Thursday, July 31, 2014

Pursuing the pennant



 
When does a pennant race start?

After the all-star break? The final three weeks of the season? At the start of the season?

It has been my belief a pennant race begins in August. The Dog Days. The days when some teams wilt and others get hot and surge to a division championship or a playoff berth.

Today is Aug. 1.

That means the Wild Things, who are tied for first place in the Frontier League's East Division with Evansville but only a game away from being in third place, are in a pennant race for the first time since ... oh, let's say 2008.

The last time the Wild Things played August games that had any kind of serious impact on their playoff chances was back in 2009, when Mark Mason was the manager. Washington was in third place on Aug. 1, 7 games behind first-place Kalamazoo and 3 1/2 games behind second-place Lake Erie.

The Wild Things were coming off a sweep at Florence, then promptly opened August by getting swept by the Midwest Sliders in Yipsilanti, Mich., and disappearing from contention. Being 7 games back and then, for all intents and purposes, being eliminated before playing a home game in August doesn't exactly count as being in a playoff race.

So, we'll go back to 2008, when Greg Jelks was the Wild Things' manager. Washington entered August six games above .500 and in second place in the East. However, they faded down the stretch and Consol Energy Park hasn't seen an important August game since 2008.

That is, until this month, which promises to be interesting and entertaining. If you're a Wild Things fan and have been for a long time, then this is the month you've waited six years to experience.

Washington has 21 games remaining against teams currently at .500 or better. Evansville plays 16 games against teams with winning records. Southern Illinois plays only nine. The Wild Things and Otters will meet six more times, including the final three games of the season at Consol Energy Park. Because of the Frontier League's goofy scheduling format, Southern Illinois does not play Evansville or Washington the rest of the season.

Sounds like a recipe for a fun month.

Big night for Ijames

Stewart Ijames with former Wild Things manager Bart Zeller in Arizona. Ijames is now playing for the Missoula Osprey of the short-season Pioneer League.

Wondering what happened to right fielder Stewart Ijames, who had his contract purchased by the Arizona Diamondbacks organization earlier this month?

Ijames played five games for the D-backs' affiliate in the Arizona Rookie League, then was assigned to the Missoula Osprey in the short-season Pioneer League. Last night, Ijames made his second appearance for the Osprey and went 2-for-5 with two home runs and four RBI in a 10-9 Missoula win. Both of Ijames' homers came in the game's first five innings.

It also was a good hitting night for another former Wild Things player, outfielder Robbie Garvey, who is playing for the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes, the Los Angeles Dodgers' affiliate in the Class A California League. Garvery, who played for Washington in 2012, went 2-for-4 with a home run against Lake Elsinore. For the season, he is batting .241 with eight triples, seven home runs, 42 RBI and 18 stolen bases for the Quakes.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Pine Tar game v2.0


As I was waiting for the Pirates-Giants game to move across the Associated sports wire late last night, I decided to scan some of the Frontier League boxscores from Tuesday. Low and behold, I found this gem from the Florence-Southern Illinois game:

SIL's Niko Vasxquez (sic) called out and ejected from game in bottom of fourth
inning for illegal use of pine tar on bat following complaint from Florence
manager.

Shades of George Brett and the famous Pine Tar Game in New York against the Yankees in 1983.

I did a quick Google News search and found one account of the game, but the pine tar wasn't mentioned. It simply focused on Southern Illinois scoring four runs in the bottom of the ninth inning to win the game 6-5 and move to within one game of the Wild Things and Evansville in the East Division standings.

A check of the Marion Daily Republican this morning sheds a little more light on what happened:

"... It was also important to sidestep any potential drama as a result of Niko Vasquez being called out and ejected from the game in the fourth inning for having pine tar too high on his bat, a result of a complaint by Florence manager Fran Riordan — who was one of the inaugural inductees into the Frontier League's new hall of fame last week — and the implementation of a rule that doesn't actually exist by home plate umpire John Hastings ..."

The pine tar rule doesn't exist? Or does it?

A quick check of the Major League Baseball rulebook revealed this in Section 1.10:

(c) The bat handle, for not more than 18 inches from its end, may be covered or treated

with any material or substance to improve the grip. Any such material or substance

that extends past the 18-inch limitation shall cause the bat to be removed from the

game.

NOTE: If the umpire discovers that the bat does not conform to (c) above until a

time during or after which the bat has been used in play, it shall not be grounds for

declaring the batter out, or ejected from the game.


Rule 1.10(c) Comment: If pine tar extends past the 18-inch limitation, then the umpire, on

his own initiative or if alerted by the opposing team, shall order the batter to use a different bat. The

batter may use the bat later in the game only if the excess substance is removed. If no objections are

raised prior to a bat’s use, then a violation of Rule 1.10(c) on that play does not nullify any action or

play on the field and no protests of such play shall be allowed.

So, as I understand it, if Florence did not object to the umpire about Vasquez's bat with excessive pine tar until after his at-bat in question (which resulted in a single), then the play should have stood, Vasquez should not have been called out or ejected and the bat should have been removed from the game. Had Florence objected about the use of the bat earlier in the game, the umpire should have checked Vasquez's bat when he went to the plate and tossed it out but not ejected the player or called him out.

I checked with Washington's resident Rules of Baseball expert, Bob Gregg of WJPA Radio, and he threw out the possibility of the umpire in Southern Illinois enforcing Rule 6.06, which states ...

A batter is out for illegal action when ...

(d) He uses or attempts to use a bat that, in the umpire’s judgment, has been altered or tampered with in such a way to improve the distance factor or cause an unusual reaction on the baseball. This includes, bats that are filled, flat-surfaced, nailed, hollowed, grooved or covered with a substance such as paraffin, wax, etc.
No advancement on the bases will be allowed and any out or outs made during a play shall stand.
In addition to being called out, the player shall be ejected from the game and may be subject to additional penalties as determined by his League President.

Does pine tar improve the distance factor or cause an usual reaction of the baseball? I wouldn't think so, but this might have been the rule home plate umpire was thinking of when he ejected Vasquez.

As it played out, the umpire's decision and his ejection of Vasquez didn't matter because Southern Illinois won the game, which got the umpires out of a sticky situation (I had to say it).

Monday, July 28, 2014

Who's the ace?


At the time I write this, the Wild Things are tied for first place with Evansville. Southern Illinois is in third place, only 1 1/2 games behind.

Washington has a 39-24 record. Teams 15 games above .500 at this point in the season typically have that dominant pitcher, a true No. 1 starter. The Wild Things teams that were playoff clubs usually had that well-defined top-of-the-rotation pitcher with double-digit wins. Think Aaron Ledbetter, Ryan Douglass, Dave Bradley and Ben Ally (both in 2003) and Jared Howton.

So who is the ace of this year's team? That's a question that had different answers at different points in the season.

Scott Dunn, who was the Frontier League's Pitcher of the Year last season with Traverse City, was expected to be the ace and got the start on opening night. For his first half dozen starts, Dunn wasn't as sharp as he was last season, which made you think somebody else was the ace. Then, Dunn put together a string of six consecutive starts during which he gave up only seven earned runs (1.89 ERA) and you might have thought he was the ace again. But Dunn had a rocky start last week at Southern Illinois was put on the 7-day disabled list.

Shawn Blackwell, however, won his first five decisions and had an ERA was as low as 2.58 after a complete-game win over Southern Illinois early in July. He was the only Washington starting pitcher to make the all-star team, which had to make him the ace, right? Since the all-star break, Blackwell has made two starts and didn't make it to the fifth inning in either outing. Is he still the ace?

Tim Flight looked like he had ace potential before taking a line drive off his arm and suffering a season-ending injury. Chris Phelan was 5-2 and had a chance to make the all-star game when he suddenly retired. Neither are around to be the ace.

That leaves Zac Fuesser, who started the season in the bullpen. The lefty made his first start June 12 and is 4-0 in that role (6-1 overall). He also leads the league with a 1.72 ERA. That should make him the ace, right?

Well, along comes Troy Marks, a guy who has never played at Consol Energy Park. He was acquired by Washington from the Vallejo Admirals of the four-team independent Pacific Association. Marks, who was in camp last year with Schaumburg but was released before the regular season started, was 3-1 with a 2.57 for Vallejo. He was added to Washington's roster during the recent road trip and gave up one run in 5 1/3 innings to beat Normal last Wednesday.

Against Evansville Monday night, marks threw a gem. He allowed only two hits and struck out 11 as the Wild Things won, 2-0.

So is Marks the ace? Or Fuesser? Though neither was in the rotation in early June, Marks and Fuesser were the only pitchers to win at Southern Illinois and Evansville. Or is Blackwell still the ace? Or will Dunn come off the DL and return to his Pitcher of the Year form?

Maybe this year's Wild Things club is simply built more like the 2004 edition, a team that won 62 games but didn't have any pitcher win more than nine games. Ryan Ewin had nine wins that year, Matt Powell won eight games, Matt McDonell won seven and B.J. Borsa won seven times out of the bullpen.

Saturday, July 26, 2014

Wild win in Marion

Here is a 50-second clip from the Wild Things' win Friday night over Southern Illinois, again from WSIL-TV. The footage includes Ryan Kresky's run-scoring triple.


http://www.wsiltv.com/sports/local/Miners-Honor-Pinto-But-Fall-To-Wild-Things-268689952.html

Friday, July 25, 2014

Wild Things-Miners video

Here is some video from television station WSIL in Marion, Ill., from last night's Wild Things game at Rent One Park against the Southern Illinois Miners.

http://www.wsiltv.com/sports/local/Miners-Draw-First-Blood--268558082.html

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Best season ever?

Stewart Ijames
The Frontier League is different things for different people.

For those who play in the Frontier League, it could be a second chance, a way to get back to affiliated ball. Or it can be a way for a player, such as former Wild Things outfielder Stewart Ijames, who slipped through the cracks and went undrafted as a college senior to make a better impression and get his first shot in the affiliated ranks. Or it could simply be a way for a player to keep playing the game he loves and maybe move to a better-paying job in another independent league.

Or in the case of Windy City pitcher Josh Spence, it could be a way to get back to the major leagues.

The primary on-field purpose of the Frontier League is move players to some major-league team's minor-league affiliate. And this year, the league is having players sold to major league organizations at a record pace.

When Normal pitcher Ethan Elias had his contract purchased Wednesday by the Miami Marlins, he became the 29th player since the start of spring training to be moved to affiliated ball. That's a record  for this point in the season.

According to Frontier League deputy commissioner Steve Tahsler, there were 12 players who had their contracts purchased at this point last year, 10 in 2012, 12 in 2011 and only 5 in 2010.

Of the 29 players who have been picked up this year, 13 have been right-handed pitchers, six have been infielders, three have been outfielders, three have been catchers and there were three left-handed pitchers.

The team that has lost the most players is River City, which has moved six, including catcher Josh Ludy, who was picked up this week by Oakland. Ludy is leading the league in batting average and home runs (one more than Ijames). That the Rascals are only a half-game out of first place in the West Division at the time I write this is a credit to the work of manager Steve Brook, who does a solid job every season.

Every Frontier League team except two (Lake Erie and Traverse City) has had at least one player sold to the affiliated ranks.


UPDATE: The Traverse City Beach Bums sold the contract of closer D.J. Johnson to the Minnesota Twins on July 25. That leaves the Lake Erie Crushers as the only Frontier League team that has not moved a player to affiliated ball this season.

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Too many managers?

Phil Wrigley and his "College of Coaches."
One last post about managers, and it has nothing to do with t he Wild Things.

I received an email from a reader of the Observer-Reporter this week who read my column in the Sunday edition. The reader wrote that he was surprised that I didn't mention the Chicago Cubs' "College of Coaches" that was used in the 1961 and '62 seasons.

I didn't mention it because it wasn't exactly the same as the Wild Things' co-coaches or coaches-by-committee approach. The Cubs always had a manager. The problem was it was changing, first every month, then every week, then every series.

Confused? if you're too young to remember or never heard of the Cubs' "College of Coaches," then here a few links.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_of_Coaches

http://www.cbssports.com/mlb/eye-on-baseball/24214118/just-because-the-cubs-and-the-college-of-coaches

http://www.mtrmedia.com/2014/01/inside-the-college-of-coaches-used-by-the-chicago-cubs-in-1961-and-1962/

If you don't want to read three stories, I'll give you the Reader's Digest version. The Cubs had a string of 14 consecutive finishes in the bottom half of the National League entering the 1961 season, when owner Phil Wrigley decided to do something unique and hired eight coaches who would rotate through the organization from the minors to the majors, changing managerial jobs along the way. Some guys actually managed a rookie league team and the Cubs in the same season.

The Cubs started with a plan to divide the 1961 season into thirds and change managers at that point. It ended up that four managers were used, often rotating from week to week. Three managers were used in 1962.

The results were about what you would expect. The Cubs went 64-90 in 1961 and 59-103 in 1962.

Friday, July 18, 2014

Wild Things going managerless

The Wild Things will not have a manager tonight. Or in the near future.

The Wild Things will go with what has been described as a "coach by committee" approach.

I'm not making this up. River City's Steve Brook will be the only manager in the ballpark tonight.

Washington's coaching duties will be split between coaches Bob Didier, Bob Bozzuto and Kevin Gryboski.

Power rankings and schedules

We all like rankings, and sports is filled with them: Top 25 rankings, power rankings, RPI ratings, Top 10 lists, etc.
One rankings system that has been around for a couple of decades is the Massey Ratings. Developed in the early 1990s by Kenneth Massey, the Massey Ratings rank the strength of sports teams. His ratings were part of the Bowl Championship Series since 1999.
Massey has ratings for professional sports, colleges and even high school football. And, yes, he ranks independent baseball teams, including those in the Frontier League:
http://www.oursportscentral.com/services/ratings/?lid=40
Massey currently has the Wild Things ranked as the No. 4 team in the Frontier League, behind top-ranked Evansville, Gateway and tonight's opponent River City. One reason for Washington's spot behind Evansville and the top two teams in the West is strength of schedule. According to Massey, the Wild Things have played the easiest schedule in the league. The Greys, obviously, have played the toughest schedule followed by the Joliet Slammers.
Strength of schedule will even out by season's end, but it's interesting to compare remaining schedules. Here are some things to know about the schedules in the post-all-star-game portion of the season:
* Gateway (31) and Washington (30) have played the most home games so far, which means they have the fewest home games remaining.
* Joliet is the only team that has 10 home series remaining.
* Joliet, Gateway, River City and Lake Erie are the only teams that have two series remaining against the Greys, though the Grizzlies will play five games instead of six against the travel team. Joliet also has nine games remaining against Windy City, which is 17-33.
* Washington has only one road series remaining against a team currently with the losing record (Windy City). Evansville, Southern Illinois and Lake Erie each have three road series left against losing teams.
* Evansville and Normal will play only 95 games. They had a game rained out that will not be made up. Though they are not in the same division, the Otters and CornBelters met eight times in the first three weeks of the season.
* Lake Erie and Florence, the closest teams to Washington in terms of mileage, do not play the Wild Things in the second half of the season.
* Washington opens the second half with 12 consecutive games against teams currently with winning records.
* Joliet will play its next 15 games against teams currently with losing records.
* Normal is the only team, other than the Greys, of course, that will play its final six games of the season on the road.
* The only trip Evansville will make to Washington all season will be for the final series of the year in September.
* River City, which leads the West Division, will play only seven games against West Division rivals in the second half of the season.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Kountis finds a home as Wild Things' closer

Timing is everything in the newspaper business. A good example of this was Saturday night, when the Wild Things hosted the Florence Freedom. As I mentioned in an earlier post, the Observer-Reporter has a deadline this summer that is 30 minutes earlier (10:30 p.m.) than it was last year.

There is no guarantee that any Wild Things home game will be completed in less than three hours, so that means I need to have what we call an "early story" ready to substituted for a game story if play runs long or the game is delayed because of rain.

Last Saturday, I wrote a 34-inch feature story on Washington closer Jonathan Kountis. It served as a placeholder for the Wild Things game story. As luck would have it, the game ended in time for a quickly written game story to run in the print edition. The Kountis feature, which included quotes from Bart Zeller, was pulled.

I had planned to use the Kountis feature leading up to the Frontier League All-Star game but, as we all know, Zeller resigned Sunday. It seemed odd to run a story in print that featured quotes from a guy who just resigned, so it hasn't appeared in print. We did put the story on the O-R's website Sunday.

If you missed it, then here it is:

By Chris Dugan
Sports editor
dugan@observer-reporter.com

When the Frontier League season drew to a close last year, Jonathan Kountis’ career as a professional baseball player had fallen to the point where he was playing for the Greys, the league’s traveling team, and had a 1-5 record with an unimpressive 7.08 ERA. He displayed all the signs of a being a pitcher who had been pushed onto baseball’s scrap heap.
However, Wild Things manager Bart Zeller didn’t see a struggling starting pitcher when he watched Kountis, even when the right-hander from Akron, Ohio, gave up five runs in five innings to Washington in his final outing of the year.
What Zeller saw was the future closer of the Wild Things.
Zeller remembered Kountis as the being best ninth-inning pitcher in the Frontier League in 2012, when the latter had a 6-2 record, an impressive 1.08 ERA and 19 saves for the Lake Erie Crushers. Kountis struck out 68 batters in 59 2/3 innings that year.
“What I saw last year was a pitcher who was miscast as a starter,” Zeller explained. “I knew starting wasn’t what Kountis wanted to do. He told me that he wanted to be a closer and that’s all I needed to hear. I told him, ‘With the record you had at Lake Erie, the job is yours.’ So far, he hasn’t left anything to be desired.”
Kountis (6-3, 220) has rejuvenated his career and played a major role in the Wild Things spending six weeks in first place. He has a 1-2 record, a 2.28 ERA and has tied the franchise's single-season saves record before the season reached the all-star break. B.J. Borsa had 19 saves in 2004. Kountis earned his 19th save Saturday in the Wild Things’ 5-4 win over Florence.
Kountis will be one of seven Wild Things in the league’s all-star game Wednesday in Sauget, Ill.
"Jonathan has been excellent,” Zeller said.
That Kountis’ career has led to Washington is quite remarkable. That career has included several unexpected twists and unlikely incidents, including changing schools before his senior year of college, slicing open a finger on a nail protruding from a wall in the Dallas airport and learning how to be a relief pitcher by watching videos on mlb.com.
Kountis spent three years as a starting pitcher at Ohio Dominican University and was drafted by the Cleveland Indians in the 42nd round in 2009. As a 42nd rounder, Kountis didn’t have much bargaining power, so he opted to return to school for his senior year. Instead of going back to ODU, Kountis transferred to Embry Riddle University, an aeronautical school in Daytona Beach, Fla., that happened to have a powerhouse baseball program at the NAIA level.
Kountis pitched well enough for Embry Riddle that he was drafted again, this time in the 19th round by the New York Mets in 2010. He performed well in a brief stints that summer for the Mets’ affiliates in Brooklyn and Kingsport, Tenn.
“Things didn’t work out as planned,” Kountis said. “The next year, the Mets brought a lot of pitchers in for spring training and I was demoted to Kingsport, where I had already played.”
He was released after pitching only 5 1/3 innings.
“It was a lost year,” Kountis said. “I didn’t know what to do next. I heard that John Massarelli was managing Lake Erie, and I had worked out at Mazz’s training facility in Canton, so I asked him for an invite to the Crushers’ spring training in 2012. He said he’d invite me, but the only job he had open was closer. I said, ‘OK, I’ll give it a try.’
“I didn’t know anything about being a closer. I didn’t know where to begin.”
So Kountis booted his computer, logged on to mlb.com and watched videos of relief pitchers. One player in particular, Jonathan Papelbon, caught his eye. So Kountis studied the video clips of Papelbon and changed his pitching motion to mimic that of the major leaguer.
“I couldn’t emulate Mariano Rivera. Nobody has a cutter like his,” Kountis said. “I saw Papelbon’s videos and liked the way he hides the ball. He also threw the ball over the top, so I could keep the same arm slot by throwing like him.”
With the help of a split-fingered fastball that he developed while with the Crushers, Kountis had the breakout year he needed, yet he wasn’t signed by any major league team during 2012. That winter, Kountis went to six tryout camps. The last one was in Toronto and the Blue Jays invited him to their minor league camp for spring training.
“I was in extended spring training when they said they wanted me to be the closer at (Class A) Vancouver,” Kountis recalled. “I was on my way to Vancouver when I was in the Dallas airport. I sat a bag down while exchanging money for Canadian currency. When I was done, I reached for my bag, but a nail was sticking out of the wall and I hit it with my hand. I split open the middle finger on my pitching hand.”
Though his finger had not healed, Kountis pitched in 10 games for Vancouver with little consistency. He often reopened the gash while pitching. He was released before the finger healed.
“I didn’t have a feel for the pitches,” Kountis explained. “The finger kept ripping open.”
Kountis wasn’t unemployed very long as he landed a job with Laredo of the independent American Association. “It just didn’t work out there,” Kountis said, and he was released again after only four games and 3 2/3 innings.
He returned to the Frontier League and signed with the Greys. But being a last-place team, the Greys needed starting pitchers more than a closer.
“I hadn’t thrown more than 30 pitches in a game in two years,” Kountis said. “I thought, ‘Do I have to develop a windup again?’ But there was only a month left in the season, so I decided to give it a try and see where it took me.”
Kountis is friends with former Wild Things pitcher and coach Gary Lee, who suggested Washington as a home for him in 2014.
“All the Greys players were free agents at the end of last season. The first day other teams could talk to me, Bart Zeller called,” Kountis said. “He said I could close for Washington and gave me 48 hours to think about it. I didn’t need that long. I had known Bart since 2012 and I knew some of the relief pitchers who played for him. I also knew he won a championship with Joliet. He knows how to put together a good team.”
Zeller has another playoff contender this year, and Kountis will be counted on to secure many important victories in the season’s second half.
“I’m all for the team,” Kountis said. “This team has the best chemistry of any I’ve been around. There are no cliques, no evil seed. … I hope we can bring a championship to the city.”

Monday, July 14, 2014

Zeller resignation

Here's the story from Monday's edition of the Observer-Reporter on the resignation of Wild Things manager Bart Zeller:


By Chris Dugan
Sports editor
dugan@observer-reporter.com

With his team tied for first place in the Frontier League’s East Division, Bart Zeller resigned Sunday morning as manager of the Wild Things.
According to Wild Things owner Stu Williams, the 72-year-old Zeller cited “health reasons and concerns” for his resignation.
Zeller did not respond to a request for comment.
Zeller guided Washington to a 31-19 record entering Sunday evening’s home game against the Florence Freedom. It was Washington’s final game before the all-star break.
“I do not know what his health reasons and concerns are,” Williams said, “but I do know that to leave a team as good as this one, and at this point in the season, that must say something.”
An interim manager has not been named. Hitting coach Bob Didier, pitching coach Kevin Gryboski and bench coach Bob Bozzuto prepared the team Sunday.
“I’ve talked to the coaching staff, and I’m going to take the rest of the week to think about it,” Williams said.
“We have three extremely talented individuals. Bob Bozzuto has meant so much to this team for so many years and is a knowledgeable baseball guy. Bob Didier has probably 50 years of experience, almost all of it is on the major league-level, and Kevin Gryboski is a major-league-talented pitcher who is taking good care of the pitchers. With that in mind, I can’t make a wrong decision. I expect we will have a solution after the all-star break.”
Zeller was to manage the East Division team in the Frontier League All-Star game Wednesday night in Sauget, Ill. He will be replaced by Evansville’s Andy McCauley. Gryboski and Bozzuto were to be coaches at the game but Williams said no members of the Wild Things’ coaching staff will be going to Sauget.
Among the in-game duties for Zeller was coaching third base. That job was done Sunday night by Didier, who coached third base in the major leagues when he was on the coaching staff of the Oakland Athletics.
The resignation came one day after the Wild Things defeated Florence, 5-4, in a game that included two pitches thrown behind batters and warnings issued to both teams by home plate umpire Matt Neader. Moments after Washington starter Tyler Elrod threw a pitch behind Florence’s Joe Staley in the fourth inning, there was an altercation in the Wild Things’ dugout between Zeller and Gryboski.
Following the game, there was a players-only meeting on the field that Williams described as “a group of adults getting together and deciding to act like adults.”
The coaching staff later met with Williams. Gryboski was not in the dugout Sunday night. He watched the game from the owner’s suite. A Wild Things spokesman said Gryboski was not suspended.
“Last night, we had a problem in the dugout and a little problem on the field. We got to the bottom of that situation (in the dugout),” Williams said. “It was all game-time emotion and needed to be dealt with.”
Despite trailing 4-0 in the inning of the altercation between coaches, Washington rallied to win the game, getting a solo home run in the bottom of the fourth from Stewart Ijames and scoring four times in the fifth.
“This team is incredible,” Williams said. “It is as professional a group as any I’ve met in any walk of life. … If anybody is missing this season, then they’re missing something extraordinary.”
Zeller was in his second season as Washington’s manager. The Wild Things had a 41-55 record and finished in sixth place in the East last year.
Zeller managed the Joliet Slammers for two seasons (2011-12) and led them to a league championship in 2011. He was let go by the Slammers after the 2012 season and hired as bench coach by Washington. When Chris Bando resigned citing health reasons in the offseason, Zeller was promoted to manager.
Washington will begin the season’s second half Friday night at home against the River City Rascals.

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Zeller resigns

With his team tied for first place in the Frontier League's East Division, Bart Zeller has resigned as manager of the Wild Things. No manager has been named as of Sunday night.

Friday, July 11, 2014

In a slump

The Wild Things, who were alone in first place in the Frontier League's East Division every day since June 1, awaken today to find themselves in second place ... sorta.

While Washington and Evansville are tied for first place in the games behind column, the Otters have a winning percentage that is .005 better than that of the Wild Things.

After winning 10 of 11 games during an early season stretch, Washington is only 14-14 over its last 28 games. It's not hard to figure out why the Wild Things have been sputtering.

Early in the season, Washington's offense was being carried by its Big 3 of Danny Poma, C.J. Beatty and Stewart Ijames. Beatty and Ijames were hitting balls over outfield walls with regularity, and Poma was among the top five hitters in the league. You knew the three had to cool off sometime. Ijames has continued to hit at a torrid clip, but Poma's batting average has dropped slightly and Beatty has been scuffling as of late.

Carter Bell has hit for average over the course of the season, and Garrett Rau has had some productive games at the plate, but the rest of the lineup has been inconsistent at best and highly unproductive at its worst.

Put it all together and Washington's team batting average has dipped to .249, which is 10th in the 14-team league, only .001 better than Traverse City.

You can't win a division title batting .249.

And Washington is 11th int he league in walks drawn, which means only the Greys and Lake Erie have a worse team on-base percentage than the Wild Things.

That puts a lot of strain on the pitching staff, which is having to win 3-2 and 4-3 games every night.

So when Washington gets home runs from unexpected sources, such as last night when Maxx Garrett and Jim Vahalik went deep against Lake Erie, and and the bottom of the order scratches out a few hits, the Wild Things need to take advantage of those spurts of bonus offense. The 5-3 loss to the Crushers was a, well, crusher. Who knows if at season's end Lake Erie winning the season series (5-4) over Washington will be a factor in the postseason or not, but that was one game the Wild Things would like to have back.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

7th added to all-star game

Al Yevoli
The Wild Things will have a seventh player in Wednesday's Frontier League All-Star game in Sauget, Ill. Relief pitcher Al Yevoli was one of the three manager selections added to the East Division roster by Washington's Bart Zeller, who will manage the East in the game, which will be held at the Gateway Grizzlies' GCS Ballpark.

Yevoli, who is in his third season with the Wild Things, has a 2-2 record and 2.58 ERA in a team-high 24 appearances. Zeller's other selections were Florence corner infielder Sam Eberle and Lake Erie pitcher Jordan McCoy.

Previously, Washington outfielders C.J. Beatty, Danny Poma and Stewart Ijames, third baseman Carter Bell, starting pitcher Shawn Blackwell and closer Jonathan Kountis were named to the East all-stars.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Web gem from Latimore

Quincy Latimore, the former Pittsburgh Pirates prospect who played center field for the Wild Things during the second half of last season, is back in affiliated ball and playing well for the Harrisburg Senators, the Class AA affiliate of the Washington Nationals. Latimore is batting .286 in 62 games with the Senators.

Laitimore also showed some fielding ability, robbing an Altoona player of a home run in recent game. Check it out by clicking on the link below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9W4R4kqAHM

Monday, July 7, 2014

6 on all-star team

Shawn Blackwell
The East Division-leading Wild Things had six players, including three starters, named Monday to the Frontier League All-Star Game that will be played July 16 at GCS Ballpark in Sauget, Ill.

Two-thirds of the East outfield will be manned by Wild Things as right fielder Stewart Ijames, who leads all East Division players in home runs (13) and RBI (41), and center fielder Danny Poma garnered starting spots. Poma leads the East in batting average at .331 and stolen bases with 18.

The other Washington player who will be in the lineup is C.J. Beatty. The Wild Things’ regular left fielder will be the East Division’s designated hitter. Beatty is batting .272 with 10 home runs and 34 RBI.

Chosen as a reserve was slick-fielding third baseman Carter Bell, who is third on the Wild Things with a .278 batting average. He leads all Frontier League third basemen with a .991 fielding percentage, having committed only one error in 111 total chances.

Selected to the East Division pitching staff were Washington’s Jonathan Kountis and Shawn Blackwell. Kountis leads the league with 16 saves to go with a 1-2 record and 1.66 ERA in 21 relief appearances. Blackwell has 5-0 record, 2.58 ERA and is tied for third in the league in wins. In his last outing, Blackwell threw a complete game with nine strikeouts in Washington’s 7-1 win Thursday over Southern Illinois.

Washington’s six selections are the most for any East Division team. Lake Erie will have five representatives. Evansville, Florence and Traverse City each have three players on the East team.

It will be the second all-star game appearance for Ijames, Beatty and Kountis. Ijames and Beatty represented Washington last year, when the game was played at Consol Energy Park, and Kountis played in the all-star game in 2012 as a member of the Lake Erie Crushers.

Rounding out the starting lineup for the East will be Florence catcher Joe Staley and outfielder Cole Miles, Greys first baseman Joe Rapp, Lake Erie second baseman Vincent Mejia, Southern Illinois shortstop Ryan Cavan and Evansville third baseman Shayne Houck.

Reserves will be Evansville first baseman Nik Balog and second baseman Josh Allen, catcher Emmanuel Quiles and shortstop Jose Sanchez of Lake Erie, catcher Jake Rhodes of Traverse City and Greys outfielder Cameron Monger. The remainder of the pitching staff includes Todd Kibby and Zac Treece of Lake Erie, Casey Delgado and D.J. Johnson of Traverse City, Southern Illinois’ Derrick Miramontes and Chuck Weaver of Florence.

Among the players chosen as starters for the West are River City catcher Josh Ludy, who leads the league with 15 home runs and 48 RBI, and Windy City outfielder Kyle Robinson, who has a league-best .388 batting average. The West pitching staff is led by Gateway’s Aaron Newcomb (7-2, 3.62).

The managers for the East and West teams will be determined by the standings. The manager of the team in first place after games Wednesday night will manage his respective division. The manager also will select an additional three players for his all-star team.

Washington has a one-game lead over Evansville. Both teams are idle until Wednesday when they will play doubleheaders at home. The Wild Things will play Lake Erie and Evansville is hosting Traverse City.

Rosters were selected by league managers, coaches, general managers and media.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Nuno traded to D-backs

Vidal Nuno
Former Wild Things pitcher Vidal Nuno has been traded by the New York Yankees to the Arizona Diamondbacks in exchange for pitcher Brandon McCarthy.

Nuno, 26, moved into the Yankess' starting rotation this year when C.C. Sabathia was lost for the season with an injury. In 14 starts, Nuno had a 2-5 record and 5.42 ERA. It’s unknown if Nuno will be a starter or a lefty relief pitcher for the Diamondbacks.

McCarthy will be 31 Monday. He is 3-10 with a 5.01 ERA and will be a free agent after the season. McCarthy has a career record of 45-60.

One thing I do know is Arizona has been inquiring about Nuno for more than a week.

Super Mario

Mario Garza
A friend of this blog sent me a text last night. The person was attending a New York-Penn League game between the Hudson Valley Renegades and the Staten Island Yankees. Much to his surprise -- and mine, too -- the Staten Island manager was former Wild Things catcher Mario Garza. It had slipped past me that Garza is in his second year as a manager.

You might remember Garza as a member of the 2007 Wild Things team. He was a left-handed hitting catcher who came to Washington after four years in the Houston Astros system and led the New York-Penn League in home runs and RBI in 2004. During one season with the Astros, Garza finished second on his team in OPS, behind Ben Zobrist and ahead of Hunter Pence, both current major leaguers.

With the Wild Things, Garza played in a platoon at catcher with Pat O'Brien. Garza struggled at the plate during the regular season, hitting only .237. However, he came up big in Game 2 of a first-round playoff series against Gateway, hitting two home runs, including one that I recall clearing the second wall (the one with the scoreboard, behind the lawn seating) at Gateway and disappearing into the darkness, seemingly still on an upward trajectory. That ball might still be going up.

Garza was knocked out of the remainder of the playoffs when, during Game 3, he broke his collarbone in a collision at home plate.

One other note about Garza: Though he ended his college playing career at Florida, Garza was the only Wild Thing to ever play at Stanford.

Garza, who is in his fourth year as a coach with the Yankees, is one of two former Wild Things who are currently managers in affiliated ball. Former second baseman Ryan Ellis is the manager of the New York Mets' St. Lucie affiliate in the Class A Florida State League.

Saturday, July 5, 2014

5,683


The Fourth of July, baseball and fireworks are a winning combination that goes back a long time.


The Frontier League usually draws its biggest crowds on July 4, except in Washington, where the Wild Things often have done a big number on July 3. Apparently, the thinking around here is very few places have fireworks on this date but do on the 4th, so you can double your pyrotechnics thrill but going to a Wild Things game on the 3rd and your local fireworks show on the 4th). This year, however, the Wild Things played at home on the 3rd but didn't have fireworks, opting instead to put on the postgame light-up show after the Rebellion softball game tonight. Gee, talk about shooting yourself in the foot. This was a good example. This might have been the only time since Washington has been in the Frontier League that a team was home July 3 without fireworks and on the road July 4.


Meanwhile, attendance was good across the board at FL ballparks last night. The seven games drew an average of 5,683 fans.

Friday, July 4, 2014

The GreenJacket in Augusta

Anyone remember Steve Messner?

If you don't, you're probably not alone.

Messner, a left-handed pitcher, played for the Wild Things only at the end of last season, pitching in eight games. He had an 0-1 record and 4.70 ERA.

Last winter, Messner was signed by the San Francisco Giants and probably considered a longshot to make a short-season team let alone a full-season club. But Messner did secure a roster spot on the latter, the Agusta GreenJackets of the Class A South Atlantic League.

Messner has spent most of the season in the bullpen but recently got a spot start and threw eight shutout innings against the Rome Braves.

Here's the link to the story:

http://chronicle.augusta.com/sports/baseball/2014-06-30/augusta-greenjackets-turn-steven-messner-spot-start-duty


For the season, Messner has a 5-2 record and 3.86 ERA. He has struck out 48 in 58 1/3 innings.