romo had previously allowed four runs all season.

5. Scott Hairston is the only Met to hit a homerun in extra innings this year (doing so twice). The last Met to hit a homerun in extra innings was Jason Pridie on September 11th of next year.

Posted in Atlanta Braves, Colorado Rockies, Extra Inning Struggles, Five Facts, Jason Bay, Jason Bay's Contract Is So Big It Requires It's Own Tag, Jason Pridie, Manny Acosta, New York Mets, San Francisco Giants, Scott Hairston, Sergio Romo | Comments Off on Five Fun Facts About Yesterday’s Mets Victory

To the saddle born

[Photo: 123.rf]

 

A smiling grandfather, a pleased mother and a doting father swelled with pride as a 31-year-old woman braved sudden high winds in the first preliminary round in the equestrian category of eventing or cross-country trials in London’s Greenwich Park on July 26.

[Photo: zimbio.com]

What makes this flow of familial pride significant is that the rider is Zara Phillips, daughter of the Princess Royal Anne and first granddaughter of the reigning Queen Elizabeth.

Qualifying for the second preliminary round on July 31, in spite of a violent gust of wind, riding High Kingdom, she finished the hilly, winding 5700 meter-course in 9 minutes 56 seconds, with seven seconds to spare, ranking 24 out of 25 in a 75-rider round to qualify for the next eventing round of racing and jumping.

“Considered a backwater of the Olympic Games,” in the words of the “New York Times’” Mary Pilon, Phillips qualifying win won the approval of some 50,000 fans who crowded to see this minor royal ride.

Phillips has taken a leaf out of mother’s book: the Princess Royal is a former Olympian in this equestrian sport and an accomplished horsewoman. Although she was listed as a member of the British team at the 2008 Beijing Summer Games, she had to withdraw owing to a training injury of her horse Toytown.

Interest in Phillips may partially seen in the glamor, pomp and circumstance of 2012 being a Jubilee Year of Elizabeth II 60th year on the throne; partly, too, in heartening nostalgia of the glory that was the far-flung British empire; and, partly, still more, to the all-embracing pride the United Kingdom has, in the face of bad economics times, in staging the Summer Games in shirking off a condition of world weariness, in a renewed vigor and pleasure in “I’m proud to be British” sense of pride and self.

Yet, we cannot lose sight of a horse riding tradition that the Queen herself embodies: a tradition with its codes and conventions that has passed down from the monarch to her daughter and now from her daughter to her own daughter. And, so far, she has done her family proud during eventing’s preliminary round one.

Until 1947, equestrian sports in the Olympics were a military sport. Eventing, jump, and dressage belonged to the Calvary exclusively. This category reflected a centuries-old tradition going back to the Middle Ages; it mirrored a tradition of nobles atop trained steeds that executed well-timed, systematic routines in almost scientific precision. The rise of mechanized warfare in the 20th century opened the equestrian competition to civilians and women.

Phillips, 14th in line to the British throne, has inherited the bearing, the manners and the graceful attitude of this aristocratic art–an art that uses selected styles and routines with judged exactness not only at the Olympics and equestrian competitions.

She was to the saddle born, in other words.

Proud mother Princess Ann said that Zara rode in a sport that the British team is “strongest,” according to Reuters, and her daughter’s performance places her team second behind Germany going into the second round.

Zara admitted, according to Reuters, during her run, “High Kingdom had lost a shoe.” That loss, however, did neither put her nor her thoroughbred off her appointed task of seeking Gold or Silver or Bronze as she and her teammates move towards the medals competition in August.

And for Zara, her ancestor Richard III, in Shakespeare’s play, famously cried out “for want of a nail, a kingdom was lost,” finds no echo in her and High Kingdom’s performance at Greenwood Park.

Posted in Dressage | Comments Off on To the saddle born

Phantom GM Part 3: Exporting Young for Young Guns

The Trade Deadline is quickly approaching, and the Mets, thankfully, are looking more like sellers as each loss piles up. While Sandy Alderson and his personnel were looking for pieces to buy as recently as three weeks ago, the abrupt struggles by the Mets leave them little time to work out trades with the still-contending teams.

For help that nobody in the Mets’ organization will ever see, and mostly for my personal amusement, I’ll be developing a trade a day until the trade deadline. Each one makes sense on paper and will help the Mets for a run next year. If the other team’s prospects don’t get traded to another team within the next three or four hours.

Without further ado, the final trade suggestion:

Mets send RHP Chris Young, RHP Collin McHughOF Juan Lagares, and a roll of duct tape to the Toronto Blue Jays for OF Jake Marisnick, RHP Danny Barnes, and RHP Noah Syndergaard.

OK, this isn’t really realistic. The Blue Jays are ultra-conservative when it comes to their prospects and aren’t true buyers. But if they want to make a run, they need starting pitching, and though they can do better in quality, the Jays flat-out need quantity.

Chris Young, when healthy, is an above-average big league pitcher with below-average stuff. His command makes him a fighter, and though he may not have the stuff to dominate the AL East, he has a chance to wade the waters. The roll of duct tape would be included to keep Young’s right shoulder attached to his body.

Collin McHugh is a whole other story. Undrafted out of high school, and a mid round pick out of college, McHugh has put up a 2.95 ERA over two levels of the minors this year, including AAA. The AL East is not the International League, and there’s a good chance that McHugh and his below average peripherals will get eaten alive by the cutthroat division. He’d still be a better option than the in-house starters Toronto has called up this year though.

Juan Lagares projects as a corner outfielder and has the potential to be a .300 hitter with some pop in his bat. He has above-average speed and could develop to be a LF that hits 10-15 HRs a year and plays solid defense.

As for the return, Jake Marisnick is prize 1a. The Blue Jays already have fellow CF prospect Anthony Gose, who is way more developed at this point. They also have Jose Bautista and Colby Rasmus as their other two outfielders, and would have no room for Marisnick. His floor is being average with all five tools (hitting, power, speed, defense, arm), and his ceiling is being a five tool player with a good all-around game. The Mets could use a true CF.

Righty Danny Barnes is dominating AA ball as a reliever averaging 10.6 strikeouts per nine innings, with a 2.38 ERA across two levels. He wouldn’t join the Mets immediately and would probably be a summer call-up. The Princeton product, and Long Island native sits at around 93mph with some cutting action on his fastball, and is developing above-average off-speed offerings. If he reaches his ceiling, it would be that of a really good closer.

And finally, prize 1b: Noah Syndengaard, a RHP from Texas. Syndengaard has good command of a dominating fastball that can break 100mph, and easily sits at 95mph with it. While still raw (he turns 20 in late August), his curveball and changeup flash above-average potential. He’s projectable at 6’5 and, if developed properly, has the potential to be a future ace. He’s years-and-years away, and may not pan out as anything more than a flame-throwing reliever, but he’d be a fantastic get for the Mets.

So why would Toronto trade a future ace, closer, and centerfielder for two months of Chris Young, an average AAA pitcher in McHugh, and an average OF prospect? Well, I mentioned this offer was unrealistic, but it can make sense if everything fell into place.

The first step is Toronto becoming buyers. The second is that the incredible depth of their farm system, and the pressure facing Blue Jays’ GM Alex Anthopoulous force him to make a fairly bad trade. Toronto is dying for a winning franchise to bring back the excitement of the early 90s, and right now, they’re on the cusp of getting some starting pitching back, and their slugger back. They only sit 4.5 games behind the second Wild Card, and solidifying a woebegone-rotation at the expense of your second best centerfielder, your 4th or 5th best pitching prospect, and a minor league reliever would please the fans. Besides, Toronto has quality to go along with it’s quantity, and there won’t be enough room for all of those prospects on the big league roster.

—–

As an aside, I can’t wait to see one of these three Toronto prospects traded to a different team like San Diego or something.

Posted in Absurd Minor League Depth, AL East, Alex Anthopoulous, Anthony Gose, Chris Young, Colby Rasmus, Collin McWho?, Danny Barnes, Duct Tape: The Universal Adhesive, Jake Marisnick, Jose Bautista, Juan Lagares, New York Mets, Noah Syndengaard, Phantom GM, Toronto Blue Jays, Trade Deadline | Comments Off on Phantom GM Part 3: Exporting Young for Young Guns

Phantom GM Part 3: Exporting Young for Young Guns

The Trade Deadline is quickly approaching, and the Mets, thankfully, are looking more like sellers as each loss piles up. While Sandy Alderson and his personnel were looking for pieces to buy as recently as three weeks ago, the abrupt struggles by the Mets leave them little time to work out trades with the still-contending teams.

For help that nobody in the Mets’ organization will ever see, and mostly for my personal amusement, I’ll be developing a trade a day until the trade deadline. Each one makes sense on paper and will help the Mets for a run next year. If the other team’s prospects don’t get traded to another team within the next three or four hours.

Without further ado, the final trade suggestion:

Mets send RHP Chris Young, RHP Collin McHughOF Juan Lagares, and a roll of duct tape to the Toronto Blue Jays for OF Jake Marisnick, RHP Danny Barnes, and RHP Noah Syndergaard.

OK, this isn’t really realistic. The Blue Jays are ultra-conservative when it comes to their prospects and aren’t true buyers. But if they want to make a run, they need starting pitching, and though they can do better in quality, the Jays flat-out need quantity.

Chris Young, when healthy, is an above-average big league pitcher with below-average stuff. His command makes him a fighter, and though he may not have the stuff to dominate the AL East, he has a chance to wade the waters. The roll of duct tape would be included to keep Young’s right shoulder attached to his body.

Collin McHugh is a whole other story. Undrafted out of high school, and a mid round pick out of college, McHugh has put up a 2.95 ERA over two levels of the minors this year, including AAA. The AL East is not the International League, and there’s a good chance that McHugh and his below average peripherals will get eaten alive by the cutthroat division. He’d still be a better option than the in-house starters Toronto has called up this year though.

Juan Lagares projects as a corner outfielder and has the potential to be a .300 hitter with some pop in his bat. He has above-average speed and could develop to be a LF that hits 10-15 HRs a year and plays solid defense.

As for the return, Jake Marisnick is prize 1a. The Blue Jays already have fellow CF prospect Anthony Gose, who is way more developed at this point. They also have Jose Bautista and Colby Rasmus as their other two outfielders, and would have no room for Marisnick. His floor is being average with all five tools (hitting, power, speed, defense, arm), and his ceiling is being a five tool player with a good all-around game. The Mets could use a true CF.

Righty Danny Barnes is dominating AA ball as a reliever averaging 10.6 strikeouts per nine innings, with a 2.38 ERA across two levels. He wouldn’t join the Mets immediately and would probably be a summer call-up. The Princeton product, and Long Island native sits at around 93mph with some cutting action on his fastball, and is developing above-average off-speed offerings. If he reaches his ceiling, it would be that of a really good closer.

And finally, prize 1b: Noah Syndengaard, a RHP from Texas. Syndengaard has good command of a dominating fastball that can break 100mph, and easily sits at 95mph with it. While still raw (he turns 20 in late August), his curveball and changeup flash above-average potential. He’s projectable at 6’5 and, if developed properly, has the potential to be a future ace. He’s years-and-years away, and may not pan out as anything more than a flame-throwing reliever, but he’d be a fantastic get for the Mets.

So why would Toronto trade a future ace, closer, and centerfielder for two months of Chris Young, an average AAA pitcher in McHugh, and an average OF prospect? Well, I mentioned this offer was unrealistic, but it can make sense if everything fell into place.

The first step is Toronto becoming buyers. The second is that the incredible depth of their farm system, and the pressure facing Blue Jays’ GM Alex Anthopoulous force him to make a fairly bad trade. Toronto is dying for a winning franchise to bring back the excitement of the early 90s, and right now, they’re on the cusp of getting some starting pitching back, and their slugger back. They only sit 4.5 games behind the second Wild Card, and solidifying a woebegone-rotation at the expense of your second best centerfielder, your 4th or 5th best pitching prospect, and a minor league reliever would please the fans. Besides, Toronto has quality to go along with it’s quantity, and there won’t be enough room for all of those prospects on the big league roster.

—–

As an aside, I can’t wait to see one of these three Toronto prospects traded to a different team like San Diego or something.

Posted in Absurd Minor League Depth, AL East, Alex Anthopoulous, Anthony Gose, Chris Young, Colby Rasmus, Collin McWho?, Danny Barnes, Duct Tape: The Universal Adhesive, Jake Marisnick, Jose Bautista, Juan Lagares, New York Mets, Noah Syndengaard, Phantom GM, Toronto Blue Jays, Trade Deadline | Comments Off on Phantom GM Part 3: Exporting Young for Young Guns