Monday, June 27, 2011

BIG LEAGUE STEW

Big League Stew - MLB

  • From LeBron to Lonnie: Chisenhall Era arrives in ClevelandEver since the calendar flipped to June, several MLB teams have called up young prospects in hopes of getting them experience during a lost season.
    The Cleveland Indians, however, are taking a different approach: They're farming their farm to help jump start their playoff hopes.
    MLB.com's Jordan Bastian reports that third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall(notes) was called up from Triple-A on Monday afternoon to take the roster spot of Adam Everett(notes), who was DFA'ed. The long-awaited move comes almost three weeks after second baseman Cord Phelps(notes) was promoted to help out in the infield and in the lineup against right-handed pitching.
    Chisenhall, who bats left-handed, is ranked the top prospect in the Indians' organization and the 36th-best in baseball, according to MLB.com. He was just named the International League's player of the week after posting two homers and 14 RBI for the Columbus Clippers and owns one of the best Twitter handles (@TheChizKid) around.
    He'll be expected to produce immediately as the second-place Indians are coming off scoring just four runs while being swept by the San Francisco Giants over the weekend. There are worse indignities than been locked down by San Francisco pitching, but with Chisenhall's eventual arrival being predicted since the start of spring training, it was a transaction just waiting to be made.
    With the Indians batting a measly .218/.294/.336 in June, it's hoped that Chisenhall can add a bit of power to a team that has gone 10-21 since being a season-high 15 games over .500 on May 23. That's obviously a lot to ask from a kid who won't turn 23 until the end of the season, but we're really just talking about the normal progression of the storyline here. He was going to get called up regardless of the Indians' record, so isn't it better that he's playing very meaningful baseball right out of the box?
  • Orel Hershiser finished the 1988 regular season by amassing 59 straight scoreless innings, a record-breaking prelude to a Cy Young Award and the Los Angeles Dodgers unlikely World Series championship later that October. The grind of '88, along with heavy use from 1985-1989, took a toll on Hershiser's elbow, but he still pitched effectively until the 2000 season.
    After a stint as a pitching coach, Hershiser went into broadcasting and he recently was promoted to lead analyst on ESPN's Sunday Night Baseball. Along the way, he briefly dabbled in coaching Little League — which, along with Subway, helped Hershiser find his way to an Answer Man phone session.
    Subway is bringing back its Baseball DeSigns promotion, which Hershiser will explain — along with his thoughts on the Dodgers, both past and present.
    David Brown: As a former Dodgers player, what do you think of the turmoil the team has been going though the past couple of years?
    Orel Hershiser: I'm allowed to check my Dodger Blue heart at the door, because I'm in the media now, so it's easy not to talk emotionally about their struggles. But it is hard to watch, of course. I was with the organization 11 years, and I'm going to be linked to the Dodgers until my grave. It's very hard to watch, not only for Dodgers fans but also for all of Major League Baseball. When you see MLB have to go in and help them out and kind of steer the organization, that's something you never would have thought of seeing when, say, the O'Malleys owned the team. Or when Fox owned the team. It's sad, that's for sure.
    DB: Regardless of who owns them, what would you like to see changed about how they're run?
    OH: I don't think it's right for me to comment on their internal workings at all. It's fair to analyze their players on the field, to analyze their roster, to look at their record and say that Major League Baseball needs the Dodgers to be like rock stars so that when they come to town, there's an extra 8-10,000 people in the seats. Just like what happens when the Red Sox travel, when the Yankees travel, what happens now when the Texas Rangers travel. The teams that are at the top of pack usually help the other teams when they came to town. That's what the Dodgers always did. That's the hard part for Major League Baseball. Especially in this economy, even in baseball, they're looking for new ways to draw fans and keep fans and to cause excitement. The Dodgers aren't doing that right now.
    DB: I was looking through some of your old baseball cards, and your Donruss card from 1989 celebrates your scoreless innings record, and there's a graphic that says "59 and counting" on it. Do you consider that a jinx?
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  • Ed. note: Shutdown Corner's Doug Farrar was at Safeco Field over the weekend to shadow Florida Marlins manager Jack McKeon. The octogenarian skipper did not disappoint, spinning a number of enjoyable stories over the three-day series.
    SEATTLE — True baseball lifers are hard to find. Sure, there are men who will manage well into their 60s, trying and failing to retire along the way, but they seem often as not to be dragged back into the game, and the endings are often sad. Rare is the man who waits in the wings to pounce on the first opportunity given, when the man in question is 80 years old.
    But as we all know, that's what happened to new (and former) Florida Marlins manager Jack McKeon, who replaced Edwin Rodriguez soon after Rodriguez's resignation last weekend. Under Rodriguez, the Marlins had lost nine straight and were 1-17 in the month of June. Still, when he left, general manager Larry Beinfest said that the move "hit us and hit us hard." After one more loss under interim manager Brandon Hyde, the Marlins announced that McKeon — the man who led the franchise to victory in the 2003 World Series — would have a second act.
    He had been a special assistant for the team — basically, McKeon was his own boss. He would review the minor league clubs, make personal appearances, and consult with the Marlins' front office on any number of matters. The move back to manager was a complete surprise to McKeon, but not an unpleasant one.
    For Mrs. McKeon, it may be a different story.
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  • Unless you were a fan of the St. Louis Cardinals, the ninth inning of Saturday's 6-3 win by the Toronto Blue Jays featured a pretty funny moment. That was when Edwin Encarnacion launched a home run and it landed in the Busch Stadium bullpen, where teammate Octavio Dotel retrieved and then danced with his new souvenir.
    Inspired by Dotel's give-and-take, Ian Hunter of Blue Jay Hunter decided for some reason that the highlight should be mashed with "The Natural." I'm glad he did:


    Here's the original video of the home run and Dotel's one-man party:
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  • Look, Ma! No gloves!
    Mired in a 4-for-37 slump entering this past weekend's series with the Houston Astros, Tampa Bay Rays third baseman Evan Longoria decided to get his George Brett on and not wear batting gloves.
    Smooth move: With his hands uncovered, Longoria went 8 for 14 with three homers and three doubles in three wins over the Astros. He also scored six runs and drove in 10 RBIs.
    Whether or not Longoria's huge weekend was a product of opting out of the gloves or just a benefit of facing the awful Astros remains to be seen. But after seeing his average rise from .232 to .253 in just one weekend, Longoria said he plans to stick with the gloveless look.
    From MLB.com:
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  • Kids these days. Ever since that young Phillies fan tossed her dad's gift of a foul ball back over the railing, it's become a bit of a "thing" for children to reject ballpark souvenirs.
    You'd like to call 'em ingrates or maybe even dismiss the meme as tired, but check out the rocket on this little guy's arm!


    Impressive effort, to say the least. Like Henry Rowengartner in "Rookie of the Year" before him, this fella amazed a lot of people — well, except for the shocked man sitting next to him — by chucking Andres Torres'(notes) foul ball back toward the field of play at the San Francisco Giants-Cleveland Indians game on Saturday.
    Can a meeting with Gary Busey and Daniel Stern be that far behind?
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  • Nine innings, nine items to get you going. Ladies and gentleman of the Stew, take a sip of morning Juice.
    1. Pewaukee Push: Was this the weekend when the Milwaukee Brewers made their big move in the NL Central? Time will tell, but a sweep-sealing 6-2 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Sunday put winning pitcher Chris Narveson (right) and the Crew in command of a division race that has been neck and neck for most of the year.
    Combined with the St. Louis Cardinals getting swept by the Toronto Blue Jays, the domination at Miller Park gave the Brewers a three-game lead in the Central and some more hope that they can win the team's first division title since 1982.
    "It's definitely bigger than a no-game lead," Prince Fielder said.
    Hey, no kidding, Prince. The once-hot Twins have now lost five straight games and fielded a lineup on Sunday that featured 22 combined homers, just one more than Fielder's season total.
    2. They can't win if they can't score (but San Francisco can): The bad news for the San Francisco Giants was that they managed to score only eight runs all weekend. The good was their pitchers only allowed a total of five, sending the team to a sweep over the Cleveland Indians, their dance partners in the 1954 World Series. Madison Bumgarner provided the pitching punctuation for the series, striking out 11 batters in seven innings during Sunday's 3-1 win.
    3. A daring escape: The Detroit Tigers are proud owners of a one-game lead in the AL Central, but the way they did it couldn't have been any more last-minute. Jim Leyland's crew scored seven runs with two outs in the eighth inning, good for an 8-3 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks.
    Read More »




  • Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Jimmy Rollins stands 5-foot-7 and weighs 175 pounds, and he proudly owns 161 career home runs in nearly 6,600 career at-bats.
    Those stats did not make him an obvious candidate to try and hit a baseball farther than anyone in recorded history ever has. But throw in a little Red Bull (which sponsors Rollins), along with some "mad scientists" who have been experimenting with composite bats and lively balls, and you got Rollins attempting a Guinness World Record on Monday.
    Rollins tried to break the record for "Longest Batted Ball," a mark of 575 feet owned by immortal slugger Babe Ruth. Adding to the circuses, Rollins took his hacks with souped-up bats at the intersection of the Ben Franklin Parkway and 20th Street in downtown Philly. The spectacle ran live on ESPN3.com during lunchtime.
    While Rollins failed gain to Ruthian lengths with any homers — the farthest he hit any ball was 463 feet — he did entertain Philly pholks in a unique way on their lunch hour. Phillies blog extraordinaire The 700 Level recapped the events in brief but entertaining prose.
    Below, check out a YouTube video of Rollins' performance, plus a Q&A we did with J-Roll before he tried to break the record. Of course, we also stray from the topic a little, exploring Rollins' brief but storied acting career and his second career as a music impresario:
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  • Photo: Yes, this man shaved a Joe Mauer jersey into his back hair
    Say it ain't so, Joe! While our own Dave Brown thought he found the ugliest Joe Mauer(notes) T-shirt during last year's playoffs, those who had the misfortune of watching this last weekend's Twins-Brewers series can attest that was far from the case. Yes, that's a man with the name and number of the Minnesota Twins catcher shorn into a back rug lush and thick enough to be shampooed with a bottle of Mauer-endorsed Head and Shoulders.
    If we're being honest, we'll say that we admire the steady hand of whoever fashioned that evenly spaced nameplate for Mr. Sasquatch. But in no way can we condone this over-the-top display of love for Mauer. Can you imagine ordering Miller Park's famous cheese fries in a helmet and then learning your seat is right behind this guy? That type of nightmare fuel would spoil Racing Sausage kebab sales for the entire mezzanine.
    Big BLS H/N: Midwest Sports Fans
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  • Friday night was already shaping up to be a good one for Michael Kacer.
    He took his 13-year-old nephew, Isaiah, to his first New York Yankees game. And as part of a group with Achilles International — a nonprofit organization devoted to athletes with disabilities — Kacer got to hang out on the field before the game, meeting Nick Swisher and posing for a photo with Joe Girardi. Kacer served 11 years in the National Guard and lost his left arm in a 2008 rocket attack.
    But the night got even better after the game began. During the Yankees' half of the first inning, Curtis Granderson popped a foul ball behind home plate. The ball caromed off the concrete just inside the wall and bounced up toward the next level of seats. Kacer reached out over the railing and caught the ball with his cap. No sweat.
    Here's the video, courtesy of MLB.com:
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