The other day, a smart executive observed that the decisions in baseball are becoming more and more bloodless, made without emotion or sentiment, and this is more true for the
Tampa Bay Rays than any other team. Few fans attended their games when they lost consistently, and almost nobody attends now that they win, and while the debate over why that is swirls within the mayor's office in St. Petersburg, Fla., the Rays' baseball operations must function like a leaking rowboat. While they are trying to move forward, they are bailing water.
So they will listen to just about every trade proposal thrown their way, regardless of who is involved, and if it's a good baseball trade, they'll do it, without fretting about public backlash. Because there can't be that much backlash when you're drawing 22,000-plus for a game against the Yankees in the middle of the summer, which is what happened Tuesday night.
B.J. Upton is a homegrown product, a Ray for his entire professional career, and the perception among other teams is that Tampa Bay is ready to move him. Now. The Nationals have long been interested; the Phillies might make sense.
Johnny Damon has had a nice showing for Tampa Bay, and they gave him a bobblehead day Sunday, and rival evaluators say they definitely could see Damon moving to another team in the last nine weeks of the season.
Casey Kotchman, a nice find for the Rays, probably has some value on the open market right now.
James Shields has had a big turnaround this season, making the All-Star team, and of all the veterans on the team, his performance would probably be the most crucial for a late rush by Tampa Bay. But the Rays really don't buy into Hail Marys and fairy-tale finishes, and the fact is that Shields's trade value may never be higher than it is right now.
At the All-Star break, the Rays weren't seriously entertaining the idea of trading the right-hander, but the cold, bloodless reality is that Tampa Bay has the mountainous task of trying to chase down the sport's two financial superpowers -- while knowing from experience that the Yankees and Red Sox will inevitably outbid them and get better before the trade deadline. Tampa Bay is 5½ games behind the Yankees, and trail the Red Sox by more, and 13 of its final 19 games will be against Boston and New York.
Shields is signed to team-friendly options for 2012 ($7 million), 2013 ($9 million) and 2014 ($12 million). The market is very thin in starting pitching and the Reds and Tigers are desperate for a high-end starting pitcher -- and maybe that explains why the Rays had evaluators watching Cincinnati's Triple-A affiliate, which sports prospects like first baseman
Yonder Alonso, with
his .382 on-base percentage, and catcher
Devin Mesoraco. Shields has thrown well, and he's not irreplaceable; the Rays have outstanding young arms on the rise.
No team weighs options and dabbles more than Tampa Bay, and maybe in the end the Rays will decide to keep Shields. But remember, this is a team that traded
Scott Kazmir and
Matt Garza when the timing was right, and made the choice to let
Carl Crawford walk away, which was the right baseball decision.
The Trop taketh away and it also giveth, as
it did Tuesday for the Rays.
Something needs to be done about the Trop,
says Rays president Matt Silverman.
[h3]Notables[/h3]
•
Brandon Beachy got hammered,
as David O'Brien writes. The Braves have talked to the Tigers about a possible
Derek Lowe trade, which would be a gamble; Lowe is experienced, and he showed in September how great he can be. But he also eats up about 15 percent of the Atlanta payroll, and if the Braves can move him, it could create some flexibility for them to make other moves and to improve the team for 2012.
But a trade of Lowe would mean that the Braves would be placing much trust in Beachy to continue to throw well, because his place in the Atlanta rotation would become that much more important.
• For years, the fan base in Pittsburgh has been dormant, waiting to be inspired -- and now that the team is winning, the Pirates faithful are turning out. On July 19, 2010, the Pirates drew a crowd of just over 12,000. The crowd that turned out to watch the Pirates register their second consecutive shutout Tuesday was more than twice that, and they stood at the end, when Pittsburgh closed out a win to stay in first place. Cool stuff. Watched a lot of this game, and
James McDonald was outstanding,
as Bill Brink writes.
The Pirates beat the Reds 1-0 and remain in first place in the NL Central. At 51-44, Pittsburgh is seven games above .500 for the first time since April 21, 2002 when the team was 12-5 (and finished the season 72-89).
The Pirates need a jolt,
writes Dejan Kovacevic.
Sources say the team has been looking hard at relief help.
I e-mailed Frank ****elly, the Pirates' president, and asked him two questions: first, about whether the strong response of the Pirates' fans would fuel the team's effort to add help before the trade deadline, and second, about the future of GM Neal Huntington. His responses:
1. "Our fans have been energized by this team. The re-bonding between the city and its team that Clint talked about wanting to be a part of is happening. Yes, the great response at the gate gives us greater capacity to add players as Neal looks to make the team better at the deadline and into August. When we are not successful in securing a player who we have targeted, it is likely to be because of the acquisition cost ask in terms of players and prospects rather than because of an inability or unwillingness to take on the financial commitment."
2. "As I said in spring training, I expect Neal to be the GM of the Pirates for a long time. Nothing has changed on that front."
•
Ubaldo Jimenez shut down the Braves and got
a standing ovation.
• The Giants made two moves to shore up their offense, trading for
Jeff Keppinger and calling up
Brandon Belt,
as Henry Schulman writes -- and
Belt helped the Giants right away.
Wrote here last month that the Giants' focus, in looking for hitters, was to find players who can put the ball in play and fuel San Francisco's current style. The Giants hit a lot of homers late last season and this lightning-strike offense worked for them, all the way through the World Series.
But this season, without
Buster Posey and without consistent production from
Pat Burrell and
Aubrey Huff, San Francisco manufactures runs one or two a time. Every time the Giants get a runner on base, manager Bruce Bochy will try anything to make something happen -- a steal, a hit-and-run, a bunt,
anything.
Keppinger can hit-and-run and advance runners with a ground ball to the right side and bunt. He's got
only 43 strikeouts in his last 744 plate appearances.
Brian Sabean made it clear he isn't taking for granted the Giants' place in the standings,
writes Bruce Jenkins. The Giants made a pitch for
Michael Cuddyer,
writes Andrew Baggarly.
• One evaluator on
Anthony Rizzo, the Padres' top young prospect: "He's having a difficult time getting to good fastballs. He's got a pretty big hole there right now."
[h3]Moves, deals and decisions[/h3]
1. The Diamondbacks already were looking for pitching before
Barry Enright took the mound Tuesday, and you'd have to believe his performance will accelerate Arizona's search for a starting pitching;
Enright got hit hard.
2. It's still not cut-and-dried on whether the Dodgers will be sellers,
writes Ned Colletti.
3. J.P. Ricciardi, advisor to Mets GM Sandy Alderson, went to watch
the Red Sox minor league team, at a time in which the Red Sox and Mets are discussing
Carlos Beltran. He should keep his bags packed,
as Joel Sherman writes.
[h3]Dings and dents[/h3]
1.
Scott Sizemore is
day-to-day after being hit by a pitch.
2. Erik Bedard's return
could be pushed back.
3.
Luke Scott was
shut down.
4.
Clay Buchholz will
climb a mound on Friday.
5.
Jason Heyward was
out again.
6.
Jose Reyes and Carlos Beltran were
back in the Mets' lineup, but
Ike Davis might not return at all.
[h3]Tuesday's games[/h3]
1.
Alexi Ogando extended
the Rangers' winning streak. How he won:
A. Ogando dialed up his highest heat of the year, throwing 87 fastballs at an average speed of 95.8 mph, a season high for velocity. His average fastball velocity increased for the third start in a row, all of which he has won. His fastest pitch was a 99.1 mph fastball that
Maicer Izturis fouled off in the third inning with a 3-2 count. It's the fifth time in his major league career that Ogando has hit 99-plus mph, but the first time he has gotten a strike.
B. The Angels were unable to keep up with Ogando, recording 12 missed swings. He recorded 10-plus missed swings for the third game in a row, his longest streak with 10+ since a streak of four games from April 23-May 13. In his career, Ogando is 8-0 in 10 games when he has recorded 10-plus missed swings.
C. In many cases, Angel hitters didn't even try and keep up with Ogando. The Angels took 17 called strikes, four more than Ogando has gotten in any start in 2011. Ogando hasn't lost a game in his career when he has recorded 10-plus called strikes (7-0 in 10 games).
From Elias: During their past six games, the Rangers have allowed only two runs. Since the mound was lowered in 1969, only one other major-league team has allowed two (or fewer) runs in a six-game span within one season: the 1974 Orioles bookended a streak of five consecutive shutouts with a 7-1 win and a 3-2 win.
2. How
Madison Bumgarner shut down the Dodgers:
A. Bumgarner relied on his slider, throwing it a season-high 49 times, accounting for almost half of all his pitches, and recording five strikeouts with the pitch. The Giants have won all three games in 2011 when Bumgarner has recorded 5-plus strikeouts with his slider.
B. Bumgarner also was able to get his slider to move out of the strike zone more than he has in any other start this season. His slider was caught an average of 2.3 inches outside the edge of the strike zone Tuesday. Bumgarner has been successful when he has been able to land his slider 2-plus inches outside the strike zone, including his start against the Dodgers exactly one year ago.
The counter-effect? Bumgarner is 0-7 in 11 games when his slider has stayed inside the strike zone by one or more inches.
San Francisco's current win streak against the Dodgers has reached six.
Longest win streaks versus Dodgers in San Francisco Giants history:
April 12, 2011-current -- 6
July 19-Sept. 26, 1969 -- 6
Sept. 6, 1966-May 26, 1967 -- 6
Aug. 22, 1965-May 5, 1966 -- 6
Apr. 19-May 13, 1958 -- 6
3. The Angels were shut out again, tying with the A's for the league lead with 11 this season.
4. Barry Enright got
pounded.
5. The Dodgers
lost again.
6.
Tim Stauffer continues to be
a stalwart for the Padres' staff.
7.
The Mariners' losing streak is at 10, and counting.
8.
Adrian Gonzalez is slumping, but isn't buying the connection to the Home Run Derby,
writes Peter Abraham.
9.
Bartolo Colon was better, but
the Yankees lost.
Brett Gardner is red-hot, and he has the highest on-base percentage of any hitter in the Yankees' lineup Tuesday. And he was batting eighth.