Wednesday, November 02, 2005

The fallout continues

Jason Varitek and Curt Schilling have both come out and spoken about how disappointed they are in the losses the Red Sox have already had this offseason with GM Theo Epstein, Assistant GM Josh Byrnes (now the GM in Arizona), and coach Dale Sveum among others.

David Wells and Manny Ramirez reportedly have asked to be traded.

And they still have some FA issues to deal with starting with CF Johnny Damon.

The Red Sox problems make the Yankees issues look like child's play.

But to twist the knife just a bit, I'd love to see the Yankees offer up Epstein a consultant's job for the next year while he figures out his next move. That would be almost as good as making Epstein the new Yankee's GM.

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

Thank you Larry Lucchino

http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/redsox/articles/2005/11/01/power_in_lineup_rests_with_lucchino/?page=1

While Theo Epstein is unlikely to head to the Yankees, at least he's opted to walk away from the Red Sox.

And it apparently wasn't about the money, but rather Epstein had grown tired of dealing with Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino.

The interesting part is that this isn't the first time Epstein has worked for Lucchino and his previous relationship with Lucchino is part of the reason that Epstein was Boston's plan B after A's GM Billy Beane backed out of an agreed to deal to become the Red Sox GM.

It will be interesting to see where the Red Sox go from here. Especially since the #2 guy behind Epstein has just left the organization to become the GM in Arizona.

Friday, October 28, 2005

Open letter to all the whiners in the NHL

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/writers/stephen_cannella/10/27/inside.nhl/index.html

STFU!

"The reason nobody is hitting is because if you run at a guy and miss or he slips past you, you can't put your stick on him to hold him up," Avalanche forward Ian Laperriere said after a surprising gentlemanly 6-4 loss to the Canucks last week. "That and nobody knows yet what is a penalty and what isn't."

People aren't hitting because clutching and grabbing is actually being called?

For shame!

Seriously, all this whining about too many penalties, not enough hitting, and the style of play in the "New NHL" has got to stop. The league has seen little to no backlash due to the lockout, so I don't see why people in the game should be complaining. I'm betting MLB would like to know how the NHL has avoided the same sort of backlash that they felt after merely cancelling the playoffs.

I'll take wide open, skating hockey every day of the week over the clutch and grabfest that the NHL had become. I won't miss the fighting and the battling in front of the net as long as the skilled guys in the league are allowed to do what they do best.

And I hope everyone else sees why guys like Laperriere really are crying. To me it sounds like Ian is figuring out that he doesn't have much of a future in the "New NHL".

For that I have to say: Too Bad.

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

My dream Yankees offseason

I want the Yankees to make two huge offseason moves:

Get Leo Mazzone to be the pitching coach and lure Theo Epstein to NY to replace Brian Cashman.

Epstein is a free agent and the Red Sox apparently aren't even offering $1 million per year to stay on as their GM.

And the Yankees have gotten permission to talk to long time Braves pitching coach Leo Mazzone to replace departed pitching coach Mel Stottlemyer.

I seriously can't think of a better 1-2 offseason punch than adding arguably the best pitching coach in baseball and the architect of the 2004 Red Sox that reversed the curse.

At a minimum, it would be worth $3 or 4 million a year to lure Epstein just to see the reaction that the move would get from Red Sox Nation. And I'd love to see Bill Simmons' reaction since he said himself that Red Sox fans can't complain about anything for 5 years since they finally won the World Series.

And maybe Mazzone could turn the Yankees' pitching staff into more than it has been over the past few seasons.

Given that adding Mazzone and Epstein wouldn't add to the Yankee's luxury tax payments, The Boss should back up a couple of Brinks trucks right now.

Give Mazzone $2 million a year and Epstein $3 or 4 million a year.

Heck, that would be less than half of the money that comes off the books with Kevin Brown's contract expiring..............................

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Jokes of the day

Any Red Sox or Yankees fan that tries to rationalize their team's flame job in the playoffs. The top two payrolls in baseball shouldn't combine to win all of 2 postseason games.

Now it will be interesting to see who does the bigger implosion this offseason.

Will it be Boston by letting Johnny Damon walk, trading away ManRam, and perhaps most importantly letting Theo Epstein leave town as a free agent?

Or will it be the Yankees where not only are three big contracts expiring (Kevin Brown, Bernie Williams, and Hideki Matsui), but also GM Brian Cashman's deal is up and Joe Torre could be replaced as manager. Lou Pinella is a free agent after all and it's not like King George hasn't flown off the handle before after a similiar melt down.

Some other jokes:

- OLN blacking out Sidney Crosby's network TV debut in an attempted cash grab to extort cable and satelite providers into moving OLN onto basic tiers and thus move more cash into their coffers.

- Not switching Game 1 of the ALCS to Thursday and moving Game 1 of the NLDS up a day to allow the Angels to get one day of rest prior to Game 1 versus the White Sox.

- The NFL's tuck rule. I know it's a homerific call this week because the rule took a safety away from the Redskins, but the rule is just as dumb today as it was when the Pats got lucky versus the Raiders a few years back.

Friday, September 02, 2005

Is it just me?

http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/columns/story?id=2149049

Or do like 95% of the writers who loathe the idea of parity in the NHL hail from big revenue hockey markets like NY, Toronto, or in Terry Frei's case, Denver, Colorado?

Personally, I'm sick and tired of writers from big revenue markets saying that parity is a bad thing. The last time I checked, the NFL had economic and competitive parity and it was one of the main reasons that it is the success that it is today.

Besides, the take isn't even fresh and new. It's the same garbage that has been spewed by big market writers for well over a year.

And let's look at the pro sports league that does as much as it can to avoid parity: MLB. Now there is a model for the NHL to follow, huh?

Well, it is if you hail from NY or Boston. But ask fans in Kansas City what they think of MLB's system.

Or better yet, let people in Pittsburgh decide. They are educated in both the ways of the NFL and MLB. They have the Steelers and the Pirates, along with the Penguins, in their backyard. And I wonder which way they would favor.

Given the signings by the Penguins this offseason, I have an idea which way they would vote.

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Jason Giambi vs Carlos Beltran

At the halfway point of the 2005 season would it shock you if NL All-Star starter and the big winner in last winter's free agency, Carlos Beltran, actually had worse stats than Jason "The face of the MLB steroids scandal" Giambi?

I know I am.

But check this out:

BA: Giambi - .268 Beltran - .262
OBP: JG - .420 CB - .319
Slugging % - JG - .433 CB - .425
OPS: JG - .853 CB - .744

Beltran does edge Giambi in HRs (9 to 8) and RBIs (41 to 27).

But, Beltran also has 100 more ABs than Giambi.

Beltran is having a much better year in the field than Giambi. But, is that really worth the $11.5 million that the Mets are paying him this season?

Looking back on this past offseason, this may have been one of the worst FA years ever.

Pedro and Matt Clement are about the only big time impact guys that changed teams this offseason.