I spent Wednesday out at Grayson Stadium, in Savannnah,
Georgia. There are so few days left when the weather is great, the family
commitments are nil, my health is great, and the team is home.
I started with my normal ritual since 2007… sushi at one of
the fine restaurants on Broughten Street, then a turn right on Abercorn up to a
turn left on Victory Drive (named for World War One soldiers). You then turn a
right into the stadium and you’re back in baseball.
Grayson Stadium was established in 1941 but this sacred land
goes back far past this. Babe Ruth and Ty Cobb played where this stadium stands
so the place is reaked in history. I’m sitting right now down third base where
there used to be the ‘colored section’ as late as the 1950s.
I’ve attended Savannah Sand Gnats games since 1984. I
sponsored them in the late 1980s when I owned 98.7-FM radio and I later created
‘The Bleacher Bums” ongoing promotion in the early 1990’s for I-95 Radio (can’t
tell you what went on under the bleachers in those days). They were torn down a
few years ago, but I still think the team lost a big part o their history
without them. Cement rows of seats. I loved them.
My routine on days like this is pretty simple. I get out to
the park around 2pm for early BP (today, with the Hispanic players/coaches). I
then move over to the sides and watch field practice. I work my way down to the
bullpen to watch the routines there and wind up back in the dugout around 5pm
for interviews.
I’m supposed to interview either/or both Brandon Nimmo and Jayce Boyd today.
As of 2pm, that hasn’t been determined by the team yet. The team always askes
for 24-hr notice on who you want to interview, but you never find out until the
last name yes or no. I always ask for two, hoping for one and I try and compile
questions (like I did last night on Twitter) for both players so when or if I’m
granted an interview, I’m ready.
I learned this the hard way last year with a Michael Fulmer interview. I had asked for someone
else, who turned out unavailable. They brought out Fulmer and I had nothing
prepared for him. The time spent was awkward and he even mentioned to me when
he was taking stats behind the plate that night during the game that he found I
had asked very little questions. Oh well.
Half of the internal staff is new this year including my
contact. They are still a little behind the curve and they should be punching
out pre and post-game press releases that I will soon add to the site.
At 3pm, most of the players move to the bullpen area for
stretching and toss. Specific infielders report to the diamond for extra work
in the field (Jeff Reynolds).
The current roster reflects two changes today. RP Paul Seward went on the DL with ‘contusions’ and he
was replaced with RP Beck Wheeler (BTW…Michael Fulmer, Alex Panteliodes, and Carlos Vasquez are still listed on the Gnats roster as
part of the DL squad).
The pitchers, my numbers, out in the pen were:
Actual
pitching from around 40-feet – Logan Taylor, Jake
Kuebler, Matt Koch, Julian Hilario, Gabriel Ynoa
Long
tossing – Brett Mitchell, Hunter Carnevale
Long
long tossing – Rainy Lara
At 3:15pm, everyday players made their way to the pen area
for stretching and tossing.
At 3:30pm, Steven Matz through
a bullpen session with Jeff Glenn. I sat there
in awe. Lightning speed and hit all the corners. I asked Glenn did he throw
where targeted and he said 100%. I also asked Jeff why the hell he was hitting
so well and he just smiled and laughed out loud.
Full infield started around 3:45pm. 3B Cole Frenzel, SS Phillip Evans,
1B Jayce Boyd, 2B 2B Yukie
De La Cruz, both catcher Kevin Plawecki and
Jeff Glenn were up first. It began with fly balls
and relay throws. Excellent throws to home by Jeff
Reynolds, Plawecki to second,
Evans to second, Yukie to second, Reynolds to first (2x), Evans charge, to first,
Reynolds very strong arm.
BP at 4pm – Jayce Boyd gap
hitting to right… Plawecki singles, flyouts… #7? – popouts, 1x gap, Boyd – gap
right, aiming right… Glenn – heavey gap, triple down left… Plawecki – deep left, gap right, single
right… 7? – gap right, fly outs… Boyd – 2 strong shots to third… almost killed Cole Frenzel… Glenn – fly outs… 7? – 5 deep flyouts… no
yard balls.
Pron – fly outs…
single left… single left… pop ups and ground outs
Nimmo – singles up middle… laced down right 2x… gap left… serious
gap right…Nimmo's swing is interesting. His bat almost sits on his shoulder until the last second. It looks like he's falling asleep up there. Then it comes off with lightning speed, but I think his strength might be follow-through. Right now, he looks like the real deal.
Sabol – fly outs… pop ups… gap left…
Pina – single right..
pop up… fly outs… gap right 3x…
Reynolds - singles,
ground outs right… gap right…
Awesome post! God I would love to read more oft this kind of posts.
ReplyDeleteI am very excited about Nimmo's fast start. He could potentially be part of a package that nets us an outfielder
ReplyDeleteThanks Michi...
ReplyDeleteRammy - I don't see the Mets trading Nimmo. I do see him finishing this year in St. Lucie and maybe opening in 2014 in Binghamtonn
I'm hopeful that Nimmo is on course for a mid 2015 promotion to Queens. In AAA by the end of 2014 and by '15, waiting out super two status in AAA. That's only if he continues to hit. He'll be, what, 23 by then? Not bad at all if he continues to develop into a 5 tool player.
ReplyDeleteI really don't care if he sticks in center, although that would be great. In 2014, the Mets will desperately need at least one legit OF'er from outside the organization. I figure Duda sticks in left, they trade or sign someone for right or center, and Nimmo takes the last spot in 2015.
Of course, that can change based on who they pick in this years draft.
I agree, I think Nimmo will be with us for some time. The Mets will likely have an OF vet whose contract will be up after 2015, just in time for Nimmo to slide into place.
ReplyDelete