Monday, August 31, 2009

6 games, 6 questions

The Wild Things begin a season-ending six-game homestand Tuesday night with a series against the Kalamazoo Kings. Here are six questions to be answered during the homestand:

1. How long will it take for Chris Sidick to set the Frontier League record for career hits? Sidick tied the record of 458 hits held by Mike Breyman (Gateway, 2004-08) during Washington's win Sunday at Midwest.

2. Can the Wild Things avoid the basement? Washington is currently in fifth place, two games ahead of last-place Midwest, thanks to beating the Sliders in the last two games. The best-case scenario for Washington is a fourth-place finish.

3. Can Jacob Dempsey break the league's single-season RBI record? Dempsey needs nine RBI (I think - Midwest still hasn't reported the boxscore from Sunday's game) to tie the league record of 100 RBI set by Kalamazoo's Pete Pirman in 2005.

4. Will there be retaliation against Florence? Washington and Florence had a benches-clearing incident during their last series, played in July at Champion Window Field. The incident happened after a home run by Washington's Ernie Banks. Florence manager Toby Rumfield left the dugout and knocked Washington first-base coach Jon Cahill to the ground with a forearm shiver. Rumfield was suspended for five games. If there is going to be retaliation by the Wild Things, you'd think there would be no better time than the final series of the year, right? If you're not going to return to the league next year, then it doesn't matter if you get suspended, right?

5. What will the attendance be? The Wild Things are on the verge of finishing with their worst year, not only on the field but at the gate as well. They could, however, exceed last year's per-game attendance but that will be a difficult task because mid-week games after school has started never draw well.

6. Will Washington again be kind to Chuck Tiffany? You probably have never head of Chuck Tiffany, but the left-handed pitcher for Florence etched his name in the city's baseball lore in 1999 when he led Covina, Calif., to the Pony League World Series championship. Tiffany turned in perhaps the best world series performance by any player. He tied a series record with five home runs, including three in one game, and tied the record for wins (3) in a series. In the championship game against Chinese Taipei, Tiffany pitched a two-hitter, struck out 13 and hit two home runs. He went on to become a top-5 prospect in the Los Angeles Dodgers' system (he threw a no-hitter in the minors) before a shoulder injury derailed his career. Now with the Freedom, Tiffany has a 4-2 record. There is a chance Tiffany might pitch the Friday night game.

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Thursday, July 30, 2009

Suspensions from the Florence fiasco

Suspensions handed down from the Frontier League for the benches-clearing incident Wednesday night between the Wild Things and Florence Freedom:

Florence manager Toby Rumfield - 5 games
Washington hitting coach Jon Cahill - 2 games
Washington pitcher Andy Schindling - 1 game

According to WJPA Radio's Randy Gore, Schindling's suspension was not for anything directed at Florence players or coaches, it was for saying something to umpire Jim Scahly.

There was no mention of the league's five-ejection rule that requires a manager to serve an automatic three-game (or is it five-game?) suspension after his team's fifth ejection. Washington has six ejections on the season.

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Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Florence free-for-all

If you're not listening to the Wild Things' game at Florence tonight – and with Florence leading 9-0 in the fourth inning, nobody can blame you for not listening - there was a benches-clearing situation in the sixth inning.

After Ernie Banks hit a long home run to left centerfield to make it 9-2, Florence manager Toby Rumfield took exception to Banks' reaction to the homer and got into a confrontation with Wild Things first-base coach Jon Cahill. According to Florence radio (I'll let you tell me what Radio Randy's version was), Rumfield took two swings at Cahill as the benches emptied.

Rumfield was ejected, as was Cahill and Washington pitcher Andy Schindling.

There have been hard feelings between these teams dating back to the second game of a doubleheader in mid-June when Florence was stealing bases with a 10-run lead during its last at-bat.

Early in tonight's game, Florence's Elvis Andrus was hit by a pitch from Craig Snipp, then stared down the Washington pitcher as he walked to first base. Later, Andrus scored and collided with catcher Alan Robbins and the two had words.

The ejections of Cahill and Schindling gives the Wild Things six ejections for the year. According to Frontier League rules, when a team has five ejections the manager will be suspended for three games. At least I think it's three games. It might be five games. I don't know if the manager gets suspended for any additional games when the ejections total reaches six.

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Friday, March 6, 2009

Coaching staff complete


Manager Mark Mason has completed his coaching staff for the 2009 season. Former Washington shortstop Jon Cahill, pictured, will return to the organization as the hitting coach and Larry Wayman will be back for his second season as pitching coach. Also returning is coach Bob Bozzuto.

This will be Bozzuto's fourth season with the Wild Things. He was the third-base coach last year under manager Greg Jelks.

Cahill spent the last two years as manager of the Frontier League's Traverse City Beach Bums. In 2005, Cahill was an assistant coach under Mason with the Ohio Valley Redcoats.

Cahill's return had been rumored for a long time. The return of Wayman, however, was somewhat of a surprise to me. I expected Mason to bring in someone outside the organization, especially after the Wild Things' pitching struggles last year. One reader of this blog mentioned that Wayman never seemed to connect with the pitchers last year, which got me thinking (I do that once every two weeks). He/she might be right. Not one pitcher mentioned the pitching coach during interviews all season, which was a first.

Mason must think Wayman is the right guy for the job, and with all the injuries and youth in the bullpen last year we'll surely get a better evaluation of the guy this year.

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