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April 19, 2011

Crawford And Sox Take Hot Streak to Oakland

Carl Crawford snapped an 0-for-15 skid with his sixth inning double off the Wall yesterday. Crawford also hit the ball well in his at-bats both before and after the double, flying to the warning track in left and nearly beating out a hard ground ball that second baseman John McDonald fielded bare-handed.
That [double] definitely will make the six hours a little easier to deal with. ... Every day, I feel like I'm about to break out of it, but it doesn't happen as fast as I want. I feel like it's going to get better, though.
SoSH's Mark Brown posted some info showing that Crawford has had a slow start in four of the last six seasons, though 2011 has been especially bad.

Daisuke Matsuzaka's gem was the first game since Jon Lester's no-hitter (May 19, 2008) in which a Boston starter went 7+ innings and allowed two or fewer base runners. ... Terry Francona went to the bullpen even though Dice had thrown only 89 pitches because of his low pitch count (47) in his previous start.

Kevin Youkilis:
The one thing that was a little shocking is before the game he got booed. It's funny how he came off the field and everyone was cheering. It's kind of foot-in-the-mouth right there.
J.D. Drew began the Red Sox's first inning with a triple. According to the Herald's Ian Rapoport: "The last time the Sox had a triple to lead off the game, it was by Drew last June 27." While Drew did triple in that game, the hit came in the sixth inning and Drew was in the sixth spot in the lineup. (I believe Rapoport is referring to Boston's game on June 29, 2009.)

Marco Scutaro accepts, the likelihood of increased bench time.
It's special being on a winning team. Being on a losing team is no fun at all. Right now, [Terry Francona] is just trying to put the best guys out there to win games. ... You don't have to [talk to the manager] to understand what's going on.
Matt Albers is scheduled to make a second rehab appearance (right latissimus strain) for Pawtucket tonight and then rejoin the Red Sox, possible in Anaheim on Thursday.
Example
In the wake of Yankee reliever Pedro Feliciano suffering a (likely) season-ending tear in his shoulder, Brian Cashman admitted last Thursday that he often went behind Joe Torre's back to try and prevent his relief pitchers from being overused and put at a greater risk for injury.

Cashman said that Torre or his pitching coach would ask relievers if they felt good to pitch that day, and if the pitcher said yes, then he was available. Cashman did not endorse this approach:
You have to understand these players are competitors. They're never going to say no. ... I met with [Scott] Proctor and said, "You better stop telling the manager this because the way he manages" - I'm not criticizing Joe, that's just the way he is - "he wants an honest answer. Just tell him no." ...

[I told Joe that you] have to have the knowledge enough to know that you've got to back off this guy, because he won't be honest with you, he'll lie to you even if he's dragging knuckles. So I met with those individual players and said, "You are hurting your career." ...

If you want to confirm to see I'm full of it, you can check with our former manager, you can check with our former pitching coach, you can check with those players, I don't really care. That's what happened.
Reached by text message that same day, Torre stated: "No comment."

Torre did talk about Scott Proctor in 2009, however. In October 2008, after pitching for Torre in Los Angeles, Proctor had right elbow surgery, a "cleanup procedure". In spring training with the Marlins the following year, he was still in pain -- and in May, he had Tommy John surgery after ligament fraying was discovered. Torre was no longer managing Proctor at that time, and he implied Proctor was a moron for pitching so much: "There's playing hurt, and then there's playing stupid." Classy statement, from the guy who used Proctor for 156.2 innings in less than two seasons and turned Proctor's last name into a verb, meaning to abuse the holy hell out of a pitcher's arm.

3 comments:

  1. Full text of Cashman interview, April 14, 2011:

    I guess this will give me a little bit of a forum because a lot of people took shots a little bit, and rightfully so, because they weren't willing to call me and ask me the questions about how some people refer to me as a hypocrite because of Scott Proctor and stuff like that. If you want to get Joe Torre on the phone, you'll know I'm not a hypocrite. I dealt with our pitching coach, I dealt with our manager, we have new people here that utilize people a certain way now.

    These guys aren't finite assets out there. There's a very limited group of people capable on a consistent basis of performing at the major league level at a high level of success so you can't put your assets in jeopardy and you can't overuse them or you lose them. Form my perspective, from the front office or if you're a player development director or a scouting director, trying to find replacements for those, we work 12 months a year to do that on a yearly basis and it's not easy. It's definitely not easy. When you have someone of quality that make it all the way and you have hopes to have them for an extended period of time, you have to use them properly. That's all. I'm talking on a general basis.

    I think the game has evolved and grown and people have learned over time, including us and ourselves. People ask, did we have players here as me as GM who were overused. Yes. But if you ask those players, if you ask the manager, if you want to go ask Joe Torre, did I meet with Joe? Yes. Did I meet with our pitching coach? Yes. When they said the same answer which obviously you heard when this became public, "Well, I asked the player every day, if he was okay."

    You have to understand these players are competitors. They're never going to say no. It's just the way they're wired. So you pay people to know the answer; I'm not paying a pitcher to be the pitching coach, for instance. Or the manager. I'm paying the pitching coach to be the pitching coach. So, I met with Proctor and said, "You better stop telling the manager this because the way he manages" - I'm not criticizing Joe, that's just the way he is - "he wants an honest answer. Just tell him no."

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  2. (continued)

    There were a number of guys when I could not convince the manager and the pitching coach that this was the wrong approach, these guys are competitors, they're going to be John Wayne for you. They're not going to disappoint their teammates, they're not going to disappoint you, they're not going to disappoint the fans. You have to have the knowledge enough to know that you've got to back off this guy, because he won't be honest with you, he'll lie to you even if he's dragging knuckles. So I met with those individual players and said, "You are hurting your career." I covered all the bases on my end.

    There's no hypocrisy here. If the player is unwilling to say what it is, the GM covered it with him, had conversations with pitching coaches or managers, that's stuff I don't have to worry about now going forward. The crew we have, they're understanding. I'm not saying - I'm just saying that's the way it is. The game, with expansion and stuff, these assets are not finite. They're just - we have to - that's my philosophy. That's how I've evolved. That's how I've grown. That's how I've handled those prior players.

    If you want to confirm to see I'm full of it, you can check with our former manager, you can check with our former pitching coach, you can check with those players, I don't really care. That's what happened. And I did answer the question honestly on the Mets stuff, but I'm not throwing hand grenades their way, not on purpose, anyway. If there was anything inappropriate, it was my honesty. It certainly wasn't meant to be bad.

    But I feel bad for Pedro. This guy is a guy who is not afraid of pitching in New York, he's not afraid of pitching in this environment and he's not afraid of taking the ball and he is a warrior and a competitor and right now he can't compete because of an injury he sustained with the New York Yankees in spring training. And he was never hurt with the Mets, but you know, it is what it is.

    ***

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  3. To the Youk comment/complaint: One great outing does not the pitcher make.

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