By Kevin Kernan October 4, 2020
Let me paint this picture. It’s a small thing, that’s really a big thing and it shows why I’ve been on the Marlins bandwagon since part-owner/CEO Derek Jeter became Mr. Marlin after the 2017 season.
I’ve been to every team’s spring training site through the years, many, many times, going back to my Padres days in Yuma, Arizona. That was the perfect place to cover spring training. Easy to get around. No hassles. Stayed at the team hotel so players and coaches were readily available. There was no place to hide and back then players didn’t hide. There were baseball conversations all the time.
At the ballpark, the working conditions were excellent, too.
Large clubhouse. Press box on top of the action at Desert Sun Stadium and you could always find GM Jack McKeon on the back fields. This was before cell phones too. A great trick current GMs do now is when they see a reporter coming their way, their phone suddenly goes up against their ear in Fake Conversation to avoid a real conversation and questions about the team.
As you can guess, this was long before spring training camps became fortresses and reporters were locked away in a window-less cell, security always keeping watch.
Plus here is another thing, Yuma is home to the Territorial Prison, opened in 1876, and the city embraces its history. In fact, the high school’s nickname is one of the best ever. The Yuma Criminals. In 1917 they officially adopted the name. An opposing high school gave them that nickname as a slight, but the Yuma students “embraced the suck”, as Joe Maddon likes to say and to this day Yuma High School is home to the Criminals or Crims.
And yes It was a T-shirt I just had to buy my first spring in Yuma.
Like the Johnny Cash song says, and it should have been written about covering baseball:
I’ve been everywhere, man
I’ve been everywhere, man
Crossed the desert’s bare, man
I’ve breathed the mountain air, man
Of travel I’ve a’had my share, man
I’ve been everywhere
With all that in mind let me tell you about an early morning visit this spring to the
Marlins camp in Jupiter, a site they share with the Cardinals. Once I pulled into the
parking lot and said hello to Dominick, the best baseball parking attendant in the world,
I made my way to the patio area, adjacent to the Marlins clubhouse.
That’s where you hang out.
There are double steel doors the players use to enter and exit. Players come out for the
early morning workout … early, so get there even earlier, if you can. That’s how you run
into stories.
There are different fields in use and some fields are a good walk from the clubhouse.
Usually, players come out in small groups, telling stories, laughing, joking or, because
they are baseball players, complaining. Players are often bitching about something, it’s
the nature of the beast, much like sportswriters.
On this perfect February morning, though, I immediately noticed something different.
Here were players coming out, but they were not sauntering their way to the fields. They
were not walking. Each and every Marlin, young and old, is running to the fields. Not a
sprint, but something better than a jog. They are moving with a purpose from the get-go,
there is work to do.
I’ve never seen that before in hundreds of visits to major league spring training sites
through the decades. You might see one or two Johnny Hustles, but the whole team?
And not one player is eating a banana or an orange or an energy bar or chatting away as
they slowly walk to the fields.
Every player is hustling, running to the field. When the workouts were over, the players
ran off the field back to the double steel doors of the clubhouse. It was refreshing to see.
Then it hit me.
Jeter is in charge here.
Manager Don Mattingly is in charge here.
VP of player development and scouting Gary Denbo is in charge here.
All ex-Yankees.
Jeter learned to run in spring training because you never know who is watching.
Here is how that happened.
In 2014 Mattingly told the story to Al Santasiere, senior director publications for the
Yankees.
“I first met Derek when he was in the minors,’’ Mattingly began. “He had a long way to go
at that point, but I liked the way he went about his business. One morning during spring
training, we were both coming off a back field together. I was running off the field, and I
noticed that he wasn’t. I quietly told him to always run onto and off the field because you
never know who’s watching you. At first, Derek thought I was referring to fans watching
him, but I knew that Mr. Steinbrenner had his eyes on us.”
For more about how the Marlins have achieved their success this year, click here.
1 comment:
Tom B.:
"Why get so hateful man, this isn't politics here ya' know? All the fanatics here are harmless, no evil posters lurking about. It's baseball man. Baseball!" LOL
Prioritizing what went wrong in 2020 for the NY Mets.
1. Noah down. That hurt hugely. He was being counted on as a top-end starter here, a very worthy one. It's not Noah's his fault that he got hurt, and his arm may have been barking at him some in 2019. Who knows. Things can happen. Man as constructed, isn't supposed to be throwing baseballs.
2. The two veteran starters that the Mets got off season (Wacha and Porcello)along with in-house Steve Matz were dreadful. An MLB team cannot win with just MiLB starters who have never won much at all (if ever) at this level. The rotation used (aside from Jake and sometimes Seth) was simply overmatched each outing.
3. Marcus Stroman opting out of playing contract and goes home concerned about catching Covid19. Takes Yo' with him. Both gone now. Somewhere in Bermuda I heard.
The summation of these three things above were (to me) the real reason why the Mets had very, very little hope of doing much in 2020. It's easy to blame the GM and Mets departing ownership for this derailment of sorts. But to me, it was simply that anything that could go wrong certainly did regarding the Mets 2020 starting rotation.
The shortened season obviously did not help with this much, and there were no MiLB games scheduled so that drawing from Syracuse with practiced players was not a possible solution for here.
It's the pitching dude. Pitching. It either makes a team of breaks a team.
If you haven't competitive starting pitching (all five starters) it won't work. This is what MLB stands for. That is what this off season has to be all about. Getting the right five starters together to make a run in 2021. They have three now assembled once Noah's re-attached arm is right again. Noah, Jake, and Davi. So really they just need two really good younger starters to meld in.
Personally, I would look at seeing if Boston's AAA lefty Jay Groome and the either Thomas Szapucki or Hansel Gonzales are ready for the fifth starter role in 2021. But there are other young Mets pitchers also to consider, and other possible young starters the Mets could trade for as well.
So this should be a very productive off season for this NT Mets ball club. The rest of the issues you mentioned will all be resolved as well concerning non-pitcher player personnel.
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