Archive for the 'Dan Wheeler' Category

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Flirtations With Jenks, The Bartlett Trade And Another Compensation Draft Pick

Bobby Jenks, Dan Wheeler, Jason Bartlett, Jonah Bayliss, Randy Choate 34 Comments »

Despite an earlier report that the Rays and Bobby Jenks were close to a deal last night, Ken Rosenthal reports that the Rays are just one team in on the closer. Rosenthal says there is “heavy action” on Jenks (which almost never a good sign for the Rays) and that the Yankees “and others” are also interested.

Despite a 4.44 ERA in 2010, Jenks was actually a very good closer. His 2.59 FIP suggests he was just the victim of some bad luck or some really bad defense.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • Don Zimmer had a pacemaker installed. [The Heater]
  • The Rays signed Jonah Bayliss to a minor league deal. Bayliss is a 30-year old right-handed reliever, who last saw action in the big leagues in 2007 with the Pirates.
  • The Jason Bartlett trade is still “better than 50-50″ to get done according to Jon Heyman. Jed Hoyer, the Padres GM adds that the two sides are working on “several different issues.” [MLB Trade Rumors]
  • The Marlins officially announced Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Crawford (Again), The Pumkin’s New Deal And Pena’s Future

Aneury Rodriguez, Carl Crawford, Carlos Pena, Dan Johnson, Dan Wheeler, Jason Bartlett, JP Howell 4 Comments »

Yesterday we argued that Carl Crawford’s price went up with Jayson Werth’s new contract. Jayson Stark takes the contrarian view. He argues that if Crawford’s price has gone up, then his options have gone down. In fact, Stark argues that Crawford’s options may now be limited to just the Yankees.

We’re not sure. First of all, Stark bases his argument on Crawford demanding eight years and $180 million. We don’t see it going that high. Also, Stark seems a little too quick to dismiss teams like the Red Sox, Rangers and Tigers. All these teams have spent big money in the past. And just because they don’t usually spend this much, doesn’t mean they won’t be willing to go that far this time.

If Crawford does want $180 million, then he better hope the Yankees are really interested. But if the price is just $144 million, then there is no reason to think the others teams are no longer interested.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • Marc Topkin reports that the Rays have signed Dan Johnson to a one-year deal for “about $1 million,” avoiding arbitration. [Twitter]
  • Marc Topkin also reports that Andrew Friedman is optimistic the Rays will sign JP Howell this week. [Twitter]
  • Dejan Kovacevic of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette speculates Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss

Brad Hawpe, Carl Crawford, Carlos Pena, Chad Qualls, Dan Wheeler, Derek Jeter, Grant Balfour, Rafael Soriano, Randy Choate 6 Comments »

The Rays offered arbitration to free agents Grant Balfour, Carl Crawford, Rafael Soriano, Randy Choate, Brad Hawpe, Joaquin Benoit and Chad Qualls. The Rays declined to offer arbitration to Dan Wheeler or Carlos Pena.

Offering a free agent arbitration is necessary if the Rays want to receive draft pick compensation if those free agents sign with another team. The risk is that the player could decide they will get more in arbitration than on the free agent market. If the player accepts the offer, the Rays could be stuck with a player they don’t want or at a price they don’t want to pay.

In the cases of Wheeler and Pena, both would have almost certainly accepted. The Rays may want both players back, but they don’t want to pay what either could have gotten in arbitration.

Balfour and Qualls could choose to accept arbitration and the Rays may be more than happy to have both back on one-year deals at a salary similar to what they made last year.

Crawford, Soriano and Choate will decline arbitration knowing they will get more money and years on the free agent market. And Benoit has already signed with the Tigers. Offering him arbitration is just a formality to make sure the Rays receive a compensation draft pick.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Options, Crawford To The Giants And Maddon’s Role In Brewers’ New Manager

Carl Crawford, Dan Wheeler, Elijah Dukes, Joe Maddon, Leslie Anderson, Willy Aybar 2 Comments »

Here is a lasting image from the 2010 baseball season (via Big League Stew)…

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • Yesterday we reported that the Rays had declined the options on Dan Wheeler and Willy Aybar and what that meant for each player and the Rays. Mark Topkin has the reaction from Wheeler. [St. Pete Times]
  • Andrew Baggarly says the Giants will “entertain the notion of signing Carl Crawford,” whatever that means. [Mercury News]
  • Joe Maddon gave a “strong recommendation” to the Brewers for Ron Roenicke, who eventually was hired to be the Brewers’ manager. [Brew Beat]
  • Elijah Dukes cried during his Read the rest of this entry »

Rays Decline 2011 Options On Wheeler, Aybar, Add Johnson

Dan Wheeler, Elliot Johnson, Willy Aybar 3 Comments »

In a couple of moves that we have been speculating about, the Rays today announced that they have declined the 2011 options on Dan Wheeler and Willy Aybar. And they have added Elliot Johnson to the 40-man roster.

Wheeler’s option would have paid him $4 million in 2011. Instead the Rays bought out the option for $1 million and Wheeler is now a free agent. Look for the Rays to try and re-sign Wheeler for around $2 million which, with the buyout, would save the Rays $1 million.

Aybar’s 2011 option was for $2.2 million. The Rays bought out that option for $275K. Unlike Wheeler, Aybar is still under the Rays control and will be arbitration-eligible. Look for him to make $1.5-1.7 million in 2011, saving the Rays about $500K.

Johnson would have Read the rest of this entry »

A Look At The Rays Free Agents And Their Compensation

Carl Crawford, Carlos Pena, Dan Wheeler, Gabe Kapler, Grant Balfour, Joaquin Benoit, Rafael Soriano, Randy Choate 7 Comments »

The Rays have eight potential free agents once the off-season begins. The Elias rankings will determine whether the Rays will receive any compensation should these players sign with another team (see below for a detailed explanation of free agency compensation).

MLB Trade Rumors has determined the formula used in the Elias rankings. Now that the season is over, let’s look at how each free agent will be classified…

The Rays have Read the rest of this entry »

2011 Tampa Bay Rays: In Or Out? The Relief Pitchers

Andy Sonnanstine, Dale Thayer, Dan Wheeler, Grant Balfour, Jake McGee, Joaquin Benoit, JP Howell, Lance Cormier, Mike Ekstrom, Rafael Soriano 17 Comments »

Before we jump into the 25-man and 40-man roster projections, let’s take a look at the one area where we can expect the most change, the bullpen. But before we start thinking about who the Rays may add to the mix, let’s take a look at who might be back in 2010…

WHO’S IN?

  • JP Howell, Andy Sonnanstine and Mike Ekstrom look to us like the only sure-things. We suppose the Rays could dangle Sonny and see if anybody still thinks he can be a big league starting pitcher, but we have a feeling that the Rays see Sonnanstine as worth more in their bullpen than on the trade market.
  • We are not completely sold that Jake McGee is ready. But with so many spots available, he is certainly close.

WHO’S OUT?

Postgame Shot Of Joe: Time For A Divorce

Dan Wheeler, Dwayne Staats, Joe Maddon hates my liver 18 Comments »

Why does it not shock Joe that this Dan Wheeler would blow a game? And why does it not shock Joe that Merlot Joe is culpable?

Wheeler — who has become such an embarrassment Dwayne Staats is secretly hoping his daughter gets a divorce — shouldn’t have been out there in that situation in the first place, a tie game in the 10th inning. That’s begging for disaster.

Guess what happened? Whoops! Pathetic!

Joe was monitoring Twitter at that moment and read some allegedly sober people claim Merlot Joe almost had to use Wheeler because the Rays were running out of arms.

Who exactly is responsible for that? Merlot Joe of course! Seven relief pitchers he ran out there — seven!

This Creeping LaRussaism is simply out of hand. Please, someone, anyone, cite a Florida state statute or an 11th commandment where MFISUO or MFIKY cannot pitch more than one inning? Go ahead.

What a marvelous comeback by the Rays. And watch a tank job by a manager who tried to wear a path to the mound on the fake grass with his mix-and-match nonsense. This is exactly the corner you paint yourself in playing these types of mind games if a manager is allergic to a relief pitcher throwing more than one inning (when Chad Qualls threw over an inning, word is that Merlot Joe broke out in hives).

Good thing Merlot Joe never managed Bob Gibson. He would have been punched.

The Feared Tropicana Temple Style

Andy Sonnanstine, Dan Wheeler, Grant Balfour, Joaquin Benoit, Joe Maddon, Lance Cormier, MFIKY!, Rafael Soriano 4 Comments »

Back in the day, in the prehistoric pre-Devil Raysian era of 1991, aspiring hip-hop producer Robert Diggs (aka the RZA) brought together nine rappers under the banner of the Wu-Tang Clan and revolutionized the hip-hop genre. In his book “The Wu-Tang Manual”, Diggs discussed his method of utilizing each individual voice for a particular part of a song. He used certain rappers for their tenor flows, others for their bass tone, and the remainder for their soprano key.

(Note: I don’t know music terminology very well. Those are his words, not mine. So if I got the distinct sound of the voices wrong, I apologize.)

The same techniques used by the RZA are also used by Joe Maddon as he moseys along his well-beaten path to the pitcher’s mound to replace one bullpen moundsman with another.

Whereas Diggs perfected situation usage in hip-hop, Maddon’s methodology emerged on the baseball mound in the late 1980s when living legend (and Tampa native son) Tony LaRussa shattered the traditional conception of the bullpen and re-organized it in an almost Henry Ford-esque assembly line fashion, with each man filling a particular role on the line to victory.

For LaRussa and his Oakland A’s, no longer were non-starters the roamers, wanderers, nomads, and vagabonds of the baseball community. They were late-inning assassins, arms ready and willing to provide reinforcement when necessary. Under LaRussa, former starter Rick Honeycutt, who started over 200 games from 1978 to 1988, became one of the best one-inning relievers in baseball and Dennis Eckersley was transformed from 20-game winner to Hall of Fame closer.

What was once revolutionary is now the norm. To the chagrin of baseball fogies and a small segment of irrelevant traditionalists, bullpen arms are absolutely essential to victory, and hence are no longer selected haphazardly – like arrows in a quill – but are brought into the game with an almost scientific precision, like a golfer selecting a club or a military general picking a force to exploit a hole in the enemy’s line.

Whereas other sports are increasingly celebrating the multi-positional flexibility of their athletes, with small forwards playing center in basketball and quarterbacks doubling as running backs and vice versa in football, relief pitching in baseball is now one of the least free form of any sports positions and is not probably most akin to field goal kicking. And like field goal kicking and other positions of strict utility, bullpen pitching now comes with a high personnel liquidity. Whereas the greats of the position are stable in their roles and uniform, the average bullpen pitcher, like the average field goal kicker, borders so close to replaceable that with one too many errant appearances, he becomes just that – replaceable.

For all his modernity and non-conformist ways, as I mentioned earlier, Joe Maddon executes his bullpen operations similar to the other 29 managers in baseball. If anything, with the support of the Rays’ top secret hovel of sabermetric Keebler elves, Maddon is even more exaggerated in his actions than his peers – more Kasparov than Queen of Hearts.

When used properly, a modern bullpen forms together like the classic kid’s cartoon hero Voltron, with each piece combining to create an unstoppable giant sum. And the Rays’ pen is no different. With Maddon at the helm, each member of the Rays relief corps brings a unique style similar to the old kung-fu flicks of yesteryear. As the Rays are one of the best bullpens around, it is only fair to compare them to one of the most famous kung-fu classics of all-time.

The Rays’ 5 Deadly Venoms”:

Choate, Wheeler – toad style. Immensely powerful, and when properly used, almost invincible.

Sonnanstine, Cormier, Qualls – snake style. Masters of control and best when staying down.

Balfour – lizard style. The lizard relies on speed and is a fitting animal for the Australian.

Side note: One of the things I find interesting about Balfour is that usually guys who light up the radar gun on the field have eccentric personalities off the mound. Pitchers such as Rob Dibble, Joel Zuyama, and Brad “The Animal” Lesley all made throwing hard an offshoot of their overall lives. Balfour, on the other hand, doesn’t seem to fit that mold. He is the quiet Dr. Jekyll off the field (wrestling experiment with Jim Hickey aside) but becomes Mr. Hyde when on the bump – as Orlando Cabrera can attest.

Benoit – centipede style. Quick and strikes fast.

Soriano – scorpion style.  When bit by the scorpion, your life (or the game) is over.  The scorpion is also the only style represented in the constellations, as Soriano was the only member of the bullpen represented in the Anaheim during the midsummer classic.

When working together, these styles provide an almost impenetrable security net over any lead, a force stronger and more celebrated than the assembled sum of any amalgamation of martial masters. As Madden sits back like the old kung-fu abbot, his “students” stroll in from the bullpen and eliminate their opponents one-by-one, making a night at the Trop like an afternoon at the kung-fu cinema.

If only we can get the RZA to create a dub track for Kevin Kennedy’s voice.

Rays Could Have 12 Of Top 70 Picks In 2011 Draft

Carl Crawford, Carlos Pena, Chad Qualls, Dan Wheeler, Gabe Kapler, Grant Balfour, Joaquin Benoit, Rafael Soriano, Randy Choate 12 Comments »

The Rays have nine potential free agents at the end of the year. The Elias rankings will determine whether the Rays will receive any compensation should these players sign with another team (see below for a detailed explanation of free agency compensation).

MLB Trade Rumors has determined the formula used in the Elias rankings. Let’s take a look at where the Rays free agents-to-be would fall if the season ended today…

The Rays have three potential Type A free agents. They also have four potential Type B free agents with Joaquin Benoit jumping up into Type B status. With only 49 games to go, this classifications are not likely to change much unless Grant Balfour comes back strong in September.

If the season ended today Read the rest of this entry »