Monday, May 23, 2016

Do We Have the Next Derek Jeter in Xander Bogaerts?

For some reason, there is just something sexy about baseball’s shortstop. Growing up, our favorite players play shortstop (Derek Jeter, Nomar Garciparra, Jimmy Rollins just to name a few household names). As children, we would take on their personas, yelling out “I call Nomah!” while playing whiffle ball in the back yard.
Their on field production supported why every kid wanted to become them. Derek Jeter is the greatest to ever play the position. Not only did he play superb defense, winning five gold glove awards throughout his career, Jeter also hit his way to 3,000 hits, a .310 lifetime batting average and an average of 15 home runs and 70 RBI per year. Jeter also averaged 113 runs as well as 32 doubles.
As the greatest shortstop to date has retired, as well as some of the other greatest shortstops to ever man the position, the field currently lacks a suitor to fill the void. Candidates include Carlos Correa, Francisco Lindor and Addison Russell, names that have potential but ultimately have not yet produced at the elite level. To call them the next Derek Jeter would be premature.
There is one player that I failed to mention that interests me that many people overlook as well, our very own Xander Bogaerts.
Bogaerts gets overlooked because of his 2014 season where he switched between third base and shortstop and hit a to a lousy .240 batting average with 12 homers, a low 46 RBI and only 60 runs. But Bogaerts bounced back in 2015. He hit to a .320 average, good for second in the AL and fifth in the league, with 81 RBI and 84 runs, albeit only seven homers.
Bogaerts has maintained his production this year. He currently bats .346, first in the American League, ahead of our very own Jackie Bradley Jr (.342). He leads the league with 63 hits and is on pace for 231 hits as well as 123 runs, 15 homers, 96 RBI, and 23 stolen bases.
Bogaerts will probably not maintain those numbers—which would put him in the running for Most Valuable Player—but he could produce something just a tad below those numbers. Say Bogaerts produces at a 10-85-15 clip with a .320 batting average with 110 runs. A realistic possibility, those numbers come close to Derek Jeter’s stat line.
Is Xander Bogaerts the next Derek Jeter? His production and top prospect status, a former second overall prospect in baseball, makes me ponder the thought.
Bogaerts is two inches shorter than Jeter (6’1” to Jeter’s 6’3”) while maintaining a similar build. The two have a very similar batting stance as well. Look at the two.


Nearly identical.

Bogaerts has turned into an elite baseball player with the stats and the stance to back up the claim that he could become the next Derek Jeter. At 23 years old, Bogaerts is still hitting his prime. Will Bogaerts name one day be in the same sentence as the greats? Only time will tell. 

Monday, April 18, 2016

Red Sox Rant: Vazquez, Kimbrel, Sandoval

At 6-6, the Red Sox have played to their exact potential, a team that will probably end a couple games above .500 with huge inconsistencies in their roster. You can spend hours, week and week talking about their starting rotation. You can go on and on about the exacerbation of the bullpen and their demand to log 30+ innings every week. I don't want to exhaust those points. I’ve got a couple different points I want to make about last week:


Christian Vazquez
The kid knows how to catch. He's clearly better than both Blake Swihart and Ryan Hanigan when it comes to controlling a game. Amazing since he's missed an entire year. In the one game he has played this year, he made Rick Porcello look like a respectable pitcher. He had poise when controlling base runners and clearly knows how to frame pitches better than the rest of the Red Sox battery. It makes me wonder about Swihart’s role with the Red Sox going forward. After getting sent down to Triple A, it makes me believe he will get used in a trade for a legitimate starting pitcher,mi clear number one or two guy. The Red Sox won’t keep both and Vazquez is just so good behind the plate while Swihart could get cashed in for some needed pitching depth that it makes the most sense.

Craig Kimbrel
I know I said I wouldn't talk about the bullpen, but I can't leave out Kimbrel. After his one bad outing (which comes once every other year for him) he has been throwing gas. Kimbrel is a guy I can picture people rooting for and trusting when it comes to October baseball. He's just a likable guy. I went to the Red Sox game on Wednesday, and the atmosphere was like nothing else. He ran in from the bullpen to “Welcome to the Jungle” with flames on every scoreboard. I know it's a cheap Red Sox gimmick but I'm buying in. I like Kimbrel’s demeanor and ability.

Pablo Sandoval
If you haven't kept up with the news, Sandoval basically has an undiagnosed eating disorder. I honestly feel bad for the guy. He gets so much crap from the fans and media about his weight, and he's just a guy that can't control it. I know there are two ways to look at it, but I can't help but feel bad for the guy. You wouldn't go around making fun at the average joe with an eating disorder, so lay off Sandoval. Let him work out his problems. Hope the guy gets some help.



Today is always one of the greatest games on the Red Sox schedule, Patriot’s day baseball. It's the one day of the year where the Red Sox play baseball in the morning, 11:05 sharp. I always remember being home from school on April vacation, and I would watch the pregame in my pajamas while eating breakfast. Truly like no other game. Clay Buchholz pitched pretty good, the team just couldn't hit behind him. I bet being at the actual game is such a great experience too. Maybe one day, but for now, in the wise words of Tom Werner “Let's Go Red Sox? Let’s Go Red Sox?”

Monday, April 11, 2016

Red Sox Rant: The Highs and Lows of Week One

After a long winter and many public outcries about the Red Sox, baseball season officially returned with already a week’s worth of play under our belts, which in Pablo Sandoval’s case is too much and has caused the belt to literally snap (video here). But with all that said, it wouldn’t be a Red Sox season without Red Sox Rants. So here I present you the first Red Sox Rant of the season with a couple of hot topics on the table.
Brock Holt
I rag on Brock Holt or @BrockStar4Lyf a lot. His value diminishes as a one position player and his production drops off exponentially after the all-star break. But I have to give it to him so far. He has carried this Red Sox team on offense this season to date. You could make a case for Hanley Ramirez, but that is an entirely different topic. Holt has started the year 7-17 (.412 batting average) with four extra base hits, two home runs, eight RBI, four runs. Absolutely crushing the ball. He hit a home run in Wednesday’s bullpen meltdown in order to keep the game close. He basically said “Screw the Blue Jays” Friday night, hitting five RBIs and a grand slam that put life back into the Red Sox. They were down 7-2 and Joe Kelly was getting absolutely nailed and when the team was down but not out, Holt stepped up. It’s a breath of fresh air from these entitled veterans. Thank you Brock Holt.
The Starting Rotation
The best way to describe it: S.S.D.D. We all knew that David Price would dominate. He pitched lights-out on opening day, creating this weird feeling amongst Red Sox fans that maybe this team will actually do something good for once. Mookie Betts also hit a home run, Travis Shaw and Holt stepped up, the two last minute decisions to the lineup by manager John Farrell, and it all seemed great in Red Sox camp. Then Buchholz pitches four innings of suck. Joe Kelly followed up with his inability to hit the side of a barn. Both Rick Porcello and Steven Wright pitched like fifth starters. This will be the Red Sox rotation the rest of the year. Price will pitch amazingly followed by a roulette spin for the other four starters. I also feel bad for Dave Dombrowski. He is stuck with Porcello, the guy he traded away in Detroit because he didn’t want him on his team. Now he has to pay him an absurd amount of money as a fifth starter.
Koji Uehara
When Koji Uehara literally threw his entire body at a ground ball last year, causing the trainers to come out on the field, I stated loudly and clearly that Uehara would not pitch the rest of the year. I was right, he broke his wrist. I then doubted Uehara. Going into his age 40 season coming off a broken wrist, I questioned whether Uehara would return to form due to a combination of age and the fact that he relies on off speed pitches with sudden movements and I did not think he would get the same kind of movement post injury. I can say so far that I was wrong. Uehara has pitched three solid innings while only giving up a walk. He looks like the same pitcher prior to surgery. So far so good for Uehara.


The Red Sox have started the season on a good note, going 3-2 and taking a couple games in Toronto, the team to beat in the American League East. I’m still not convinced with the team after week one however. Last year the team started out 6-2 and we were all on board with the team winning 90+ games. Then they went on a really bad losing streak, falling to 12-10 by May and then 22-29 by June. So verdict is still out on this team, but congrats on the accomplishments in week one of the season.

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Cheer up Patriots fans, all is still well in New England

Oh how the mighty fall.
After the New England Patriots started their season 10-0 averaging 32 points per game during that span, fans spoke about the Patriots as the best team ever to grace the game of football. Most agreed that the Patriots could trounce any opponent that stood in the way of “Tom Terrific” and the gang.
Now the improbable and what most said would never happen has occurred. The Patriots have lost to the Miami Dolphins, their last two games in a row, and four of their last six games.
As I listened to sports radio throughout the week, I remember radio personalities Tony Massarotti and Adam Jones say that there was no way that the Patriots could lose their last two games of the season. Boston Globe writer Chris Gasper, who appears occasionally on the radio show “Felger & Mazz” said on air that the Patriots could easily beat the Dolphins with half of their reserves in the game, that he believed the Patriots would easily defeat the Dolphins.
Well the Patriots lost the game Mr. Massarotti and Mr. Jones, and they lost playing every available starter Mr. Gasper.
The lack of offensive weapons are not to blame for this historical collapse. The Patriots have who some call the best quarterback to ever play the game in Tom Brady and a tight end who will probably retire as the best ever to play his position in Rob Gronkowski. Sure the losses of Dion Lewis and Julian Edelman hurt their offensive production, but it cannot be the only reason for such a collapse. They are still the fourth best offense in the NFL and ranked second in passing.
There are other reasons to blame. The Patriots loss against the Philadelphia Eagles solely because of their lack of efficiency on special teams by allowing the Eagles to score on a blocked punt and on a punt return. The loss also includes one of the weirdest plays Bill Belichick has ever concocted by allowing defensive back Nate Ebner to drop-kick the ball on a kick-off.
It came down to a terrible call on the coin flip in the Patriots overtime loss to the Jets. The Broncos rallied from a 21-7 fourth quarter deficit to beat the Patriots in week 12 when the Patriots were without their four top targets.
So maybe part of it is unfortunate luck on the Patriots end, combined with some bad calls. Surely it doesn’t help that Brady’s has to throw to Brandon LaFell who has dropped 50% of his passes either.
It looks bad for the Patriots right now. Their offense looks defeated, their defense beat up. Losing four of their last six doesn’t help the situation. I sure don’t feel the same about the team as I did in weeks 11, five, week one even. But they certainly are not out of the Super Bowl hunt.
The two wild card teams should be considered so called “weak” playoffs teams, along with division winner Houston Texans. The Kansas City Chiefs played San Diego twice, Cleveland once, Baltimore once and a not so tough NFC North division. The Pittsburgh Steelers have lost a couple questionable games this season and once to the Patriots as well, albeit coming during week one of the season. The Steelers defense can show up one game and not the next. The Texans are well, the Texans.
I forgot to even mention the Cincinnati Bengals. Prone to horrendous playoff efforts, the team could be without quarterback Andy Dalton once again for the divisional round of the playoffs.
Even though it seems bleak in New England, it isn’t as bad as it feels and seems. I would still put the Patriots as the AFC favorites to make it to the Super Bowl. The recent losing streak, as well as the injuries suffered just create a fog not a blizzard over the path to Super Bowl 50 for the Patriots.
So maybe the might haven’t fallen.

Maybe they are just under repair.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

David Price is Worth the Production, Terms are just Scary

As a team with the fifth worse ERA in baseball last season, a combined starter 4.39 ERA, and a rotation sporting no ace, the Red Sox needed major improvements. The team found their answer.
The Red Sox have signed pitcher David Price to a seven-year, $217 million contract. The Red Sox have solved their ace problem.
David Price is one of the best starting pitchers in the game. He has earned one CY Young award and finished second in two other races. He has a career 3.09 ERA, averages 216 strikeouts a season and 227 innings. Price won 19 games in 2010, 20 in 2012 and 18 last season between Detroit and Toronto. Price also has no injury history in his throwing arm.
Price is the surest thing the Red Sox could get of an ace, but I still have my worries and doubts.
Price is thirty years old, the traditional benchmark for decline in a baseball player. He also has 1,441 professional innings on his throwing arm, a scary amount to have on a thirty year old pitcher that the team just gave $31 million annually. Most pitchers decline rapidly in their thirties, just look at C.C. Sabathia, Justin Verlander and Barry Zito.
Handing out a contract of this length and money is scary. Even though Price has all the numbers, credentials and accolades of a proven ace, the terms still scare me. Price just has too many innings on his arm to feel 100% confident.
I am also worried about the clubhouse. I know everyone says that money will brush all tension under the rug, but I still think it is a problem to have David Ortiz, Hanley Ramirez, and David Price all in the same locker room with John Farrell as the manager. No disrespect to John Farrell’s character or anything about him to that sort, but the man does not seem like the best guy to bring together all of these egos and make them a winning bunch. There are too many egos working together and I think they will all collide at some point.
I love David Price as a pitcher, and he ranks in my top five pitchers currently in baseball. I love his success and have said in the past that I want him in Boston. But the terms of the contract just scare me to death.
The best case scenario is that he opts out after his third year and then signs elsewhere, but I highly doubt that Price would opt out of a $31 million guaranteed contract at the age of 33.

Once opening day comes around, I am sure fans, including myself, will forget all about the price tag. If Price pitches well, finds himself in CY Young contention, and brings the Red Sox back to the post-season, I bet I will find myself at rest about the contract. But for now, I can’t help but imagine all of the bad things that will happen to David Price. It just fits the Red Sox woes.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

The Creation of an Epidemic: Tommy John Surgery in Baseball (Part Two of Two)

*Part two to a two part story. Read Part one here
Kids today have nothing to fear about Tommy John surgery. The surgery has become safer than ever, more and more pitchers each year come back and reclaim their elite status after the surgery. Out of all the pitchers that receive Tommy John surgery, 80% make it back to the big leagues. Just take a look at the New York Mets, the 2015 National League Champions. Five of their best and most promising starting pitchers have had Tommy John surgery, which includes Zack Wheeler, Matt Harvey, Jake DeGrom, Steven Matz and closer Bobby Parnell. Kids today see the National League Champions with a rotation full of Tommy John surgery recipients, see their success with Tommy John surgery and begin not to worry about the negatives. Even newly elected Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz had the surgery, the first ever to have Tommy John surgery and make it into the Hall of Fame.
            With so many success stories, many people think that the surgery has a 100% success rate and pitchers can come back even stronger after surgery. Without any apparent repercussions for having Tommy John surgery, pitchers rationalize that a new and fixed ligament will basically give a clean slate when it comes to wear and tear on the elbow. These players believe that they can throw harder because of it as well, which will get them to the major leagues and the big paycheck, so pitchers elect for surgery if at all possible.
            However, the stereotype is very much false. Tommy John surgery is a transplant, meaning that a doctor replaces the ligament from somewhere else on the body. The doctor takes a tendon in the wrist, cuts it out, and connects it in replace of the broken ligament. However, the new ligament is no stronger than the old ligament. The inventor of Tommy John surgery, Doctor Frank Jobe, spoke in favor of this notion, saying “The surgery doesn’t make anyone better… It restores. That’s it." Doctors have not perfected the surgery either. In 2014, 11 out of 31 surgeries performed were for revisional purposes. Players underwent Tommy John surgery for a second time because the first surgery failed. According to Stephania Bell in an article on ESPN.com, since 1999, 32 pitchers have undergone revisional Tommy John surgery and a third of those revisions happened in the past year. Bell also tracked five starting pitchers and five relief pitcher’s velocities before and after surgery. Seven out of 10 pitchers had their velocity decrease post-surgery. The three pitchers that had their velocity increase, increased by tenths of a mile per hour.
     So why do pitchers elect to receive Tommy John surgery? Because of the money that comes with making it to Major League Baseball. The average annual salary for a Major League Baseball player in 2014 was $3.82 million dollars. Pitcher Max Scherzer inked a seven year, $210 million deal from the Washington Nationals last offseason. Almost all of the top tier pitchers ink nine figure deals. With pitching in such demand in Major League Baseball, organizations willingly spend insane amounts of money on a pitcher. These teenagers want part of that. Therefore, they feel the need to do anything they can in order to succeed as a pitcher, even if that means needing Tommy John surgery. At young ages, pitchers willingly do anything to net themselves a lucrative contract in the Major Leagues. They will throw hundreds of pitches at top speeds all year round in order to impress Major League scouts. These baseball organizations even encourage it, shown when scouts pressured Brady Aiken to pitch against doctor’s orders. Major League Baseball organizations use the money against these young pitchers. They have created their own conundrum known as the epidemic of Tommy John surgery. An inflation of Tommy John surgeries in baseball without any known long-term consequences is a scary path for baseball to head down. What could happen to these pitchers 10, 20, even 50 years in the future? Let us not wait to find out by taking initiative now.

Monday, November 16, 2015

The Creation of an Epidemic: Tommy John Surgery in Baseball (Part One of Two)

                In baseball, a player with the ability to throw a ball with uncanny velocity and incredible movement has become an indispensable resource. Teams will pay millions of dollars for this kind of talent. In consequence, young players will do anything to secure that million dollar contract by pitching year round, maxing out their inning limits and forcing themselves to throw harder than ever. In actuality, these kids are throwing until their arm falls apart. Throwing a baseball at velocities upwards of 90 mph puts tremendous strain on the elbow. Putting too much strain on the elbow leads to injury and eventually to surgery. This is known as Tommy John surgery, a reconstructive surgery for the ulnar collateral ligament in the elbow named after pitcher Tommy John. Within recent years, Tommy John surgery has plagued Major League Baseball. Pitchers have received the surgery at rapidly increasing rates, creating an epidemic within the game of baseball.
According to Pitch Smart, over the past three years, the number of baseball pitchers receiving Tommy John surgery has increased yearly. As of 2012, approximately 25% of Major League pitchers and 15% of Minor League pitchers have had the surgery during their career. The rate of players receiving Tommy John surgery has also increased by 50% since 1990. Overuse has caused this epidemic. According to Doctor Glenn Fleisig, the research director at the American Sports Medicine Institute and advisor to Major League Baseball, Tommy John surgery usually occurs in 15-20 year old pitchers throwing more than 80 pitches per game and pitch in eight or more months a year. Pitching beyond these constraints generally results in pitching fatigued, leading to overuse of the throwing arm. According to Fleisig, throwing 100 pitches a game every fifth day is unnatural for the arm. This excessive throwing year round causes the inflation of Tommy John surgeries in baseball.
            Nineteen year old pitcher Brady Aiken, provides a great example for arm fatigue. Drafted first overall by the Houston Astros, Aiken did not sign his professional deal because the Astros organization noticed elbow inflammation in his throwing arm, outlined within an ESPN article. In this article, the writer acknowledges Aiken’s rise as a dominant pitcher and the leading cause of his elbow problems. Up until his junior year of high school, Aiken pitched all year round. Once Aiken’s senior year came around and knowing about the rise in elbow problems in pitchers, Aiken and his coach developed a plan to reduce his innings in order to save his elbow. Aiken took the winter season off because of a doctor recommendation. They kept him on a pitch limit and avoided any pitching outside of his regular starts.
            However, a major league scout contacted the two of them and wanted Aiken to pitch at the MLB showcase for promising talent. The showcase would take place during the winter, when Aiken was not throwing. In order to pitch, Aiken would need to build up his elbow strength by throwing every day to ready himself for the showcase. At first, Aiken did not want to start throwing in order to save his perfectly healthy elbow, but the scouts pressured him into ignoring the doctor’s recommendation. The scouts told Aiken that pitching would secure his place in major league baseball, his ticket to a million dollars. Aiken decided to pitch at the showcase. The following baseball season, the same season the Houston Astros drafted Aiken first overall in Major League Baseball’s amateur draft, Aiken would feel soreness in his throwing elbow. The team picked up on the inflammation in Aiken’s elbow during his physical. Houston would retract their offer to Aiken and Aiken would elect to receive Tommy John surgery.
            The sad part about this story is that it occurs regularly in the game of baseball. In today’s world, athletes must accept injury if they want to survive in the world of sports. According to Doctor Mary Lloyd, the competitive nature of sports has programmed youth players to think that they must bend the borders of injury as far as possible, which leads to the increase in elbow injuries. Lloyd warned players about the temptations to push themselves in order to pursue money and scholarships, saying “The 21st century athlete of any age or sport must throw faster, play harder, earn the scholarship, and don’t tell anybody you’re hurt." The money causes the students to push the barriers and major league baseball takes advantage of the player’s wants. Aiken did not receive Tommy John surgery for the benefit of his health. He received the surgery because without it, Aiken would never make it to Major League Baseball. The surgery saved his career and his chance at earning millions of dollars.

            Rarely does a baseball organization hold it against a pitcher like Aiken for throwing too much. Most baseball organizations do not keep track of potential draftee’s innings nor worry about the overuse of a pitcher’s arm. According to Sam Miller, the author of the article on Aiken, most teams draft players solely based on their velocity and ball movement. So pitchers also disregard their inning limits and force themselves to pitch harder than their arm can handle. If a pitcher destroys their arm in the process, Major League Baseball bares no responsibility either. As shown in the Brady Aiken case, the team just retracts their offer and saves their money while the player forces themselves to undergo Tommy John surgery in hopes of prolonging their baseball tenure.