Sunday, April 29, 2012

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/josh-hamilton-has-baseball-world-wondering-what-he-s-capable-of-in-a-full--focused-season.html

Josh Hamilton has baseball world wondering what he's capable of in a full, focused season



Josh Hamilton is baseball's ultimate what if.
To watch him face the Tampa Bay Rays on national television, as he did this weekend, is to wonder how his career and the fortunes of the team that drafted him might have differed. Josh Hamilton was once Bryce Harper, the sweet-swinging, power-hitting outfielder chosen No. 1 overall and destined to turn around a sluggish franchise.
The No. 1 overall pick in 1999, Josh Hamilton didn't make his major-league debut until 2007. (US Presswire)To look at Hamilton's career stats is to wonder what they might be had he never been a drug and alcohol addict. Would he be a sure Hall of Famer had he been clean and broken into the big leagues a few years after being drafted in 1999 rather than with the Reds in 2007? Hamilton was 26 in his first real MLB season. Harper is 19.
Even now, at age 30 and a fixture in the Texas Rangers' lineup, there are what ifs about Hamilton: What if he gets hurt again? What if he falls off the wagon again? Those are legitimate questions and always will be.
But now there's another what if – a far more pleasant one to consider: What if it all comes together for Hamilton? How good can he be?
"He's a definite Triple Crown threat," teammate David Murphy said.
"He's the most talented player in the game right now," Michael Young said.
"He's making the game look easy right now," Mike Napoli said. "He's a freak."
It's not as if Hamilton hasn't had brilliant seasons before. He was AL MVP in 2010 when he hit .359 with 32 home runs. But that was one of only three seasons in which he played more than 90 games. His teammates marvel at his ability, but they agree there's room for improvement.
"Sometimes I think he doesn't even feel good at the plate," Napoli said. "It just happens for him."
[Tim Brown: Bryce Harper finds things "beautiful" in the major leagues]
Hamilton admits this is true. Asked how often he feels completely comfortable at bat, he rubs his eyes and says, "Never." He doesn't smile when he says it, either. He feels pitchers are changing things up on him all the time, and he's scrambling to stay ahead of them.
"You try to get a certain feel," he said. "The more at-bats you get, the better you feel. But then they start to do another thing and you have to adjust."
Well, he seems to be adjusting. This season he's hitting .388 with nine home runs and 24 RBIs in 21 games, which projects to 72 home runs and nearly 200 RBIs. Obviously that's not a sustainable pace, but it is a contract season, and pitchers are already uncertain how to approach him.
In Detroit a week ago, Tigers pitcher Rick Porcello served Hamilton a steady diet of outside pitches, including a change-up that he fouled off. Porcello figured he'd bust Hamilton inside, since that's really the only thing that works against a brutal Rangers lineup, and Hamilton whipsawed a high hard one deep into the bleachers for a three-run home run. The next day, lefty Drew Smyly fed Hamilton outside pitches and then tried to sneak one inside. Same result.
[ MLB Full Count: Watch live look-ins and highlights for free all season long ]
"You try to move the fastball in and out," Porcello said. "I gotta tip my hat to him. I put it exactly where I wanted it. What are you gonna do?"
So what's changed in Hamilton's approach? Perspective, for one thing. Hamilton says he's always set goals for the season: 30 HRs, 100 RBIs and a .300 average. That's almost standard when he's healthy: In the three seasons he's played more than 100 games, Hamilton hit 25/32/32 home runs, drove in 94/100/130 runs and batted .298/.359/.304. This season, he says, he didn't set any goals. His only hope was "to help the team." He says that's allowed him to relieve some of the pressure he feels. Hard to imagine that a former MVP who swings so easily can feel a lot of pressure, but he says he feels it "a lot more than you'd think."
Josh Hamilton played 15 games for Class-A Hudson Valley in 2006. (St. Petersburg Times)There are certainly reasons for that. The demons of alcohol and injury shadow him. Less than three months ago, in February, he held a press conference to admit he had lapsed again. The relatively remote location of his team doesn't help much, either. The Rangers are the easternmost team in the AL West by far, meaning road trips are viciously long. Going to church means attending chapel in ballparks all over the country. Visiting with family means using Tango to place video calls to his daughters over a PDA. For someone trying to stay grounded and clean, 10-day road trips must be a landmine. He admits they feel long, whether in April or September.
"One day at a time is not just for a 12-step program," he said. "It's for everything."
That includes the long summer. Hamilton's only gotten through a couple of baseball steps so far – including one long road trip – but he's healthy and, we can only hope, sober. But he's found a mighty groove and he's protected not only in the lineup by great hitters but also in the clubhouse by teammates who look out for him. There will always be "what ifs" for Josh Hamilton, about his past and his future. But for now there's a "what if" for his immediate present:
What if this keeps up?

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/brandon-inge-couldn-t-hit--but-he-deserved-better-from-detroit-tigers-fans-before-his-release.html

 

 

Brandon Inge couldn't hit, but he deserved better from Detroit Tigers fans before his release



Karma just hit Detroit Tigers fans with a Babe Ruth-sized bat.
The morning after the most unfairly jeered athlete in recent Motown memory was released by the team, outfielder Delmon Young was arrested for a possible hate crime in New York City.
Young did something Inge would never have done – embarrass the city he played in for so long. Instead, certain people in and around the city embarrassed themselves by lustily booing a 12-year Tiger because – gasp – he is no longer a good hitter.
And it wasn't just a smattering of boos. It was a torrent – as if Inge was Shea Weber of the Nashville Predators, Claude Lemieux of the Colorado Avalanche or the ghost of Juan Gonzalez's contract. Some fans actually laughed at Inge when he appeared at the plate last weekend. It got so bad that manager Jim Leyland devoted a soliloquy to defending Inge in a post-loss interview session Monday, assuring fans that it wasn't all Inge's fault the team was losing.
Slumping Brandon Inge was released by the Tigers. (AP Photo)Mind you, Detroit Lions defensive lineman Ndamukong Suh was cheered by home fans after stomping on a Green Bay Packers player last November, failing to admit it and risking his team's playoff appearance in the process. And, really, there's not much wrong with that reaction: Suh is a hometown guy who has played well and given a lot to charity.
[Related: Tigers' Delmon Young arrested on a hate crime harassment charge]
As for Inge? Well, he was drafted by the Tigers in 1998 as a catcher even though he had little experience at the position. He played his entire career with the team, all but wrecking his knees trying to backstop the worst team in baseball through a 119-loss season in 2003.
He was a stand-up Tiger even when the very fans that ended up despising him were too good to show up and cheer. He was active in the community, and photos of him with sick kids are still visible on gas station pumps throughout the area. He was happy to be in Detroit when it was widely thought big-name players would never again sign with the Tigers. (Remember how the acquisitions of Pudge Rodriguez and Magglio Ordonez were major coups because at least somebody good wanted to spend a summer in the D?)
He willingly played unfamiliar positions as the team requested, and hit 27 home runs in the dream 2006 season, when the team came out of nowhere to make the World Series for the first and only time since 1984. He even made ESPN's defensive play of the year at third base. Inge hit 27 home runs again as recently as 2009, and made the All-Star team that year. Last season, he was sent to the minors and vowed to rebuild his swing. He did. Inge returned to the big club and played solidly during its playoff run.
Yes, he's a few weeks shy of his 35th birthday and his production has fallen off markedly. Last season he had almost as many strikeouts as total bases. But is that any reason to rattle Comerica Park with boos as if the man set a kitten on fire? And the venom wasn't just when Inge came to bat. In an off-season when the Tigers had news in the form of a Cy Young and MVP award for Justin Verlander, along with a key acquisition in Prince Fielder, the sports radio airwaves still belonged to the Inge haters, who were out for blood because he didn't seem to realize he was a terrible hitter. There were certainly those who loved Inge unconditionally, but eventually those people were drowned out.
Detractors may say it wasn't really Inge that was booed, but rather those who supported Inge. It was a bit like Tim Tebow (another No. 15), where haters don't really dislike the player personally, but rather the blind devotion to the player even when it's clear he doesn't have the talent to remain at the top level.
Yet the boos rained down on Inge himself. Those were the last sounds he heard after more than a decade in a Tigers uniform.
Inge was classy to the end – and past the end. Here's what he said upon hearing of his release Thursday: "The chance to go play maybe somewhere else might be good for me personally. But my heart will always be in Detroit, 100 percent forever. I appreciate everything that's happened here and every opportunity that I've been given. This is an emotional city. This is a city that will back you. They want their teams to do well. If they're not, they'll let you know, and there's nothing wrong with that. That shows they are fans. A fan that dislikes someone or that likes someone is still a fan. I respect them all, I really do."
Now, as has happened so many times during Inge's career, the Tigers have an unexpected hole in the lineup. That's because an allegedly inebriated Young is accused of shouting anti-Semitic remarks at a panhandler and getting into a tussle with New York City tourists at 4 a.m. on the morning before Friday night's game against the Yankees. Now that's worthy of public ridicule, and maybe an outright release, but this time Inge won't be around to fill the gap.
Brandon Inge isn't going down in Detroit history as Steve Yzerman or Barry Sanders. He simply wasn't that good. But you know what? There have been years when Detroit itself wasn't that good. During the bad times, though, the city always showed up and worked hard. That's something to commend, not something to revile. And still a sizeable part of Detroit turned on the man anyway. It's sad how Brandon Inge always saw himself in the Motor City, and yet in the end, the Motor City failed to see itself in him.