Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Getting a Grant


The Wild Things added a big piece to their roster when they announced Wednesday the signing of third baseman Grant Psomas, a Keystone Oaks High School graduate and West Virginia University product.

Psomas is one of the three players classified as Veterans by Frontier League roster standards. The others are Chris Sidick and Brett Grandstrand.

Psomas comes to the Wild Things after spending five seasons in the minor leagues - two in the New York Mets' system and three with Florida. He made it as high as Class AAA, playing in seven early-season games last year for Albuquerque in the Pacific Coast League. Psomas went 9-for-18 with three home runs for Albuquerque, but he struggled the rest of the season in Class AA and high-Class A.

I believe outfielder Doug Garcia (2003) was the only other Wild Things player to have played in Triple-A.

Psomas had two productive seasons (66 extra-base hits) for the Mets after being drafted in the 15th round in 2004. Psomas was one of three minor-leaguers New York traded in 2005 to Florida for all-star first baseman Carlos Delgado and $7 million. Psomas, who was the "player to be named later" in the trade, went to Florida along with first baseman Mike Jacobs (now in the majors with Kansas City) and pitcher Yusmeiro Petit, who is currently playing for Arizona and has replaced injured Brandon Webb in the Diamondbacks' rotation.

In his first two years in the Marlins' system, Psomas hit 26 home runs, including a 50 extra-base hit season in 2007 for the Carolina Mudcats in Double-A. But his batting average dipped to .238 - he was a .283 hitter in Class A.

In five minor-league seasons, Psomas hit 55 home runs including 23 above the Class A level.

"Grant will provide us veteran leadership and an impact bat in the middle of the order," said new Wild Things manager Mark Mason. "We have received very strong reports on him, and his numbers speak for themselves."

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Monday, April 20, 2009

Nicknames that are Nutz

The Normal, Ill., franchise that is planning to enter the Frontier League in 2010 has trimmed its list of potential team nicknames to four. Almost 1,500 entries were submitted in a name-the-team contest, and here are the Final Four:

Nutz
Nighthawks
Coal Bears
CornBelters

If these were the four best nicknames, I don't want to know what the rejected ones were. Nighthawks is obviously the best of the four, but it's too similar to the Rockford Riverhawks. The Normal Nutz is laughable. The Coal Bears might have something to do with mining in the Normal area, but again it's too similar to the Southern Illinois Miners. CornBelters also falls into the laughable category but is even cornier (I can't believe I just typed that) than Nutz.

Coal Bears is the early favorite based on voting on the franchise's homepage. Nutz was the most-suggested nickname of the four finalists.

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Barnstormin'


Two former Wild Things pitchers, Tom Cochran and Joe D'Alessandro, are trying to land jobs this season with the Lancaster Barnstormers of the independent Atlantic league.

D'Alessandro, who played for Washington last year and, at last check, had a standing offer to return to the Wild Things this year, was invited to the Barnstormers' spring training after attending three tryout camps, including one in Florida.

Cochran, pictured, spent the 2006 and 2007 seasons in Washington. He was released from the Cincinnati Reds' minor-league camp this year and was invited to Lancaster.

The Lancaster New Era did a newspaper story on D'Alessandro and a blog story about Cochran on consecutive days. You can read both stories here:

Joe D'Alessandro.

Tom Cochran.

UPDATE: Both Cochran and D'Alessandro have made the Barnstormers' roster for opening day, which is Thursday, April 23.

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Thursday, April 16, 2009

Shades of Bill Veeck


You have to give the York Revolution of the independent Atlantic League credit for trying something different, even if the idea isn't original. The Revolution signed Dave Flood, a 44-year-old Tampa, Fla., radio personality and 3-foot-2 man. Flood is attempting to make the team as a pinch-hitter. There's plenty of talk these days about small strike zones but this one beats them all.

In the Revolution's first exhibition game Thursday, Flood worked the count to 2-2 but was called out looking at strike three.

While there is no doubt this is a publicity stunt, York manager Chris Hoiles and pitching coach Tippy Martinez are calling Flood's presence in spring training an "experiment." The reason is a new Atlantic League rule that allows teams to carry 27 players on the active roster for the first month of the season. Atlantic League teams normally carry 24 or 25 players throughout the season. This might allow York to keep Flood as a pinch-hitter, ala Eddie Gaedel, the 3-foot-7 player who gained fame by appearing in one game in 1951 for the St. Louis Browns, who were owned by maverick Bill Veeck. Gaedel walked on four pitches in his only plate appearance and became the smallest player to appear in a major-league game.

Here's a link to the story by the York Dispatch's Jeff Johnson (the photo also is from the Dispatch):
Read the story here.

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Monday, April 13, 2009

D'Alessandro to Lancaster

Joe D'Alessandro, who pitched in 20 games (3-2, 2.52, 4 saves) last year for the Wild Things will attend spring training with Lancaster of the independent Atlantic League. He is one of four "non-roster" players with the Barnstormers. Among the others is former Wild Things pitcher Tom Cochran, who had a brief stint in the Cincinnati Reds' minro-league camp this spring.

D'Alessandro has a standing offer to return to the Wild Things this year but had been working the Atlantic League tryout circuit.

There's still a good chance D'Alessandro could end up back in Washington. The Atlantic League is loaded with former major leaguers, and Triple-A and Double-A guys. D'Alessandro has pitched only 55 innings the last three years and none above the low-Class A level, so the odds are stacked against him making the Barnstormers' opening day roster.

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Saturday, April 11, 2009

Every pitch counts


Once you get past the payroll disparity at the major-league level and the steroids use, the biggest change in baseball over the last 15-20 years has been pitch counts. They're everywhere. The major leagues, minor leagues, colleges, high schools, youth leagues. Even Frontier League teams put pitchers on pitch counts.

With the next shoulder or elbow injury potentially an awkward pitch away, teams have become diligent about safeguarding their young assets, er, pitchers. Some people - minor-league personnel directors and major-league general managers in particular - love pitch counts. Others believe they do more harm than good, often slowing a pitcher's development.

Why do I bring this up?

The dreaded pitch count came into play Friday night in a Class AA Eastern League game between the Altoona Curve (Pirates) and Erie SeaWolves (Tigers). Altoona pitcher Jared Hughes, a 6-7 right-hander with a 19-26 career record in the minors, had a no-hitter going in the bottom of the seventh inning of his first outing of the season. He had issued only one walk. The game was tied 0-0.

Hughes was in complete control, working the best game of his pro career. But he reached his pitch count. At this point in the season, even after a month of spring training, the thinking is pitchers haven't built up enough stamina to work deep into games.

Hughes was replaced by reliever Shawn Nottingham. The first pitch Nottingham threw was ripped into right field to break up the Curve's no-hit bid. It was followed by a walk and two-run triple. Erie won 2-0.

The easy thing would have been to let Hughes finish the game, or at least stay in until Erie got a hit. After all, Hughes earned it. It was his game, right? Why shouldn't Curve manager Matt Walbeck leave Hughes in? Who knows, he might have a nice memory to look back on when his career ends.

But in baseball these days, a rule (even an unwritten one) is a rule. If Hughes was throwing a perfect game, it wouldn't have changed what Walbeck was thinking. It was time to take Hughes out of the game.

How many times have we seen a Frontier League game in which a pitcher is in complete control but taken out after four, five or six innings because of pitch count, then the bullpen blows the lead? Too many to count.

If you want to get former Washington High School athletic director and minor-league pitcher Bob Wagner fired up, just mention pitch counts. You'll need to free-up the next two hours because that's how it will take for Wagner to finish his rant against pitch counts.

Those who believe in pitch counts have their reasons. Some tell the story of Cleveland Indians closer Kerry Wood. In high school, Wood pitched for Grand Prairie during the Texas State Playoffs. On the day Grand Prairie won the state title, Wood pitched all seven innings in the first game of a doubleheader and, after a 30-minute break, pitched the first two innings of the second game. His pitch count for the day was a staggering 175.

Sure, Grand Prairie won the title, but at what cost? Less than four years later, Wood had ligament damage in his elbow. Then shoulder problems. Who knows if those problems are related to pitching in high school, but the Chicago Cubs were so disturbed by Wood's pitch counts that they practically shut him down after drafting him.

West Virginia was one of the first states to put innings limits on its high school pitchers. That move was the result of Don Robinson, who would go on to an injury-plagued career with the Pirates, pitching all but (I think) two of his high school team's games one season. Pennsylvania went to innings limits after the 1983 season, when California High School pitcher Brian Zanardelli posted a 14-3 record (think about that, a high school pitcher having 17 decisions in one season). Zanardelli also had injuries derail his career at a young age.

Not everybody likes pitch counts. Longtime major-league pitching coach Leo Mazzone once said of pitch counts "I don't want to see them. My eyes are gonna tell me more than any (expletive) number."

Pitching greats Bob Feller, Don Sutton and Tom Seaver each has said young pitchers do not throw enough these days because of pitch counts and five-man rotations. Supporters of eliminating pitch counts often mention 22-year-old Greg Maddux throwing 167 pitches in a game for the Chicago Cubs, and the 241-pitch game by Nolan Ryan during his days with the California Angels. Both Maddux and Ryan had long careers.

The divisive issue of pitch counts, whether they are good or bad, are here to stay. You'll see pitchers removed at odd times this year, even if they're throwing a no-hitter.

You can count on it.

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Friday, April 10, 2009

Updated roster

Here is the updated roster listed by Frontier League roster classification. Players with an * have not been announced as signing a contract for 2009:

Veterans:
SS-Brett Grandstrand
OF-Chris Sidick*

L2:
DH-Jacob Dempsey
RHP-Jonathan Lewis

L1:
3B-Brad Arnett*
INF-Chris Carrara
INF-Michael Parker
RHP-Nick Peterson
LHP-Craig Snipp
OF-Matt Sutton

Rookies:
RHP-Rick Austin
RHP-Corey Bachman
RHP-Joe D'Alessandro*
RHP-Josh Eachues
RHP—Justin Edwards
RHP—Sean Heimpel
RHP—Brian Honeyman
LHP_Dan Horvath
RHP—Matt Maradeo
RHP—Michael Mondesir
RHP—Jace Smith
C—Steve Pickerell
C—Kris Rochelle
1B—Aaron Janusey
OF-Tim Alberts
OF—Jason Appel
OF—Blake Butler

My guess is there will be at least two more pitchers, two more catchers, another first baseman, a third baseman and an outfielder signed before camp begins early in May. At least two of those players will come out of the Frontier League's tryout and draft May 4-5 at Consol Energy Park.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Stanley makes team


Former Wild Things starting pitcher Patrick Stanley has been assigned to the Lakeland Flying Tigers, the affiliate of the Detroit Tigers in the Class A Florida State League.

Stanley led the Frontier League in strikeouts with 111 in 2006, when he had an 8-4 record and 2.72 ERA. Stanley was limited to four games in 2007 because of an injury, then played with the Newark Bears of the Atlantic league last season and had a 10-8 record.

This will be Stanley's second time in affiliated ball. He spent two seasons in Colorado's farm system before joining the Wild Things.

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Friday, April 3, 2009

Risser released

According the a blog that covers the Montgomery Biscuits, Tampa Bay's Class AA affiliate, former Wild Things relief pitcher Travis Risser was released Friday by the Rays.

Risser was a combined 4-1 with eight saves and a 3.16 ERA last year, split between Columbus of the full-season Class A South Atlantic League and Hudson Valley of the short-season New York-Penn League. Risser played for the Wild Things in 2007.

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Thursday, April 2, 2009

4 returnees, 2 newcomers, 1 retiree


The Wild Things announced several signings today and one retirement, which clears up the L2 roster problem.

Signing contracts for the 2009 season were shortstop Brett Grandstrand, designated hitter Jacob Dempsey (pictured), outfielder Tim Alberts and second baseman Chris Carrara. The Wild Things also announced the signing of two rookie pitchers, Brian Honeyman and Michael Mondesir, and that first baseman Nathan Messner has retired.

Grandstrand returns for his third season in Washington after posting career highs in batting average (.295), at-bats (295), runs (48), hits (87), home runs (4), RBI (47), and stolen bases (13). Grandstrand, who I consider best defensive shortstop in the Frontier League, has spent time in the Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay farm systems.

Grandstrand is currently the head baseball coach at Ringgold High School.

Dempsey was Washington's top offensive player last year and a league all-star. He hit .310 last season and led the league in games played (96), doubles (31), and RBI (88). He finished second in extra base hits (52) and fourth in total bases (203), walks (67) and on base percentage (.422). Dempsey's 31 doubles is a Wild Things single-season record, and his 88 RBI tied for the team record (Mike Arbinger 2005).

Carrara and Dempsey were teammates at Winthrop University and will be together for a second season in Washington. Carrara had a strong second half of the 2008 campaign and finished the year with a .285 batting average and 19 stolen bases.

Alberts also finished strong after signing with the Wild Things at midseason out of Niagara University. As a right fielder and DH, Alberts batted .289 with 11 home runs and 39 RBI. He hit nine home runs at Consol Energy Park. Only a handful of players have hit that many home runs at CEP in half a season.

Honeyman and Mondesir have no pro experience. Honeyman was the East Coast Conference Pitcher of the Year in 2008 at NCAA Division II Queens (NY) College. During his senior season, Honeyman had a 6-0 record with three saves and a 2.20 ERA. Mondesir joins the Wild Things from Division II Dominican (NY) College, where he led all D2 pitchers with a 1.12 ERA and 5.3 hits allowed per game last season. he had a 6-2 record.

Messner was a Frontier League All-Star in 2007. He appeared in 80 games last
season, batting .261 with 21 doubles, five triples, seven home runs, and
47 RBI.

The re-signing of Dempsey and Messner's retirement means the Wild Things will likely begin the season with Dempsey and closer Jonathan Lewis as their two L2 players and go with three Veterans and seven L1s.

An updated roster will be posted later.

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