Thursday, May 7, 2009

Letter from camp


Thoughts and observations from Thursday, the second day of spring training:

- Only saw the morning session, which was the intrasquad game. There were more relievers than potential starters on the mound. None of the pitchers stood out but none got lit up, either. Josh Eachuses, the converted catcher, and Dan Horvath got the best results. Justin Edwards, the former West Liberty pitcher, seemed to throw the hardest of the group and might be a candidate for a starting spot. Michael Mondesir struck out three of the six batters he faced.

- The story of the day had to be the field conditions, or to be more specific the outfield conditions. Water, water and more water. What a mess. Reminded me of some of those games last year against Midwest. Because W&J's Ross Memorial Park was hosting to the Presidents' Athletic Conference tournament, the Wild Things had little choice but to muddle through the muck at Consol Energy Park. Late in the scrimmage, shortstop Joe Spiers dove for a fly ball in shallow left centerfield and landed in a mud puddle. One batter later, Blake Butler was playing right field when a shallow fly was hit in his direction. Butler tried to make a face-first diving catch. After seeing the water fly, I was tempted to give Butler a 9.8 for his dive into the pool (the Russian judge would have given the dive a 7.5). When he stood up, Butler's uniform was soaked and covered in mud. It looked like he had just played four quarters in the rain at Heinz Field.

- Two rarities did happen during the intsrasquad game: a triple play was turned and Chris Sidick grounded into a double play. The triple play came with runners on second and third and the infield drawn in. The batter grounded out to second base, then Spiers took off late for home and was tagged out in a rundown. The runner on second base was then thrown out. The triple play would have never happened in a game situation. Had it been during a game with a coach at third base, Spiers would have been running on contact or staying put. Sidick's 6-4-3 DP was interesting only because he grounded into just four double plays in 1,096 at-bats the last three years.

- Sidick has changed his uniform number from 12 to 5.

- Second baseman Michael Parker, pictured, made the play of the day. He fielded a ball on the grass behind the bag and, as his momentum carried him toward left field, he threw out the batter. Washington's had some good defensive second basemen, but the only one I've seen make the play Parker did was Ryan Ellis.

- That Butler even attempted to dive into the water and catch the fly ball probably shouldn't come as a surprise. He seems to play full-tilt all the time, even on the basepaths.

_ Kris Rochelle should no longer be considered injured. His arm looks as strong as ever.

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4 Comments:

Anonymous Obuma said...

Chris,
Thanks for the review on the Wild Wet Ducks.
Jamal, get some of that stimulus money going so they can get drainage in the outfield. Or perhaps your connection has gone south.
Any action on he operating partner change from John to Franni?

May 8, 2009 at 4:21 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I dont understand the dynamics of drainage systems, but wouldnt a "pro" baseball team/league have proper drainage? What exactly is "pro" about this league and its franchises? Just becasue you charge a small fee for attending, what else about the league is "professional".

Interested Newcomer

May 8, 2009 at 6:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ballpark was built on the cheap. Very cheap. From what I was told, one of the many corners that were cut to get the project started was the drainage.

May 8, 2009 at 1:57 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You have to have topsoil or sand to have drainage. From what I've been told, there's 3" of topsoil in the outfield and 4" in the infield. PNC Park has 12" of sand throughout. That's why the field doesn't drain!

May 11, 2009 at 4:58 PM  

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