Through the Player’s
Eyes: Tony Dibrell
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“A couple of hours after I heard my name called, my area
scout, Tommy Jackson, called me. He
congratulated me and told me to pack my stuff up so I could get to Port St. Lucie
to sign my first professional contract. I thought for sure I would have a few
weeks at home to celebrate with my friends and family, but instead I had to
leave that Friday. The excitement finally hit me when I arrived in Port St.
Lucie and walked into the locker room. Seeing my name on the back of a New York
Mets jersey finally made the whole experience real for me. Unfortunately, I
never got to wear that particular jersey, but that was because I was soon
headed to New York to play my first professional season for the Brooklyn
Cyclones.”
Remembering Baseball
Legend Roy Halladay
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Inside that mid-February clubhouse what the Phillies couldn't
stop talking about regarding their new ace was how early Halladay arrived every
day.
Like, 4:30-or-5-in-the-morning early.
A minor leaguer named Phillippe
Aumont told me he had been in town three weeks and had yet to beat
Halladay to the Phillies' workout facility in the morning. Veteran closer Brad Lidge told me of Halladay's legendary workouts,
"when I'm getting here at 9 in the morning, he's finishing up."
2018 ‘Modern Era’ Hall of Fame Ballot –
While much focus during the offseason is on the BBWAA voting
for the Baseball Hall of Fame, there is another route to Cooperstown. The Eras
Committees, formerly known as the Veterans Committee, handle that end. Four
different eras get one turn per year, with the "Modern Baseball Era"
(1970-87) getting a crack this season.
The Modern Baseball Era committee will be 16 members,
comprised of current Hall of Famers, executives and select media members. In
order to gain enshrinement, candidates need at least 12 votes. Each voter only
gets to vote for two, so it's pretty tough to make it.
The list of candidates is 10, with nine former players and a
former MLBPA head. Here they are, in alphabetical order:
Bob Bowman, Major League Baseball’s Digital Mastermind,
Steps Down –
The former baseball commissioner Bud
Selig once called Major League Baseball Advanced Media, the league’s
digital and video arm, “one of the great success stories of not only the
baseball business, but American business.”
The person most responsible for that success is Bob Bowman, its chief executive for 17 years.
Major League Baseball announced on Monday that Bowman, 62,
was stepping down as president of business and media when his contract expires
at the end of the year.
JT Ginn
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Ginn's slider is a weapon with sharp horizontal bite. The
pitch has the potential to become plus and at times flashes better than plus.
He struggles at times with control of his pitches, but when he is able to
locate the slider, it is downright unfair. His command was on at the Perfect
Game's World Wood Bat Association Championship, and the competition was unable
to touch him.
Ultimately, Ginn may be a better fit in the bullpen than the
rotation. He doesn't have the build of a starter — standing only 6'1" —
and his dominant stuff plays down at times when his ability to hit the zone
falters. However, the profile has been proven to work as a starter, and there
is a chance he sticks in that capacity as well. His ultimate ceiling will
depend on how well he refines his ability to locate his pitches and the
development of his changeup.
Tell too short to start JT Ginn that Whitey Ford was 3 inches shorter and did OK - Hall of Fame OK.
ReplyDeleteTony Dibrell - very nice article - kind of young man you want to see succeed. After his shaky debut period in Brooklyn, he was so much better. He should do great in Columbia in 2018.
Hallady never took a holiday. He couldn't hit like Tyler Pill, though.
Still wondering how Keith Hernandez isn’t included on this new ballot
ReplyDeleteThis too short nonsense has to stop. Is Jose Altuve too short to play in the majors?
ReplyDeleteReese, most times, short height is an impediment but the guy Ginn is 6'1" - he may not be tall for a pitcher, but he is surely not short.
ReplyDeleteWhen the Mets draft short guys, they do however draft guys like Branden Kaupe: .201 career hitter, .233 non-slugging %. Short in height, equally short in talent, and drafted in the 4th round in 2012 for some inexplicable reason. I think the Mets scouts were woefully short in screening. He wasn't a fielding wiz either, with 44 errors in 160 games, mostly as a 2B.
Mets scouting team drafts like midgets.