Monday, May 26, 2008
Posada catches five innings in simulated game
Friday, May 02, 2008
Gallardo's season over?
Baseball star Canseco loses home to foreclosure
Canseco, 43, one of the most flamboyant U.S. baseball players until his retirement from the major leagues in 2001, told the celebrity TV show "Inside Edition" that it did not make financial sense to keep his 7,300 square-foot (678.2 sq-metre) home in the Los Angeles suburb of Encino.
"Inside Edition" said it had foreclosure documents showing Canseco owed a bank more than $2.5 million on the house.
"I've been out of the game for about eight or nine years and obviously this issue with the foreclosure on my home," he told "Inside Edition".
"I do have a judgment on my home and it to me is very strange because it didn't make financial sense for me to keep paying a mortgage on a home that was basically owned by someone else," he said.
Canseco said the foreclosure was not a difficult issue emotionally. But he sympathized with the millions of other Americans who have already lost, or face losing their homes, because of soaring interest rates on sub-prime loans.
"I decided to just let it go, but in most cases and most families, they have nowhere else to go," he said.
It was not clear from the "Inside Edition" report where Canseco was now living.
U.S. home foreclosure filings jumped 23 percent in the first quarter of 2008 from the prior quarter and more than doubled from a year earlier, real estate data firm RealtyTrac reported this week.Canseco was one of the first Major League Baseball players to admit using steroids in his tell-all 2005 book "Juiced." His personal life has also been controversial with two divorces and several run-ins with the law for violence.
Canseco said a good portion of the money he earned in his heyday went to pay for his divorces. "I had a couple of divorces that cost me $7 or $8 million," he said.
Baseball mourns Buzzie Bavasi2
Bavasi died of natural causes following a brief illness in San Diego.
From the moment he became traveling secretary of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1939 until he bowed out as executive vice president of the California Angels following the 1984 season, Bavasi earned a reputation as an imaginative, media-savvy front-office maven.
Perhaps best remembered for building the Dodgers' first World Series championship team in 1955, the only title of the team's long tenure in Brooklyn, Bavasi was also behind the California Angels' first two division titles in 1979 and 1982.
His friends and admirers in and out of baseball are legion.
"All of baseball today mourns the passing of one of its giants, Buzzie Bavasi," Commissioner Bud Selig said. "Buzzie was one of the game's greatest front-office executives during a period that spanned parts of six different decades.
"He loved the game and he loved talking about it. Buzzie was a wonderful friend. He always gave me good advice and had an excellent perspective on the issues of the day. I will miss our long and frequent correspondence. My sympathies go out to his family and friends."
"I considered Buzzie to be a friend of mine and Gene's," said Jackie Autry, the widow of the late Angels owner and honorary president of the American League, "and a man I admired and respected for his vast baseball knowledge.
"His contribution to baseball will be sorely missed by all, and I know his wife, Evit, and his sons and grandchildren will miss this wonderful human being."
Mike Port, who succeeded Bavasi as Angels GM late in the 1984 season and now is MLB's vice president of umpiring, tied a bow around the baseball statesman's legacy, saying, "Eight National League pennants, four World Series titles, two American League Championship Series titles, more than two dozen of his former players who managed at the Major League level! That just scratches the surface of Buzzie's accomplishments in this game.
"He was just simply an outstanding baseball mind," Port added. "He could be your best friend or your best motivator. It was a privilege to have been mentored by him and to have worked for him."
"He was like a father to me," said Don Zimmer, the 77-year-old senior advisor for the Tampa Bay Rays who made his big league debut for Bavasi's Dodgers in the mid-'50s. "From the time I was 19 years old ... all my life, really. I can't describe how much he meant to me."
"Buzzie had a knack about him," said Ralph Branca, one of the mainstays of the Dodgers' post-World War II pitching staff. "He was good with the players, a very warm individual who worked his way up the ladder of the Dodgers' Minor League system."
New York-born and a graduate of Bronxville High School and DePauw University, Bavasi succeeded Branch Rickey as the Brooklyn Dodgers' general manager in 1951. He formally retired from the game in 1999, having served as a special advisor to Autry.
In between those benchmarks, he served as the San Diego Padres' charter president and spearheaded organizations that captured four World Series and nine pennants.
Bavasi's survivors include Evit, his wife of 68 years; and sons Bill, the general manager of the Seattle Mariners; and Peter, the general manager of the San Diego Padres before becoming founding president of the Toronto Blue Jays in 1977.
Other survivors are son Chris and his wife, Corinne; son Bob and his wife, Margaret; grandchildren Patrick, Cristina, Aimee, Amanda, Alexandra, Haley, Emily, Kyle and Katherine; and great-grandchildren Cooper, Lolly, Cole, Summer and Luke.
Bavasi respected the bottom line, both on the ledger and in the standings. He was always about substance; his fingerprints were all over the '55 club that ended the Dodgers' long run as Brooklyn's Bums. The season before, he had handed the managerial reins to an unknown, Walter Alston, and fleshed out the roster around core players Duke Snider, Jackie Robinson, Pee Wee Reese and Roy Campanella.
But Bavasi was also a staunch owner's man, known for irreverence.
A personification of "old school," he was one of the guardians of the reserve-clause brand of baseball.
He once said, "We operated by the Golden Rule. He who has the gold, rules."
Yet after free agency dawned in 1976, Bavasi adjusted to become one of its most fervent exploiters. With the Angels, and with The Cowboy's open saddlebags, he transformed a chronic loser into a division champ by corralling such free agents as Rod Carew, Reggie Jackson, Don Baylor, Bobby Grich and Fred Lynn.
"He was a very good baseball man who thoroughly knew the game and contributed a great deal for both the organizations he worked for, as well as the game itself," Carew said. "The organizations he worked for always came first in his mind, and he always tried to do the right thing for each of them."
"Buzzie was one of those rare baseball icons," Grich said. "His energy and enthusiasm were always contagious. It was a cherished opportunity to have been around him."
A proud man who always walked with his chest held a little higher when his often-questioned moves were clicking, Bavasi was not averse to eating crow when it was deserved.
He alienated much of Southern California in 1979, not so much for his inability to re-sign free agent Nolan Ryan to a new Angels contract but for his parting words about the icon, who that season had gone 16-14: "We'll just have to find a couple of 8-7 pitchers to replace him."
After the durable Ryan notched his sixth no-hitter 11 years later, Bavasi sent him a message: "Nolan, some time ago I made it public that I made a mistake. You don't have to rub it in."
As the passing of Bavasi sank in on Thursday, voices from throughout the game joined the chorus of grateful remembrances and sad farewells.
"The Dodgers, and the baseball world, lost a true pioneer today," said Dodgers owner Frank McCourt. "Buzzie's contributions to the Dodgers are immeasurable. His passion for the game and loyalty to baseball was surpassed only by his devotion to family and a willingness to stand up for what he believed in."
"We were deeply saddened to learn of Buzzie's passing," said Jeff Idelson, president of the Hall of Fame. "His passion for and dedication to the game were unsurpassed, and I know he took great pride in seeing it prosper.
"He was an icon in Brooklyn as one of the architects of its only World Series title, and he took those winning ways west. He was a tremendous friend to the Hall of Fame on many levels, and I will personally miss our deep conversations about the game he loved so much."
"Our relationship was a very good one," said Jim Fregosi, the Angels' first iconic player, who was brought back by Bavasi to manage the team in 1978. "I enjoyed the opportunity to work for and with Buzzie. He was truly one of the genuine characters of our game."
Missouri playing catch-up to host NCAA baseball regional
Interest in the program and attendance have increased. Coach Tim Jamison believed that part of the reason 3,847 showed up at Kauffman Stadium to see the Tigers play Kansas on Tuesday had something to do with new fans won over by the Tigers’ postseason play in Columbia last year.
“We had done some good things to elevate the program in the last five, six years,” Jamison said. “But until you get your local fans to buy in …We had been missing the crowds. Then we hosted (the regional), and a lot of people who showed up wanted to come back.”
Regionals on your campus can be that important.
The Tigers have work to do if they’re going to repeat as a host program this year. Although they’re ranked No. 14 nationally, Mizzou stands fourth in the Big 12, and the league has never had more than three teams serve as one of the 16 first-round hosts.
“Hopefully we can get back in it and put ourselves in a position to host,” Jamison said.
In NCAA play, four teams are assigned to each of the 16 first-round sites, with the winners emerging into the super regional round, played at eight sites. Those winners advance to the College World Series.
Last year, Missouri earned one of those first-round sites but lost to Louisville in the regional title game.
One problem for the Tigers this year is that they’re a combined 1-5 against Oklahoma State and Texas A&M, two of the teams ahead of them in the Big 12 race. The Tigers finish the regular season with a home series against second-place Nebraska.
Being in fourth-place may not be holding Missouri back as much as its RPI. Yes, the same Ratings Percentage Index that helps select the NCAA men’s basketball field is a tool used by the baseball committee to identify at-large teams and seed the 64-team baseball field.
After its 3-0 loss to the Jayhawks, Missouri fell to the mid-40s in the RPI.
“We have a lot of climbing to do,” Jamison said.
It’s not a subject that gets much dugout chatter, anywhere.
“We take a line from Tom Osborne,” Nebraska coach Mike Anderson said of the Cornhuskers’ legendary football coach and athletic director. “Winning isn’t talked about often. You take care of the things that contribute to winning.”
Since 2005, Nebraska twice has been host to regionals, advancing to the College World Series in 2005.
Lake Orion still rolling Baseball
The Dragons are 15-0 overall, ranked No. 1 by the state coaches association, No. 25 in USA Today and fresh off a quality win over No. 7 Royal Oak this week.
The Dragons have thwarted the competition with a mix of precision hitting and consistent pitching. Lake Orion is averaging nearly 13 runs a game this season.
"I think this is the highest scoring team in 10 years," head coach Andy Schramek said. "We have a multi-dimensional offensive team. We do have guys who can hit home runs up and down the lineup but we run a lot, steal a lot of bases. We hit a lot of doubles. We're patient. I think we've walked 30 more times than we've struck out this year."
No. 2 hitter Brandon Riggsbee and cleanup hitter Mike Musary, both seniors, have led a balanced attack at the plate.
Senior Connor Mielock, who will play at Oakland University, and senior Josh Deeg, who will play at Xavier, have provided a one-two punch on the mound. Mielock has done a fine job mixing his pitches this season, including a slider. Deeg, meanwhile, has thrived off a curveball and change-up. Both throw in the upper 80s. Both are 5-0.
And both will be important pieces the remainder of the season, which includes stiff competition against the likes of Novi, Midland, Grandville, Utica Eisenhower, Romeo and a shared tournament with Oxford.
Moving on: St. Clair Shores Lake Shore may have lost its University of Michigan-bound star pitcher Kevin VanGheluwe for the season, but the Shorians certainly haven't lost hope on their season.
Far from it.
VanGheluwe, a Mr. Baseball candidate, pitched his last game for Lake Shore on April 9 before undergoing season-ending surgery to remove two blood clots in his right arm.
Lake Shore was 7-0 with VanGheluwe. The Shorians have gone 7-0 without him.
Lake Shore has drawn from a pool of talented pitchers that includes Warren De La Salle transfer Dan Keith, a right-handed junior, left-handed junior Travis Brown, lefty senior Vinnie Plouffe and junior righty closer Cameron Walker.
Layton spoils Knights' mark
But the Lancers couldn't hold it, as the Knights rallied by scoring three runs for a win that kept them unbeaten in Region 1 and frustrated the Lancers to no end at the same time.
Losing in that fashion would be hard for most teams to recover from. But, on Thursday, Layton put the demons behind it, defeating Northridge 6-2 to become the first team to hand the Knights a league loss after 11 consecutive wins.
"That's a very good team over there," Lancers coach Robert Ferneau said. "We came out and played well. Defensively, we came out and didn't make mistakes. That was huge."
With the win, Layton only needs a win in its final two games of the regular season to lock up the region's third seed for the upcoming playoffs. The Lancers have already clinched a berth in the postseason, but they obviously want to improve their position in any way possible.
"That's the spot that we want," Ferneau said.
Gavin Green made that happen with a bat that started hot and stayed that way throughout. Green, who has signed to play baseball at Utah, hit a two-run homer in the first inning. He followed that up with two more base hits, one of which scored a run. All told, Green was 3-for-4 with three a performance that Layton had to have.
It was also a welcome game for Green, who was roughed up on Tuesday when he pitched.
"I wanted to get them back," Green said. "They hit two home runs off me, so I wanted to get one back. I just played well today. It was just one of those days."
Green's offense helped pitcher Bo Jensen settle down. And when he did, he calmly went on to throw a complete game in which he allowed one of the best offenses in the state to score just two runs.
Jensen's ability to control the game with his arm was vital. He also worked himself out of a bases loaded one out jam in the top of the sixth inning.
"That was a big-time performance by Bo," Ferneau said. "He was given a 3-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning and he delivered when we needed it."
* Gavin Green goes 3-for4 with a home run and three RBIs.
* Layton becomes the first Region 1 team to defeat Northridge, which had won 11 consecutive league games.
* With the loss, Northridge drops back into a first-place tie with Viewmont. The two teams face each other next week
Baseball notes
Colorado Rockies star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki tore a tendon in his left quadriceps and could be out until the all-star break, if not longer.
"Best case scenario is six weeks. The realistic one is a few months," agent Paul Cohen told the Associated Press. "We're hoping it's a couple months, but we won't know until they do further medical tests."
Tulowitzki, the runner-up for NL Rookie of the Year last season, was injured while charging a grounder in the first inning at San Francisco Tuesday night, and he underwent an MRI exam on Wednesday, which found a complete tear of the tendon near his hip.
Phil Hughes has a stress fracture in one of his ribs, and the New York Yankees' pitcher is expected to be sidelined for at least two months. Hughes had tests that revealed a stress fracture in the ninth rib on his right side. He will be shut down for four weeks and re-evaluated.
Yankees pitcher Angel Reyes was suspended for 50 games after testing positive for stanozolol metabolites under baseball's minor league drug program. The suspension will start at the beginning of class-A Staten Island's season in the New York-Penn League.
The Houston Astros will activate third baseman Ty Wigginton from the 15-day disabled list today when the team opens a three-game home series with Milwaukee. To make room for Wigginton on the roster, the Astros will option right-handed pitcher Jack Cassel to Triple-A Round Rock.
Baseball SCOREBOARD
- Ryan Braun, Brewers, homered and drove in three runs in a 4-3 win over the Cubs.
- Sidney Ponson, Rangers, pitched eight innings in a 2-1 victory over the Royals, earning his first win in exactly a year.
- Juan Pierre, Dodgers, went 2-for-3 with a two-run double in a 5-3 victory over the Marlins. He also was hit by a pitch, stole a base and scored a run.
- Matt Garza, Rays, allowed two runs and three hits over six innings in a 4-2 victory over the Orioles that kept the surprising Rays atop the AL East.
- A.J. Burnett, Blue Jays, scattered three hits over 7 2-3 innings in a 3-0 victory over the Red Sox. He struck out five and walked five.
Rockies star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki has a torn tendon in his left quadriceps and could be out until the All-Star break. ... B.J. Upton left Tampa Bay's 4-2 victory over the Orioles with a strained left shoulder. Upton said he should be fine in a day or two.Carlos Zambrano pitched 6 1-3 innings in the Cubs' 4-3 loss to Milwaukee, allowing one run and seven hits. He also helped himself with his 13th career homer - tying the team record held by Ferguson Jenkins.
The Dodgers completed their second consecutive series sweep by beating Florida 5-3. The Dodgers have won six in a row, their longest winning streak since taking seven straight to close the 2006 season.
The Athletics pounded out 20 hits in a 15-6 rout of the Angels, highlighted by an eight-run fifth inning. Everybody got in on the act, too, with five different A's driving in a pair of runs each and every player in the starting lineup getting a hit.
The Mariners' Richie Sexson hit the first pitch he saw from Masa Kobayashi for his 300th career homer in a 3-2, 11-inning loss to Cleveland. It was his sixth of the season and 100th since signing with Seattle as a free agent after the 2004 season. The first baseman reached the Seattle milestone in 463 games, quickest in team history.
Toronto starter A.J. Burnett improved to 4-0 against Boston by scattering three hits over 7 2-3 innings in a 3-0 victory. He's allowed one run in 16 innings over two starts at Fenway Park.
Slumping slugger Ryan Howard homered off Joe Thatcher leading off the eighth inning, pulling a 2-0 fastball into the right field seats and helping Philadelphia to a 3-2 win over the Padres. The 2006 NL MVP, who is batting just .184 with six homers and 14 RBIs, also had an RBI double.
Baseball coach gets 500th win
When Hermosillo became Montgomery's coach in 1984, Johnson was the Aztecs' first baseman.
When Hermosillo's team scored a 3-0 South Bay League win yesterday over visiting Mater Dei, Johnson was in the other dugout coaching the Crusaders.
It was more than just another victory for Hermosillo, who became the San Diego Section's fifth coach to reach 500 wins.
“I was here for Manny's first win and here today,” Johnson said. “It's two different feelings, obviously. But my relationship with the Hermosillo family runs deeper than baseball.”
The Hermosillo family was on hand en masse. Two generations and then some.
“This is special because I was able to get this with all of my family being here,” said Hermosillo, whose career record is 500-203. “My wife (Rosario) has been with me every game, and you can't get much better than that.”
Even plate umpire Jim O'Hanlon hugged Hermosillo during the postgame jubilation.
“We don't have an umpire out there who doesn't love working Manny's games,” said Bob Merchant, assignment secretary for the umpires. “He's a credit to the game.”
Montgomery players didn't miss a chance to deliver the traditional drenching of their coach with the team water jug.
“It is an honor to be a part of this celebration,” senior right fielder Brandon Meredith said. “Baseball has been such a big part of Coach Hermosillo's life. It's great that we could help him reach this milestone.”
Montgomery began the season 6-6, but the Aztecs have won 10 of 11 to take a firm grip on first place.
Hermosillo, who teaches social science, has a collection of game balls for milestone wins – 1, 100, 200, 300, 400 and now 500.
“Actually, I was curious about the first (win) so I looked it up before (yesterday's) game,” said Hermosillo, noting it was 5-4 over La Jolla the second game of his career.
“I remember when we got 300. It was in 2000, the year we won (the section Division II title). We all thought that was a big deal. And then when we got 400 this current group of seniors was in the ninth grade. I remember kidding around with them saying, 'You guys are going to take me to .500.' It's something you say but never think it's going to come. Now that it has, wow, 500, wow, that's a lot.”
Though proud of his coaching record, Hermosillo clearly puts more emotional stock in the love he has for his players, assistant coaches and family.
Immediately after yesterday's win, Hermosillo and his wife hosted a carne asada feast for the team.