Friday, July 8, 2011

Beckett leaves with ‘mild’ knee strain

Beckett leaves with ‘mild’ knee strain


Josh Beckett holds his head after being hit by a ball during batting practice on Monday.
(AP Photo/Brita Meng Outzen)
BOSTON (AP)—The Boston Red Sox say pitcher Josh Beckett(notes) slightly hyperextended his left knee on the wet mound at Fenway Park.
The Red Sox pulled Beckett after the fifth inning against Baltimore on Friday night, calling it a precautionary move.
Boston already has three starters on the disabled list and doesn’t want to take any chances with Beckett, who was selected to the American League All-Star team. It was not immediately clear whether Beckett would be available for the All-Star game Tuesday.
Beckett was having problems with the wet dirt in the fifth after steady rain fell early in the game. The Red Sox were ahead 8-3 and brought in reliever Matt Albers

Hamilton says he could hear boy screaming

Hamilton says he could hear boy screaming


ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)—Josh Hamilton(notes) could hear 6-year-old Cooper Stone screaming for his dad, who tumbled over an outfield railing and fell 20 feet onto the concrete.
“In my mind, it happened in slow motion,” Hamilton said Friday, a day after the fatal accident. “I threw the ball and saw him go for it and saw him just tip right over the edge there. When it happened, it was just disbelief.”
Firefighter Shannon Stone, who only minutes earlier had called out to Hamilton for a foul ball, fell headfirst after reaching out to catch one tossed his way by the Texas Rangers outfielder during the second inning. Stone died about an hour later.
“It’s just hard for me, hearing that little boy screaming for his daddy.… That’s one of the main things I remember,” Hamilton said. “It’s definitely on my mind and in my heart. I can’t stop from praying enough for them.”
Hamilton said he is relying on his Christian faith, just as he has during an inspiring comeback from cocaine and alcohol addictions that almost kept him from ever playing in the major leagues.
The reigning AL MVP, whose major league debut in 2007 came almost eight years after he was drafted as the No. 1 overall pick, was selected by fans to start his fourth consecutive All-Star game next week.
Hamilton was in the starting lineup for the second game of Texas’ game against Oakland on Friday night. Rangers manager Ron Washington offered the slugger the day off, but Hamilton wanted to play.
“You pray, and you just understand that there’s nothing that you can do to change it now,” Hamilton said. “We live in a fallen world and things you try to do good, try to make people happy or put a little joy in their day, something can go wrong. You just trust God.”
After Hamilton picked up another foul ball earlier in the second inning Thursday night and tossed it to a ball girl, he heard someone in the stands call out, “Hey, Hamilton, how about the next one.”
When the left fielder turned around, he saw Stone and the boy whose favorite player is Hamilton.
“I just gave him a nod, and I got the next one and threw it in that direction,” Hamilton said. “When I glanced up there, the first person I saw was the dad and the boy. And it looked like somebody who would love to have a baseball.”
That next one came when Oakland’s Conor Jackson(notes) hit a ball that ricocheted into the outfield.
Hamilton tossed it up, and Stone tumbled over the railing, landing in an area out of sight from the field behind the 14-foot-high outfield wall.
“Nobody’s at fault at all. Nobody should feel responsibility. Not anybody,” Athletics manager Bob Melvin said.
“Hopefully Hamilton is fine, … hopefully his teammates and family and everybody help him,” Chicago White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. “It’s not his fault. Hopefully we try to forget this day, but it’s going to be very tough to forget.”
When Hamilton returned to left field after the Rangers batted in the second, he went over to the fence and asked how the man was. Hamilton was told that Stone had hurt his arms and his head but was talking and asking about his son.
“Immediately, I thought he was going to be OK,” Hamilton said. “But then found after the game that he had passed on. It’s just a shock. … It’s just a freak accident, so it’s pretty surreal. It brings things into perspective, how quickly lives can change, in a blink of an eye and very unexpectedly.”
Hamilton said he planned to reach out to the Stone family.
After getting home Thursday night, Hamilton said his wife and his kids stayed up with him for a while, talking to him and encouraging him.
Although Hamilton still expects to toss balls to fans in the stands, the tragic incident will make him think every time he tosses that ball now.
“You do it so many times, you just don’t think about it,” he said.“That’s what the game’s all about. Fans come, they pay to see you play, they want to have a good experience at the ballpark and with player interaction, that’s part of the good experience. … You’ll look carefully at where the fans are, how high they are up, what’s the railing like. All these things will come into play now.”
AP Sports Writer Rick Gano in Chicago and AP freelance writer Ken Sins contributed to this report.

Jeter pulls himself from All-Star game

Jeter pulls himself from All-Star game


NEW YORK (AP)—Derek Jeter(notes) has pulled himself from the All-Star game.
The New York Yankees’ shortstop says he wants to rest while coming back from a strained calf. He was elected by fans to start for the American League.
Jeter is two hits from 3,000 going into Friday night’s game against Tampa Bay.
Jeter has been moved down from the leadoff slot and will bat second against the Rays. He is in a 4-for-18 rut since coming off the disabled list last week.
Rookie Jeremy Hellickson(notes) was ready to pitch for the Rays. Maybe this is an omen: Hellickson’s pet dog is named Jeter. Hellickson grew up rooting for Jeter, and named his Yorkie after the Yankees star

Fed-up Dodgers fire Garvey

Fed-up Dodgers fire Garvey


LOS ANGELES – Steve Garvey, the former iconic first baseman for the Los Angeles Dodgers, on Friday was fired by the team for his aggressive and public attempts to buy out embattled owner Frank McCourt.


Steve Garvey speaks at an event at Dodger Stadium in May 2011.
(Getty Images)

Twice in recent weeks Garvey has taken his plans to the media, first to Fox, then to ESPN radio. In April he told the Los Angeles Times he’d formed an investment group that included billionaire Ron Burkle, although later he confirmed a Yahoo! Sports report that he’d overstated his financial relationship with Burkle. He has enlisted former Dodgers pitcher Orel Hershiser as part of his prospective management group.
In spite of heavy debt, an ongoing dispute with Major League Baseball and last week’s bankruptcy filing, McCourt has said repeatedly he would not sell the Dodgers.
Though he drew a regular paycheck from McCourt and had been asked by the club to cease efforts that would undermine McCourt’s ownership, Garvey continued to seek community and financial support.
Garvey, 62, worked for the club’s marketing and community relations department. From 1969-1982, he batted .301 with 211 home runs and 992 runs batted in for the Dodgers and played on four World Series teams.
In the early 2000s, Garvey had a series of financial setbacks and left behind a trail of unpaid bills.

Fan’s pursuit of gift for son ends in tragedy

Fan’s pursuit of gift for son ends in tragedy


The closest I came to catching a baseball at a major league stadium was the year SkyDome opened. I was 9. Mauro “Goose” Gozzo, a rookie pitcher for Toronto, was trolling around the outfield during batting practice when a man standing next to me shouted for him to throw him a ball for his son. Goose obliged and fired a strike. Emboldened, I asked Goose for a souvenir, too. His next throw didn’t quite reach the stands, even with my lean over the rail. My mom extracted me before Goose could try again.
There is something magical about a baseball, a 5¼-ounce orb made of rubber, cork, yarn and leather, that excites grown men as much as it does children. People catch balls while holding babies, sacrifice $10 beers in pursuit of them, fight and claw for their possession. Everyone in the stands who catches a ball thrusts it into the air. It’s a trophy. Sometimes the applause is polite. Other times the whole crowd cheers. The pursuit of a ball inside a stadium is noble.

Police officers and fans look over the railing where a Texas Rangers fan fell while trying to catch a ball tossed in the stands.
(AP)

It’s especially so when a father tries to fetch a ball for his child, like the man next to me at SkyDome did, and like a man at Rangers Ballpark did Thursday night. His name was Shannon Stone. He was a firefighter from Brownwood, nearly a three-hour drive from the stadium in Arlington. He wore a white T-shirt and a blue Texas Rangers hat. His 6-year-old son wore a red T-shirt and a red Rangers hat. They sat in the left-field bleachers together.
In the second inning, Oakland A’s outfielder Conor Jackson(notes) hit a screaming foul ball down the left-field line. It caromed toward Josh Hamilton(notes), the Rangers’ left fielder. Hamilton picked it up and threw the ball toward the stands. Players do this hundreds of times in a season. It’s part of baseball’s charm. Show up to a stadium, take home a piece of the game.
Hamilton’s toss came in short. It didn’t stop Shannon Stone from stretching to grab it. I’m almost certain, in fact, that the moment before Shannon Stone fell 20 feet and suffered injuries that would kill him, he was indescribably happy. He was going to grab a baseball from Josh Hamilton, a man who hauled himself from the depths of drug addiction to not only return to baseball but win the American League MVP award last season. Once Stone had that baseball, he was going to hand it to his son. And for the rest of his life, his son would have a story to tell about the time his daddy reached over a railing and snagged a bad throw from Josh Hamilton, one of the most talented players ever to wear a baseball uniform.
[Related blog: Man dies after falling out of stands at Rangers game)]
Instead, he watched his dad die. He saw Shannon Stone secure the ball in both hands but lose his balance in the process. The man next to Stone reached, in vain, to grab his leg. Stone fell head first 20 feet. When paramedics arrived to stabilize Stone and take him to a hospital, the relief pitchers in the A’s bullpen overheard the conversation.
“Please check on my son,” Stone said.
This is unfair. It’s so very unfair. It’s unfair to Josh Hamilton, a decent man and a father to three daughters. He tried to do a good deed. That’s all he tried to do. It’s unfair to Shannon Stone, a firefighter for 18 years who just wanted to make his kid’s night. It’s most unfair to that son. He will grow up without a father.
I have a son. He is 3. I’ve taken him to a few ballgames. He likes the hot dogs and fireworks. He wants to know the players’ names. He asks who is nice and who is mean. And when I’m going down the scorecard, answering his questions, he interrupts me and asks to get ice cream.
One night on the walk back from the ice cream shop at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., my son asked to sit in a seat down the right-field line. We moved to the front row. A foul ball ricocheted toward us. My son loves foul balls. When one goes into the upper deck, he’ll crane his neck behind him in case it falls. He always asks me to get one for him, and I tell him I’ll try, and here was my chance. Someone closer beat me to it. That always happens.
The next time we go to a stadium, I’ll try again. Maybe for the first time in 30 years I’ll get lucky and a ball will come toward me or a player will toss it in my direction. If I have to lean a little to grab it, so be it. When I pass it to my son, and he lifts his prize, and the crowd around us applauds, his smile will light up the stadium.
He’ll know it was a gift from a dad who loves him more than anything, a gift fathers hand to their sons at ballparks every day. A gift Shannon Stone, a dad who caught a foul ball for his son, never got to give

SCOOP DU JOUR

Fri Jul 08 08:53am EDT

Phillies' Lidge slowly working way back

Brad LidgeThe Philadelphia Phillies have put three different closers on the disabled list this year: Brad Lidge(notes), Jose Contreras(notes), and Ryan Madson(notes). Young Antonio Bastardo(notes) is holding down the fort for now, finishing off five games.
Lidge, though, is working his way back from a strained rotator cuff and had his second outing for the Phils' Class-A Lakewood BlueClaws Thursday night.
The Philadelphia Daily News reports that Lidge faced three batters, striking out two and getting the third on a groundout. "Every time I go out, I want to progress," said Lidge, the paper reports. "I know it won't be an exact straight line. Tonight, I felt good about my control, about my slider. I want to keep working on my fastball. I knew I still have some work yet to still do on that."
The Daily News has it that Lidge's fastball only topped out at 88 mph. "When I had a few rehab games [last year], I started at 87 mph and it went up a mile per hour each game," Lidge said, the Daily News notes. "I got it up to 90, 91 mph. And then when I got back to Philly, it magically jumps up 2 miles per hour when I get into those situations."
Lidge noted that the team had told him it would take seven to 10 outings to get him back to being ready for the bigs. "I am hopeful it is on the shorter side of that," he said, according to the Daily News. "It's going to be very hard to be patient. It's been a long time, and I want to get back."
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  • Jose ReyesNew York Mets shortstop Jose Reyes(notes) is getting paid a lot of dough and having a phenomenal season in the last year of his contract. So it stands to reason that a team that's had some very public financial troubles would be looking to trade him before the deadline at month's end.
    But General Manager Sandy Alderson says it is "very unlikely" the Mets will trade Reyes this year, according to the New York Daily News. The Mets are currently 7 ½ games back in the wild-card race and 10 games behind in the National League East.
    Reyes just went on the disabled list with a strained left hamstring and the team hopes for him to return by July 22, the News reports. "The Mets plan an effort to re-sign Reyes this winter - although, contrary to a published report about 'secret negotiations,' they do not expect to engage Reyes' agents again before then," the paper notes.
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  • Jaime GarciaLefty Jaime Garcia(notes) is in his second full season as a starting pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals. He won 13 games in 2010 and has gone 8-3 so far this season. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that it's looking like Garcia could be with the team for a few more seasons.
    The word is that Garcia is getting close to signing an extension that would keep him in St. Louis for four more years (plus two option years) at a cost of $27 million, the paper reports.
    "If something happens, obviously, it's exciting," Garcia said, the paper notes. "But I'm not really focusing on that right now. I'm not going to lie to you, some security is always good. Right now all I'm worried about is pitching and that's it."
    The paper reports that the Cards don't make such deals without giving the player a physical. A source tells the Post-Dispatch that Garcia "is scheduled for a physical in the next few days."
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  • SEan BurnettThe New York Yankees are, as usual, one of the best teams in the American League but that isn't stopping the team from looking for trade-deadline deals to get even better.
    FOXSports reports that the Yanks have had internal discussions about adding Washington Nationals reliever Sean Burnett(notes), who is 5-9 this season with a 5.59 ERA and 15 strikeouts in 29 innings pitched.
    FOXSports notes that the Yanks had a scout at Nationals Park Thursday night whose "focus (was) believed to be" on the left-handed Burnett, even though the Nationals "have not yet made Burnett available."
    Burnett didn't make it into the game Thursday.
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    Source: FOXSports

  • Alex RodriguezNew York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez(notes) has had a sore right knee since June 19 when he was injured on the basepaths against the Chicago Cubs.
    Even though the knee has been improving, it may be enough to keep him out of this Tuesday's All-Star game, according to the New York Post.
    The paper notes that Rodriguez looked better Wednesday than he has in recent days, hitting two singles and diving to catch a pop foul.
    Rodriguez said he will likely attend the game even if he decides not to play in it, the paper reports.
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  • Joe MauerThe Minnesota Twins' Joe Mauer(notes) has played 864 games in the big leagues as catcher or DH, but it appears that he'll be playing a new position when he takes the field Thursday: first base.
    The St. Paul Pioneer Press writes: "Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said Wednesday that Joe Mauer almost certainly will start at first base tonight against the Chicago White Sox, a move that keeps Mauer in the lineup while allowing Drew Butera(notes) to catch Carl Pavano(notes) and Jim Thome(notes) to be team's designated hitter."
    Mauer didn't start Wednesday due to "general soreness," the paper notes. In 27 games this season, the 28-year-old has hit .223 with no home runs. He's in the first year of an eight-year deal that pays him $23 million per season.
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  • Justin VerlanderDetroit Tigers pitchers Justin Verlander(notes) and Rick Porcello(notes) were both thrown out of the game in the eighth inning Tuesday when they argued with the umpire. This prompted Tigers manager Jim Leyland to say that tensions in general between the umps and everybody else in the league are way too high.
    "The tension level is much more than it should be," Leyland said, according to the Detroit Free Press. "For the better of the game, something has to happen to tone this stuff down a little bit. All of us have to work harder to somehow ease this tension."
    Leyland went on to say that he doesn't want his team to make excuses or blame the umps for things. "We can't blame an umpire instead of taking care of our business -- getting hits, knocking people in, making plays -- just because we felt we had a call go against us," Leyland said, the paper reports.
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  • Ian StewartColorado Rockies third baseman Ian Stewart(notes) rejoined the team on Tuesday after batting .269 with 14 home runs in Triple-A. His major league season hasn't gone so well: After 54 at-bats, he's hitting a dismal .074. Last year, he played 121 games for the Rocks, pounded out 18 homers, and ended the season with a .256 batting average.
    The Denver Post reports that several other teams are interested in Stewart as the trading deadline approaches. The Post points out that if Stewart can do well in the short run, it will help his stock with the team or a trade.
    Drafted out of high school in 2003, Stewart made his big league debut in 2007 for the Rockies.
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    Source: Denver Post

  • Jose ReyesNew York Mets shortstop Jose Reyes(notes) leads the majors in batting average (.354), hits (124) and triples (15). He's second overall in stolen bases (30) and third in runs scored (65).
    Unfortunately, Reyes is of no help to the Mets right now. He strained his left hamstring Saturday against the New York Yankees and he's been sitting ever since. That hasn't stopped the surprising Mets from winning four straight. But it looks like they'll have to continue winning without Reyes, who will be out for an extended time.
    ESPN New York reports that all indications are that Reyes is headed to the disabled list. After taking ground balls and working on a stationary bicycle and treadmill earlier this week, Reyes was unable to do any physical activity on Wednesday at Dodger Stadium, the site reports. If Reyes can't run when he gets to the park Thursday, which is the expected scenario, he'll be place on the disabled list, ESPN reports.
    "I didn't do anything today. ... Probably tomorrow I don't do anything, either," Reyes said Wednesday, the site reports.
    This will mark the third time Reyes has been to the All-Star game but has been unable to play, ESPN notes.
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  • Martin PradoAtlanta Braves left fielder Martin Prado(notes) has already been on the disabled list for a month, recovering from surgery for a staph infection.
    He won't have to wait much longer to make it back to the big leagues. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that Prado will reunite with the Braves on July 15, the first game after the All-Star break.
    The paper reports that Prado is now headed off to play five games for the Triple-A Gwinnett Braves this weekend before possibly playing a game for the Double-A Mississippi Braves or another affiliate Monday.
    "Give him five or six games, and hopefully coming out of the All-Star break he's good to go," Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said, the Journal-Constitution notes.
    In 61 games this year, Prado has hit .277 with eight homers.
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