Now how much better does that feel?
The Mariners lost eight games in a row. Over those eight games - all at home - they managed to score 12 runs, post a .487 OPS, and generally look pathetic. They couldn't hit, they couldn't field, and while they could pitch, it didn't really matter, because the instant a Mariner gave up a run, everyone instinctively shrunk his shoulders because the game felt conceded. There was no confidence in any Mariner's ability to deliver a big hit, and as such, there was no confidence in the Mariners' ability to win.
Today, though, they won. They won a game. They won a game that didn't lift them in the standings. They won a game that raised their homestand record to 1-8. They won a game against a team they're fighting for the cellar.
And it felt amazing.
If the Mariners had to go 1-8 on this homestand - which, well, they didn't, but, >:( - today's was the right game to win, because it lets everyone head into the offday with raised spirits. The players and coaches get to feel like the slump is behind them. And the fans get to feel like there's still a little hope. At 11-19 and 5.5 back, none of us wanted to hear "it's still early." At 12-19 and 5.5 back, it is still early. This season is still worth fighting for. Morale can seem like such a silly concept from afar, and it's not like the way we feel as fans makes any difference in the world, but there's no questioning the fact that our collective morale is quite a bit higher now than it ought to be following a 1-8 homestand, and it's because they won the last game. Win the last game and all of the bitterness from before is no longer so fresh on the tongue.
The Seattle Mariners are 12-19, and they've played some really, really bad baseball. For the rest of the day, I don't care. Because the Seattle Mariners just won a game against the Angels, and winning the game felt good.
- Jason Vargas continues to stand out, as even when he's not at his sharpest, he can limit the damage. This was flyball Vargas. This was flyball Vargas to the extreme. The top of the fifth, for example, saw him surrender a warning track fly out to Franklin Gutierrez, a warning track fly out to Michael Saunders, and a warning track fly out to Ichiro, all in a row. This was Jason Vargas pitching like Ryan Feierabend. But it turns out that kind of pitcher is a great fit for the park, and with a little luck and some well-timed changeups, Vargas was able to turn in his longest start since August 21st, 2005.
Through six starts, Vargas now stands at 39 innings, with 31 strikeouts and 14 runs allowed. It was easy for Wak to demote Ian Snell to accomodate Cliff Lee because Snell was terrible, but while the team remains confident in RRS, Vargas and Doug Fister are making Erik Bedard's return look awful tough. No manager's going to want to move a guy that's eating innings and limiting runs. Personally, what I'd do when Bedard and Mark Lowe return is push RRS to the pen, drop Jesus Colome and option Sean White, but knowing how much the team seems to like those latter two, who the hell knows what's going to happen? It'll probably be bad news for Shawn Kelley, but who else? RRS can't go to Tacoma unless they scare up an injury. I would think they'd send Colome away, but I've been wrong before.
- Alan Cockrell was fired this morning. Alonzo Powell was promoted, but didn't really have time to do any work, what with staging a press conference, introducing himself to everyone, and getting familiar with his new surroundings. Today, the Mariners didn't have a hitting coach. They scored eight runs.
- Powell was working in Tacoma. Presumably, then, he was living in Tacoma. What does he do now? Does he move? Does he commute every day? I know players have to deal with this kind of thing all the time, but minor leaguers usually live in small spaces and stay prepared to go somewhere if need be. Powell's been with the Rainiers since 2007. He probably has a house. I imagine Alonzo Powell is really happy, and kind of annoyed.
- Describing an at bat in the top of the seventh, Mike Blowers attempted to predict Vargas' pitch sequence, saying something along the lines of "he'll go with the changeup low and away for the groundball. If that doesn't work, he'll straighten up the hitter with a fastball, then go back to the change." Blowers followed that up by saying "Vargas does a nice job of mixing things up." If Mike Blowers really believed that Jason Vargas does a nice job of mixing things up, Mike Blowers wouldn't attempt to predict Vargas' pitch sequence, because it would be impossible.
- Everybody's all happy and skipping on clouds right now, but morale was still low before the game, and as Dave Niehaus talked with Blowers about Cockrell's dismissal, you could sense his displeasure. He was openly questioning Cockrell's culpability in this whole mess, and he was sneering as he did it. These days Dave Niehaus is blinder than a date with John Lackey, but we're still just so damn lucky to have him.
- This team - this Mariners team - drew 20 walks and struck out 22 times against Angels pitching during the series. That pitching staff is bad. Especially the bullpen. Including Brian Stokes' fine performance this afternoon, Angel relievers have allowed 62 runs in 95 innings, with 80 strikeouts, 72 walks, and an FIP over 5. At least Brian Fuentes is back!
- In the bottom of the seventh, Ichiro faced Ervin Santana with one out and none on. Ichiro took two pitches, fouled off four in a row, took a ball, and then fouled off two more before lining a single just past Brandon Wood at third base. One could argue that the ten-pitch at bat might've worn Wood out and caused a lapse in concentration, allowing the ball to squeak by. Ichiro is the only player that I'm certain could do that on purpose. When he's going good, the observer really does get the sense that Ichiro is playing with his opponents.
- With Franklin Gutierrez on second base in the bottom of the fifth, Jose Lopez lined a single into left. Juan Rivera, however, was playing shallow and got on the ball in a hurry, which makes me wonder why Mike Brumley waved Gutierrez around third when Rivera was already retrieving the ball as Guti arrived. It was a senseless gamble, and though the impact of the out was mitigated by it already being a 5-0 game, that was a bad decision. Third base coaches, of course, are only ever noticed when they make bad decisions, so in fairness to Brumley, he's probably really good at picking fruit at the store.
- Brumley also waved Jose Lopez around third on a Josh Wilson single in the second, a play on which Lopez was thrown out at home on the fly, but that was a more defensible decision, on account of who doesn't love watching Jose Lopez run? When the Mariners dealt Yuni to the Royals, I feared that we'd unwittingly gotten rid of all of our silliness, but when Lopez runs, it's all moving parts with slow progress, like a Rube Goldberg steamroller. Bonus points to Jose for getting thrown out by Reggie Willits, who must've been wearing his rocket ship Underoos.
- Josh Wilson made a couple bad plays in the field, but it's funny how little attention your defense can draw when you provide the only offense this team's seen in years. Wilson's homer wasn't special - he just dropped the bat head on a slider over the plate - but he hit it hard, and harder than anyone can remember Jack Wilson hitting a ball. Then he threw in the triple the other way, and the single, and the walk...since joining the organization, 15 of Wilson's 40 hits in Tacoma have gone for extra bases, and 14 of his 36 hits in Seattle have gone for extra bases. Needless to say, it's been unexpected. Something about the Mariners seems to agree with him, and as such I wouldn't plan on seeing Jack until he's completely healed.
Wilson made his homer look so easy that the rest of the team should be ashamed of itself. Wilson put a good swing on a slider and hit the ball 350 feet. Nobody else can put a good swing on a slider and hit the ball 350 feet? Nobody? Come on, Jose, this was like all you did all of last season.
- Felix Hernandez will forever be my baby, but I gotta say that seeing Michael Saunders succeed tickles me in a way that few others do. Saunders has put together some good at bats in his limited time up here, and today we saw some discipline, a line drive single, and - at last - a home run to right-center. Mike took two close pitches to get ahead 2-0 before putting a level swing on a fastball and drilling it just over the fence. There's been some concern that Saunders is too much of a pull hitter. The overwhelming majority of his power is down the line to right. But this fly ball went straight, and it flew about 400 feet. That's a good reminder that Michael Saunders is a powerful guy. He should develop into a legitimate 20-homer threat every season, and after everything that's happened to him ever since the Chris Gimenez disaster a year ago, I imagine so much weight just came off his shoulders that I'd hate to be standing there when it comes back down.
In attendance: Saunders' mom, who, for the fourth time, is battling cancer.
- Brandon League's line: 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 BB, 0 HBP, 3 K's, 4 batters faced. League generated a wild pitch strikeout on which Kendry Morales reached and Reggie Willits advanced an incredible two bases to score, and he also generated a weak groundball on which Josh Wilson made an error. League's is an early candidate for strangest line of the season.
Dammit
I missed the greatest game ever!
Marinerfanjake - May 9, 2010
Lost in the offense is probably the fact that League looked fucking unhittable today.
I know Aardsma hasn’t been doing an awful job, but League is starting to look like the guy we thought we traded Brandon Morrow for, or something even better.
lailaihei - May 9, 2010
Is DA allergic to the mud on the baseball or something?
Always has the puffy eyes.
Sirbunt - May 9, 2010
He's probably just high.
It’d explain all of the bullpen antics.
chezbergrur - May 9, 2010
League
That’s encouraging, since League had been a couple of ticks below last year’s mph on his fastball per fangraphs. Still 94.3 in 2010 compared to 95.4 in 2009, but he’s creeping up so he must have been dialing it up recently. His outside zone swings induced are a little down and contact in and out of the zone is up this year, so his K rate is down from last year. Good to see him get some strikeouts.
wobatus - May 10, 2010
Pitchers usually aren't throwing 100% early in the season
I wouldn’t worry about 1mph or so.
Jeff Sullivan - May 10, 2010
Through 5/9 last year, his FB averaged 94.7
Through 5/9 in 2008, it was 96.5
(It’s 94.2 this year).
So yeah, it’s down a bit from 2008, but there’s no real difference between 2009 and 2010 thus far.
marc w - May 10, 2010
The problematic issue is that his splitter is no longer death on a stick.
marc w - May 10, 2010
or death to the sticks.
JY - May 10, 2010
So do the stadium numbers run high?
Because at the game League was clocking in at 97 mph according to the stadium gun. I thought that seemed high, but Santana was clocking in at 92-94, and was down to 91 late in the game.
Fear - May 10, 2010
until a week or so ago
it was more like 3 mph. You are right that it may have just been early in the year and he was getting loose. And as Marc W points out he wasn’t throwing much harder out of the gate last year. i was comparing to his season long average.
The contact percentage has jumped, though.
Like I said, it is encouraging to see he is picking it up. he apprently did last year too as the season went on.
FWIW, someone who really looks to be missing some fastball velocity is another groundballing setup guy. Ramon Troncoso.
wobatus - May 10, 2010
Yep, and the contact percentage is all about his splitter.
35% sw. strikes on it in 2009, now it’s like 17%, which means it’s less effective than Vargas change-up, which… uh, good for Jason Vargas change-up, I guess!
marc w - May 10, 2010
Where are you getting that?
I’m getting a figure in the mid-20’s, and besides, the sample right now is so low that attaching percentages does a disservice anyway.
Jeff Sullivan - May 10, 2010
SSS
On that note, his overall swinging strike percentage is 8.5% per fangraphs. That is much closer to his career rate if you take out last year, when his swinging strike percentage was 14%, per fangraphs. I mywself wasn’t looking at particular pitches. Also, his contact rate of 85% is closer to his career average before last year’s 71%.
Last year may be the outlier, not this year thus far, so when we talk about small sample sizes, last year, and indeed his entire major league career, isn’t a huge sample size. Although it is early yet as you said, he is just starting to air it out, and he probably hasn’t ceded all of last year’s career gains. Plus he was injury-plagued before last year. He definitely picked it up as last year moved into May and thereafter.
wobatus - May 10, 2010
I'm not real interested in what League did before last year
because last year is when he started featuring that splitter way more often instead of going all fastball/slider. 2009 is what we’re looking for him to reproduce.
Jeff Sullivan - May 10, 2010
Gap in my knowledge
Fangraphs doesn’t have him throwing that, seemingly lumping it in under another pitch, I suppose. They had him throwing over 30% change and no splitter, whereas this year they have him throwing the split-finger 14% or so. But appreciate the added info.
wobatus - May 10, 2010
Yeah, they lumped it in with his change.
marc w - May 10, 2010
Was texas leaguers, but it was yesterday, ergo, before they updated with his performance yesterday.
Point taken.
marc w - May 10, 2010
I do think his slightly adjusted delivery could also have a small negative effect
but it’s impossible to measure something like that.
Jeff Sullivan - May 10, 2010
It was going to regress from 35% in any event
But I am a bit surprised he’s not throwing more of them.
Never noticed that delivery change – that’s a small but significant change. Looks a bit more sidearm this year.
marc w - May 10, 2010
Supposedly it'll help!
http://www.lookoutlanding.com/2010/4/27/1447698/on-brandon-league-and-the
Jeff Sullivan - May 10, 2010
Josh Wilson can go to hell for all I care
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
What did Josh Wilson ever do to you?
C-Nage - May 9, 2010
That home run he hit killed Fogel's mother.
JAH - May 9, 2010
I'm glad he helped us win today but I am very uncomfortable with him as our shortstop because he is a horrific baseball player relative to the rest of the major league of baseball
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
When did being bad ever stop someone from playing good?
ignacio - May 9, 2010
Have you seen our DHs
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
Especially since we need any offense we can get right now..
So Ride the hot streaks!
C-Nage - May 9, 2010
When did being bad ever stop you from rooting for someone?
Mariner John - May 9, 2010
When the player in question is so boringly white
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
Rob Johnson is excitedly white?
Or are we saying he’s not bad?
Mariner John - May 9, 2010
I don't even like Rob Johnson
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
That was a great game to be at.
And you’re right, after this last week, it did feel pretty amazing…
section331 - May 9, 2010
I FEEL SO GOOD.
Was listening on the radio on my way back to Seattle from Walla Walla, smiling like a bastard the whole way.
sanford_and_son - May 9, 2010
Why were you in Walla Walla?
And where in Walla Walla were you?
Matt Erickson - May 9, 2010
Hot Air Balloon Stampede, baby!
I wish I was joking. Twas a family get together.
sanford_and_son - May 10, 2010
Ah yes! I saw a lot of those.
I’m at the University here in Walla Walla. Not many LLers over here, that’s for sure.
Matt Erickson - May 10, 2010
.
M'sFanatic - May 9, 2010
Yea.
I miss him too.
ThundaPC - May 9, 2010
A little note about Niehaus and Blowers...
I also noticed that Dave wasn’t picking up on the “mood” Blowers was giving out. Usually with stuff like this, I’ll just shake my head and blame it on him getting old, not being as “sharp” as he used to, etc.
But I was kind of thinking that Dave knew exactly what Blowers was getting at, and just played the role of the mediator or whatever.
The only reason I say this is because of the way the two generally interact with each other. I don’t have any video links or anything, but I’ve noticed something during several of those AFLAC trivia questions they have. Blowers usually answers pretty fast if he knows, and many times Dave will kind of stop himself when Blowers doesn’t know the answer. And when Blowers is wrong, Dave will kind of change his opinion from “I know the answer” to “hmm I’m not quite sure, it could be A or B…”
Not that this is a bad thing, I think Dave and Mike have great chemistry. Way different from Dave and Ron Fairly, where Ron would just go on and on and on…And when he would be with Valle or Hendu, they would say some stupid stupid stuff where there wasn’t any appropriate response.
Kinda strayed off topic there, but this has been in the back of my mind all season. Probably could have been a fanpost or something, but oh well.
Karma Police - May 9, 2010
Wow, after reading that, that's pretty damn vague and confusing
Yeah, I’ve been up since yesterday morning at 10am working on a Philosophy paper. My mind is broke.
Summary: Dave and Mike have good chemistry and Dave will sometimes bite his tongue to keep it going.
Karma Police - May 9, 2010
Saunders' swing is so funky looking.
But it generates so many line drives as well!
Slurvey - May 9, 2010
Oh I hope he can do up here what he's done in the minors sometimes!
ignacio - May 9, 2010
I really want Saunders to be one of our first position players to pan out since... what Lopez?
Slurvey - May 9, 2010
Choo, Jones, and Cabrera
All turned out to be fine players.
BigR - May 9, 2010
Daggers. In. My. Heart.
JY - May 9, 2010
At least Valbuena's struggling!
And he’s already 24 years old!
Jeff Sullivan - May 9, 2010
Yeah we sure won that trade
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
Valbuena would be third on our team in walks >:(
I know you’re just kidding around, but it kind of hurt when he was traded. I know we got the better end of that deal, but I had been following Valbuena since his first season in the VSL, which must have been around 2002, and had argued for his prospect status when hardly anyone else would.
On the whole though, I’d say Choo hurts a lot worse because I knew we had fucked that one up badly at the time, and he’s a far superior player.
JY - May 9, 2010
So you were into Valbuena before it was cool?
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
You could call it that.
I think what did it was that his final season in the VSL, for the last game of the year, he talked the manager into letting him play all nine positions on the diamond. I hardly ever get to see that, so I was a fan from that point forward.
JY - May 9, 2010
What????
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
I miss him :(
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
.
JAH - May 9, 2010
And all are GONE...
Slurvey - May 9, 2010
I have no sources
besides my memory. I recall reading an article about a player (maybe it was Langerhans saying it in early April) that said the players in Tacoma live right in between Seattle and Tacoma. My guess, if that were true would be the players live in Federal Way, or that vicinity during the season. If that applies to managers too, I don’t know. Hope this helps (maybe). I’ll try and find that article.
marinerschas2 - May 9, 2010
I was at that game with my old man
and yea it was awesome. A few notes: I heard a scattering of boos at Griffey when he predictably made an out early in the game (before the back to back home runs). And the cheers for Ichiro were significantly louder then Griffey’s most of the game from what I could tell. So maybe the average fan is tiring of Griffey..? And when Lopez hit that double, my dad immediately exclaimed, “My GOD he’s SLOW!” (he later said the same thing about Griffey). I never realized how…awkward and slow Lopez looks while running before.
Finally, is it just me or is Gutierrez battling back from a lot of 0-2 counts lately? It seems like almost every bat over the last several days he’s been in an 0-2 count then worked it back to a full count before something happened (walk, out, hit, whatever). I feel like (and hope) he’s developing a pretty decent eye.
Fear - May 9, 2010
Guti has an excellent eye
He’s had a great approach up there all year
Griffin Cooper - May 9, 2010
I don't feel lucky listening to Dave Niehaus
I hate Dave and 1995.
ChaseB - May 9, 2010
Dave may have a hard time seeing the trajectory of a flyball now
but he’s still better at handling all of the space between plays than 99% of all the broadcasters out there. The day Dave hangs them up will be incredibly sad for me.
BrianL - May 9, 2010
This sounds fruity
but Dave still has that poetic touch that colored radio only broadcasts. He doesnt shy away from the occasional purple streak, and I love him for it.
Bearskin Rugburn - May 9, 2010
He provides a hell of a narrative for every game.
BrianL - May 9, 2010
He's the man, and it will be a very sad day when he hangs it up.
TrustBaseball - May 9, 2010
Niehaus sounded like he had filled his shorts when Wilson cranked that homer.
It was awesome, he was so excited!
sanford_and_son - May 10, 2010
The Rizzs call I heard watching the replay was unimpressive.
At least he kind of got it together for Condor’s first home run.
JY - May 10, 2010
One of my favorite things about listening to Dave on the radio....
Is that, unlike Rizzs, he’ll just shut the fuck up for a minute and let you take in the atmosphere of a game. But if the game is a blowout early, he’ll break out one of his old-timey baseball stories to keep you interested.
I also love how, in late high-leverage innings, he’ll narrate the pitcher’s every action as if it were an epic battle.
Benne - May 9, 2010
I never realized how much I loved that silence
Until you just mentioned it. Some of my favorite M’s memories are listening to summer evening games on the radio when I was a kid, and taking in the ambiance of the crowd whenever Dave got quiet for a few seconds.
He might get a little too excited every time Junior flies out to right, but I’ve gotten in the habit of not getting excited when Dave does, just because half the time his excitement quickly wanes when he realizes the ball isn’t leaving the park.
HititHere - May 10, 2010
One of the things I hate most about all modern sports coverage
is the seemingly compulsive need to fill every second, whether on TV or radio, with as many words as possible. I don’t understand why announcers can’t just let the event breathe every now and again, and Niehaus has always been pretty good at that which is one of the reasons I like him so much.
pdb - May 10, 2010
Why do you hate 1995?
seattlebruin - May 9, 2010
I'm just joking around.
People are always flipping Niehaus shit, but I have listened to him since I was a little kid and I really don’t care if he can’t see anything.
ChaseB - May 9, 2010
When Bedard gets back
assuming he’s good enough to merit a rotation spot, you don’t even consider moving RRS to the pen? Seems like they could use a lefty and Hyphen has been pretty inconsistent as a starter but quite successful as a reliever. I understand his long term value is as a starter, but if were anywhere within shouting distance of first it may make sense to bolster the pen and give him a chance to be a positive contributor right away.
Bearskin Rugburn - May 9, 2010
I assume that's what everyone wants to see, but Jeff is saying that this team loves Colome
and White so much, that there is no room for RRS.
Kelley will probably be sent down again when Lowe gets back for some stupid reason.
Rudy4three - May 9, 2010
Now I'm apprehensive, the way Wak has been making decisions.
Hate to lose RRS when Bedard comes back, what if he doesn’t work out you know? (sorry RC)
Kermit. - May 9, 2010
As much of a hard on as they seem to have for no talent arms like Colome and White, I think they
would keep RRS over both if it comes down to it (which is likely will)
Rudy4three - May 9, 2010
It could happen. Bedard could stink in the near future. But RRS stinks now.
royalcurve - May 9, 2010
I would move RRS to the pen, yes
I don’t know what the team’s gonna want to do, though. I wonder if this is what’ll finally get them to drop Colome.
Jeff Sullivan - May 9, 2010
I'm starting to think that's where he fits.
Long relief, a handful of starts every year, but nothing where he’s held accountable for too long in the rotation.
He had similar issues in the minor leagues. Velocity shifts by a few mph tend to make it hard on him.
JY - May 9, 2010
Like this?
ALTER TABLE mariners_bullpen
DROP COLUMN a
Eyebrows - May 10, 2010 via mobile
Saunders, Langerhans, and Wilson are providing some life to this team.
Like they weren’t a part of this weak offense for the first month, so they aren’t feeling the same pressure as these other guys.
I really hope Saunders can keep producing. It would be awesome if he locks down that LF job the rest of the season. It was nice to see some legit power from a player on this team, as he really stung that ball into right center.
As for Wilson, I know he isn’t any good, but every time he’s gotten the call to play SS for us, he’s done a solid job with the bat. He’s swinging a good bat so far this year in AAA and the first few games with the big club. As Jeff pointed out, they should let Jack Wilson take his time to recover.
Only negative I saw today was the continued cluelessness of Adam Moore. I really want Adam Moore to succeed and solve this catching crisis the M’s seem to always have. However, he’s just awful right now, and that brain dead play on the League strikeout was comical. He needs to be sent down. I havent checked the numbers yet, but he seems to swing and miss a ton.
Rudy4three - May 9, 2010
Yeah, the numbers show he's well below league average with his contact rates.
Seems to be hacking at a lot of balls outside the zone, and not even pulling a Yuni and hitting them. He just swings and misses at them.
15% swinging strike rate. Double the league average.
He needs to head back to AAA. Although, maybe working with his AAA hitting coach can get him going a bit.
Rudy4three - May 9, 2010
The call-up guys did a great job today.
A combined 5 for 9 with 2 HR, a 2B, 3BB, a SB, 5 RBI, and an error between Langerhans, Wilson, and Saunders. Wow.
micky D - May 9, 2010 via mobile
Langerhans has a 44.4% BB rate now.
Hilarious.
Coach Owens - May 9, 2010
Langerhans has been mighty impressive so far.
I cannot believe we didn’t advocate for him to get playing time in left field to start the season. Then Wak could have used Bradley at DH to help avoid injury and limit the PAs from Griffey. In retrospect it’s so obvious!
Matthew - May 9, 2010
If Langerhans and Saunders keep producing and Milton Bradley sorts his shit out we'll have above average hitting coming out the wazoo
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
I must admit, I have a man crush on Ryan Langerhans.
Unlike the rest of the team, he seems to not be a total fucking retard running the bases.
RustyJohn - May 9, 2010
He's mine. You can't have him.
SethGrandpa - May 10, 2010
That's what all us level-headed folk expected Wak to do.
Before Sweeney came along and hit REALLY WELL against fucking minor league pitchers in spring training. UGH.
sanford_and_son - May 10, 2010
Uh...
Whoosh?
harkening - May 10, 2010
Saunders and Gimenez?
Lost me there? Anyone want to help out my poor memory?
brokejumper - May 9, 2010
He robbed what would have been Saunders first ML home run.
Jackle Mackle - May 9, 2010
It was in his first game too, wasn't it?
Stormton - May 9, 2010
I think so.
Jackle Mackle - May 9, 2010
Chris Gimenez
=\
=(
Slurvey - May 9, 2010
Chris Giminez sucks.
SethGrandpa - May 9, 2010
You act like driving from Tacoma to Seattle takes hours
Like someone posted about, there was an article a few years back that stated most players that think they might get promoted live in Federal Way. I don’t know about coaches, since few ever get promoted.
If Powell does live in Tacoma, he would leave home in the afternoon, not in peak traffic. Also, most traffic heads south in the afternoon. Driving north most days is fairly traffic free during the time Powell would be commuting.
Regarding Dave, I think he is non controversial. I am sure he picked up on Blowers and wasn’t about to touch that subject with a 10 foot pole.
Coug1990 - May 9, 2010
I would be pretty annoyed if I had to drive back and forth between Tacoma and Seattle every day
especially if I’m not driving back until 11 or 12 at night a lot of the time. But who knows. I don’t know Powell’s situation. It was a throwaway point.
Jeff Sullivan - May 9, 2010
He can take the express bus to the Tacoma Dome
and pick up a hooker or two for a quick romp at the La Quinta Inn.
RustyJohn - May 9, 2010
Actually it's a pretty easy commute depending on the time of day.
It depends on if he live in Tacoma or somewhere south of there. In Tacoma, no problem, south of Tacoma and he could have problems any time of day.
TrustBaseball - May 9, 2010
I did it for three months once
It’s not that bad- the drive goes by fairly quickly when you do it all the time
Corco - May 9, 2010
Perhaps I've been conditioned by the fact that I never have to drive more then 10 minutes anywhere anymore
Jeff Sullivan - May 9, 2010
You should move to Rawlins, Wyoming
Where people commute 2 hours to Laramie or Rock Springs and have to drive 3 hours to get to Northern Colorado where stuff is and 4 hours to Denver and do it with a smile on their face because they like living in a small town
Corco - May 9, 2010
Small-town America is amazing.
thehemogoblin - May 9, 2010
What about driving to Seattle?
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
I meant regularly
Jeff Sullivan - May 9, 2010
Maybe you should say what you mean
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
I for one and shocked that you of all people had no problem with the highway.
CapSea - May 9, 2010
I-5 is such a pleasant highway to drive half an hour down every day
Seattle drivers are slow pussies but make for an incredibly easy if not slightly inefficient driving experience
Corco - May 9, 2010
Hell my commute to work is 45 minutes to and 45 minutes home.
But I’ve been doing in for 3 years now and it just flies by.
Goose - May 10, 2010
I would not, however, be annoyed at the huge raise I probably got
For being promoted to a major-league coach instead of an AAA one.
I’ll admit I don’t know how the contract/pay structures work for minor/major league coaches, but if it’s anything remotely close to the structure for players, I wouldn’t be annoyed at all.
My thinking would be more along the lines of “HELL YES, now I can move out of my shitty apartment in Hilltop and rent a nice condo in Seattle!!!”
HititHere - May 10, 2010
I know hitting coaches aren't of much importance. However, it's a bit alarming to read the
quotes from a number of players regarding how highly they thought of Cockrell. I’ve seen a few guys now state he’s the best instructor they’ve ever worked with.
Seems like we axed a guy who is pretty good at what he does.
Rudy4three - May 9, 2010
They're reading from the script.
Deja vu all over again.
Kermit. - May 9, 2010
Eerily similar.
Brian Floyd - May 9, 2010
It seems like I have no idea what our hitting coach's name is until he gets fired
Dewey N - May 9, 2010
Me either
royalcurve - May 9, 2010
I have always found Josh Wilson kind of interesting ever since he hit that home run off Sabathia last year around the 8th or 9th inning when we were getting shut out
he seems to have little hot streaks and clutch hits that make me remember him being a better hitter than he really is.
Boz86 - May 9, 2010
I bet Alan Cockrell has an apartment he can sublet to Powell.
msb - May 9, 2010
I've enjoyed the last few games if only because it has, once again, proven Geoff Baker to be a moron.
1) Sweeney needs to play more- Sweeney is a big douche and swings at a zillion balls out of the strike zone.
2) Langerhans isn’t the solution to the club’s problems- Langerhans not only plays LF, but fills in for Kotchman when injured, and gets on base 50% of the time, exhibits good decision making when it comes to base running.
3) “It’s not as if Josh Wilson is going to hit a three-run homer,” snickering to Mitch Levy the day after the call up- Josh Wilson hits a 3 run homer.
When my kids get older and need to pick a career, I’ll tell them become a political commentator or sports reporter- you can make the most asinine, ass wrong predictions and still have a job at the end of the day. The only profession I know of where you can be a complete fuck up and maintain employment.
But I digress.
RustyJohn - May 9, 2010
Ignoring Geoff Baker has done wonders for my psyche.
Benne - May 9, 2010
I always thought that I liked his stories and blog posts.
But seeing his comments the last week or so seems like he is just trying to piss-off the LL and USSM crowd. Oh well, nothing really lost in not reading his crap.
ABQmsFan - May 9, 2010
Do we need to bash Geoff Baker every ten minutes?
Seriously, just don’t fucking read his blog if you don’t like him.
MT Olson - May 9, 2010
Seriously people. If you don't like hitting your hand with a hammer, you stop.
So stop. It feels way better.
SethGrandpa - May 10, 2010
I've stopped reading Baker, but rely on other sources for his information. I'm not so
frustrated with what he has to say, still get the info he has and don’t have to read his moronic interpretation of what he knows.
TrustBaseball - May 9, 2010
Geoff who?
I Lick Squirrels - May 10, 2010
Quick reminder.
On this day last year the Rockies were 11-18. Season is far from over so all the negativity from the Cockrell post needs to be toned down massively. Our team has much better pitching then the Rockies, an offense that is just as capable, and an easier division.
Nobody Anonymous - May 9, 2010
I love your optimism.
Benne - May 9, 2010
Thats because it is factual and researched optimism, Hooray!
Tulowitzki was only batting .200/.324/.400 with 3 HRs, 5 RBIs, and 11 walks to 17 K’s at the end of april (his may was even worse, .242/.316/.394).
Id give the edge to the Ms in lineup strength any day of the week over the Rockies, our hitters are not lucky enough to play in one of the most infamous hitters’ parks ever.
Nobody Anonymous - May 10, 2010
I just loved the back-to-back dingers!
MT Olson - May 9, 2010
Was at the game to...well, I guess it's yesterday now
I wasn’t about to jump up and down about the capper to a 1-8 homestand, but god did it feel good to see a win. Figgins’ sorry ass needs to grab some pine for as long as Wilson’s hitting like this. I know, I know, some statistic I’ve never heard of conclusively proves Figgins is the better ballplayer, always was and always will be, but right now he’s the most surefire guaranteed out in the lineup. He came up three times with Ichiro on second and less than two outs, and not once was he even able to hit a grounder to the right side. This is assuming the other Wilson will be back in the lineup in Baltimore. Too bad Wilson fouled off the only decent pitches he got to hit in his last AB, it would’ve been nice for a chance at the cycle.
Got to see Felix throw a bullpen session, and he was pissed about something. Yelled out after releasing the ball a couple of times, had an annoyed expression on his face the whole time, and even slammed his glove on the ground at one point. It was interesting to see him and Adair working on…well, whatever they were working on.
Aly Edge - May 10, 2010
"whatever they were working on"
Moxie? Swagger?
JY - May 10, 2010
"he’s the most surefire guaranteed out in the lineup"
“C” and “DH”.
Brian Floyd - May 10, 2010
3rd most surefire guaranteed out in the lineup.
rickpo - May 10, 2010
Josh Wilson has hit a home run in 2.5% of his M's plate appearances
With everyone else, his HR rate is 0.5%.
With the M’s, Wilson’s been worth 6.8 runs above replacement. With everyone else, it’s -10.7 RAR.
Weird.
marc w - May 10, 2010
Josh Wilson is above average!
seattlebruin - May 10, 2010
Above replacement level.
Average is 20 RAR.
Josh Wilson still sucks. He just sucks less.
harkening - May 10, 2010
there is a greater than zero chance that I was being facetious with my statement claiming that Joshua Wilson of the Seattle Mariners is a good baseball player based on a sample size of four games
seattlebruin - May 10, 2010
I got the facetiousness.
It was your use of “average” instead of “replacement level.” I was being pedantic. I have tried to make up for it by reccing your original post.
harkening - May 10, 2010
The key point to me where I finally was able to relax?
That broken bat bloop single by Adam Moore.
It just seems like every time we have had one of those hit against us, it has dropped in and everytime we hit one of those, it was caught.
It was nice for one to finally fall in…
seattlesundevil - May 10, 2010
Nothing about Adam Moore's day was encouraging.
I take the point, and it’s cool to see bloop singles fall in, but his ABs against a struggling Santana were painful.
marc w - May 10, 2010
Right, it's not about Moore - he was pitiful...
It was more the feeling that things are finally starting to fall in like that.
seattlesundevil - May 10, 2010
That Lackey character is one ugly SOB
Probably the ugliest cracker I ever saw in person.
If he became a Mariner, I would have to stop watching games live or on TV, because I honestly can’t stand to look at his ugly mug. Watching him in post-game interviews is beyond painful, I’m surprised the interviewers don’t turn to stone.
::shiver::
HititHere - May 10, 2010
That description of Jose Lopez running has stuck with me all day, fantastic.
Kermit. - May 10, 2010
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