Thursday, January 11, 2007

Sammy Sosa to Japan? Do it!

588 HRs, 7 All-Star appearances, 6 Silver Sluggers, and his numbers compare to these Hall of Famers (and future Hall of Famers):
  1. Ken Griffey (902)
  2. Mike Schmidt (868) *
  3. Harmon Killebrew (854) *
  4. Willie Stargell (844) *
  5. Eddie Mathews (839) *
  6. Willie McCovey (838) *
  7. Mickey Mantle (835) *
  8. Gary Sheffield (832)
  9. Fred McGriff (805)
  10. Reggie Jackson (803) *
However, in a matter of 3 years, one corked bat, one "extremely violent sneeze", one "no speak Ingles" speech in Congress, and one off-season supposedly to rid his body of steroids (which promptly lead him to hit .221 and 14 HRs for the Orioles) later, Sammy Sosa is in the middle of a mess that he mostly created through his mistakes.

A player with 588 HRs in the times of yesteryear would be inducted in the Hall of Fame without any shadow of a doubt. However, with the cloud hovering over the Steroid Era of baseball, players like Barry Bonds and Sammy Sosa had their Hall of Fame aspirations crushed just a little bit with Mark McGwire's 1st year rejection into the Hall of Fame this week. Many baseball analysts have offered suggestions on how McGwire should repair his image in baseball. Some offered a suggestion of a public apology. Some suggested that he does nothing. Some even suggest that McGwire does not follow Barry Bonds' guide on "How To Deal with Steroid Allegations".

Due to the 1998 Chasing-Maris Home Run chase, Sammy Sosa will always be tied to Mark McGwire in baseball history. However, their abysmal speeches in front of Congress also tie them together in the steroids controversy. Sosa's massive drop in HRs, Batting Average, and OPS from 2001 to 2005 also illustrate the increased wear-and-tear effects that improper use of steroids can provide on the human body. Because of the connections and his alleged use of steroids, Sammy Sosa's image in baseball is as stained as McGwire's image. If Sammy Sosa does not play another game in the MLB, he will be up for induction to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2011.

Though Sosa wants to play in the MLB, there have been no rumors about any MLB team being interested in him. Notice the initials MLB in the last sentence. According to an article in the Sunday's Japan Times, the Yokohoma BayStars are interested in acquiring Sammy Sosa on a one year, 4.2 million dollar contract. Converted to yen, Sammy Sosa would be paid 500 million yen. Basically, Sammy Sosa will be paid his salary from the mid-1990s (1995: $4.3 million) to play one full year in the Japanese League.

According to the Japan Baseball Daily, an unnamed official from the BayStars have denied the Sosa offer to the point of calling out Sosa's agent, stating that the agent was trying to "perpetrate fraud" on the BayStars' organization. Whether the offer was made or not, the Sammy Sosa Japanese League offer brings up a very interesting thought. It's an interesting thought that has been brought to the forefront because of one man: David Beckham.

Not unlike Pelé and Beckenbauer with the Cosmos, David Beckham will be joining the LA Galaxy in the MLS for 5 yrs/up to 250 million dollars. The choice of the LA Galaxy was a very deliberate decision by Beckham for two reasons: fame and money.

Beckham is arguably the most marketable soccer player with a movie named after him ('Bend It Like Beckham', good movie, I must say). What does Los Angeles have that no other team (not even the New York Red Bulls) have? Hollywood. The Stars of Fame. The lights. The celebrities. Movies. Any need to continue? Beckham will instantly be immersed into the Hollywood crowd. The man will be wining and dining with the Hollywood crowd. The only difference is that he won't have to do it across the Atlantic Ocean.

There have been questions made about Beckham's health and whether he is "over the hill" at age 31. However, to think that a league signing arguably the most marketable soccer player world-wide is a bad move is illogical, at best. David Beckham will get his fame and money from the MLS and being amongst the celebrities in Hollywood. The MLS will sell out games and increase recognition across the world and amongst American and non-American soccer players worldwide.

Why do I bring Beckham up? The one thing I have seen in my lifetime is the influence American culture has on world-wide culture, especially in Japan. As the years go on, the trade-off of American and Japanese culture has been huge. Americans are becoming immersed in anime, Japanese import video games, and the popular launch and sale of the Wii. The Japanese have immersed themselves into American culture on the lines of music, advertisements, food, and yes, baseball.

I'm not bringing up baseball to bring up the American examples of Ichiro and Hideki Matsui's success here, though Alfonso Soriano and Cecil Fielder are the best examples you can make for that. I'm talking about the reverse: bringing an American at the end of his career to Japan to play baseball. Sprinkled in Japanese baseball are the Benny Agbayanis and Andy Sheets of the baseball world: mediocre players who are trying to make a name in Japanese baseball. Suggesting that Sammy Sosa should play Japanese baseball isn't grouping him in the same category as Benny Agbayani and Andy Sheets because, steroids or not, Sammy Sosa had a career that was better than mediocre on all accounts.

Sammy Sosa playing Japanese baseball would be the best move for him for two reasons:

1. Fame and money: Two words - Bob Sapp. A man who failed numerous steroid tests in the NFL got a new start in Japan. He got so much of a start that he has done numerous advertisements and have appeared on many Japanese TV shows. His fame has gotten to the point where he released a CD! To have enough fame to release a CD based on your name is Shaq-like! I would say Paris-Hilton-like, but Shaq and Sapp had to earn their fame. Sapp has achieved enough fame and money in Japan to come back to the United States and appear on Real Sports as well as the movie remake "The Longest Yard."

What does Bob Sapp's example have to do with Sammy Sosa? The unnamed official from the BayStars does not have an idea what he is talking about. It would seem hypocritical in the least bit for an entire country to embrace Bob Sapp, though he has been a proven ex-steroid user, and yet, shun Sammy Sosa. It seems ridiclous for an unnamed official from the BayStars speaks for the entire country of Japan. If Sammy Sosa wanted to go to Japan, a Japanese team would be more than happy to sign him.

Sammy's a likable guy. He has that million-dollar smile and Hispanic charm that got America to love him in 1998 during the Maris Chase. The media friendly charms and whims that Sammy Sosa processes can be used to perfection in Japan. If he played his cards right, Sammy could be as big of a name as Bob Sapp. He's got the charm, the stats, and the stature that can captivate Japanese audiences with his bat and he can make lots of money as well.

However, Sosa has one goal and one goal only. What he may not know is that he may have a better shot at achieving that goal in Japan.

2. Sammy's goal - a possible second shot at the MLB: Excluding Julio Franco (because the man's godly with his endurance), let's look at 2 mini-success stories of players who have played in the MLB, went to Japan, and got back into the MLB: Tony Batista and Eduardo Perez.

Tony Batista: The link that is provided in his name is a clip of him scaring the crap out of a Japanese pitcher after he got hit with the pitch. Apparently, hitting .263 with 27 HRs and 90 RBIs scared enough Japanese pitchers for a major league team to take a second look at him and bring him back. The Twins signed Tony Batista in March of 2006 for a 2nd MLB campaign. Though he got released again after going .236 with 5 HRs and 21 RBIs in 178 At-Bats, he got the second shot he wanted and earned.

Eduardo Perez: The hit-by-pitch object of Randy Johnson's small rise to Yankee pinstripes last year, Perez took a year off in 2001 from the MLB to try his hand in the Japanese League and to earn a consistent starting role in the majors. His stats in Japan were terrible, to say the least: .222 with 3 HRs and 19 RBIs in 52 games and 167 At-bats, but he got more consistent play in 2002 and 2003 on the St. Louis Cardinals. He has had an up-and-down career, but he viewed Japanese baseball as a solution, a solution Sammy Sosa should take on.

Do I think Sammy Sosa should play in Japan for a year? Absolutely. Will he? I don't think he will. He is too stubborn to accept that no major league team will take him at this point. If he can prove to play healthy and to put up good numbers in Japan, he can open some of those teams' eyes. At this point, however, he is viewed as opening more Big Macs and Whoppers than the eyes of the MLB.

Sammy, listen to me: go to Japan. Make some money. Get some fame. Hit some home runs. This may be your last shot, Sammy. Go to Japan and get yourself back to the MLB. Heck, it may help you when the Hall of Fame is considered. Just... don't goof up in Japan and go Joe Pepitone on us, ok?

Happy reading!

B(rent)

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Zito... what to say?

Well... Merry (belated) Christ-mas, Happy New Year, etc etc... you get the point, I'm finished with finals and I'm on break until mid-January, so maybe I can actually update this blog on a regular basis...

Anyway, there has been a lot of things going on lately... for starters, in a recent chat (linked to me by NoMaas.org), Baseball America's Jim Callis ranks the Yankees' farm system as #6 in the majors... can I get a BOO-YAH? :-)

For more celebrations, this goes out to the Met-haters and for the Yankee fans who enjoy and relish in the inter-league rivalry... Barry Zito, who people have inaccurately linked to the Yankees (especially with the trade talks of the Big Unit), doesn't sign with the Mets... but instead...

From ESPN:

Barry Zito is staying in the Bay Area with the San Francisco Giants.

Sources told ESPN's Peter Gammons that the former Oakland A's pitcher has agreed to a seven-year, $126 million contract with the Giants.Barry Zito

The deal includes an $18 million option for 2014 and a complete no-trade clause, a source told ESPN.com's Jerry Crasnick.

If Zito pitches 600 innings over the last three years of the agreement, 400 innings over the last two or 200 in the final year of the deal, he can either exercise a player option or opt out of the contract.

Zito is scheduled to have a physical Friday, and the Giants planned to announce their agreement with the three-time All-Star later in the day.

Zito's deal ties for the sixth largest overall, matching the $126 million, seven-year extension agreed to this month by Toronto and center fielder Vernon Wells. Previously, the largest contract for a pitcher was Mike Hampton's $121 million, eight-year deal with the Colorado Rockies before the 2001 season.

Texas, Seattle and the New York Mets also pursued Zito, the top available pitcher on the free-agent market. The 28-year-old left-hander spent the last seven seasons across San Francisco Bay pitching with the Oakland Athletics, and staying in the area appeared to be a factor in his decision.

What is there to say about this?

1. The Mets don't get him, leaving them without a dominant pitcher and hurting them greatly...

2. It gets him out of the AL... though he never bothered the Yankees much (last 3 years: 1-5 with a 7.01 ERA)...

3. Zito receives the biggest deal for a pitcher ever... not Webb, not Wang, not Halliday, not even Santana... but Barry Zito receives the biggest deal for a pitcher...

I know the deals that other pitchers got (including Meche to the Royals), but this is rather ridiculous... 18 million a year for seven years...

Steve (from WasWatching) thought an accurate and fair offer from the Yankees for Zito would be: 3 yr/$48 mil with a club-option for a 4th year...

Personally, I would have given (the most from any team) 17 million per year for 5 years, giving him 85 million for 5 years... but Barry Zito (and Boras, mostly) cashed in on a shallow free agent market and cashed in big...

If Barry Zito got this much, imagine what Carlos Zambrano will get next year in the free agent market... the money will only go up and it will continue going up for years to come... will we see another 250 million deal (ala Alex Rodriguez) in the next few years?

With the way things are going now, there is no doubt in my mind that we will... I just hope the Yankees won't offer the 250 million dollars... unless Philip Hughes is the second coming of Jesus Christ... I mean, Roger Clemens...

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As a small New Years' resolution, I'm trying for shorter and more frequent posts in this blog... we'll see what happens...

Happy reading! And happy ending to your 2006! :-)

B(rent)

*****

P.S.: EJ (formerly from the Fire Joe Torre blog) has a new fantastic blog up called Pinstripe Potentials... some of my analysis and looks at potential prospects come from the comprehensive scouting profiles from EJ, and what he provides is a priceless resource for almost less than nothing... :-P, check it out when you get a chance!

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

As finals finish up, I will be back...

In a few days, but until then, Yankees 2000 has an excellent interview with Alex Belth, writer of Bronx Banter... I'll just copy and paste some of my favorite segments for views... (thanks to Steve... again...):

Y2K: Mets fans are convinced that a sizeable majority of Yankee fans are fake somehow, that they don’t really care, that they’re fans for social reasons. Do you find this criticism is justified?

Belth: Well, definitely on some level, but look, New York is a front-running town by nature. Yeah, we have great, loyal fans too. But let’s not kid ourselves, there’s lots of bandwagon cats here. In the 80s all those people were out at Shea because the Mets were winning. Now they’re Yankee fans.

The fact is that one of the things that a true, rational, decent-minded Yankee fan has to deal with is a segment of people who are totally spoiled by success. The owner [George Steinbrenner] has always tried to preach this entitled to win attitude, and because they’ve won so much, the fans have picked that up.
Y2K: What do you think the Yankee teams of the past 6 years have been missing that those late '90s teams had?

Belth: Luck. Some of that is luck that they created. They had a collective personality in the late '90s that was extremely driven; there were a lot of red asses on that team – competitive, self-motivated guys, guys who were opportunistic grinders.
When I come back, I will probably adapt a new blogging style... in order to make the blog more about the reader, I will write about comments I get and throw them up (with my answers) in the next blog post...

With that said, the comment I got from the Pettitte post will come along with my thoughts about the Igawa deal and the (hopefully dead) talks about the Melky/Gonzalez trade...

Thank you for the patience, and I will be back... heck, what else am I gonna do the next 4 weeks of break? Sleep?

Happy reading!

B(rent)

Friday, December 08, 2006

Andy Pettitte's back... :-)

From ESPN:

Many thought Andy Pettitte should have never left New York. It looks like that issue has been rectified.

Andy Pettitte
Pettitte

The left-hander and the Yankees have reached an agreement on a one-year deal that will pay him $16 million in 2007 with a player option for 2008, sources close to the negotiations told ESPN The Magazine's Buster Olney on Friday.

The player option for 2008 is also at $16 million. Pettitte must pass a physical for the agreement to be finalized.

Let me be somewhat realistic for a second: Pettitte's a tough dude who can pitch pretty good even with elbow pain... but he's getting old, and 16 million is quite a bit, overpassing the Astro's rumored 10 million a year deal...

But enough about that: A couple of million is a price to pay to rectify a terrible mistake and to bring back a fan favorite, enough said...

I'm very excited for this, but what bout Clemens? Will he join his best friend on the Yankees? Does Clemens still wanna win a World Series? Will he make the commitment?

Time will tell, and of course, it will be reported...

Yankee fans everywhere, drink and be merry, for tomorrow... we'll... uh... still be happy?!?!? :-D!

Happy reading... and rejoicing!

B(rent)

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P.S.: Join my campaign to elect Craig Wilson as our right-handed 1st baseman! :-P



















^ Thank you Nomaas for the inspiration from a year ago with their Kevin Thompson for 4th Outfielder campaign... :-)

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Wilson > Hillenbrand > Phillips Part 2...


Ok, guys, I posted about why we should go with Craig Wilson a few posts ago, but due to comments left on the big (and my opinion, more moronic) Yankee group on MySpace, I decided to revisit why I want Craig Wilson for the 1st base job...

In the Craig Wilson post of the past, I showed the hitting splits... but let's talk about two more things: worries and defense...

Worries? I'll address it from this link (almost a direct copy and paste):

Some random guy posted a reply to my major Wilson points like this:
George "the man" Corsi wrote:

we need a everyday firstbaseman, we dont need sum1 who can play everything, bc thats wat a backup infielder is for, to play when problems arise. Wilson bats the complete opposite of the Yankee idea, look for ur pitch, or take a walk. And he's too old to change that now, u either hav or dont hav an eye for the ball, which wilson doesn't
Aside from the silly grammar and spelling mistakes, he seriously made ridiculous points, so I responded as such with this:

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A few things...

1. Are you serious? Wilson is "too old" to change his approach of hitting?

Ok, let me give you examples of players who have tried to change their approach in their playing... and are older than 30 years old?

Remember Randy Johnson? Yea, when he was slumping last year, what did he do? He asked Guidry for help, he put his pride down, he let himself be taught and be given advice, and he changed his release point in order to garner better results...

Let's use another example: Mr. A-Rod himself... he was slumping and striking out (more than Wilson, actually), and guess what he does? He asks Mattingly for help! He put his pride down and he asked for help... he asked for help and he did his best to put his pride down and to change his approach...

To say that people are "too old" to change something that's not working is ridiculous... players are constantly trying to get better... to say that he's "too old" to change and take advice is not only ridiculous, it's inaccurate...

2. Do you really think that Wilson, after playing on a shit-hole of a team for a couple of years, wouldn't change things so he can play better for the Yankees? Think about what you're saying before you say it...

If you can show me that Craig Wilson is a stubborn ass who wouldn't take advice from Kevin Long or any of the other coaches next year, then I'd agree with you, but until then, source your words...

and 3. For all the Phillips lovers in here, can anyone in here prove to me that Phillips is a better defender than Wilson even though Wilson has had more experience at 1b? And even with that said...

Wilson played 588 innings at 1B last year with the Pirates and Yankees... he allowed 3 errors...

Phillips played 533 innings at 1B last year with the Yankees... he allowed 7 errors...

So more innings and less errors... if you wanna use basics, that's pretty basic for you on who's the better defender...

Shea: 597 innings, 3 errors as well... so if you wanna use those, Shea's as good of a defender as Wilson, and yet, Wilson kills lefties better than Shea, which is why the Yankees are pursuing a RH 1st baseman, right? To do what Giambi can't do: hit lefties and actually play 1B well...

Now, if you want me to get into Zone ratings, and show why (career-wise) Wilson has been a much better defender at 1st base than Shea, then, ask me and I will...

But seriously, if you wanna come with what you said, but give me some sources to show me that Wilson's a stubborn ass who won't take direction... because, apparently, all the Yankees aren't that stubborn... :-)

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You know what's worse than an "angry blogger", as Jay Marriotti once called us on an "Around the Horn" episode? Idiots on MySpace who don't use the education they supposedly get at school, and apply it in their writings...

*sighs* Thank God I never thought about being an English teacher...

Speaking of defense, I want to address the Zone Rating of both Shea and Wilson...

What is Zone Rating? Though a more detailed description is linked in here, a Zone Rating is the percentage rate of balls fielded by a player in his typical defensive "zone"... though it has been viewed as a "flawed" defensive statistic, it tracks a player's defensive value better than fielding percentage and errors can...

With that said, let's compare career Zone Ratings for Shea and Wilson, provided by ESPN.com...

Shea Hillenbrand: 2971.2 innings for a rating of .829 (27 errors)
Craig Wilson: 1823.2 innings for a rating of .842 (14 errors)

Due to Craig Wilson's flexibility of being able to play left field, right field and catcher, he hasn't played as many innings as Shea has... but the numbers show that Wilson has a better ability to catch more balls in his "zone" than Shea can...

Defensively, offensively, and logically, Craig Wilson is a better overall option to play 1st base than Shea Hillenbrand and Andy Phillips, no doubt about it...

Will the Yankees follow this philosophy?

We'll soon find out...

Happy reading!

B(rent)