Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Holzman's Baseball Vision




Relievers owe a debt to Holtzman's baseball vision
By Gene Wojciechowski
ESPN.com
(Archive)
Updated: July 25, 2008, 6:56 PM ET


I don't know if Jerome Holtzman was larger than life, but I do know life is smaller without him.

He died last Saturday after an extra-inning illness, was buried this past Tuesday, and will be remembered by friends, colleagues, readers and fans Monday, Aug. 4 at the only place that makes sense.

A baseball field.

Holtzman, 81, was a cigar-chomping, suspenders-wearing Chicago baseball writer. He didn't aspire to more because that was more. A ballgame. Deadline. A story to tell. That was Holtzman's idea of a perfect work day.

Even if you think you've never heard of him, you have. Holtzman is the reason why Goose Gossage will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday. He's why Rollie Fingers, Bruce Sutter and Hoyt Wilhelm are in there, too. In fact, if you're a big league reliever, you owe it to Holtzman to write his initials under the bill of your ball cap.

Holtzman invented the save category in 1966. It isn't the same as inventing the dialysis machine, but it's not bad.

Anyway, Holtzman's new category gave statistical meaning and clarity to the closer role. It made millionaires out of late-inning specialists. It eventually gave every fantasy baseball geek in America (guilty) another precious category to agonize over in their 5x5 or 4x4 league drafts.

If Old School had a valedictorian, it would have been Holtzman. He was respected, maybe even a little bit feared by ballplayers, managers, management and whoever had to compete against the former Marine on the baseball beat. He broke stories. Big ones. Small ones. Didn't matter; his notebook was always open, his pen always uncapped.

If Old School had a valedictorian, it would have been Holtzman ... He broke stories. Big ones. Small ones. Didn't matter; his notebook was always open, his pen always uncapped. Jerry Reinsdorf bought the Chicago White Sox the same year -- 1981 -- Holtzman moved from Wacker Drive and the Chicago Sun-Times to the rival Chicago Tribune on Michigan Avenue. That was the same year Holtzman broke the story on the end of the baseball strike.

Holtzman and Reinsdorf developed a working relationship and, later, a friendship. Owners and sportswriters don't usually spend much time together, but Holtzman wasn't your usual sportswriter. He was a romantic, a historian, an author (if you don't own a copy of "No Cheering In The Press Box," you are weak and useless), a worker bee, a man of conviction and, in 1989, an inductee into the writer's wing at Cooperstown.

Some of us listen to iPods when we write; Holtzman hummed to himself. Out of habit he would eat peanuts in the press box and toss the empty shells on the floor -- even if the floor was carpeted. Nobody said a word.


Holtzman retired from the Tribune in 1998, but you'd still see him at Wrigley Field or new Comiskey Park/U.S. Cellular Field. He used to drive himself to the stadiums from his lovely Evanston home. As his health began to fade, a grandson or friend would do the driving. And more than a few times, Reinsdorf arranged for a limo service. It became a standing offer.

He'd sit in the dugout before the game and it wouldn't take long before players, coaches, managers and writers would stop by to shake his hand or say hello. Respect.

Later, he'd make his way upstairs and usually spend the game with Reinsdorf in the owner's private suite. Cigars were known to be smoked.

When Holtzman died, it was his son Jack who later called Reinsdorf with the news. Reinsdorf, who spoke to Holtzman at least once a month, was visibly shaken by the loss of his friend. Another offer was made: Have a memorial service at The Cell.

I'll be there at the stadium's Scout Lounge the evening of Monday Aug. 4. So will Commissioner Bud Selig. And Reinsdorf. And sportswriters. Lots of sportswriters.

Late in 1995 I was hired to cover the Cubs for the Tribune. The sports editor told me to report to the January MLB owners meeting in Los Angeles. Introduce myself to Holtzman, I was told.

So I did. He had eyebrows so thick that they needed their own lawn service. He wore a white shirt, suspenders, and he scared the living hell out of me.

This was the great Holtzman. The man known simply as "The Dean." A member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

And here's what he did. He introduced me to every stuffed suit he could find. Owners, league officials, team officials -- Holtzman knew them all.

It was a busy day. The owners had just voted in favor of interleague play. The then-California Angels were being sold to Disney. A handful of TV deals were up for formal approval. So I asked Holtzman if there were anything I could do to help out.

"No, no," he said. "I'm fine."

We ordered steaks as thick as first base and he spent the next hour telling stories. The Marines ... WWII ... how he courted his wife, Marilyn ... the Chicago newspaper wars ... baseball ... the Cubs ... the White Sox. It was the one time I wished the waitress never brought the check. Less than 20 minutes later, Holtzman was done writing. Amazing. It would have taken me three times that amount to finish.

I couldn't help myself; I stole a peek at his computer screen. There was his famous byline. Then a handful of tight, no-nonsense graphs. Then, in parentheses, Pick Up Wire.

Holtzman had done the hard part. He figured the Associated Press could do the rest.

A month later, at spring training in Mesa, Ariz., Holtzman invited me to dinner. We ordered steaks as thick as first base, and he spent the next hour telling stories. The Marines ... WWII ... how he courted his wife, Marilyn ... the Chicago newspaper wars ... baseball ... the Cubs ... the White Sox. It was the one time I wished the waitress never brought the check.

So a moment of silence, please, for The Dean. But only a moment. Holtzman wouldn't want you to miss any of the game because of him.

Gene Wojciechowski is the senior national columnist for ESPN.com. You can contact him at gene.wojciechowski@espn3.com.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Mound of Trouble

Mound of trouble: Indians' battered bullpen offers many questions, few answers (so far)Posted by Paul Hoynes July 24, 2008 20:11PM


Mark Avery/Associated Press
Masa Kobayashi may --- or may not --- be the Indians' closer for the rest of the season, but that doesn't mean the club won't be searching for a better alternative in 2009.The Indians in an emotional sense have rebounded from the trade of CC Sabathia.
"They're back to being themselves," said manager Eric Wedge, "relaxing, having some fun and trying to play good baseball."

What they haven't rebounded from this season, and probably won't until it is rebuilt or repaired in the off-season, is one of the worst bullpens in the big leagues.

The Indians have no established closer or reliable set-up men. What they have is a jigsaw puzzle dumped on the dining room table waiting for Wedge and GM Mark Shapiro to snap it into place.

"The roles are open -- wide open in the pen," said Wedge at the conclusion of the six-game trip through Seattle and Anaheim, Calif.


The injury and release of closer Joe Borowski and the decline of super set-up man Rafael Betancourt have plunged the bullpen to the bottom of most American League stats. The Tribe's entire pen has 16 saves compared to Francisco Rodriguez's 42 for the Angels.

Borowski and Betancourt aren't the only guilty parties. Jensen Lewis has yet to find the velocity and command he showed going down the stretch last season. Lefty Rafael Perez is only now pitching as he did last year when he and Betancourt ruled the seventh and eighth innings. Tom Mastny remains inconsistent and off-season acquisitions Jorge Julio and Craig Breslow were jettisoned a long time ago.

(Tom Mastny (1-2, 14.90 ERA) was the latest Indians reliever to feel the pain of a lost season when he allowed a grand slam to Jeff Mathis of the Angels on Wednesday.Wedge believes a bullpen starts with its closer. Unless Masa Kobayashi seizes the job in the second half (he's 6-for-8 in save situations), the Indians will go into the winter looking for one. )

"A lot would have to come into play right now with the people we have for us not go out and get a closer," said Wedge. "Someone would have to really grab the role, really lock into it and prove we could count on him for next year. That's a lot to have happen in two-plus months."

Potential free agent closers include Brian Fuentes, Eric Gagne, Trevor Hoffman, Jason Isringhausen, Todd Jones, Brandon Lyon, Rodriguez and Kerry Wood. If Oakland doesn't trade Huston Street to a contender in the next few weeks, he might be available as well.

Tribe prospect Adam Miller has the arm to close, but he's recovering from surgery on the middle finger of his right hand, the latest in a series of nagging injuries that have blocked his path to the big leagues. Miller has spent almost his whole minor-league career as a starter, but he could be a candidate for the bullpen based on what he does in winter ball or the Arizona Fall League and in spring training.

Shapiro said Betancourt, Rafael Perez and Kobayashi will be part of the pen in 2009.

"Ed Mujica, Jensen Lewis and Tom Mastny have a chance to improve their opportunity and status for next year by pitching well now," said Shapiro.

Added Wedge, "I believe Rafael Betancourt can get back on track and be someone we can count in the late innings. I don't think it will happen overnight.

Former Twins reliever Juan Rincon, signed to a minor-league contract and promoted to Cleveland on July 9, has done well in limited appearances.

"He's a free agent at the end of the season," said Shapiro, "but when we signed him it was with the idea that he may be able to help us next year."

Veteran Brendan Donnelly, recovering from Tommy John surgery on his right elbow, is pitching at Class AAA Buffalo in a comeback attempt. When the Indians signed him, it was with the idea that he could help them down the stretch toward the postseason. With the Indians no longer a contender, it's unclear how Donnelly, 37, fits in their plans.

Olympian Jeff Stevens, Brian Slocum and lefties Tony Sipp and Rich Rundles are candidates as well.

"We've got plenty of time to look at these guys," said Wedge. "They're going to get opportunities to step up and figure out if they can play a prominent role in this thing.

"I think everyone would agree that Perez is a lot better than he was earlier in the year. You want to see how Mastny and Lewis come along. You want to see if Betancourt can find it. Mujica has definitely evolved. We're using him in more prominent role."

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Tribe's only priority for rest of 2008 should be 2009

Cleveland -- If I had to take over the Indians for the rest of the season, these are the moves I'd make. I'm not talking about stuff for the off-season, but things that can be done within the next three months only.


My approach: Everything done after the All-Star break should be aimed at making the team better for 2009. We don't need to see much of Dave Dellucci, who is 34 and has hit .230 and .231 in his last two years with the Tribe. No need to sign Barry Bonds, Richie Sexson or some other older veteran with physical problems. Use this time to evaluate players under the glare and pressure of the regular season, not meaningless games in September or spring training.

Their approach: In their recent meetings, the Indians agreed that playing time is the key to next year. They say they plan to really watch young outfielders Shin-Soo Choo, Ben Francisco and Franklin Gutierrez in left and right fields. They don't want to bring in a veteran just for the sake of adding a "name" player. My general approach, especially to the outfield, matches the Tribe's.



Chuck Crow/The Plain Dealer
Asdrubal Cabrera's return to the Indians is a good decision, writes Terry Pluto, but the team may be wasting an opportunity if they only play Cabrera at second base for the rest of the season.My shortstop: Consider that Omar Vizquel came to the majors with Seattle at the age of 19. He batted .220-.247-.230 in his first three big-league seasons. The Indians should install 22-year-old Asdrubal Cabrera at short. After hitting .184, he was sent to Class AAA Buffalo to work on his hitting. Well, he's batting .326 with a team-leading .856 OPS. His defense remains superb, according to scouts. The Bisons shortstop was just named the International League Batter of the Week (13-of-33, .394, 3 HR). Cabrera loves Vizquel. Like Omar, he is from Venezuela, wears No. 13 and is a switch-hitter. He does need to learn to watch his conditioning, because Vizquel played into his 40s by being in great shape.
Their shortstop: For now, the Indians are committed to Jhonny Peralta at short, with Cabrera (set to join the team this weekend) playing mostly second base.

My third baseman: I'd have Peralta and Andy Marte split time at the position. When Marte is at third, Peralta can be the DH. One of these guys should be the third baseman in 2009, let's find out which one. I'd start with Marte there four times a week, Peralta the other three. Peralta's only extended time at third was in 2004, when he made 14 errors in 59 games at Buffalo. That was four years ago, let's see how he looks there now.

Their third baseman: They want to take an extensive look at Marte at third, or at least that's the plan now. They have been pleased by his defense, which was terrible in spring training and has been improved during his brief outings this season. Casey Blake will play there when Marte sits.


Chuck Crow/The Plain Dealer
Casey Blake has provided one of the few reliable bats for the Indians this summer, but at age 34, his best value to the team is likely to be greater as trade bait as the deadline approaches.My deal: I'd love to see Blake on a contender where his versatility would be valuable, and he also may bring something decent in return. Blake is having a career year batting .282 (.390 with runners in scoring position). He makes $6 million, will be a free agent and he'll be 35 on Aug. 23. It doesn't seem he will be in the plans for 2009, so they should trade him now.
Their deal: They may keep Blake and use him at first base the rest of the year. They don't want to just give him away, and they see him as a safety valve at several positions. They also think they will have a chance to re-sign him to a short-term deal at the end of the season.

My second baseman: I really wanted to see Josh Barfield (broken finger), but he's out another 3-4 weeks. I'd stick with Jamey Carroll there, with Cabrera at short and my Marte/Peralta combo at third until Barfield is healthy.

Their second baseman: Cabrera will get heavy duty at that spot for now.

My first baseman: If he comes back from his elbow surgery this season, play Victor Martinez a lot. Give his body a break from catching, where he caught more games from 2004-06 than anyone in the American League. He ranked fifth in that category last year. Between the elbow and hamstring injuries, he paid for it in 2008. In the meantime, I'd look at Ryan Garko, unless Blake is still here.

Their first baseman: It will be Blake and Garko. Manager Eric Wedge and I both think Garko can hit, and wish he'd get started. If not, they will need a new first baseman in 2009.

My rotation: Assuming Fausto Carmona is indeed two weeks away from returning, the rotation would be Cliff Lee, Carmona, Aaron Laffey, Jeremy Sowers and Paul Byrd -- with the idea of moving Byrd if a contender is interested. A key is finding out about Sowers. I believe they are on the same page.

My idea that won't work: I wanted to be bring Jeff Stevens up from Buffalo and add him to the bullpen, and then promote Matt LaPorta from Class AA Akron to Buffalo. But both are in the Olympics, which will chew up the month of August. After the Olympics, I'd add both to the September roster and play them. LaPorta will play mostly first base in the Olympics.

My idea for the bullpen: I don't have too many other than the obvious ... close with Raffy Perez. Revive Raffy Betancourt. See if Edward Mujica can help somehow. Jensen Lewis? Tom Mastny? I don't know, hope one of them can help. I have a feeling Juan Rincon is the next Jorge Julio. Watch the innings for Masa Kobayashi, who is 34 and has not appeared in more than 53 games or thrown more than 58 innings in the last seven years.

Their idea for the bullpen: They will close with Kobayashi, at least for now -- and watch his workload. They are excited by Perez, confounded by Betancourt. They have been encouraged by Mujica, and think Rich Rundles at some point can come up from Buffalo and help as a lefty reliever.

My idea that some fans won't like: I won't fire the manager, batting coach or anyone else this season. The biggest failures are the injuries, the bullpen and not making any major off-season additions. To dump a coach or manager in the middle of this mess is a scapegoat approach and masks the real problem, which is the roster and a farm system that is not producing right now. I can't fault Wedge and the rest for that.

Tribe's only priority for rest of 2008 should be 2009

Tribe's only priority for rest of 2008 should be 2009, says Terry Pluto
by Terry Pluto Thursday July 17, 2008, 6:55 PM

Cleveland -- If I had to take over the Indians for the rest of the season, these are the moves I'd make. I'm not talking about stuff for the off-season, but things that can be done within the next three months only.


My approach: Everything done after the All-Star break should be aimed at making the team better for 2009. We don't need to see much of Dave Dellucci, who is 34 and has hit .230 and .231 in his last two years with the Tribe. No need to sign Barry Bonds, Richie Sexson or some other older veteran with physical problems. Use this time to evaluate players under the glare and pressure of the regular season, not meaningless games in September or spring training.

Their approach: In their recent meetings, the Indians agreed that playing time is the key to next year. They say they plan to really watch young outfielders Shin-Soo Choo, Ben Francisco and Franklin Gutierrez in left and right fields. They don't want to bring in a veteran just for the sake of adding a "name" player. My general approach, especially to the outfield, matches the Tribe's.



Chuck Crow/The Plain Dealer
Asdrubal Cabrera's return to the Indians is a good decision, writes Terry Pluto, but the team may be wasting an opportunity if they only play Cabrera at second base for the rest of the season.My shortstop: Consider that Omar Vizquel came to the majors with Seattle at the age of 19. He batted .220-.247-.230 in his first three big-league seasons. The Indians should install 22-year-old Asdrubal Cabrera at short. After hitting .184, he was sent to Class AAA Buffalo to work on his hitting. Well, he's batting .326 with a team-leading .856 OPS. His defense remains superb, according to scouts. The Bisons shortstop was just named the International League Batter of the Week (13-of-33, .394, 3 HR). Cabrera loves Vizquel. Like Omar, he is from Venezuela, wears No. 13 and is a switch-hitter. He does need to learn to watch his conditioning, because Vizquel played into his 40s by being in great shape.
Their shortstop: For now, the Indians are committed to Jhonny Peralta at short, with Cabrera (set to join the team this weekend) playing mostly second base.

My third baseman: I'd have Peralta and Andy Marte split time at the position. When Marte is at third, Peralta can be the DH. One of these guys should be the third baseman in 2009, let's find out which one. I'd start with Marte there four times a week, Peralta the other three. Peralta's only extended time at third was in 2004, when he made 14 errors in 59 games at Buffalo. That was four years ago, let's see how he looks there now.

Their third baseman: They want to take an extensive look at Marte at third, or at least that's the plan now. They have been pleased by his defense, which was terrible in spring training and has been improved during his brief outings this season. Casey Blake will play there when Marte sits.


Chuck Crow/The Plain Dealer
Casey Blake has provided one of the few reliable bats for the Indians this summer, but at age 34, his best value to the team is likely to be greater as trade bait as the deadline approaches.My deal: I'd love to see Blake on a contender where his versatility would be valuable, and he also may bring something decent in return. Blake is having a career year batting .282 (.390 with runners in scoring position). He makes $6 million, will be a free agent and he'll be 35 on Aug. 23. It doesn't seem he will be in the plans for 2009, so they should trade him now.
Their deal: They may keep Blake and use him at first base the rest of the year. They don't want to just give him away, and they see him as a safety valve at several positions. They also think they will have a chance to re-sign him to a short-term deal at the end of the season.

My second baseman: I really wanted to see Josh Barfield (broken finger), but he's out another 3-4 weeks. I'd stick with Jamey Carroll there, with Cabrera at short and my Marte/Peralta combo at third until Barfield is healthy.

Their second baseman: Cabrera will get heavy duty at that spot for now.

My first baseman: If he comes back from his elbow surgery this season, play Victor Martinez a lot. Give his body a break from catching, where he caught more games from 2004-06 than anyone in the American League. He ranked fifth in that category last year. Between the elbow and hamstring injuries, he paid for it in 2008. In the meantime, I'd look at Ryan Garko, unless Blake is still here.

Their first baseman: It will be Blake and Garko. Manager Eric Wedge and I both think Garko can hit, and wish he'd get started. If not, they will need a new first baseman in 2009.

My rotation: Assuming Fausto Carmona is indeed two weeks away from returning, the rotation would be Cliff Lee, Carmona, Aaron Laffey, Jeremy Sowers and Paul Byrd -- with the idea of moving Byrd if a contender is interested. A key is finding out about Sowers. I believe they are on the same page.

My idea that won't work: I wanted to be bring Jeff Stevens up from Buffalo and add him to the bullpen, and then promote Matt LaPorta from Class AA Akron to Buffalo. But both are in the Olympics, which will chew up the month of August. After the Olympics, I'd add both to the September roster and play them. LaPorta will play mostly first base in the Olympics.

My idea for the bullpen: I don't have too many other than the obvious ... close with Raffy Perez. Revive Raffy Betancourt. See if Edward Mujica can help somehow. Jensen Lewis? Tom Mastny? I don't know, hope one of them can help. I have a feeling Juan Rincon is the next Jorge Julio. Watch the innings for Masa Kobayashi, who is 34 and has not appeared in more than 53 games or thrown more than 58 innings in the last seven years.

Their idea for the bullpen: They will close with Kobayashi, at least for now -- and watch his workload. They are excited by Perez, confounded by Betancourt. They have been encouraged by Mujica, and think Rich Rundles at some point can come up from Buffalo and help as a lefty reliever.

My idea that some fans won't like: I won't fire the manager, batting coach or anyone else this season. The biggest failures are the injuries, the bullpen and not making any major off-season additions. To dump a coach or manager in the middle of this mess is a scapegoat approach and masks the real problem, which is the roster and a farm system that is not producing right now. I can't fault Wedge and the rest for that.