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Cnotes MLB 2019 Spring Traning News Notes and Rumors !

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  • #46
    Something special about first workout for new Texas manager
    February 13, 2019
    By The Associated Press


    SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) Chris Woodward thinks long-term and appreciates the everyday grind of the game, having been a utility infielder over a dozen seasons and serving as a third base coach in the World Series each of the past two years.

    Still, Woodward allowed himself to consider where he had come from to being a first-time manager when the Texas Rangers pitchers and catchers held their first workout of spring training Wednesday.

    ''There's something special about it. To think, just kind of go back to my career, and I kind of mentioned that to the guys today,'' Woodward said. ''When you've been through so much as a player and then as a coach, just the ups and downs, you kind of start to look back and think about, `Man, this thing started when I was 18, could I be standing at this moment.' ... I'm going to enjoy it.''

    Woodward's daily spring training commute from his home in Chandler, Arizona, has gotten longer this spring - from about 40 minutes each way to a solid hour, extra time he uses to listen to more documentaries.

    The 42-year-old Woodward has gone from being the third base coach for the two-time defending National League champion Los Angeles Dodgers to managing a Rangers team with a bunch of 20-something position players and a revamped rotation that is coming off consecutive losing seasons for the first time in a decade. But he hasn't changed his expectations.

    ''We're building a championship mentality. Like that's first and foremost. He didn't hire me to finish third,'' Woodward said, referring to general manager Jon Daniels standing beside him. ''It's lofty expectation, but you have to start that belief right now. ... We've got to give them the process, define it for them, help them understand it, and provide the atmosphere.''

    Before opening camp, the Rangers had their most comprehensive organization meeting in a dozen years, with about 190 people gathering together in a resort ballroom Monday. That is about three times as many people as typically attend their meeting at the start of spring training.

    ''Everybody in baseball operations,'' Daniels said. ''Stood up at the front of the room, and you realize the size of the operations. It's large.''

    There were about 55 people hired in the past 12 months among the group, including the manager who replaced Jeff Banister after last season.

    ''A variety of things. I think probably the biggest was to introduce some of the new people that are on board, and some of the things, the initiatives that we're focused on, and just communication throughout the organization,'' Daniels said. ''It was a little bit of like looking to pull back the curtain and try to be as transparent as we can on what we're doing, why we're doing it.''

    When there was a show of hands from the people that attended the last full organization meeting in January 2007, Daniels said about 30 people had also been at that one before Texas won consecutive AL pennants in 2010 and 2011.

    Rangers pitchers opened spring training Wednesday doing long toss and some fielding drills without any bullpen sessions. Their day on the field got started later than usual, and that is likely to be the case until they begin to play spring training games.

    ''Let these guys get their rest,'' said Woodward, who played for five big league teams and coached for two others. ''On teams that I played on in the past, and coached on, you try to look like you're the best team out there because you're out there the longest. Let's be the most efficient in what we do, work the best while we're doing it so we don't have to be there five hours a day.''
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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    • #47
      Wainwright back after injury-wrecked '18
      February 13, 2019
      By The Associated Press


      JUPITER, Fla. (AP) Adam Wainwright stood in front of his customary corner locker following the St. Louis Cardinals' first workout and said he was healthy.

      ''Last year going into spring training, I was struggling,'' the pitcher said Wednesday. ''I was trying to convince myself I was better than I was, but I was doing a poor job of it, I think.''

      Wainwright had minor elbow surgery after the 2017 season and was just 2-4 with a 4.46 ERA last year, appearing in only eight regular-season games. His average fastball velocity dropped 1 mph to 89.75 mph, down from 92 mph in 2013, when he went 19-9 and helped the Cardinals reach the World Series.

      ''I'm excited to play baseball again without having to flinch every time I throw a ball,'' Wainwright said.

      Wainwright finished second or third in NL Cy Young Award voting four times in six seasons through 2014. But he is 29-19 since, averaging 18 starts per year.

      Coming off a $97.5 million, five-year contract that paid $19.5 million last season, the 37-year-old right-hander agreed to a $2 million, one-year contract that allows him to earn $8 million in performance bonuses as a starting pitcher, $3 million for relief appearances and $4 million more for games finished.

      Wainwright is scheduled to throw his first bullpen session Thursday. He is excited about the additions of first baseman Paul Goldschmidt and reliever Andrew Miller.

      ''When I look at our lineup, and I look at our bullpen and I look at our starting rotation, I don't see many holes,'' Wainwright said.

      All-Star catcher Yadier Molina loosened his arm and monitored throwing sessions but never put on his shinguards. Molina is recovering from left knee surgery in December and isn't expected to catch bullpen sessions before the start of exhibition games.

      ''He's able to do everything, it's just a matter of, listen, it's Day 1 of pitchers and catchers,'' manager Mike Shildt said. ''We don't feel like we need to push him to do anything.''
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #48
        MadBum puts rookie Joey Bart to wiork
        February 13, 2019
        By The Associated Press


        SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) When catching prospect Joey Bart arrived in the San Francisco Giants' camp, he wanted to get over any nervousness about being around veterans such as Madison Bumgarner, so he made a point of introducing himself to the pitcher.

        The second overall pick in last year's amateur draft had no idea he'd be catching Bumgarner's first bullpen session Wednesday.

        ''I was walking in to catch and he was like, `Let's go on No. 1,''' Bart said. ''I was like, `All right, here we go.'''

        Bumgarner hopes to bounce back from a disappointing 2018. The left-hander didn't make his season debut until June 5 after breaking the pinkie of his pitching hand when hit by a line drive off the bat of Kansas City's Whit Merrifield late in spring training. Bumgarner went 6-7 with a 3.26 ERA in 21 starts.

        ''You can tell he came in ready,'' Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. ''It was a really good bullpen for him. It's good for the kid to catch him, too. First bullpen and he's catching your No. 1 guy. That's probably good for him to break the ice and feel part of this.''

        Bart, a junior at Georgia Tech last year, is filled with enthusiasm.

        ''If a guy like Bumgarner or one of these other veterans, (Jeff) Samardzija, wanted me to go in there, that would be a blast,'' Bart said. ''It'd be a dream come true to get back there and work with those guys. Like I said, I'm just here trying to do what they tell me to do, whether it's catch bullpens, stand in for hitters, whatever else, that's what I'm here to do.''

        After watching Bumgarner on television make opposing hitters look foolish, Bart didn't expect to have a front row seat.

        ''He put it right where he wanted it and to me, that was great,'' Bart said. ''I don't know how he is at his peak but for his first one, I thought he did well. He said he'll get better. I was pretty impressed.''

        San Francisco will have a competition for the No. 2 catcher behind Buster Posey, who is coming back from hip surgery. Others in camp include Aramis Garcia, Cameron Rupp, Hamlet Marte and recently signed veterans Rene Rivera and Stephen Vogt.

        ''We're hopeful that all goes well with Buster and we get him back normal and catching as many games as he normally does,'' Bochy said. ''We have some good names here and experience. We do have coverage there behind the plate.''

        Bart, 22, planned on shadowing Posey as much as possible.

        ''I've already been told by a few guys to stay as tight to him as you can,'' Bart said of Posey. ''Everyone around here says he's a genius and it shows. Whatever he can give me pointers on, I'll try to soak it all up and have a great spring.''

        Notes: Pitcher Johnny Cueto was delayed reporting to camp because of what Bochy called a personal issue and expected on Thursday. Cueto posted on Instagram that his horse, Popeye, had died. ... The Giants agreed to a minor league contract with 31-year-old OF Gerardo Parra, subject to a successful physical expected to take place Sunday. Parra hit .284 season with six homers and 53 RBIs. ... Bochy said he liked what he saw of Samardzija, who was limited to 10 starts last season because of problems with his right shoulder. ''You could tell he was a lot freer and had a good slot where he was throwing from,'' Bochy said. ''He had a different look about him so that's a good thing. He's on pace to keep doing what he normally would do or what the other pitchers do now and that's getting ready for the season.'' ... The Giants acquired RHP Trevor Gott, 26, from Washington to cash and claimed RHP Jose Lopez off waivers from the Reds. Gott appeared in 20 games with the Nationals last season and had a 5.68 ERA over 19 innings. At Triple-A Syracuse, Gott compiled a 3.68 ERA in 28 games. Lopez, 25, was designated for assignment on Monday after the Reds signed Zach Duke. A top prospect, Lopez was 5-13 with a 4.47 ERA in 26 starts last season at Triple-A Louisville, totaling 141 innings.
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • #49
          Rockies anchored by homegrown rotation
          February 13, 2019
          By The Associated Press


          SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) How's this for a mile-high milestone: The Colorado Rockies have one of baseball's best young starting rotations.

          According to ace Kyle Freeland, at least.

          ''I think our rotation can stack up against anybody,'' Freeland said Wednesday when pitchers and catchers had their first workout.

          He has a strong case. The Rockies have made the postseason as a wild card each of the past two seasons - a first for the franchise - and the evolutions of young starters like Freeman, German Marquez and Tyler Anderson are a big reason why.

          The rotation had a 4.17 ERA last season, the second-lowest mark ever for the franchise. Of course, because of the hitter-friendly conditions at Coors Field, the Rockies are unlikely to ever challenge for a team ERA title.

          Other indicators show them right there with the National League's best. The group made 87 quality starts - only the Dodgers (95) and Milwaukee Brewers (91) had more - while working a league-high 932 innings. Ranked by Fangraphs' wins above replacement metric - which attempts to cancel out park effects - Colorado's starters ranked fourth in the NL, behind the Mets, Dodgers and Phillies.

          The chief goal right now: catching the six-time reigning NL West champion Dodgers.

          ''The Dodgers have a very good rotation. These are different rotations because these are different pitchers,'' Colorado manager Bud Black said. ''We feel like on any given night, any given start, that we can match up with anybody. The Dodgers have pitched extremely well the last number of years. You look at team pitching. You look at any team that has made the playoffs, they are always at the top of team pitching. Statistically, the Dodgers are right there.

          ''That is our goal, when you look at team pitching, to be up the ladder there. We have a little different environment, but there are some markers there that show we are a good pitching team.''

          Homegrown starters Freeland and Marquez had breakout years in 2018, the second full season for each. The 25-year-old Freeland was 17-7 with 2.85 ERA, which was fifth in the league, and Marquez, 23, was 14-11 with a 3.77 ERA and 230 strikeouts in 196 innings.

          Jon Gray, another product from the farm, is a three-time double-digit winner who won 12 games with a 5.12 ERA last year. After an inconsistent few years, the 27-year-old reported to camp having putting on some muscle and ''is in a good spot,'' Black said.

          ''From when I got here a couple of years ago, I sensed that there was some talent, and I think we are building on that, too,'' said Black, in his third season in Colorado. ''The depth is starting to emerge from our system. Overall, we feel good about the group. I know that organizationally, it is something we have to stay on top of. All teams do.

          ''Because you have to pitch.''

          Freeland pitched six shutout innings on three days' rest when the Rockies beat Chicago in the NL wild-card game, and Marquez gave up two runs in five innings in his NLDS start against Milwaukee, which swept the three-game series.

          Now, Freeland said, it's time to get even better.

          ''We are all getting older, we are all getting wiser and learning this game, and learning it all the highest capacity,'' Freeland said.

          ''We are in the playoffs and we are playing extremely meaningful games that are do-or-die. We are learning how to play in that, and I think that is only going to help us in the long run.''
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #50
            Royals sign Diekman to $2.25M deal
            February 13, 2019
            By The Associated Press


            SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) The Kansas City Royals and reliever Jake Diekman agreed Wednesday to a one-year contract that guarantees $2.75 million and includes a mutual option for 2020 plus bonuses that could make it worth $10 million over two seasons.

            Kansas City made room on its 40-man roster by placing right-hander Jesse Hahn on the 60-day injured list. Hahn is recovering from Tommy John surgery and is not expected to be ready before opening day.

            The 32-year-old Diekman spent last season with the Texas Rangers and Arizona Diamondbacks, making 71 appearances with a career-worst 4.73 ERA. But he's shown shutdown ability during a seven-year career that included a stop in Philadelphia, going 14-15 with a 3.75 ERA.

            Diekman gets a $2.25 million salary this year, and the deal announced includes a $5.75 million mutual option for 2020 with a $500,000 buyout. He can earn $1 million annually in performance bonuses.

            The Royals' bullpen was a mess all of last season, and there are plenty of jobs up for grabs this spring training. Kevin McCarthy and Wily Peralta are the only safe bets to make the team.
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • #51
              Xavier Cedeno agrees to $900,000, 1-year contract with Cubs
              February 14, 2019
              By The Associated Press

              MESA, Ariz. (AP) Left-handed reliever Xavier Cedeno and the Chicago Cubs have agreed to a $900.000, one-year contract.

              The deal is not guaranteed, meaning Cedeno could be released for termination pay before opening day.

              The 32-year-old went 2-0 with a 2.43 ERA in 48 appearances last season. He began the year with the Chicago White Sox and was traded to Milwaukee on Aug. 31.

              Lefty batters hit .207 against Cedeno last year.

              Cedeno made his major league debut in 2011 with Houston. He is 10-7 with a 3.69 ERA in 249 career games for the Astros, Washington, Tampa Bay, White Sox and Brewers.

              The Athletic was the first to report the move.
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • #52
                Mets' Callaway seeks smoother ride
                February 13, 2019
                By The Associated Press


                PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. (AP) Mickey Callaway's first season as a manager with the New York Mets was ... well ... messy.

                His team batted out of order due to a lineup-card snafu. Several puzzling decisions drew heavy scrutiny. And the banged-up Mets faded fast following an 11-1 start, finishing eight games under .500.

                "I experienced a ton. I think that's probably the most valuable thing, is just going through it. Going through the ups and downs," Callaway said Wednesday. "I'm looking forward to Year 2."

                But as he prepares to begin his second spring training in charge, the 43-year-old Callaway is already under plenty of pressure in a potentially dicey situation.

                The club's new general manager, former player agent Brodie Van Wagenen, didn't hire him. Not to mention, Van Wagenen and chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon want a playoff contender after spending about $80 million on free agents plus more big bucks to obtain second baseman Robinson Cano in a blockbuster trade with Seattle.

                On paper, the Mets look much improved, and a confident Van Wagenen hasn't been shy about saying they fancy themselves NL East favorites.

                "I don't have a big concern at this point," Callaway said about his team.

                But wins won't come easily in a robust division that includes Atlanta, Washington and Philadelphia. New York finished behind all three last year, and each one has made significant moves to upgrade this winter.

                "Bring on as much pressure as possible," Callaway said. "The pressure is welcomed, and I'm going to be better suited to handle things on a daily basis because of my experience last year."

                Sandy Alderson was the GM when Callaway was brought in following a highly successful stint as Cleveland's pitching coach. He felt so sure about the Mets roster at his disposal when camp started last year that Callaway proclaimed: "If we don't do something special with the group we have in place, it's going to be on the leadership. That's going to be on me."

                After his rookie season at the helm, Callaway spent a lot of time reflecting on his performance.

                "I got to sit down with my coaching staff. I got to sit down with Brodie. I got feedback from everybody I could," Callaway said. "People that are no longer in the organization, I reached out to them and asked them what I could do to be a better manager."

                To assist him in the dugout this year, the Mets hired Jim Riggleman as their new bench coach.

                The 66-year-old Riggleman has 13 seasons of experience as a major league manager with five teams - four in the National League.

                "I walked him through some of the moves that I made last year. And he stopped me four minutes into my explanation and said, 'See how long it took you to explain that?' You're never going to be able to explain everything," Callaway recalled. "He said, 'Don't overthink it.' I think going into the season I'm going to make sure I'm more cognizant of that this year.

                "I tend to be a deep thinker. And it's fun for me to sit there the whole game and think about what's going to happen and how I can use my guys," he added. "I think it's like taking a test: When you know something, you know it. And don't start questioning what you know. And I think at times I had some time to stew over things and maybe just tried to make it a little more complicated than it really is. And I think at this point in my career and who we have in that room, we can play a little bit more traditional baseball than I was trying to think about last year. You try to get creative to help your team win, and that might not always be the right way."

                If the Mets get off to a rocky start, however, Riggleman could quickly be viewed as a natural replacement for Callaway.

                Riggleman has been promoted to interim manager several times throughout his career - including last season by the Cincinnati Reds.

                "We're on the same page. We've had great conversations so far. He's such a knowledgeable baseball guy. I can't wait to get in the dugout with him and kind of go back and forth on what we should and shouldn't do," Callaway said. "We are lucky to have him and I'm lucky to have him next to me in the dugout. There's no threats there."

                With help from the analytics staff and new quality control coach Luis Rojas, one of Callaway's biggest challenges will be juggling the lineup on a daily basis and during games.

                Van Wagenen focused on building depth this offseason and said the Mets want to take advantage of their versatility at multiple positions. For example, they brought in two All-Star second basemen in Cano and Jed Lowrie, who will likely see time at third base and all over the infield.

                "We have to over-communicate, if anything, on what the lineup's going to look like," Callaway said. "We're very confident that we're going to get all these guys playing time that they deserve."

                NOTES: Callaway said LHP Jason Vargas will be the No. 5 starter but power-hitting prospect Peter Alonso needs to earn the first base job. ... Callaway also said he hopes slugger Yoenis Cespedes, rehabbing from surgery on both heels, can contribute "late in the season." ... The first formal workout for pitchers and catchers is scheduled for Thursday.
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • #53
                  Angels' Ausmus will get in on the action at spring training
                  February 14, 2019
                  By The Associated Press


                  TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) Brad Ausmus will absolutely get in on the action during his first spring training as Angels manager. He has already caught a couple of bullpens and plans to jump right into more drills along the way to help his players prepare for a fresh season.

                  ''I get involved pretty good,'' he said. ''You might see me standing at a position with a glove on, covering a base or taking groundballs. That will happen.''

                  Ausmus got back behind the plate to catch bullpens by Trevor Cahill and Matt Harvey at the Tempe Diablo Stadium complex.

                  ''It's something I like to do. I did it in Detroit,'' Ausmus said. ''My frame of reference catching all those years was seeing a pitcher from that angle. It's easier for me to see something in the delivery or the movement of the pitch from that as opposed to from the side or behind.''

                  So, how'd they look?

                  ''Good. Think I'd tell you otherwise?'' he said with a smile.

                  The 49-year-old former catcher who played 18 major league seasons is charged with the task of getting the Angels back to the playoffs after a four-year absence and eight out of nine years without a postseason berth. Los Angeles got swept by the Royals in the 2014 AL Division Series.

                  Any pressure as the franchise's first new manager in nearly two decades with Mike Scioscia's departure? Scioscia managed 19 major league seasons, wound up with 1,650 career victories and led the wild-card Angels to a World Series title in 2002.

                  ''I was in a similar situation in Detroit replacing Jim Leyland. Jim hadn't been there as long as Sosh was here, but the bottom line is I've got to be me and I've got to run the camp the way I think the camp should be run,'' Ausmus said. ''Anything other than that would be seen as kind of fake by the players. So I'm just going to be me. Sosh obviously had a tremendous managerial career, probably of the likes that we will not see again in modern baseball unless something changes. But I can't be Mike Scioscia.''

                  Not that Ausmus is revealing how he might be different or details about how he will operate spring training.

                  He insists most things aren't that different from anywhere else around baseball at this time of year.

                  ''If you were to take a drone and fly it over all 30 teams, camps would look generally the same. We cover a lot of the same basics, the fundamentals that need to be covered. So I don't know that I would point to anything specific and even if I knew of some specific things, I probably wouldn't tell you. I feel like that's state secrets. But you won't notice much of a difference.''

                  It helps that Ausmus is already familiar with his roster. He spent last season as special assistant to general manager Billy Eppler following four years as Tigers manager. Ausmus had a 314-342 record in Detroit.

                  ''Just in terms of knowing the guys, with a new manager,'' he said. ''When I got hired in Detroit I came in and the vast majority of players I was meeting for the first time in spring training. There was a handful I met ahead of time. But the vast majority other than talking to on the phone I hadn't seen or spoken to. These guys, going all the way down to the minor leagues because I traveled through the minor leagues as well, they've at least seen me. And a lot of them I've had conversations with, especially at the big league level where I spent most of my year.''

                  His eyes up, Ausmus watches batting practice and takes in other drills early on while also monitoring the action to make sure his players don't push too hard too soon.

                  Oh, and off the diamond, Japanese two-way star Shohei Ohtani already made a keen observation.

                  ''He's a very good-looking guy,'' Ohtani said, then quickly added, ''of course Scioscia was good looking, too.''
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    Blevins says he has felt at home returning to the A's
                    February 14, 2019
                    By The Associated Press


                    MESA, Ariz. (AP) Jerry Blevins didn't know many of his new Oakland Athletics teammates yet the left-handed reliever said he has felt right at home returning to the team with which he broke into the big leagues back in 2007.

                    The 35-year-old Blevins rejoined Oakland when he signed a minor league contract earlier this month. The A's have a talented bullpen but right now Ryan Buchter is the only left-handed option currently on the 40-man roster.

                    ''I've always had a soft spot for Blev,'' Oakland manager Bob Melvin said. ''He was a guy I had to send up and down for a while, which is difficult to do, and he's made a nice career for himself. He has a really good understanding of what he needs to do and is impactful in the clubhouse, too. He's a smart guy and gets it. It's nice to have as many of those guys in your clubhouse as you can have.''

                    Blevins has pitched the last four seasons with the Mets but he's kept an eye on his former team.

                    ''It's like your first love kind of thing,'' Blevins said. ''You always keep an eye on them, check up on them on Facebook, that kind of thing.''

                    He celebrated his return by posting a handwritten note to Oakland fans on Twitter: ''Oakland! Back to where my big league career began. It's difficult to describe how it feels to return. I'm coming home. That's it. To the familiar faces by the bullpen and tunnel, right field and left field, I'll see you soon. I can't wait to start Chapter 2 of my A's story. Let's make it a World Series story.''

                    Blevins compiled a 13-6 record with a 3.30 ERA from 2007 to 2013 with the Athletics. But he's coming off a rough season with the Mets in which he had a 4.85 ERA over 42 2/3 innings in 64 games.

                    ''Up and down, inconsistent,'' Blevins said when asked to describe last year. ''I never had a clear role. I started slow, got hot, got cold, didn't get traded. Just inconsistent and that's out of character for me. I just want to get back to knowing what you get when you put me on the mound. That's been my entire goal this offseason. I feel great.''

                    Oakland's bullpen, which compiled a 3.35 ERA, second-lowest in the league last season, was one of the reasons the team won 97 games and secured an American League Wild Card spot.

                    ''This is a great team and you've got a lot of young talent, some good leadership,'' Blevins said. ''I'm just trying to fit in and do my part. I don't want to try to lead. I'm just going to fit in. That's been the gist of what I want to do. I just want to be a left-handed pitcher and contribute as much as I can to a great team moving forward already.''

                    ---
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      Friday’s 6-pack

                      — Hofstra 99, Charleston 95— Pride is 12-1, has a 2-game lead in CAA.

                      — Furman 67, NC-Greensboro 57— Spartans fall two games behind Wofford in SoCon.

                      — Gonzaga 73, LMU 60— Lions played well, played their hearts out, but lost by 13.

                      — Utah 83, Arizona 76— Parker Van Dyke was 7-10 behind the arc.

                      — Murray State 73, Austin Peay 71— Governors’ tying hoop was split-second after the buzzer.

                      — Omaha 85, South Dakota State 84— Mavericks hit a contested baseline jumper at the buzzer for the win.

                      Quote of the Day
                      “I’ve loved every day I’ve been in this job, and I think there’s nothing but enormous opportunity ahead for this league. And ultimately, I realize I’m just passing through like every player who’s gone through this league and ultimately like every owner, and I feel an enormous obligation to the fans and to this greater NBA family to do my best and try my hardest every day. But that’s where 100 percent of my focus is.”
                      NBA commissioner Adam Silver

                      Friday’s quiz
                      Michael Jordan was the #3 pick in the 1984 NBA Draft; Hakeem Olajuwon was the #1 pick. Who was the #2 pick?

                      Thursday’s quiz
                      Who was James Harden’s coach at Arizona State?

                      Wednesday’s quiz
                      John Calipari used to coach the NBA’s Nets; he was 72-112 in 2+ seasons in New Jersey.


                      *******************

                      Friday’s List of 13: Random stuff with weekend here….

                      13) In the first 7.5 months of legalized sports gambling in New Jersey, a total of $1.63B was wagered; how much did those people also spend on restaurants/shopping while they were out gambling in the Garden State? It is time for New York State to wake up and legalize sports wagering.

                      12) 76ers are a combined 1-7 against Toronto, Milwaukee and the Celtics, which doesn’t bode well for the Eastern Conference playoffs this spring.

                      11) Denver Broncos’ Super Bowl odds before the Flacco trade: 60-1
                      Denver Broncos’ Super Bowl odds after the Flacco trade: 60-1

                      The guy who is the head of the Westgate SuperBook is a Broncos’ fan, by the way.

                      10) Saw a video on Twitter the other day of a woman throwing a chair off a 45th story balcony along a busy downtown Toronto street; now that woman is facing charges, She is charged with mischief endangering life, mischief endangering property and common nuisance.

                      I’m watching this video and thinking “Why would someone do this?” Luckily, no one got hurt; if there had been a car accident and someone died, thats criminally negligent homicide, right?

                      9) Golfer Matt Kuchar apparently paid his caddy $5,000 during his win at the Mayakoba Classic last fall, where he won $1.3M. Thats a 0.38% tip. Not good.

                      Going rate for caddies is 10% if the player wins, which obviously would be $130,000.

                      The caddy is not Kuchar’s normal caddy; he offered the guy an additional $15,000 later on, which the caddy (for some reason) turned down.

                      Weird story that basically makes Kuchar look like a cheap bastard.

                      8) Lot of times, I rattle on in this space about things I think should happen, and it is just me typing stuff that has no chance of ever happening, but every once in a while……..

                      Late last month, the San Diego Padres informed MLB that starting in 2020, they’ll have new uniforms, and those uniforms’ main colors will be brown and gold!!!!!

                      This is excellent, the Padres returning to their Nate Colbert/Randy Jones roots, when they had very cool uniforms. Can’t wait to see them.

                      7) Donald Trump played golf with Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods couple weeks ago after not having left Washington since Thanksgiving; you know he had to have been practicing golf somewhere. Least surprising news ever: There is a golf simulator in the White House, where you can play simulated “rounds” on courses all over the world.

                      The new $50,000 simulator replaced an older one that President Obama used in the White House. Stressful job, the president needs an outlet to release his frustrations, and just to have fun with.

                      6) San Francisco Giants signed Gerardo Parra to a minor-league deal, which could be a signal that they’re out of the Bryce Harper sweepstakes, seeing how Parra is a lefty-hitting OF, just like Harper.

                      5) Oregon Ducks’ football team fired DC Jim Leavitt this week; he was making $1.75M after Willie Taggart wanted to bring him to Florida State, but Oregon boosters were mad at Taggart because he used one of their planes to fly to a job interview with FSU, so they overpaid Leavitt to prevent him from going to the Seminoles.

                      4) Mississippi State DT Jeffery Simmons, projected to be a top 15-pick in the NFL Draft, suffered a knee injury during training that is thought to be a torn ACL. Simmons was already not invited to the NFL Combine; he was seen on video in 2016 striking a woman.

                      3) Utah’s great point guard John Stockton missed a total of 22 games in his entire 19-year career, so I’m guessing he didn’t need “maintenance days” when the Jazz had games on consecutive nights.

                      2) Unusual fact that annoys me a little; I pay for the NBA Full Court package, so I can see every NBA game live, but when games are re-broadcast late at night, those games get blacked out on the local cable channels, except for Knicks/Nets and anything on NBA TV. Since I’m paying a decent amount of money, shouldn’t I be able to watch those replays?

                      I do not have the NHL package, but their late night replays aren’t blacked out, I can watch any of those games I want to- it makes no sense. Too bad I like basketball better than hockey.

                      1) Last three NFL teams who appeared on HBO’s Hard Knocks went a combined 16-31-1 that season; all three of those coaches have been fired, two during the season where they were on Hard Knocks. Of course, those two coaches were also breaking in rookie QB’s that year.

                      This year, looks like the final five are: Lions, Redskins, Raiders, Giants, 49ers. We’ll be seeing a lot of one of those teams next summer on HBO, and I’m guessing they’re saving the Raiders for 2020, when they move to Las Vegas.
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                      • #56
                        Twins reach deals with Kepler, Polanco
                        February 14, 2019
                        By The Associated Press


                        MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Minnesota Twins have locked up a pair of young position players for the long term by agreeing to five-year contracts with right fielder Max Kepler and shortstop Jorge Polanco, according to two people with direct knowledge of the deals.

                        The people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the team had yet to announce the contracts, which were reached on Thursday as pitchers and catchers went through their first workout in Fort Myers, Florida. The Twins scheduled a news conference for Friday.

                        Kepler's contract is worth $35 million and includes a $10 million club option for 2024 with a $1 million buyout. Polanco's deal, which is valued at $25.75 million, has a 2024 option that could become guaranteed as well as a 2025 club option.

                        Kepler, who turned 26 on Sunday, had agreed last month to a $3,125,000 salary for 2019 in his first year of arbitration eligibility. Entering his fourth full season as a regular in the lineup, Kepler won the team's defensive player of the year award in 2018. He never found a rhythm at the plate, batting a career-low .224, but he set his major league career high with 20 home runs.

                        Raised in Berlin and signed by the Twins as a 16-year-old, Kepler has long been considered a late bloomer by the organization who has only scratched the surface of his potential because of his roots in Germany where baseball is mostly an afterthought.

                        With this contract, the Twins could buy out his first three years of eligibility for free agency. With so many unsigned stars still on the market around MLB, the Twins have expressed caution toward such commitments with their not-there-yet status. So chief baseball officer Derek Falvey and general manager Thad Levine turned inward to begin assembling a core of what they're targeting as a future contender.

                        Kepler and Polanco will now be the only players on the books for 2020 and beyond. Designated hitter Nelson Cruz and starting pitcher Martin Perez have club options for next season, but they can be bought out.

                        Polanco, who will turn 26 in July, wasn't going to be eligible for arbitration until next year. Entering his third season as a regular, Polanco batted a career-best .288 last year in 302 at-bats after serving an 80-game suspension for testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug .

                        One of the team's top prospects, Royce Lewis, is a shortstop who was drafted out of high school with the first overall pick in 2017, so Polanco could always find himself at a different position near the end of this deal. Another recent first-round pick, Nick Gordon, was selected fifth overall in 2014 as a shortstop out of high school. He has already begun to play some second base, having finished last year with Triple-A Rochester.
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                        • #57
                          P Harvey will be sidelined 10 days
                          February 14, 2019
                          By The Associated Press


                          TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) Los Angeles Angels right-hander Matt Harvey will be sidelined for at least a week as a precaution because of a glute strain he felt during agility drills. He said he expects to be ready by opening day.

                          ''It's nothing to be alarmed about,'' Harvey said Thursday. ''It's unfortunate it's this early and with a new team and I have to miss a little time. I'll pick up right where I left off.''

                          Harvey signed a one-year, $11 million deal with the Angels in December and is looking to bounce back after last season. He went 7-9 with a 4.94 ERA in 32 games (28 starts) with the Mets and Reds last year.

                          Angels manager Brad Ausmus said he expected the 29-year-old Harvey to miss a minimum of a week and a half.

                          ''You can recover from a week and a half,'' Ausmus said. ''It depends on how he feels when we reevaluate him and how he feels and how quickly he can get back on the mound and what he's done in the interim. He can recover from that.''

                          Harvey said he felt some tightness in his left hip during Wednesday's workout, but added the discovery could be a blessing. Now, he's got additional hip mobility and core strength exercises to do.

                          ''It's nothing serious,'' Harvey said. ''If this was during the season, I would keep going, probably take some anti-inflammatories and keep playing. This early in the spring, we discussed, we just want to get it completely out of the way. We're going to figure out how to not use my lower extremities and be able to throw so I don't lose any arm strength or anything like that. Once I get cleared to fully move around, then I can jump right back out on the mound and get going.''
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                          • #58
                            Nova seeks new start with White Sox
                            February 14, 2019
                            By The Associated Press


                            GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) Ivan Nova didn't expect to be traded last offseason. But now that he's with the Chicago White Sox, he knows where he fits into the team's plans - to make 30 starts and be a mentor, if needed.

                            ''If I've got to approach somebody, I'll do it my way,'' Nova said Wednesday at White Sox camp.

                            ''I'm not a type of guy that's going to step up in front of everybody and say something. I don't like to get involved in anyone's personal space. But if I've got to say something to someone, I'm going to grab them aside and do it that way,'' he said.

                            Nova's way on the mound has been throwing strikes and getting ahead of hitters. The 32-year-old right-hander was acquired from Pittsburgh after going 9-9 with a 4.19 ERA in 29 starts last season for the Pirates. The White Sox gave up a prospect and some international slot money to get a pitcher they hope can fill the veteran starter role that James Shields held the last few years.

                            ''It's a good thing that teams out there still want you,'' Nova said. ''It's way different when nobody wants you. It's surprising, especially after the type of meeting you have with the organization where you think you're going to stay there one more year, and then you find out they trade you.''

                            The Pirates are embarking on a rebuilding program, while the White Sox enter the third year of their teardown with hopes of beginning the climb back to contention.

                            Nova joins Reynaldo Lopez, Carlos Rodon and Lucas Giolito in the first four slots of the White Sox rotation.

                            ''I'm looking forward to watching him throw and talking to him,'' Giolito said. ''He's a strike-thrower. That's what we need to do as a starting staff, fill up the zone.''

                            ''Having someone to keep us grounded and guide us in the right direction. We (young pitchers) can be all over the place sometimes,'' he said.

                            Manager Rick Renteria remembers when Nova was one of those young pitchers. A decade ago, Renteria was a coach with the San Diego Padres, who took Nova in the Rule 5 draft from the Yankees. The Padres didn't keep him past spring training, though, and Nova returned to New York's roster.

                            ''He's a professional,'' Renteria said. ''He brings in experience and the ability to communicate with everybody across the board. He can keep us in ballgames.''

                            Nova likes what he sees in the early days of spring training as he gets familiar with his new teammates.

                            ''I think we've got a lot of talent, good enough to compete. That's what I see. I see that in the faces of these guys. They're hungry, they want to win. I know they're young, but they have big expectations,'' he said.

                            And helping them meet those expectations is something Nova sees as his responsibility.

                            ''You can't be shy. You've got to be yourself. I'm probably new for a lot of these guys, but there are other guys I've seen in the past from playing against each other. So it's not difficult,'' he said.
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                            • #59
                              Mookie Betts looks to repeat success
                              February 14, 2019
                              By The Associated Press


                              FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) Mookie Betts won a World Series in October, became a first-time dad nine days later, earned his first AL MVP award and was part of a team that won a professional bowling event.

                              What can the 26-year-old do for an encore with the Boston Red Sox?

                              ''He can do whatever he wants in sports,'' Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. ''He can golf. He can shoot the basketball and he won a tournament in bowling. He can do it all. He's just gifted.''

                              ''Yeah, it's been fun. It's been a great year,'' Betts said Thursday. ''It's a new year now, so you have to look at in hindsight and smile about, know what's going on now and take care of things and view things that way.''

                              He hit a major league-leading .346 with 32 homers and 80 RBIs last year. Betts likely will be dropped a slot to second in the batting order behind Andrew Benintendi.

                              Betts was a part of a Red Sox team that won a club-record 108 games and Boston's fourth World Series title in 15 season. During the offseason, girlfriend Brianna Hammonds gave birth to the couple's first child, a daughter they named Kynlee Ivory. He won the AL MVP, his third Gold Glove and teamed this month with pro bowler Tommy Jones, winning the PBA Celebrity Invitational.

                              After finishing second to Mike Trout in the 2016 AL MVP vote, Betts put pressure on himself the following season and hit a career-worst .264 with 24 homers and 102 RBIs.

                              ''Having the struggles, I kind of know what to expect, what not to do,'' he said. ''Hopefully, I'm going to use that to my advantage and have another good year. I think just going out and playing, continuing to work hard. I think I'm a different player now than I was then. Fortunately, I was able to have a great year.''

                              CAMP MYSTERY

                              Left-hander David Price changed his number from 24 to 10 and didn't explain why.

                              ''I'm going to let you guys figure it out. It's not that tough,'' he told reporters. ''If you know me at all, I think you can get it.''

                              It led to number of guesses that the pitcher rejected.

                              MVP ARRIVES

                              World Series MVP Steve Pearce arrived and joined Dustin Pedroia, Mitch Moreland and Brock Holt during batting practice in a cage on a back field. A small speaker on the grass played country music from an iPhone.

                              ''It was a fun offseason,'' Pearce said. ''I think a little bit's changed, but I would say for the most part I had a fun offseason.''

                              Notes: Cora said 2B Pedroia ''looks good.'' The infielder took some grounders before hitting in the cage. He's attempting to return after a left knee injury cost him all but three games last season. .. Price joked that he thought RHP Ryan Brasier was left-handed the first time he was running in from the bullpen last year.
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                              • #60
                                Scherzer, Verlander concerned about MLB
                                February 14, 2019
                                By The Associated Press


                                WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) Two more aces are expressing concern about how major league teams are playing their cards.

                                Washington right-hander Max Scherzer said Thursday there are too many teams trying not to win, and all the rebuilding ''poisons the game.'' Houston star Justin Verlander, a former teammate of Scherzer with Detroit, thinks the current economic approach pursued by some teams will continue to drive away fans.

                                ''If you're constantly just going into this win-loss cycle that MLB is pushing you create bandwagon fans and that's not the type of fans that you want to create,'' Scherzer said. ''You want to create fans that are following teams year in and year out. It's up to the fans, honestly, to demand that from the league.''

                                More than 50 free agents are still looking for homes as spring training ramps up in Florida and Arizona. Sluggers Bryce Harper and Manny Machado top the list, but 2015 AL Cy Young Award winner Dallas Keuchel, super utilityman Marwin Gonzalez and closer Craig Kimbrel also are without a team at the moment.

                                ''To me this can only happen in baseball, where teams are making public statements that they don't want top-notch players.'' said Scherzer, a newly elected member of the Major League Baseball Players Association executive subcommittee. ''To me that's a problem within the sport.''

                                Scherzer, who signed a $210 million, seven-year deal with Washington in 2015, praised the Nationals' front office for its aggressiveness. While Harper remains a free agent, Washington signed pitcher Patrick Corbin to a $140 million, six-year contract as part of its active offseason.

                                But the 34-year-old Scherzer, a three-time Cy Young Award winner who threw Thursday as part of Washington's first official workout for pitchers and catchers, thinks more teams should be looking for ways to improve.

                                ''The one fundamental that's just unacceptable is the amount of acceptability there is to lose - to not play to win as a whole,'' he said. ''There's going to be some teams that are not in a position necessarily try to win the World Series - I understand that. But when you have over a third of the league trying to do that, that's a problem. That's not OK with the players because every single player puts on a uniform to try to win, so we really have to defer to the fans to demand it.''

                                Verlander, who helped Houston win the 2017 World Series after it emerged from its rebuilding project, also expressed skepticism about what teams are actually trying to do.

                                ''I think some organizations are hiding behind the `rebuilding' phrase and really have no intention of doing so,'' he said.

                                Verlander, who turns 36 on Wednesday, went 16-9 with a 2.52 ERA in 34 starts last year. He is eligible for free agency after this season and says he intends to pitch until he's 45.

                                So the slow-moving market is a concern for the seven-time All-Star on multiple levels.

                                ''Some of these players that are out there, if you don't think you're going to be competitive in the next 10 years, what are you doing here?'' Verlander said. ''I understand you might say `rebuilding' but there's only so long you can say that and then you're just not trying to win. You're just trying to pocket everything.''
                                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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