Wednesday, February 29, 2012

It's Official - 10 Team Playoffs Are Here


By Sean Gagnier
@SeanGagnier 

One of the most controversial portions of the MLB's newest collective bargaining agreement came in the form of the expansion of the playoffs from eight teams to 10. In the new format there will be two wild card teams that compete in a "play-in" game while the division winners enjoy a bye and wait for their match-ups.

This new format was announced many months ago but it had recently had a resurgence as the 2012 season approached and their still had not been an agreement that would implement the new format for the season. According to ESPN's Buster Olney the MLB Players Association and the team owners are close to agreeing on the proposal and making the 10 team playoff a reality.

Some have questioned the further expansion of the playoffs from the current eight teams to the new 10 - would it push the playoffs deeper into Nov.? Something that Commissioner Bud Selig despises. The answer is that it shouldn't push baseball any deeper into Nov. than it typically runs. Under the new format there is just one additional game added to the schedule and not a three game series that some had been proposing.

With this new wild card play-in game on the schedule it should allow for added intensity down the stretch as teams vie to be one of the last two in and battle their way to the World Series. It's become obvious that being a wild card doesn't necessarily handicap a team - in fact many wild card teams have ridden the hot streak that in most cases won them the wild card spot all the way to the World Series.

While some oppose the new 10 team format because they believe it will damper the intensity of the final weeks of the season as teams now have two wild card spots to aim for. It is hard to think that this will occur as it should stoke intensity as more teams will feel they have a chance to make the post season than in previous years.

Many argued against the addition of the original wild card teams to the playoffs but that has proven to be a good move for Selig and baseball, what's to say that this expansion isn't more of the same.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Drew Smyly Is the Right Candidate for the No. 5 Spot



After acquiring Prince Fielder, the Tigers still had questions heading into the season, but they were questions that the other 29 teams would love to have. The main question was who would take the mound every fifth day - when your team is concerned about their fifth starter, there are good things happening.

Many names have been bandied about from Jacob Turner to Duane Below, but the name that has started to gain some traction, and for good reason, is Drew Smyly. Smyly, 22, was a second round pick of the Tigers in the 2010 Draft and has spent his time in Lakeland and Erie.

Smyly stands 6'3" and weighs in at 190 lbs., but one of the most important features that Smyly has is that he is a southpaw. Detroit has solid pitching in the rotation already, but it is all right-handed, meaning that the ideal candidate for the No. 5 spot is a lefty.

Not only is Smyly a lefty, but he is a very good lefty. While in Lakeland, Smyly posted numbers that are quite impressive - a 7-3 record with a 2.58 ERA and a 1.145 WHIP which is bolstered by a 8.6 K/9. While those numbers are impressive, any MLB general manager will tell you that Double-A ball is the toughest stop in the minors and Smyly has proved that he can dominate the competition in Erie.

In the final seven starts of his season, Smyly suited up for the Erie SeaWolves and posted a 4-3 record and an outstanding 1.18 ERA and a 1.029 WHIP, he even increased his K/9 to 10.4. Frequently pitchers struggle when they move from high Single-A ball to Double-A, but Smyly did just the opposite, he got better.

Tigers stud prospect Turner proved his worth in Double-A and received several spot starts with the big league team in 2011, proving that General Manager Dave Dombrowski has no problem bringing Double-A pitchers to the majors. And with the potential that Smyly is showing in the minors and in Spring Training, there is no question that he needs to be wearing the Olde English "D."

While his numbers are impressive and he very well could be the No. 5 starter this season, many Tigers fans don't know who Smyly is, and as such he is very accessible at Spring Training. And like any good athlete he makes time for the loyal Tigers fans who have done their homework and know who he is.

Check out Smyly at Spring Training in this video provided by Steve St. Germain.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Tigers Arrive at Spring Training WITH VIDEO

Slowly but surely the Detroit Tigers position players trickled into Joker Marchant Stadium in Lakeland, Fla. to begin one of the most anticipated Spring Training sessions in recent memory. The Tigers were preparing for a quiet off season, signing Octavio Dotel and making a minor trade for Collin Balester from the Nationals. But following a devastating knee injury to Victor Martinez the Tigers went out and laid down $214 million for Prince Fielder.

With the Fielder signing any hope of a quiet spring training went out the window, fans were sent scrambling and Fielder became an instant hit because many in Detroit remember him from his youth when his father played in the Olde English "D." Ticket sales exploded and interest in the Tigers peaked in a time generally reserved for the Red Wings in the city of Detroit.

During his press conference Fielder showed that he was still a Detroiter at heart and his children captured the fans attention much like "Little Victor" had the year before as he tagged along with his father Victor Martinez. As the weeks progressed perhaps the Tigers thought the fervor would die down, they were wrong, Joker Marchant was packed with Tigers fans wanting to experience the club first hand.

In the video to the right, provided by Steve St. Germain, the Tigers make their way out onto the practice fields for the first time on Monday to the delight of the crowd that had massed near the clubhouse.

Now the players on the active roster weren't the only ones in Lakeland this week, World Series Champion Manager Tony LaRussa took in the Tigers training sessions, but not with his friend Jim Leyland. LaRussa stuck close to Detroit General Manager Dave Dombrowski to get an idea of how the front office works in baseball. LaRussa hopes to break into the front office, but did not want to interfere with the Tigers camp, to which Leyland told him that he would gladly have him in camp, if only to pick his brain for some ideas to use for this season.

While many focused on the attendance of LaRussa, not many noticed the presence of "The Gambler" in TigerTown. It is the first time since 2008 that Kenny Rogers has been in Tigers spring training, while he isn't in camp to become a coach he is trying his hand at instruction. He will be working with the Tigers left-handed pitchers on holding base runners on and working with their pick off moves.

Other than the usual buzz surrounding Fielder many in the baseball world are looking to who the Tigers will tap to be the No. 5 starter for the season and the names have varied. From Jacob Turner or Andy Wilk to Duane Below or Drew Smyly. No one is quite sure who will come out of Lakeland with the job, but that's what they go down to Florida for isn't it?

As the spring progresses names will float to the top and those names just might be the ones you see emblazoned on the new 6000 sq. ft. scoreboard at Comerica Park this year. Keep your eyes on Smyly, Wilk, Andy Dirks and Danny Worth.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Make Sure To Eat Your Fastball Flakes!

Photo from Detroit News
When Justin Verlander pulled up to Spring Training in a $200,000 BMW people must have thought that there wasn't anything this guy doesn't have. He's been on talk shows, on the cover of video games, owns an MVP and Cy Young award. The only thing Verlander was missing was being on a box of Wheaties, well, he won't get that. He's done one better, he now has his own cereal.

The Michigan-based Meijer supermarkets have begun selling, Justin Verlander's Fastball Flakes, in stores in Michigan as well as on www.plbsports.com. It will cost you $2.99 to eat like a champion, or at least like Justin Verlander.

Verlander hasn't let his sudden rise to fame get to him and is donating 100 percent of the proceeds from his Fastball Flakes to the John D. Dingell VA Medical Center in Detroit and to the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.

This donation shows that Verlander cares about more than his fame and affirms his comments from earlier in the off season when he stated that he "loves Detroit" and inferred that he doesn't want to play for any other franchise other than the Tigers.

Good move Justin, there will definitely be a demand for Fastball Flakes and probably a rush on Taco Bell meals without tomatoes following your next no-hitter.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Brandon Inge to 2B, Say What?

 
 
Before the Tigers rocked the baseball world by signing Prince Fielder, Brandon Inge was hoping to rebound from a forgettable 2011 season with considerable playing time at 3B. But once Detroit pulled the trigger on their newest slugger it shifted Miguel Cabrera back to his original position at the hot corner and left Inge without a home.

At the press conference to announce Fielder's signing Tigers Manager Jim Leyland said that Inge was "not a happy camper" about being forced out of third base once again. To add insult to injury a few days later Denny McLain called Inge out for "whining" and told him to "suck it up."

At the press conference Leyland ran down several configurations for his team in the field, and none of them featured Inge. Even the designated hitter position, not that Inge could ever be considered a hitter, featured a collaboration of about four names, none of which were Inge.

But as the team prepares to head down to Lakeland, Fla. for spring training Inge talked to general manager Dave Dombrowski and indicated that he wants to compete for a spot at second base. Perhaps Inge has studied the team and seen that 2B is the weakest spot in the field for the Tigers, or maybe he just wants back into the game.

Currently, Leyland is looking at going into the 2012 season with a platoon of Ryan Raburn and Ramon Santiago at 2B, but neither of those players are good enough to have anything locked up before Opening Day rolls around. But they each possess something that Inge may not - the ability to turn a double play.

Inge has shown incredible athleticism at third during his career, but 3B is the moon compared to 2B. At third a player makes a stab at the ball and fires it to first or second for the out. While at 2B, a player has to read the runners and his partner at SS and make the out before getting the ball across the diamond to the waiting glove of Fielder at 1B. Even Leyland expressed uncertainty about Inge's proposed move.

"I don't know if he can do it," Leyland said. 

Leyland made one thing certain, if Inge wants to compete for a starting spot at 2B, he will not only have to be able to field the position and turn a double play, he will have to be able to hit. If he can't hit then he won't be in the lineup.

While this is all well and good, one has to wonder the impact on Raburn and Santiago heading into spring training. Raburn has frequently had abysmal starts to the season and if Inge is breathing down his neck on the bench it could force Raburn to push and struggle once again. As for Santiago, he just signed an extension with the Tigers only to face the possibility of losing his spot to the journeyman Inge.

Spring training is long and who knows, maybe Inge can make himself into a decent second baseman, but unless he can consistently hit without the need of a boat oar and can restrain himself from lashing out at the fans again his stay with the Tigers will be on the bench.


Wednesday, February 15, 2012

This is what the Tigers' new scoreboard will look like

 
When it opened in 2000, Comerica Park boasted all of the newest amenities available, but things move fast nowadays and the Tigers scoreboard quickly became outdated. The Tigers scoreboard did boast one thing, the largest analog clock in the major leagues - but fans don't want those things, they want large, bright, high-definition video screens as part of their scoreboards. And Tigers fans will get it.

The scoreboard in left field will be much bigger and more impressive this year, becoming the 13th largest video-board in professional sports and the largest in the state of Michigan. It will be a 600 percent increase in size from the old scoreboard when it is finished. The original scoreboard was 1008 sq. ft. and with the new construction will be 6000 sq. ft.

Atop the new scoreboard will be a script Tigers logo that features motion lights that will move around the logo and have the ability to change colors at certain times; think National Anthems. The logo will also be 36 ft. tall as opposed to the old Tigers logo atop the scoreboard which should 22 ft.

The two 12-foot tigers that flanked the scoreboard are returning, but after having been refurbished from their time in the cement mixer that is Michigan weather. After being battered by the elements the two statues will be touched up and returned to their spots in left field. 

Bleacher creatures will appreciate that the entire scoreboard has been shifted upwards about 16 feet to allow for better sight lines for fans sitting in the bleacher seats that have been installed underneath the scoreboard. Also new is a pitch speed display that is twice as large as the previous; increasing from 5-feet-by-48 to 5-by-96.

The scoreboards and video boards along the baselines were not forgotten in the upgrade either, being replaced by LED boards that will be brighter and will allow for more impressive displays. In addition to all of the new scoreboards and video boards the Tigers will feature more in-depth stats on players at the plate, as a sort of glossary for fans.

The upgrade cost the Tigers millions, an exact figure is unavailable, but could bring in many new fans who want to see the updated stadium and take in the new amenities. Just one more reason why Opening Day 2012 will be exciting.

Justin Verlander Wants Some "Hands On" Help

As the cover boy for MLB 2K12 the Detroit Tigers Justin Verlander will be splashed across televisions all over the country, and will become the center of attention whenever he appears on the screen. Well, he won't be the center of attention in this ad, and it doesn't appear he wants to be.

In the latest MLB 2K12 commercial Verlander sits in a trailer with Jay Bruce, C.J. Wilson and David Price as they are being taught how to properly pitch in the game by super model and Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue covergirl Kate Upton. She starts by giving a verbal lecture and giving hand gestures before leaning over Price's shoulder to give a "hands on" approach.

Naturally, Price appears overjoyed by her teaching method and seems to care very little about learning how to pitch with Upton leaning over him. After instructing Price, Upton asks the other ball players who else needs help to which all three practically dislocate their shoulders raising their hands.

The commercial again is comedy gold and shows a side of MLB stars that most fans don't get to see. And while Verlander is riding a cheetah and getting tips from super models Tigers fans can rest assured that all of this attention will not go to his head. Check out the video and let us know what you think.

Monday, February 13, 2012

My Cheetah Riding Ninja

It's been known that Justin Verlander, the Detroit Tigers ace and American League MVP and Cy Young winner, is going to be the next MLB 2K12 cover boy. He has appeared on late night talk shows, notably "Conan" where he revealed his Taco Bell superstition. But as the release date for MLB 2K12 approaches you will be seeing more and more of Verlander splashed across your television.

MLB 2K12 has released their first teaser commercial to go national and it features Verlander as well as the Los Angeles Angels of Anahiem Jered Weaver. The two are playing each other and the viewer can hear the inner thoughts of Verlander who compares himself to a ninja riding a cheetah. Weaver then jumps in and calls Verlander weird before Verlander's inner mind jumps into Weaver's. Weaver questions how Verlander has done this and gets a one word response, "ninja."

It's a funny commercial and should serve to promote Verlander to the national market and increase his popularity and should do wonders for the Detroit Tigers public relations department. Keep it up Verlander, but next time maybe you could be a ninja riding a tiger.

Monday, February 6, 2012

'The Perfect Game' needs some change

It's called 'the perfect game.' There are no play clocks, no power plays, no timers at all. Two teams show up at the specified time and play until someone wins. That is what makes baseball perfect, it's a beautiful game that attracts fans from every spectrum - but it's that lack of urgency that makes some fans shirk away from baseball and Major League Baseball needs to do something about that.

Detractors from the game say that it takes to long and is "boring." So to fix that baseball needs to find a way to speed up the game without adding timers that would irritate the die-hard fans. It's understandable that everyone except the die-hard's get a little bored after yet another four hour Yankees-Red Sox game. 

This off season ESPN invited fans to write in and make suggestions for changes to the game that they believe would improve it and make it more appealing to more people. Suggestions ranged from adding a play clock to pitchers, forcing them to throw in a set period of time to the usual removing the designated hitter in the American League and the opposite of adding the DH in the National League.

The "pitch clock" idea was intriguing until you think of the ramifications - no longer will a pitcher be able to stall to help his bullpen, playing mind games with the batter would be greatly reduced and it would add stress to an already stressed player. While this idea is plausible, it is not the change that baseball needs.

Like it or not the designated hitter is in the American League to stay and it isn't showing any signs of making the leap to the senior circuit anytime soon. The uniqueness of each league is one of the things that makes baseball so intriguing - there are two different games within the sport. Watch an American League game and it become about power and hitting doubles and home runs. Watch a National League game and the game becomes more mental - managers trying to out duel each other while utilizing pinch-hitters and pinch-runners. Changing the very fabric of the league is not what baseball needs.

What baseball needs is to speed up the game without adding a clock and without changing what millions of fans have grown up enjoying. And how can baseball do that? Instant replay.

The push for instant replay has grown in recent years, but resistance from the Commissioner's Office has stymied that for the most part. Commissioner Bud Selig has relented somewhat on the instant replay front and has allowed its use on fair or foul calls on home runs and with the passage of the new collective bargaining agreement on trapped ball plays. This is a step in the right direction, but it's not enough.

 There seems to have been a noticeable increase in close plays that have determined games, and in Armando Gallaraga's case, history, that could have easily been cleared up with a simple glance at an instant replay monitor.

Many have said that the institution of further instant replay will only serve to slow the game down more instead of speeding it up as intended. Using the current system, that is true. In the current system, a call is made and a manager disagrees with it and storms out of the dugout - stopping the flow of the game in the process and goes into a tirade on the umpire that he disagrees with. This can go on for some time and if the manager in question happens to be Lou Piniella can end up in kicked hats and, literally, stolen bases. Most often than not the umpire will stand there for several minutes and allow the manager to say his piece before shooing him back to the dugout, but in some cases the umpire will call his colleagues together for a confab, which again, can take some time. Then they either agree on the call that was made or they head down a tunnel to the replay room to check out the video - yet again taking more time. After an ordeal of upwards of ten minutes a call is finally made and play can resume. 

The current system is flawed and is in need of a total overhaul. Umpires are human, they make mistakes but the way baseball is structured now makes them omniscient. Baseball needs to pick these guys up and give them some help. The way to do that is to add instant replay on every objective play made in the field.

Balls and strikes are subjective to the home plate umpire and they way they are called should not be changed. However, calls made on plays at each base, catches in the field, fair or foul calls down the line and on home runs should be brought into the 21st century. The technology exists to do that and speed up the game in the process.

The need to review each play made would require quite a bit of work, but to conduct instant replay in the manner the National Hockey League does and require all reviews come from "The War Room" inside the Air Canada Centre in Toronto wouldn't speed up the game in the least. What baseball needs is a "war room" set up inside each stadium that displays live feeds and allows replays for everything that goes on during that game.

This set-up would require the addition of a fifth umpire to the traditional crew that works each series, but in a tough financial time the World Umpires Association should jump at the opportunity to give its members more work. The way this replay system would work would be similar to the system implemented in college football, with a full-time replay official with the power to reverse any call made on the field.

This new system would serve to speed up the game in that it would eliminate arguments between the managers and umpires, the umpire huddle and the long walk to the current replay rooms. When a play is made the replay umpire would be able to see the feed of each camera in the park and determine whether or not the correct call was made. Should he decide that the call on the field was incorrect he could buzz the home plate umpire and correct the play.

With each play being reviewed and corrected if the wrong call was made, managers would have no grounds to argue with an umpire because each one of their calls has been reviewed and insured to be correct. The umpire confab's would disappear because the home plate umpire would receive a correction to be made within seconds of the end of the play. And with a fifth umpire in the press box sitting behind a panel of monitors the crew on the field would never have to make the long walk to the current replay rooms again.

Baseball is indeed 'the perfect game,' but it is in need of some change and that change is something that can be readily achieved with the technology available.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Reports: Rangers slugger Josh Hamilton suffers relapse


His battle with sobriety, with both drugs and alcohol, has played out on the national stage for years and now Josh Hamilton has been seen drinking at a bar in Dallas. According to The Dallas Morning News Hamilton was at Sherlock's Pub and Grill on Monday night consuming alcohol.
Reports do not indicate how much alcohol Hamilton consumed or what caused the star slugger to relapse. Rangers teammate Ian Kinsler reportedly showed up at the bar and attempted to convince Hamilton to leave and head home.

This would be Hamilton's second relapse in the last four years, who before the 2009 season was seen, and photographed, drinking heavily at a bar in Tempe, Ariz. In the photos Hamilton is seen in the company of multiple women and the entire group is consuming alcohol.
The Texas Rangers have said that they are aware of the situation and have no current comment on the subject.
Hamilton was made the No. 1 overall pick in 1999 by the then Tampa Bay Devil Rays, but missed the 2003-05 season while he was hooked on drugs and alcohol. Major League Baseball handed down multiple suspensions during that time due to multiple failed drug tests.

In 2007 Hamilton was traded by the Cincinnati Reds to the Rangers and it is in Arlington where he has truly become a star in the MLB. Since joining the Rangers in 2007, Hamilton has been an All-Star all four years - hitting .298 with 25 HR and 94 RBI in 2011.

The relapse could be due to the tragedy in Arlington during July when Hamilton tossed a foul ball to fans i the left-field seats causing one to fall to his death. That fan, was reaching for the ball for his son and fell over the fence onto the walkway leading to the opponents bullpen. 

It is unclear as to what caused this relapse, but the Rangers have stood behind their players and coaches in the past. In 2009, after Hamilton's first relapse the Rangers said they would support him and later that season the club again stood behind it's manager Ron Washington when he failed a drug test.

Hamilton is due $13.75 million for the 2012 season and is scheduled to become a free agent after the season, but this recent incident could bring his pay and possibly his future into jeopardy.



Thursday, February 2, 2012

Fielder impacts sales across the spectrum

It took less than a week and the Prince Fielder gear is already hitting the stores across Detroit and sales are brisk to say the least. Not only is Fielder gear flying off the shelves but the phones in the Comerica Park ticket office have hardly ceased ringing since the announcement of the slugger's contract.

At the Tigers press conference introducing Fielder General Manager Dave Dombrowski said that after the news of the Fielder signing the sales of tickets at TigerTown in Lakeland, FL went through the roof. Dombrowski went on to say that the two days after the Fielder announcement saw more ticket sales to Tigers spring training than had been sold to date and well surpassed the totals from the previous year.

It appears as though fans in Detroit haven't forgotten the "little" Fielder running around the Tigers locker room and horsing around with the team in the early 90's and they are very excited about his return to Motown.

The Tigers Director of Ticketing stated that he judges the buzz about the team based on the number of texts and tweets he receives and he stated that after the Fielder announcement his phone all but exploded from the number of people talking about the signing.

Fielder has brought business to Detroit companies in the off season that usually sees a decline in sales. The fervor surrounding Fielder has lead "The D Shop" at Comerica Park to open its doors to fans looking for Fielder gear. The store recently received shipments of Fielder jerseys and player shirts and is offering any fans willing to come in a free autographed baseball if they spend $200 or more.

Not only will Fielder be a boon to the Tigers, he will be a boon for metro-Detroit businesses for years to come. His popularity is high and as an "adopted son-of-Detroit," it shows no signs of slowing down.