RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (Full Version)

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Todd G -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/16/2013 9:59:30 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Stacey King

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd G

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Red Sox are 0-14 on Aug 15 since '98
As good as they've been, that's just plain weird.


They're obviously still bummed about President Nixon completing the break from the gold standard by ending converability of the US dollar into gol by foreign investors on this date in 1971.


They took that pretty hard.


But really, who didn't?   [sm=shrug.gif]




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/16/2013 10:38:44 AM)

Of course ESPN had to relate it to Ben Afflecks birthday, but I like TGrays explanation better. [:D]




bparlin -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/16/2013 9:19:15 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jim Frenette

In late June when everyone was praising the Pirates, I said they did the same the previous 2 years and faded fast after all star break and I would expect the same. Boy was I wrong, they are still playing good baseball and in 1st place. We might see them as buyers yet before this month is over


The Twins are the Pirates now. Do you think the Pirates like Liriano better than Korea? Man.




bparlin -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/16/2013 9:20:39 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd G

Newest member of the [sm=anim_wow.gif] Appreciation Club . . . Danny Devito

[image]http://img850.imageshack.us/img850/7439/gmq.gif[/image]

[image]http://img809.imageshack.us/img809/8954/gxwm.jpg[/image]




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 7:41:33 AM)

Poor ol Charlie gets the boot.
Our clown will get an extension, for accomplishing about 8 times LESS than he did.
EXPECTATIONS
Sometimes, its tough, but YOU HAVE TO MAKE TOUGH DECISIONS that are good for your ballclub.

"I think sometimes people forget how much I love to win," Manuel said. "I think that goes unnoticed. I think sometimes I don't talk about it, because I push it to my team and how important it is. Every day, I say our No. 1 priority is to win the game. When we get away from that, we get into trouble. I love everything about managing, and I think for us, the last couple years to fall back, I get upset very much so. I want us to stay where we were at, I want to compete for a World Series every year."
Manuel led Philadelphia to the franchise's second World Series title in 2008 and brought the team back to the series in '09, when it lost to the Yankees in six games.
Manuel was 780-636 with the Phillies and won five straight NL East titles from 2007-11. He also spent three years as manager with the Cleveland Indians, winning the AL Central in 2001
 
Charlie was BELOVED there, probably even more than Gardy here, and yet they went ahead and did what was right.
Sigh




lylej -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 8:35:58 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Poor ol Charlie gets the boot.
Our clown will get an extension, for accomplishing about 8 times LESS than he did.
EXPECTATIONS
Sometimes, its tough, but YOU HAVE TO MAKE TOUGH DECISIONS that are good for your ballclub.

"I think sometimes people forget how much I love to win," Manuel said. "I think that goes unnoticed. I think sometimes I don't talk about it, because I push it to my team and how important it is. Every day, I say our No. 1 priority is to win the game. When we get away from that, we get into trouble. I love everything about managing, and I think for us, the last couple years to fall back, I get upset very much so. I want us to stay where we were at, I want to compete for a World Series every year."
Manuel led Philadelphia to the franchise's second World Series title in 2008 and brought the team back to the series in '09, when it lost to the Yankees in six games.
Manuel was 780-636 with the Phillies and won five straight NL East titles from 2007-11. He also spent three years as manager with the Cleveland Indians, winning the AL Central in 2001
 
Charlie was BELOVED there, probably even more than Gardy here, and yet they went ahead and did what was right.
Sigh


Need to hire Charlie Manual to oversee our farm clubs (player development)....sure he would enjoy bringing up new players....and we surely do need the assistance....although at this age, he might not like traveling!!




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 8:57:54 AM)

Stark with some great insight on the Manuel situation.


It's never neat or clean or seamless -- these news conferences when managers are being pointed to the nearest exit ramp. So, there was no chance that the not-so-grand finale of Charlie Manuel in Philadelphia on Friday was going to be any different.
But wow. What an odd scene.
The general manager -- Ruben Amaro Jr. -- fought back teardrops.
The ex-manager sat at his side, yukked it up and said he almost wore his uniform to the news conference.
The team couldn't bring itself to use the word "fired" to describe what had just gone down. ("Phillies Announce Managerial Change," read the carefully worded release.)
Then the manager took the microphone and announced: "I never quit nothin'. And I didn't resign."
So if you were confused about what just happened here, let me try to clear it up for you.
Manuel wasn't going to be the manager of the 2014 Philadelphia Phillies. His GM knew that. Heck, his GM had, essentially, known that for months. But what forced this issue was that, by this week, the manager knew it, too.

[+] Enlarge[image]http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2013/0816/mlb_u_manuel11_200.jpg[/image]
Eric Hartline/USA TODAY SportsCharlie Manuel's Phillies were 14 games under .500 and 20½ games behind the Braves in the NL East.He might not have known that on Opening Day. He might not have known that a month ago. But then came The Meltdown
.
Then came 19 losses in 23 games, including a gruesome 1-13 stretch over two successive road trips from hell. And, by Wednesday night, when the Phillies' plane took off from Atlanta bound for Philadelphia, Manuel knew, too.


He knew he was never going to manage another game wearing this uniform. And even as his friends across the game worried that he might finish the best gig of his lifetime with an angry, confrontational stomp-off, 69-year-old Manuel understood he couldn't let it end that way.
So, he agreed to participate in the news conference announcing his firing, his "change" or whatever the heck it was. Then he sidled up to the mike and handled this scene with about as much class and as congenially as anyone in this position could possibly have handled it.
But don't let those smiles and thank-yous fool you. Manuel didn't think what happened to the 2013 Phillies was his fault. He didn't think he deserved to be fired. And he has made it known for months that he wants to keep managing -- if not in Philadelphia, then somewhere else. Anywhere else.
And there is going to come a time when he makes it clear -- possibly to his next employer -- that no manager could have won with the roster he was given.
With a pitching staff that ranked dead last in its league in ERA.
With a bullpen that had allowed more runs than any other team in its league.
With an aging, impatient offense that had seen the second-fewest pitches in baseball -- nearly 2,700 fewer than the Red Sox, if you're counting -- and not nearly enough depth to keep the season from imploding once the injuries hit.
And with a manager who had begun to feel, increasingly, as though he didn't have the backing of his front office to address some of the issues he'd always been quick to deal with in the past.
So you can bet your favorite World Series parade float that, one of these days, Charlie Manuel is going to have some stuff to say about all of that -- in a different time, a different place, a different setting -- just in case anyone out there didn't notice the real reasons his team went careering toward the bottom of the standings.
But he also knows, undoubtedly, that he wasn't the only one who wasn't happy about the way the 2013 Phillies allowed their season to devolve into such a spiritless nightmare.
This just in: His bosses -- they weren't so happy, either.
They knew their team had limitations. They knew this wasn't the 2008-09-10-11 roster they were running out there. But if you heard the GM insisting, even in the past few days, that this team "has talent," you don't need a real vivid imagination to guess he had come to the unsettling conclusion that the manager was mismanaging that talent.
The teams Manuel won with in Cleveland and Philadelphia, the teams he loved best, weren't constructed like this team. They were teams full of mashers, teams loaded with established every-day players, teams full of names the manager could write on his lineup card 150 times a year.
They were the kind of teams, in short, made to order for a manager who believed in letting players play, giving players tremendous freedom to be themselves, and using his remarkable people skills to keep his troops happy and energized.
But this was a team that couldn't operate like that. Couldn't pound baseballs the way those teams could. Couldn't run on cruise control the way those teams could. Couldn't out-talent anybody the way those teams could.

[+] Enlarge[image]http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2013/0816/mlb_g_charlie-manuel_mb_300.jpg[/image]
Rich Pilling/MLB/Getty ImagesManuel will long be remembered in Philadelphia for guiding the Phillies to a World Series title in 2008.So, the more the Phillies' powers that be watched Manuel manage the way he always had -- even with a roster that, they felt, needed a whole different sort of approach -- the more it became clear to them that The Time Had Come.


And once they knew, once and for all, that The Time Had Come to change managers, the only question was when, not if.
So, in the past week or so, Amaro began to agonize, sources say, over whether this was the right moment. He sounded out his friends and advisers. He met numerous times, in fact, with Manuel himself.
And once it became clear there wasn't much for either of them to gain by forcing this manager to writhe his way through 42 games worth of uncomfortable questions for no particular purpose, it was time to start typing the news releases.
But the other factor in the timing was this: Ryne Sandberg has been viewed for months as Manuel's anointed heir apparent. But Amaro could not have made it more clear Friday that this front office isn't sure yet whether he's the right man for this job.
So, by doing this now, the Phillies have given themselves 42 games to see what Sandberg looks like in this setting -- how he handles the media, how he handles an odd mix of players, how he fits beneath the glare of one of the toughest managerial jobs in America.
And that's why they slapped the word "interim" onto his title Friday -- as opposed to, say, "successor."
But then again, this was a day in Philadelphia when all the words were chosen carefully -- some more carefully and effectively than others. There is one word, though, that hung above the rest, one word about which there could be no confusion.
And it was the last word the winningest manager in Phillies history will ever hear in a town where he got to ride in an unforgettable parade down Broad Street.
That word, of course, was "goodbye."




lylej -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 10:11:37 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Stark with some great insight on the Manuel situation.


It's never neat or clean or seamless -- these news conferences when managers are being pointed to the nearest exit ramp. So, there was no chance that the not-so-grand finale of Charlie Manuel in Philadelphia on Friday was going to be any different.
But wow. What an odd scene.
The general manager -- Ruben Amaro Jr. -- fought back teardrops.
The ex-manager sat at his side, yukked it up and said he almost wore his uniform to the news conference.
The team couldn't bring itself to use the word "fired" to describe what had just gone down. ("Phillies Announce Managerial Change," read the carefully worded release.)
Then the manager took the microphone and announced: "I never quit nothin'. And I didn't resign."
So if you were confused about what just happened here, let me try to clear it up for you.
Manuel wasn't going to be the manager of the 2014 Philadelphia Phillies. His GM knew that. Heck, his GM had, essentially, known that for months. But what forced this issue was that, by this week, the manager knew it, too.

[+] Enlarge[image]http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2013/0816/mlb_u_manuel11_200.jpg[/image]
Eric Hartline/USA TODAY SportsCharlie Manuel's Phillies were 14 games under .500 and 20½ games behind the Braves in the NL East.He might not have known that on Opening Day. He might not have known that a month ago. But then came The Meltdown
.
Then came 19 losses in 23 games, including a gruesome 1-13 stretch over two successive road trips from hell. And, by Wednesday night, when the Phillies' plane took off from Atlanta bound for Philadelphia, Manuel knew, too.


He knew he was never going to manage another game wearing this uniform. And even as his friends across the game worried that he might finish the best gig of his lifetime with an angry, confrontational stomp-off, 69-year-old Manuel understood he couldn't let it end that way.
So, he agreed to participate in the news conference announcing his firing, his "change" or whatever the heck it was. Then he sidled up to the mike and handled this scene with about as much class and as congenially as anyone in this position could possibly have handled it.
But don't let those smiles and thank-yous fool you. Manuel didn't think what happened to the 2013 Phillies was his fault. He didn't think he deserved to be fired. And he has made it known for months that he wants to keep managing -- if not in Philadelphia, then somewhere else. Anywhere else.
And there is going to come a time when he makes it clear -- possibly to his next employer -- that no manager could have won with the roster he was given.
With a pitching staff that ranked dead last in its league in ERA.
With a bullpen that had allowed more runs than any other team in its league.
With an aging, impatient offense that had seen the second-fewest pitches in baseball -- nearly 2,700 fewer than the Red Sox, if you're counting -- and not nearly enough depth to keep the season from imploding once the injuries hit.
And with a manager who had begun to feel, increasingly, as though he didn't have the backing of his front office to address some of the issues he'd always been quick to deal with in the past.
So you can bet your favorite World Series parade float that, one of these days, Charlie Manuel is going to have some stuff to say about all of that -- in a different time, a different place, a different setting -- just in case anyone out there didn't notice the real reasons his team went careering toward the bottom of the standings.
But he also knows, undoubtedly, that he wasn't the only one who wasn't happy about the way the 2013 Phillies allowed their season to devolve into such a spiritless nightmare.
This just in: His bosses -- they weren't so happy, either.
They knew their team had limitations. They knew this wasn't the 2008-09-10-11 roster they were running out there. But if you heard the GM insisting, even in the past few days, that this team "has talent," you don't need a real vivid imagination to guess he had come to the unsettling conclusion that the manager was mismanaging that talent.
The teams Manuel won with in Cleveland and Philadelphia, the teams he loved best, weren't constructed like this team. They were teams full of mashers, teams loaded with established every-day players, teams full of names the manager could write on his lineup card 150 times a year.
They were the kind of teams, in short, made to order for a manager who believed in letting players play, giving players tremendous freedom to be themselves, and using his remarkable people skills to keep his troops happy and energized.
But this was a team that couldn't operate like that. Couldn't pound baseballs the way those teams could. Couldn't run on cruise control the way those teams could. Couldn't out-talent anybody the way those teams could.

[+] Enlarge[image]http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2013/0816/mlb_g_charlie-manuel_mb_300.jpg[/image]
Rich Pilling/MLB/Getty ImagesManuel will long be remembered in Philadelphia for guiding the Phillies to a World Series title in 2008.So, the more the Phillies' powers that be watched Manuel manage the way he always had -- even with a roster that, they felt, needed a whole different sort of approach -- the more it became clear to them that The Time Had Come.


And once they knew, once and for all, that The Time Had Come to change managers, the only question was when, not if.
So, in the past week or so, Amaro began to agonize, sources say, over whether this was the right moment. He sounded out his friends and advisers. He met numerous times, in fact, with Manuel himself.
And once it became clear there wasn't much for either of them to gain by forcing this manager to writhe his way through 42 games worth of uncomfortable questions for no particular purpose, it was time to start typing the news releases.
But the other factor in the timing was this: Ryne Sandberg has been viewed for months as Manuel's anointed heir apparent. But Amaro could not have made it more clear Friday that this front office isn't sure yet whether he's the right man for this job.
So, by doing this now, the Phillies have given themselves 42 games to see what Sandberg looks like in this setting -- how he handles the media, how he handles an odd mix of players, how he fits beneath the glare of one of the toughest managerial jobs in America.
And that's why they slapped the word "interim" onto his title Friday -- as opposed to, say, "successor."
But then again, this was a day in Philadelphia when all the words were chosen carefully -- some more carefully and effectively than others. There is one word, though, that hung above the rest, one word about which there could be no confusion.
And it was the last word the winningest manager in Phillies history will ever hear in a town where he got to ride in an unforgettable parade down Broad Street.
That word, of course, was "goodbye."


Never will forget the first time I saw Charlie Manuel in Tacoma in 1972....good old country boy, always smiling and laughing, and having a good time on the field.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 1:13:16 PM)

Wanna take a look at the Royals since bringing George Brett in?
This ridiculous reluctance to pursue Molitor until he gives in ... drives me crazy.
I just can't see him failing at anything.
Please get him involved, esp with these young guys we have coming up. Please.




Jim Frenette -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 2:12:07 PM)

So now Tejada gets hit with a 105 game suspension. I read that he's on the DL so he won't appeal it. I wouldn't think they count so most will be next year. Might as well hang them up




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 2:43:49 PM)

I remember some experts telling me the Yankees were done. Toast. Headed for the basement.
63-58.
Well, they were kinda right ... that is terrible.
By WINNERs standards.
[sm=taunt.gif]




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 2:46:26 PM)

Ouuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuch





 

All of baseball has taken notice of the Los Angeles Dodgers' remarkable turnaround. So have gambling experts. Online sportsbook Bovada — which sends out updates every few weeks about baseball odds — has made the Dodgers its World Series favorite, marking the first time this season the Detroit Tigers aren't atop the list.



The Dodgers are in the middle of a spectacular 40-8 run since June 22, which has moved the team out of last place in the NL West and into first place, where it now holds a 7 1/2 game lead. It's enough for Dodgers fans to believe they're living a Drake song. The team hasn't cooled off recently either, currently riding an eight-game winning streak.
In announcing the Dodgers' ascension, Bovada sports book manager Kevin Bradley said:

"For the first time during the regular season, the Detroit Tigers have been surpassed as World Series favorites by none other than the hottest team in baseball the LA Dodgers. The amount of liability we have incurred on the Dodgers over the last month, combined with their stellar play as of late, forced us to drop them to 9/2 favorites just ahead of the Tigers who still sit close by at 5/1.”

On July 1, the Dodgers' World Series odds were 22/1. So that's another thing Don Mattingly's bunch can be proud of this season. Other than the Dodgers leap-frogging the Tigers, the other change to the top five in these latest odds is the Red Sox jumping ahead of the Cardinals.
Here's the entire list:[image]http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/8QH8fBPAxzyZ2965HEgTog--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTMxMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en/blogs/sptusmlbexperts/tigers081613.jpg[/image](Getty Images)

Odds to win the 2013 World SeriesLos Angeles Dodgers - 9/2Detroit Tigers - 5/1Atlanta Braves - 13/2Boston Red Sox - 15/2St. Louis Cardinals - 10/1Tampa Bay Rays - 11/1Texas Rangers - 11/1Cincinnati Reds - 12/1Oakland Athletics - 12/1Pittsburgh Pirates - 12/1Baltimore Orioles - 18/1New York Yankees - 40/1Arizona Diamondbacks - 45/1Cleveland Indians - 45/1Kansas City Royals - 45/1Washington Nationals - 75/1Los Angeles Angels - 250/1Toronto Blue Jays - 250/1Colorado Rockies - 350/1San Francisco Giants - 350/1Seattle Mariners - 350/1New York Mets - 500/1Philadelphia Phillies - 500/1San Diego Padres - 500/1

You'll notice Bovada didn't even bother listing the Astros, Marlins, White Sox, Twins, Brewers or Cubs anymore.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 2:52:54 PM)

I'm thinking my old buddy Danny Valencia is gonna lay pretty low for awhile and hope this blows over without sucking him into the vortex ...

A longtime friend of Ryan Braun's filed a lawsuit against the suspended slugger last month, charging that Braun defamed him after the friend provided help in his successful appeal of Braun's positive steroid test in 2011.

Ralph Sasson, 29, makes a number of personal accusations against Braun, saying in the lawsuit that Braun doped through his years at the University of Miami, committed academic fraud and accepted money while a student.


Reached this week, Sasson declined to comment and said the lawsuit speaks for itself.


Braun's attorney, Howard Weitzman, rejected the claims.


"This lawsuit is an unfortunate attempt to capitalize on Ryan's recent press attention for taking responsibility for his actions. The factual allegations and the legal claims have absolutely no merit. We believe the lawsuit will be dismissed," he said in a statement.


Sasson, who describes himself as a law student, says he was contacted by Braun's agent, Nez Balelo, in November 2011 after Braun was notified that he had tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone. Part of his assignment, the lawsuit says, was to conduct background research on the man who collected Braun's urine sample, Dino Laurenzi Jr.


The lawsuit says Sasson was forced to threaten Braun and Balelo with a lawsuit in order to recover $5,000 that he says was promised, and that he was paid last year when he agreed to sign a non-disclosure agreement. But Sasson charges that Braun violated that agreement when he made what Sasson calls defamatory statements about him to undisclosed parties. Sasson asks for unspecified damages in the complaint.


The lawsuit also says that Braun asked Sasson to "prank call" ESPN "Outside the Lines" reporter Mark Fainaru-Wada, who was working with reporter T.J. Quinn on a story in December 2011 that Braun had failed a PED test. According to the lawsuit, Braun wanted Sasson to say, "The original information Quinn and Fainaru-Wada had obtained regarding Braun was part of an elaborate conspiracy to assassinate the character of multiple baseball players and agents including, but not limited to, Ryan Braun."
Sasson says in the lawsuit that he refused.
Meanwhile, USA Today reported Friday that Braun is close to admitting he used performance-enhancing drugs during parts of the 2011 season. The newspaper, citing friends of Braun who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the suspended slugger plans to apologize to commissioner Bud Selig, urine collector Dino Laurenzi Jr., his teammates and his peers.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 3:26:34 PM)

GOMEZ!


[image]http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/Ly81jRe6eMBFqSNt9c.P7Q--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTUwMA--/http://l.yimg.com/os/publish-images/sports/2013-08-15/c295ba09-606f-4700-a541-2a3b38cc45d6_koreanhr081513.gif[/image]

[sm=viking1.gif]




lylej -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 3:44:52 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Wanna take a look at the Royals since bringing George Brett in?
This ridiculous reluctance to pursue Molitor until he gives in ... drives me crazy.
I just can't see him failing at anything.
Please get him involved, esp with these young guys we have coming up. Please.


Have a feeling that Molitor and Gardy are not the best buddies or friends!




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/17/2013 4:03:54 PM)

Very long, but very interesting Grantland piece on the Royal resurgence in KC.

http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/9569241/the-shocking-resurgence-kansas-city-royals





Todd G -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/18/2013 8:18:42 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

I remember some experts telling me the Yankees were done. Toast. Headed for the basement.
63-58.
Well, they were kinda right ... that is terrible.
By WINNERs standards.
[sm=taunt.gif]


Being carried right now by Soriono.  A great move on their part.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/18/2013 12:38:16 PM)

These are mind-boggling numbers ....


PHILADELPHIA -- Dodgers manager Don Mattingly summed it up nicely after Clayton Kershaw became the latest Los Angeles starter to shut down the sinking Phillies.
"Kershaw's pretty good," Mattingly said.

The young ace pitched eight dominant innings and the seemingly unstoppable Dodgers won their 10th straight Saturday night, beating Philadelphia 5-0 to keep the Phillies scoreless in two games under new manager Ryne Sandberg.
Juan Uribe hit a three-run homer, Kershaw had an RBI double and the NL West leaders improved to 25-3 after the All-Star break. They have won 19 of their last 20 road games and are 42-8 overall since June 22, the best 50-game stretch in the majors since the 1942 St. Louis Cardinals had the same record.
The previous team to win 19 of 20 road games was the 1916 New York Giants, according to STATS.
The 10-game winning streak is the longest for Los Angeles since an 11-game run in 2006.




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/18/2013 12:38:49 PM)

Scherzer goes for Detroit today.
He's 17-1.  [:-] 




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/18/2013 3:16:42 PM)

Scherzer goes to 18-1 with win over Royals.
That almost-6 runs a game his offense provides for him probably helps, eh?
Could tend to relax a fella going in, knowing you're going to get backed by your offense.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/18/2013 3:49:20 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Poor ol Charlie gets the boot.
Our clown will get an extension, for accomplishing about 8 times LESS than he did.
EXPECTATIONS
Sometimes, its tough, but YOU HAVE TO MAKE TOUGH DECISIONS that are good for your ballclub.

"I think sometimes people forget how much I love to win," Manuel said. "I think that goes unnoticed. I think sometimes I don't talk about it, because I push it to my team and how important it is. Every day, I say our No. 1 priority is to win the game. When we get away from that, we get into trouble. I love everything about managing, and I think for us, the last couple years to fall back, I get upset very much so. I want us to stay where we were at, I want to compete for a World Series every year."
Manuel led Philadelphia to the franchise's second World Series title in 2008 and brought the team back to the series in '09, when it lost to the Yankees in six games.
Manuel was 780-636 with the Phillies and won five straight NL East titles from 2007-11. He also spent three years as manager with the Cleveland Indians, winning the AL Central in 2001
 
Charlie was BELOVED there, probably even more than Gardy here, and yet they went ahead and did what was right.
Sigh


Ruben Amaro needs to go there, too.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/18/2013 3:50:04 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Wanna take a look at the Royals since bringing George Brett in?
This ridiculous reluctance to pursue Molitor until he gives in ... drives me crazy.
I just can't see him failing at anything.
Please get him involved, esp with these young guys we have coming up. Please.


THIS




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/18/2013 4:30:54 PM)

In some weird news today .... the Dodgers lost.   [:-]

What the?




SoMnFan -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/19/2013 9:09:31 AM)

Back the Yanks in a corner, they usually respond.
Fun series in Beantown.
Getting back in it.
Love how competitive the East is.




Mr. Ed -> RE: MLB General Information PT 4 (8/19/2013 9:37:32 AM)

Bozo Sox will apparently bring up a 20 year old to man SS in the heat of a pennant race [:-]


The Red Sox will make a series of roster moves today, writes WEEI.com's Alex Speier, with none being more notable than the promotion of top prospect Xander Bogaerts.

The 20-year-old Bogaerts has mashed his way into a universal Top 10 prospect, ranking third on Keith Law's Midseason Top 50 Prospect list (ESPN Insider required), fourth on Baseball America's Midseason Top 50 and ranking sixth on the current Top 100 list of MLB.com's Jonathan Mayo. The Aruban shortstop is batting .297/.388/.477 with 15 home runs in 515 plate appearances between Double-A Portland and Triple-A Pawtucket this season.




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