Good morning.
A History Of Activism
In Baseball -
INSKEEP: Is it thought of as a white man's sport even though
you do have African-American players, Latino or Hispanic players, many kinds of
players?
WALKER: Well, certainly for Latino players, with them coming
in at about 30 or so percent of the population in Major League Baseball. But
then African-American players only accounted for 62 to 64 players total. It's
not as diverse as it may look.
Western baseball
players pick up the pieces in Puerto Rico Puerto Rico
-
Erick Bracero played first base on the Griffon baseball team at Missouri
Western State University for four years and graduated in 1995 with a business
degree.
He currently lives in Gurabo, Puerto Rico, with his wife and
three children, where they’re still recovering from the devastating impact of
Hurricane Maria.
“Personally, it’s been the worst experience in my life,” he
said. “I have three kids that are from 10 to 13 years old. It’s the first time
in their lives experiencing something like this. My wife, Michelle, and myself,
we’re doing what we have to — have the poker face to control our emotion, and
keep telling them that everything is going to be OK.”
Major League Baseball
has set the qualifying offer www.mlbtr.com for the upcoming offseason at $17.4MM, MLBTR’s
Tim Dierkes reports (Twitter link).
With the news, teams
can now make full assessments of whether to issue qualifying offers to pending
free agents. Offers are due five days after the World Series wraps up; players
will then have ten days to weigh them.
Prior indications were
that the figure would land somewhat higher, with expectations sitting in the
range of $18.1MM. Last year, the QO sat at $17.2MM, so this represents only a
marginal tick upward. Though the variations here are relatively small relative
to the total value, every bit of money adds up for teams that are looking to
map out a payroll plan.
We won’t be offering anyone nuthin’ to stay
here. We already got rid of all those players.
I keep looking over the free agent list and I
just don’t see much to go after. P Yu Darvish, 1B Eric Hosmer ,and OF J.D. Martinez make my short list.
Rockies closer Greg Holland www.mlbtr.com will
decline his $15MM player option and re-enter the free agent market in search of
a more lucrative multi-year deal, reports FanRag’s Jon
Heyman.
Once the option is
formally declined, the Rockies will have the opportunity to make Holland a
qualifying offer of a reported $18.1MM. Presumably, Holland will again reject
that figure, thus setting up the Rox to recoup some draft pick compensation if
he ultimately signs elsewhere.
Even with Holland’s
end-of-season woes, though, his overall numbers on the year look solid. He
wrapped up the year with a 3.61 ERA and an impressive 11.0 K/9 mark through 57
1/3 innings. While he averaged 4.1 BB/9, Holland averaged 1.1 HR/9 despite the
league-wide uptick in homers and despite playing half his games at Coors Field.
Of the seven homers he allowed, five came in his final 18 appearances.
Maybe I should add Holland to
my short list. Thoughts?
The Atlanta Braves https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/ are in a world of
shite –
The investigation into apparent international signing
violations by the Braves has already claimed the jobs of GM John Coppolella and special assistant Gordon Blakely, but the investigation is still
ongoing. Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic has a lengthy update (subscription
required and recommended) on the matter, citing sources that tell him the
team’s “violations are unprecedented in scope.”
Even as the Atlanta organization weighs its next steps, which
will necessarily include a replacement for Coppolella and others, the league
continues to dig. There’s no evidence to this point that president of baseball
operations John Hart had knowledge or involvement
in the transgressions, per Rosenthal, though he also hasn’t yet had his
sit-down with investigators.
I ask should it stop here? Are we stupid enough
to believe that the Braves are the only team in baseball to cheat when it comes
to signing kiddies out of Latin countries. I mean, these 15 and 16-year olds
are represented by crooked ‘busteros’ that take them out of grade school and ‘enroll’
them in forced camps called baseball academies. There is so much corruption
down there and who are we to believe that only Coppolello tried to capitalize
on it.
10 comments:
Hopefully Atlanta's loss will be the Mets' gain.
African Americans sadly are not a baseball-first demographic. It shows in the numbers.
People need to contribute to good charities for Puerto Rico. Theirs is an unparalleled USA disaster.
I agree with the sentiment about Puerto Rico. If they were able to vote in the general presidential election there would certainly be a higher priority than we've seen to help them with recovery. It's amazing how aid was not limited in Houston or south Florida.
Sorry, the soap box is being put away.
As far as representation in the African American community, it takes more space to play baseball than most other sports. Urban communities don't have nearly as many baseball diamonds as they have room for basketball courts. Consequently there are more relatable role models in other sports than in baseball and it self perpetuates.
I read an article awhile back from Andrew McCutchen who said if not for some private sponsorship he never would have been able to travel, make the performance videos and other things that require money to get noticed by the scouts.
Reese you’re correct with your assessment of the crisis in Puerto Rico .. guys do you think this kid will be put into a lottery situation like Seaver was - or will he he designated a free agent that every team but the Braves can bid for his services ?
Ed - are u talking about bracco
I mean bracero
Yes .. the infield prospect that got the GM fired
Oh - yes, I expect him to be declared a free agent but Sandy doesn't roll that way
So no Lottery like the one where we won the rights to Negotiate with Tom Seaver
Ed -
I could be wrong but I do not believe so.
Thanks Mack .. we could dream lol
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