Showing posts with label Dejan Kovacevic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dejan Kovacevic. Show all posts

March 4, 2009

LaWhiff

Ah, it truly is baseball season, almost.  After reading Dejan Kovacevic's piece on Steve Pearce in the Post-Gazette today, I casually started looking at spring stats for our 6-1 Pittsburgh Pirates.

I damn near choked at this stat line.

Avg - .167, OBP - .167, SLG - .167, Ab -12, SO -8, R- 0, RBI -0

Yes, it looks like Adam LaRoche is in Mid-May form.  Really, that is correct, EIGHT strike outs in 12 at bats.  He has two, count them, two hits.  Both were singles.  He has not drawn a base on balls.  The only time he has touched the plate is during his walk back to the dugout after striking out.  The bright spot, of the four balls he has put in play, fifty percent have been for base hits.

Now, rounding back to the Pearce article, HOW can the Pirates not find playing time for Pearce in Pittsburgh?  Especially early in the season during LaRoche's down time.

With so many unknown quantities coming into the year such as Morgan, Moss, Andy LaRoche, Ohlendorf, Karstens and half the bullpen.  In addition, at some point in the season we will likely see McCutchen and Tabata.  What would it hurt to add one more unknown to the list in Pearce?

If the Pirates can find a taker, and get anything of value in return, trading LaRoche early in the season or during spring may be the best move they could make.  This is a year of discovery for so many players.  Why not take the chance and see if Pearce is also ready for his shot?  

 

Five Questions:

In case you missed the Five Questions installment yesterday, I recommend you take the time to read it.  It is a very good read and well worth the time.  I must say, it is easier to ask questions and have someone else write the post for you.  Thanks Jen, that was a great series of answers. 

January 27, 2009

Free Agents Conclusion

This isn’t the conclusion I was hoping to write, but it looks like the Pirates are close to signing someone.  To recap, Huntington is looking for a versatile right handed bat.  I guess that makes the next sentences all the more wrong.

The Pirates are in contract discussions with left handed hitting Eric Hinske.  Hinske is a corner outfielder/infielder. 

The Pirates have also been in touch with Juan Gonzalez.  Gonzalez is limited to outfield duty and likely would be better suited to play in the AL this season, for no other reason than his age of 41. 

Meanwhile another left handed bat has changed his outlook on free agency.

Bobby Abreu has lowered his asking price to 3 years and $30M.  Abreu, 34, is a 20+ HR guy who can play any position in the outfield.  He is also a player who will have trade value at the deadline.  If the Pirates were willing to go a little over budget, they could have a player to flip for prospects at the deadline.  This type of signing would show the fans ownership is willing to fork out some cash and can bring back more prospects later in the season.

Dejan Kovacevic tallied the Pirates payroll to be near $47.9M if the Pirates win both arbitration cases.  If they lose both cases, the total would be 50.1M.  This would allow the Pirates $4.9M-$7.1M to spend on free agency if they hard capped at $55M.  A deal for Abreu might be had at 3 years $24M with incentives to reach $10M a season.  The market is prime for a market the size of Pittsburgh to add talent on the cheap.  Considering what is being paid to Adam LaRoche, this deal would be a bargain.  After the season and LaRoche is off the books, Abreu would eat up what is freed by LaRoche.

If nothing else, it would appease fans that are begging for a real free agent signing while proving ownership isn’t in this for the pocket lining. 

Signing the next free agent would also appease fans and fit the description of what is being looked for.

Doug Mientkiewicz is still not mentioned, even though he has proved his versatility to the team.  Oh, by the way, he bats right handed.

Some other names to watch for, in some instances again:

Juan Uribe, 28 – Right handed hitting infielder.  He could fill in the shoes Jack Wilson will leave behind if traded.

Ty Wiggington, 30 – Right handed hitter who can play LF, RF, 1B, 2B, 3B.

Brad Wilkerson, 31 – Left handed hitting OF, 1B.  Injuries are always a concern for him.  Has not played in over 140 games since 2005.

One other free agent that will likely be rumored but would not sign with Pittsburgh is Tony Garciaparra.  Also known as Nomar.  If you live in Boston, it is Nomah.

I maintain the best fit for what the Pirates are looking for is Doug Mientkiewicz.  I don’t understand what is going on with the front office when they proclaim they are looking for a versatile, right handed bat to come off the bench and have a player who wants to return that fits the mold to a tee.  Someone please explain.

 

From the pitching side, Pedro Martinez has been mentioned.  Look for a John Garland rumor to start in the next few days.

 

Donate:

I will be walking in the MDA Stride and Ride locally.  Please sponsor me in my Stride and Ride Walk for MDA at https://www.joinmda.org/srcoralvilleia09/dharr18, every dollar is appreciated.

January 25, 2009

Rumors on LaRoche, Free Agent Signing, Cuthbert, Boras Fingered and More

A couple rumors from XM MLB Radio (XM 175)

LaRoche:

According to MLB Radio: A rumored trade persists from the West Coast pertaining to an Adam LaRoche to the Giants deal.  Apparently San Francisco is willing to trade Jonathan Sanchez and first baseman Travis Ishikawa for the much scrutinized Pittsburgh Pirate first baseman.

BTW Take:

Sanchez is quite intriguing, but for my money Ishikawa is much more tantalizing to the baseball palette.  If this is an accurate rumor, being a rumor lends to the likelihood being minimal at best, this is a deal Huntington would likely jump at.  Considering the front office denied emphatically any deal was in the works with San Francisco, I highly doubt the is much meat behind the story.  Huntington does not like to divulge anything on deals he is working on, so the denial could still be a cover-up of actual talks.  That is the only reason I have spent any time on this. 

 

Free Agent:

According to MLB Radio: The Pirates are in discussions with free agent outfielder Luis Gonzalez.

BTW Take:

Mientkiewicz is a better fit for the team.  I do not see where a 41 year old outfielder should garner more than a minor league contract.  Gonzalez is outside the "rebuilding" project free agents the Pirates have signed recently like Monroe.  I am not sure I buy this rumor either, but Dejan's comments about a free agent signing coming soon and a name we all know makes me a little nervous this is more than a rumor. 

 

Cuthbert:

Apparently the Pirates are favored to sign a Nicaraguan Prospect League player by the name of Cheslor Cuthbert.  According to the blog post, he will be available to sign come July and is drawing attention from many teams.

http://cardinalsbestnews.blogspot.com/2009/01/updates-out-of-nicaragua.html

Another link from Cardinals Best News has some information on him:

http://cardinalsbestnews.blogspot.com/2008/12/aritcles-on-jem-argenal-cheslor.html

Here is a link to a Google translation of an article about his tryout:

http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=es&u=http://impreso.elnuevodiario.com.ni/2008/10/19/deportes/87649&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=5&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3DCheslor%2BCuthbert%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26hs%3D77I

BTW Take:

I know nothing about this player but found it interesting nonetheless.  It looks like the legacy of Roberto Clemente is still paying dividends for the Pirates.  According to the articles, the kid can flat rake.  Big power, especially at a young age.

 

Mayor Retires:

Sean Casey has retired to take on a studio job.

BTW Take:

There are a ton of free agents retiring after seeing what the market has in store for them.  Good luck in the new gig Sean.

 

Boras Fingered:

Scott Boras and his agency have been fingered by Kirk Radomski as being part of the Kevin Brown portion of the Mitchell Report.

From ESPN.com:

Radomski's account says he sent HGH to Brown in the winter of 2003, and several days later discovered a wet overnight shipping package containing $8,000 in cash in the bushes by his house. Radomski says the FedEx account number and return address on the package were from the sports agency of Brown's California-based representative, Scott Boras.

Boras, reached by ESPN.com, says his agency had no connection to the alleged payment.

"The Federal Express package or anything like that, Kevin Brown was asked about it and denied it," Boras says. "The fact of the matter is we obviously give out our Federal Express numbers to a wide number of sources -- team officials, people, clients, that kind of thing -- because we obviously are sending out and mailing back and forth."

Radomski says government agents found FedEx labels from Brown in the raid of his Long Island home, but he was uncertain whether they were in possession of this particular label.

There is much more in the story.

BTW Take:

How sweet would it be to have Boras lose his license over this deal?

 

Delay:

One more days delay on wrapping up the free agency posts.  Once again work has got in the way of blogging.

 

Donate:

I will be walking in the MDA Stride and Ride locally.  Please sponsor me in my Stride and Ride Walk for MDA at https://www.joinmda.org/srcoralvilleia09/dharr18, every dollar is appreciated.

January 15, 2009

Long and Mini and More

Long

HeraldNet ran a pretty good article on Pittsburgh Pirate hitting coach Don Long.  The article starts off recapping how long caught half a bat upside his head last season.  After the gruesome details, the article goes on to recap his career and some great advice he received from Lee Elia.

BTW Take:

It is interesting to read how Long took Elia’s advice and has parlayed it into his every day coaching style.  Just reading how Bay reacted to him should explain why he is a good coach.

 

Mini

Dejan Kovacevic, over at the PG, is running some frequent updates from Pirates mini-camp.  He has been updating as need be, which seems to be at least three times a day.

A few highlights include Capps and Gorzy coming to mini-camp in excellent shape.  Maholm is shaping up to be the staff leader.  At least one LaRoche is hitting before June.  Moss took his first hacks in a cage after walking around all day like Pedro Cerano, Major League, with a bat in his hand.  Hopefully he was not cursing Jobu for not helping him hit breaking balls and hopefully no one sacrificed any live chickens.

BTW Take:

When Dejan took over the Pirates beat a couple years ago, I cringed.  I really did not enjoy his coverage of the Penguins.  Why?  I do not remember.  But as the Pirates beat writer, he has been fantastic and has really grown on me.  The guy seems to never sleep and it is fantastic actually getting so much Pirates info year round.  I always liked Paul Meyer, but Dejan is an old school baseball reporter.  I can imagine him in a hat with his press badge gnawing on a day old cigar.  Thanks DK, you truly are a bright spot for a desolate franchise.  The great thing, more than once I have seen on ESPN, and other large sites, references to the tireless Dejan Kovacevic.   Well done old chap.

More

There is an AP recap of some of the events of the owners meeting in Arizona.  The main focus of the article is a salary cap.

BTW Take:

There has been a huge call for a salary cap by many owners after the Yankees most recent spending spree.  Needless to say the large market teams don’t mind what the Yankees are doing, but the rest of the owners seem to be banding together on the topic.

 

Dig Doug

I’ve been trying to dig up some info on what is going on with Doug Mientkiewicz and the Pirates.  From what I have unearthed, it seems there was an un-official understanding with Greg Landry, Doug’s ex-agent, on what the Pirates terms would be and a general idea of what the contract offer would look like.  The Pirates are still interested in bringing Doug back, but, as Dejan reported, there does not seem to be a good fit between what Doug would like to have in playing time and what the Pirates can offer in terms of playing time.

Along the same lines, if the Pirates found a taker for Adam LaRoche and could get fair return, Doug and Steve Pearce would likely split time at first if terms could be reached with Mientkiewicz.  As of now, the Pirates have not been shopping LaRoche but a few teams have inquired loosely about his price tag.

 

Arbitration

All six players eligible for arbitration filed before the deadline.

January 13, 2009

Pirates That Win, Chris Peters

Pirates That Win

Tony Bender of  The Dickinson Press takes a backhanded slap at the Pirates.  His article called “Paying ransom encourages piracy” talks about Somali pirates and their attacks.  The following quote can be found in the article:

Pirate attacks are up by more than 100 from the previous years. It seems the pirates are winning everywhere except Pittsburgh.

BTW Take:

How embarrassing are these comments for a once proud franchise.  This is worse than being called hapless.  Comments like these take all the haps they may have earned, by Dejans count, over the last season.

Embarrassing.

 

Chris Peters

Congratulations to former Pirates pitcher Chris Peters, he was named pitching coach for the Point Park University baseball team.

BTW Take:

This is along the lines of a where are they now.  Peters pitched parts of 5 seasons for the Pirates from 1996 to 2000.  We have a tendency to follow what former Pirates do and how they make good after they leave the team.  Here is just one more name to follow.

January 7, 2009

Hairston Signs With Reds, Letter Fallout, Keeping Up With The Jones

Getting Hairy

Jerry Hairston Jr. has agreed to a one year $2M contract with the Reds.

BTW Take:

The Reds signing Hairston may take them off the market for Baldelli.  Right now it is speculated the Reds will use Hairston as their starting short stop until Gonzalez is ready to return.  If the Pirates are truly interested in Baldelli, his suitors are starting to dwindle.  As long as the Red Sox are still interested, the Pirates chances are slim unless they offer significantly more than Boston.

UPDATE 1:45:

Dejan has a story up at the PBC blog covering the Pirates pursuit of Baldelli tying the Hairston signing in.  Apparently the Baldelli suitors are down to 3.

 

A Fans Letter

The other day Dejan Kovacevic printed a letter he was copied on from a Pirates season ticket holder who canceled his season tickets.   The letter was published in the PBC Blog on the PG site.

Today there was a follow up with links to a few blogs that sounded off on the letter.  There were also many comments from PBC Blog readers on the topic.

BTW Take:

When I read the letter, I totally understood the fans reasoning.  I didn't find anything that would cause so much debate on the post. 

One other Pirates Blog, I will not name the blog because I can't find the post now, lambasted the PG and Dejan for running the letter on the website but not in the daily paper.  I think this was a misguided comment from the blogger since the blogs run on the PG site are not printed in the daily paper, to the best of my knowledge.  Living in Iowa I do not get to see the PG too often.

Inferring that the PG is running a cover up for the Nuttings is plain and simply asinine.  The last time I checked, the Nuttings did not run the Post Gazette.  While I don't always agree with Dejan, I do appreciate his candor and would love to have a chance to sit down and talk baseball with him some day.  Maybe hit him up for a five questions interview.

A comment in the follow up did strike a nerve to me.  The quote goes as follows:

I'm not surprised the blogosphere takes a stance contrary to what that disgruntled season ticket holder said.  They're blind loyalists who need to find some reason, any reason, to follow a team which insults a reasonable person's intelligence on a daily basis.

I am not going to defend other blogger's on this.  I will say I write this blog because I am a fan.  I enjoy Pittsburgh Pirates baseball.  Living in Iowa, I do not get to talk baseball, especially Pirates, with too many other knowledgeable people in the area.  I spend my spare time reading about the Pirates, visiting The Buccos Forum and listening to games on XM radio.

I have been a Pirates fan, a Pittsburgh fan in general since birth.  I was raised in Turtle Creek.  I bleed black and gold.  I do not do this with aspirations of being a journalist, I already have a full time profession.  I do this because I am a fan.

Over the years I have gathered some local contacts that have insight to the team.  I use this as a forum to pass on information I hear or what I am thinking.  I appreciate my contacts, as they are friends who occasionally get me a scoop before the real media lands a story.

I love the Pirates.  Bottom line. 

UPDATE 2:00

I found the link to the other Pirates blog.   Apologies to J  for forgetting who wrote it.

 

Keeping up with Jones

The Dodgers have agreed with Andruw Jones on a restructuring of his contract that will allow Jones to be traded or released and the Dodgers some financial wiggle room for the coming season.

BTW Take:

If Jones is released, he will only cost the team that signs him $400K.  I only mention this because so many Pirates fans seem to think trading for Jones would be a good idea.  I don't think so, I have felt he was overrated even when he was with Atlanta.  Somehow he was considered an all world center fielder.  I never saw that through my eyes.

 

Coonelly Chat:

At 2:00 PM today, Pirates.com is running a chat with rank Coonelly.  You can login/register here.

January 4, 2009

Salary Cap And More.

Many of the following links are courtesy of http://www.ballbug.com/:

 

Nady Out:

The Yankees are shopping Xavier Nady.  The Yankees have targeted two pitcher, Bronson Arroyo and Aaron Harang.  The Reds however are hesitant to trade either for a player set to be a free agent after 2009.

BTW Take:

The Pirates looked for prospects for Nady, and got a slew of mid-tier prospects and Jose Tabata.  The Yankees are looking for established starting pitching in return.  Don't look for the Pirates to be in the discussion, unless Duke can land Nady or Nady is released from pinstripes.  It is kind of funny how the economics of baseball works.  The Yankees buy, buy, buy while other teams try to build from within.  The only need the Yankees have for a farm system is so they have players to trade that do not make $20M a season.

It is hard for me not to expect MLB to confront the union in 2011 for a salary cap.

 

Segway...

 

Salary Cap:

In the PG's Hot Stove Report Dejan states what seems the obvious.  The Pirates are in favor of a salary cap.  Coonelly is quoted in the article.

BTW Take:

See, told ya so...

 

Losing Chic?:

Squawking Baseball has a nice piece up entitled "Has Losing Become Chic?"

BTW Take:

Interestingly enough, the Pirates are a key portion of the article, as well as the Devil Rays.  They make a good point of having to be bad to be good in smaller markets.  I don't necessarily agree.  After 16 seasons of losing the Pirates should already have started a decade of dominance rather than another rebuilding project.

 

The Buccos Forum:

We have a few good discussion topics started at The Buccos Forum

First is a discussion on what Pirate players could be sleepers.  My three players I see as being potential break through players are Walker, Bixler and Salazar.  Drop in and give your opinions.

The second topic is on who the odd man out will be between Moss and Morgan.  There is a poll involved in the discussion, so make sure you vote and defend your decision.  I wish there was a choice for both being the odd man out, but my selection is Morgan.  The only reason I can see him getting a significant amount of playing time would be to showcase him in an eventual trade.  Hopefully he can hit enough to outshine his poor angles he takes on defense.  His speed is enticing, until he runs and slides past the bag.  Also, I see the Pirates making a major play at Baldelli with McCutchen getting an early season call up.  Likely that sends Moss to the bench and Morgan back to Indianapolis. 

December 12, 2008

Winter Meeting Recap

Thanks to a wonderful site called Woot I have been sidetracked from writing.  Woot was kind enough to have a 3 day Woot-off during the Winter meetings.  Sorry people, my geek life takes precedence occasionally.

Now, onto the recap.

No Mo Ro Pa:

The Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies swapped catchers.  Ronnie Paulino was sent to the Phillies for a return of Jason Jaramillo.

BTW Take:

Looking at stats alone, it seems Jaramillo has a better eye in the minors based on his walk numbers alone.  Beyond walks, there minor league stats aren't much different. 

The sad think for Ronnie, he went from being a backup catcher to Ryan Doumit to potentially being blocked by Carlos Ruiz and Lou Marson.  People seem to think Paulino is a good hitting catcher.  He never showed a .310 average was in him while playing in the minors.  Remember it took a few injuries to even get a shot in Pittsburgh. 

He was praised for his handling of pitchers, but his defense was lousy and his offense came back to earth after his fluke of a .310 season as a rookie.  A .280 minor league hitter does not turn into a .310 MLB hitter.  Paulino also earned a tag of being lazy, whether he deserved that tag or not is something you can decide.

Jaramillo was considered a top prospect not long ago.  He is only a year younger than Paulino.  This seems to be a trade to grant Paulino his wish of a trade while getting a player back that Russell has managed in the past and was very high on.  More or less, a slacker for a hard worked.

 

Rule 5:

The Pittsburgh Pirates took Donnie Veal in the MLB portion of the Rule 5 draft.

In the Minor League portion, the Pirates did something unusual, grabbing players from the Latin Summer Leagues.  The players taken in the Minor League portion are Andres Santos ( 22, New York Yankees) Rafael Quintero (21, Cleveland Indians), Gerardo Esparza (21, Seattle Mariners). The first two were in the DSL, Esparza in Venezuela.

BTW Take:

Veal seems to be a solid pickup.  He has had some tough times over the last 3 years off the diamond.  If he can get his game together, this guy could be a steal.  I found this article on his personal problems over the last 3 years.  He lost both his parents, his mother to cancer and his father to a diving accident.

The minor league pickups I have not found much on, but the fact the Pirates went outside the norm makes these moves even more impressive in a creative kind of way.  Dejan has a nice little write up on this in the PBC Blog, the 6:05 update.

 

Free Agent Signing:

The Pirates are on the verge of signing a 2 year contract with Ramon Vazquez. 

BTW Take:

Everyone seems to think this is a precursor to a Jack Wilson or Freddy Sanchez trade.  I have my doubts.  This has the smell of a move to have an additional option if Andy LaRoche or Neil Walker can't take the Hot Corner.  Vazquez could play third or Freddy could move back to third if both prospects fail to make the grade.  Vazquez has played 255 games at third.

Just because rumors swirl about a Wilson trade doesn't make Vazquez the next shortstop.

 

Bixler a Marlin?:

Rumors swirl about the Marlins being interested in Brian Bixler.

BTW Take:

I'd hate to see Bixler go.  I had the opportunity to see Bixler play in College.  If you asked me to give a CHP (Can He Play) rating, I would say he can play.  I think he struggled with the initial call up.  Don't be surprised if he doesn't perform worlds better in his next call up.

 

McCutchen To Pittsburgh:

In one of Huntington's press meetings, he made a statement McCutchen will "likely" be on the MLB roster sometime in 2009.

BTW Take:

I am anxious to see what he can do.

 

The BIG News:

The Pirates are in discussions to sign extensions with Maholm, McLouth and Doumit.

BTW Take:

McLouth and Maholm make sense.  Doumit scares me with his injury history.  Last season he stayed mostly healthy, but I'd like to see him do it again before dropping a long term deal on him.

August 19, 2008

PR Machine Backlash

I have received some heat, and some agreement, for my Pedro The PR Machine post.  Thanks to Dejan at the PG and Pat at WHYGAVS for the links.  Thanks to anyone else who felt the need to drop a link to the post at their sites as well.

Rather than make comment after comment in the comment section, I wanted to address each comment received so far in a single post.  Some people don't venture into the comment area and there were some very good comments that I want to be seen.  I love the interaction part of blogging, it keeps things interesting and it is always nice to hear what others think.  I really appreciate so many people read what a "Village Idiot" like myself has to say.

Now on to my replies:

matt in dc said...

    What would you have had them do? Not sign him to prove a point?
BTW:

That would be ironic if he was not signed. 

Nowhere in my heart do I believe Nutting had nothing to do with Alvarez being chosen in the draft.  I do believe Frank Coonelly and Neil Huntington have done a fantastic job in a short time of restocking the barren farm system.  They also did a great job in being creative in their draft strategy and aggressiveness in spending the cash allowed them, especially on the unsignable players. 

However, the post was about Nutting and the rest of the ownership group.  They do deserve some praise for bringing in Coonelly, one right move in over a decade does not make up for the sins of the past.

By not signing him, Nutting would not have proved a point, but lost even more respect from the Pirates fans.  Alvarez was going to be signed no matter what.  The team, more directly the ownership, would not have been able to survive the backlash from the fans if he was not signed.  The fear of pitchforks and torches could be felt all the way here in Iowa.


Anonymous said...

    Not that a big Nutting fan, but give him the benefit of the doubt for now. FWIW, the Nutting era shouldn't start until the McClatchey era ended a couple off-seasons ago. And don't forget: the Galbreath era started off with what until the last 16 seasons was the worst era for the PBC (1946 - 1957), but then they put up 3 NL/World Series champs and 6 NL titles in 20 years.

BTW:

From where I stand, the Nuttings have been part of the ownership group for many years.  They collectively had as much say as anyone in making financial decisions and the selection of general managers.  This era should still be considered one and the same from an ownership standpoint.  The same group owns the Pirates only the figurehead has changed.

I won't pretend to know much about 1946-1957 ( My parents were barely a twinkle in their parents eye's when that era started) , so I will not comment on that until I can do appropriate research, maybe an off-season post?

 

billykidd said...

    While I have to agree with you on the past it has been shown almost 10 Millon times in the past few weeks with the signings with the new management team of FC and NH that there is a renewed commitment to the PBC. Mistakes were made money wasted and in some cases not spent eg Weiters in the past. While I admit that the Nuttings write the checks they also placed trust in THEIR management team of McClatchy, Littlefield, Tracy to provide the best possible information as to how, when and on whom to spend that money. I would like to think as do many other PBC fans that after 15 years this new management team finally is giving the best information to Mr. Nutting. Will it lead to a WS in 1 or 2 years probably not, but you have to start building a foundation sometime and that management and Mr. Nutting has given the fans nearly TEN MILLION reasons and 32 of 50 picks to give him another chance/benefit of the doubt to belive he is willing to try and place a winning product on the field.

BTW:

Not much to debate with you here billy, or do you prefer Mr. the kidd? (a bad Bill and Ted reference)

Coonelly makes the baseball decisions, he is also the best move this ownership group has made.  Nutting runs the financial/business side of the club.

While the Pirates spent in the $10M range, so did the Red Sox.   It is difficult to make up ground on the big boys when they spend as much or more in the one place the playing field is level.

   
billykidd said...

    @Matt in DC---What would you have had them do? Not sign him to prove a point?

    Excellent point. It is unfortunate that there will always and forever be naysayers and uneducated people offering opinions that try to fan the fires of thier own negativity.

    It seems no matter what this management team does or does not do short of digging up the corpses of the past Pirates heroes will the few village idiots be happy.

    FC and NH were took over a machine that operated broken for 15 years. There was a belief when they left Bradenton that the pitching was to be far better than it has proven to be. The hitting proved to be better than expected but in order to have something to build from after it was evident that the machine was not fixed (they broke Bradenton with largely the same team from the previous year)and the minors did not have the quality replacements necessary to field a competitive team decisions were made a la Bay Nady Marte. Then nearly 10M was spent on trying to make LONG TERM improvements.

    I have always said bring the solution not the problem..

    I have followed this team since I was 5 years of age in 1968. Am I depressed/upset about the losing? You damn right I am. They are working with what they have been handed. Village idiots like Dave would still find something to cry about if the Nuttings spent like the Yanks or RSox.

    Yo DAVE What is your solution???!!!
    Other than crying about the past. You big sissy.

    Hey Matt--thanks for gettingme fired up. NOT!

BTW:

Village idiot and sissy.  Wow.  Thanks for the compliments.  Apparently I have somehow struck a nerve.

I will take an assumption here and say you do not regularly read the site.  I have praised Huntington and Coonelly on many occasions, most notably the trade deadline moves.  I think their vision is the right one for this team, I am not into a short term fix.  This post was about ownership, not management.

Would I be happy if the team was run like the BoSox?  Actually yes.  They have a franchise that has built itself from the bottom up over an extended period of time.  They have made the free agent signings when it was the right time to make that signing.  They have traded to fill needs.

Would I want to have a team like the Yankees?  Honestly no.  They spend with no regard to the game.  They have an unfair advantage on the rest of the league by having the financial means to have whatever they want whenever they want it.  I really enjoyed seeing them not being able to sign their first round draft choice.  Even more, I enjoy seeing their payroll struggle and not get the title they and their fans feel it is their right to win.

I would not want my team to carry that burden of hate.

I understand you don't build Rome in a day.  I understand the rebuilding of a barren farm system will take time.  This ownership group has played a huge part in taking 16 years to finally lay a foundation for Rome to be built on.

My solution...Nutting and the ownership must either stay the course they have started backing Huntington and Coonelly and saint both Huntington and Coonelly or sell the team to someone who wants to have a successful sports franchise in Pittsburgh.  I have no faith in this ownership group to do what is right.  I do have all the faith in the world that Coonelly and Huntington will make what they believe is the correct baseball moves, unlike Littlefield and Bonifay who had absolutely no plan nor direction.

 

Jer said...

    You're right. This is one draft. We need about two or three more just like this, then we'll know that Nutting is really as committed to wining as he said he is. I'm willing to compliment Nutting and them for getting Pedro, but it's not over, as far as I'm concerned. It's a good beginning, but they still have a lot of work to do.

BTW:

One for 16 is a bad slump or a pitiful football team, see Dolphins.  The question remains, is this one a slumpbuster or gork?  If we can get to 4 for 20, then we are at least at the Mendoza line.  Huntington and Coonelly have made a good start and are making a nice tandem.

 

Anonymous said...

    Wasn't just one big investment. Alvarez was only 2/3 of the total in bonuses. And, look at the DR academy.
    Owner of the year? No. Changed man? Yes.

    Will this assure us a winner? No. But, it's a huge step in the right direction.

BTW:

Ten million plus the four million for the Dominican Academy are easily covered by the revenue sharing baseball has instituted.  I should have been clearer in saying Alvarez is the face of the PR move.  The DR Academy was a step in the right direction, but there is no reason it has taken this long to take that step.

The improvement in Latin America is a nice step forward also.  Although that did start before Coonelly arrived with Gato being assigned by the previous regime.

I don't buy the changed man.  He is a business man that knows he must invest a little if he wants to at least maintain interest in his product.  What Nutting has authorized is nothing out of the profit Forbes magazine claims the Pirates have made in recent years.  Building the DR facility, investing in talent with other people's money (revenue sharing) are quick ways to get the fans to believe they are willing to sink money into improving the product without having to prove it in the short term.

When this team is legitimately on the brink of something big and the team goes out after that one key piece to finish the puzzle.  That is when I will believe this ownership group wants to win.  Coonelly and Huntington can get them to the point ownership will need to make an investment in Major League talent.  That is the litmus stick to see if Nutting and clan want to win or just want to stay the course as owners.

Scott said...

    This is a silly post. In fact, you defeat your own argument: Why would someone who is a penny pincher pay $6 million just so people would like him? How does that make sense?

    The fact is things have changed bigtime since Bob Nutting put himself forward last year as the principal owner and guy in charge. He's brought in new front office leadership, and the entire way they do business has changed.

    If you're still cynical about that, why would you even bother to follow the Pirates anymore?

BTW:

Why does a politician make promises he will never or could never keep?  To get elected.

Why does a business owner invest in his company?  To make a profit.

Why would a penny pincher pay $6M?  PR.  If he wants to maintain any interest in this team there needs to be a future to look to.  Alvarez, Miller etc. represents that future.

Littlefield had to go.  McClatchy could take no more of being the scapegoat.  Coonelly was the best option available.  I will give credit to ownership for bringing in a baseball mind in Coonelly.  As I said earlier, this is the one correct move this ownership group has ever made.  Since this group has owned the Pirates, I feared their only right decision would be to sell.

Why am I still a fan?  I love baseball.  I have loved the Pirates since I was 5 in the mid 70's. 

I loved the feeling of going to the World Series in 79. 

I loved the day Tony Pena was called to the major league roster refusing to sign autographs for anyone until a 10 year old geek with glasses yelled his name correctly and he walked over and gave the autograph.  All of the sudden everyone along that railing on the first base line at Three Rivers Stadium said Pena correctly and all received an autograph.

Pops.

Bonds, Van Slyke, Bonilla, Spanky and the rest of the early 90's.

The Freak Show.

Green Weenies.

The Gunner.

No Doubt About It.

Someday, hopefully soon, the Pirates will no longer be a joke on Sports Center.  Someday Dejan will not have to count haps.  Someday the Pirates will be the scourge of the diamond again.  I would not miss that day for anything.

 

Conclusion:

One point I did not get to make in reply to any of the comments.  Most of the scouting staff is still in place from the previous reign of terror known as the Dave Littlefield Era.  I doubt they have got better at scouting overnight.  I still have a hard time to believe DL was so ignorant that he thought Moskos was a better pick the Wieters.  DL had to have someone breathing down his neck at that point.  Then again, DL made a deal for Morris so he could be a complete moron. 

Regardless, when it was said Moskos was a baseball decision not a monetary decision, I just can't buy that in any shape or form.  No one drafts a reliever in the first 5 picks of any draft except in a roto league that gives bonus points for most saves.  Someone had to whisper save some money and get a signable pick.  If not, he should have been fired before the second round.

 

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August 1, 2008

More Thanks

A couple "Thanks" I forgot last night:
The guys over at MVN.com had a fantastic live blog. Excellent job guys.

Also, a "Thanks" goes out to Dejan Kovacevic who did a fantastic job on two levels.
One, bringing down the Post-Gazettes servers. I received a lot of traffic thanks to that.

Two, having outstanding coverage.

Those were the two sites I watched the most.

As a side note, I rarely use Dejan's last name. Not out of arrogence or disrepect but more out of fear of hacking it too badly. Sorry DK.