…this is always true… however, from what i can gather, while the team can add payroll, i wouldn’t expect them to take on, for instance, ALL of the $30 million due to oswalt… of course, no team is interested in doing that… and so, instead, i hear adding a guy like Cliff Lee, or Ted Lilly, who are due roughly $3 million or so between now and the end of the season, is totally within reason… unless he will cost Jon Niese or Ike Davis, in which case the lack of action will have nothing to do with money or motivation, but everything to do with talent…
Category Archives: Quotes
People turn everything into something else
Amazing, amazing feature on Bob Gibson from Joe Posnanski.
R.A. Dickey refutes reports that he’s a nerd
I asked Dickey about the Daily News article that mentioned how he was looking up stats on the Internet before his last start, hoping to find out precisely which stats he was looking up and how he used them. But he told me it wasn’t true. He said there may have been stats up on the computer when he sat down, but he wasn’t looking at them.
Josh Thole appeared amused by the entire conversation, either because of Dickey’s elocution or because I had the gall/stupidity to ask a baseball player about his stats. Ike Davis, on his way to the shower, chimed in that they only look at their record.
Dickey said the team goes over hitters’ tendencies and baserunning habits in their pitcher meetings at the beginning of each series, but that most players he knows intentionally avoid looking at their stats or anyone else’s during the season.
Jerry Manuel on Johan Santana
And, you know, duh. There’ll certainly be columns and blog posts written suggesting that Johan Santana pitched poorly today because of the news that came out about his since-dismissed sexual assault charges from October. But the truth is, Santana hasn’t been sharp all year.
In fact, Saturday’s start was Santana’s fourth straight with at least four earned runs allowed. He’s only done that once before, back in 2004. And, of course, even when he was succeeding this season he wasn’t striking guys out.
Manuel suggested that opposing teams have become too familiar with Santana’s fastball-changeup pattern, and Santana didn’t disagree. Rod Barajas said, essentially, that maybe the league has finally caught up to Santana.
Both Manuel and Santana said the pitcher plans to mix in his slider more often, and said that doing so in the later innings today helped make his changeup more effective.
Santana said his struggles are “not the end of the world,” and stressed, “at some point, everything will turn around.”
Also, vaguely related fun fact: No one has ever described Johan Santana without using the word “competitor.”
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