Monday, January 16, 2012

The Week That Was

Outfielder Kevin Kiermaier injured his hamstring in the Australian Baseball League and missed Canberra's five-game series against Perth, which wrapped up earlier today. The Cavalry only have five games left in the regular season, finishing up next Sunday. No word yet if Kiermaier will be able to play in any more games. He has hit .347/.407/.429 in 49 at-bats so far.

Teammate Mark Thomas has caught fire since the calendar turned, hitting .333/.389/.576 in eight ABL games in 2012. In addition to the five remaining regular-season games, Thomas may see action in the ABL playoffs. The Cavalry are currently in a three-way tie for 3rd place, 12 games behind Perth, but only a game out of second. The top four finishers will make the ABL playoffs.

In other ABL news it sounds like attendance has been disappointing:
The ABL is backed by Major League Baseball, which has agreed to support the first five seasons of the league, but the sight of empty rows of seats is not encouraging for the team. Despite boasting 685 season ticket-holders, Balfour revealed average membership attendance at games was just 211. Some 83 members have yet to attend their first game of the season.
The 'Balfour' mentioned above is Sydney Blue Sox general manager David Balfour, father of ex-Rays reliever Grant. This is the Rays first year participating in the ABL, sending Kiermaier, Thomas, Ty Morrison and Todd Glaesmann to each play in part of the ABL season with Canberra.


The Rays have re-signed minor league free agent RHP Richard De Los Santos, who has been in the organization since 2005. He was limited to two April starts for Durham last season due to injury. Here are his career stats:
Year   Age               Team  W  L  ERA   G GS    IP  BB  SO  WHIP  H/9 HR/9 BB/9 SO/9
2003    19         Burlington  3  4 6.41  12  0  39.1  10  40 1.398 10.3  0.7  2.3  9.2
2004    20    Mahoning Valley  1  5 5.26  13  9  51.1  19  45 1.403  9.3  0.4  3.3  7.9
2005    21      Hudson Valley  1  0 0.93   6  0   9.2   2   8 0.828  5.6  0.0  1.9  7.4
2005    21 Southwest Michigan  3  0 0.66  15  0  41.0  18  49 0.805  3.3  0.2  4.0 10.8
2006    22            Visalia  5  3 3.44  41  0  68.0  19  49 1.338  9.5  0.1  2.5  6.5
2007    23         Montgomery  5  4 2.75  40  3  72.0  15  38 1.139  8.4  0.4  1.9  4.8
2007    23             Durham  1  1 7.20   6  0  15.0   3   5 1.600 12.6  1.8  1.8  3.0
2008    24         Montgomery  5  5 3.42  14 12  79.0  24  39 1.253  8.5  0.5  2.7  4.4
2009    25      Hudson Valley  2  0 2.81   8  0  16.0   6  13 1.125  6.8  0.0  3.4  7.3
2009    25          Charlotte  2  0 0.79  13  0  22.2   4  21 0.662  4.4  0.0  1.6  8.3
2010    26         Montgomery  0  0 4.50   1  0   2.0   0   1 1.000  9.0  4.5  0.0  4.5
2010    26             Durham 14  5 3.52  28 23 148.1  48  90 1.362  9.3  0.4  2.9  5.5
2011    27             Durham  0  1 6.00   2  2   6.0   4   4 1.833 10.5  0.0  6.0  6.0
9 Seasons                     42 28 3.50 199 49 570.1 172 402 1.248  8.5  0.4  2.7  6.3

Here is a summary of the Rays minor league free agent moves so far this offseason:

Added:
RHSP Richard De Los Santos - re-signed
RHSP Matt Torra - re-signed
1B Juan Miranda - from the Arizona Diamondbacks
RHRP Jhonny Nunez - from the Chicago White Sox

Lost:
RHSP Brian Baker - to Milwaukee Brewers
OF Matt Carson - to Minnesota Twins
RHRP Rob Delaney - to Florida Marlins
RHRP Mike Ekstrom - to Colorado Rockies
IF Ray Olmedo - to Chicago White Sox
RHRP Adam Russell - to Atlanta Braves

2011 Rays minor leaguers still available:
RHRP Joe Bateman
RHRP Lance Cormier
IF J.J. Furmaniak
1B/DH Dan Johnson
OF John Matulia
RHRP Deivis Mavares
3B Daniel Mayora
RHRP Paul Phillips


Speaking of Dan Johnson, Joe Christensen had a nice article on Johnson's search for a new team and some of the obstacles he's overcome in his career:
A former hockey player at Blaine High School, he blossomed into an elite power hitter at Nebraska. The Oakland Athletics drafted him in the seventh round in 2001, and made him their starting first baseman in 2005, replacing Scott Hatteberg of "Moneyball" fame.

But after a promising rookie season, Johnson's luck completely changed. On the last day of spring training in 2006, Johnson went to spray sunscreen on his arm and accidentally shot it into his right eye. He had trouble seeing breaking pitches all year, and it wasn't until the season ended that he was diagnosed with double vision.

The next spring, after months of vision therapy, Johnson could see clearly again. But one day, he went to throw the ball around the horn after a double play, and the runner charging down the first baseline clipped his leg, tearing Johnson's hip labrum.

The Montgomery Biscuits and the City of Montgomery will hold a press conference on Wednesday at 5 p.m. regarding the new scoreboard. Speakers will include Mayor Todd Strange and Biscuits Co-Owner Sherrie Myers. It will be at Riverwalk Stadium’s Club Car Bar. The public is invited (enter through the RF gate) and complimentary beverages and ballpark popcorn will be served.


The Princeton Rays have announced the start times for their 2012 home games: Monday-Saturday games at 7:05 p.m. except doubleheaders which begin at 5:30 p.m.; all Sunday games at 3:00 p.m.; and July 24th will be at 11:00 a.m.


The Rays Winter Development Program was last week at the Trop. Bill Chastain spoke to some of the 28 minor leaguers in attendance, including shortstop Derek Dietrich:
"You're treated like a big leaguer for a week as far as where you stay, when you wake up, the breakfasts, the meals," Dietrich said. "The workouts are first class, on the field and in the weight room, with all the coordinators and staff in this organization. It's a great opportunity for me and the others to see the instructors and for them to see us and for them to see how our progress is during the offseason. We're away for four months and everyone is working at becoming a better player for the team, and it's valuable for them to be able to see our progress and see what we need to do."

There were a couple of Rays-related prospect Q & A's at milb.com last week. Ashley Marshall interviewed shortstop Tim Beckham:
MiLB.com: How would you say you handled yourself at the higher levels and in the Arizona Fall League?

Beckham: I feel like I handled it pretty well and I feel like I handled my own. I did pretty well and I'm happy. I actually got a leg kick this year, so I worked on that. I just tried to take advantage of the hitter's counts as far as 0-0 or 2-0 or 3-1 and counts like that. What I changed the most was that I was a lot more aggressive on hitters' counts this year than what I was in the past.

The second Q & A was by Robert Emrich with RHSP Chris Archer:
MiLB.com: What was the biggest difference in the second half for you?

Chris Archer: At the beginning of the season, I think I was trying to do too much and got out of character. I was trying to make too many perfect pitches instead of letting my stuff just play in the strike zone. I was trying to make perfect pitches like a back-door slider and when you try to become too fine in this game you make little misses. I just said, "I'll go back to being myself."

Former Hudson Valley Renegades general manager (1999-2003) Steve Gliner has been named President of the Fort Myers Miracle by the Goldklang Group, which owns both teams.


John Lembo spoke with 2011 2nd round pick Granden Goetzman about the transition from high school to professional baseball:
Goetzman batted .173 in 25 games last summer for the GCL Rays. And while a groin injury he suffered during one of his first days with the team didn’t help, Goetzman said most of his problems were mental rather than physical.

“My average wasn’t too hot, but I was swinging at bad pitches, pitches I shouldn’t be swinging at,” Goetzman said. “This year, I’ll be comfortable and swinging at strikes and at pitches I can handle...Just be myself.”

The Rays signed controversial free agent outfielder Luke Scott to a $5 million one-year contract. The deal includes a $6 million option for 2013 or a $1 million buyout. His career numbers in the majors:
Year   Age Team   AB   H  2B 3B  HR RBI SB CS  BB  SO   BA  OBP  SLG   OPS OPS+
2005    27  HOU   80  15   4  2   0   4  1  1   9  23 .188 .270 .288  .557   46
2006    28  HOU  214  72  19  6  10  37  2  1  30  43 .336 .426 .621 1.047  165
2007    29  HOU  369  94  28  5  18  64  3  1  53  95 .255 .351 .504  .855  118
2008    30  BAL  475 122  29  2  23  65  2  2  53 102 .257 .336 .472  .807  111
2009    31  BAL  449 116  26  1  25  77  0  0  55 104 .258 .340 .488  .828  114
2010    32  BAL  447 127  29  1  27  72  2  0  59  98 .284 .368 .535  .902  144
2011    33  BAL  209  46  11  0   9  22  1  1  24  54 .220 .301 .402  .703   92
7 Seasons       2243 592 146 17 112 341 11  6 283 519 .264 .349 .494  .843  121

In order to make room on the 40-man roster for Scott, the Rays designated catcher Nevin Ashley for assignment. As a DFA, if no other team claims him for a 40-man roster spot after ten days, the Rays can outright him back to the minor leagues.

I'm not sure how many teams have openings on their 40-man rosters, but of those who do I would be surprised if any decide to add Ashley. He hasn't spent much time at AAA yet, and in his 39 AAA games he's only hit .208/.259/.304 in 125 at-bats. Assuming no other teams claim him, Ashley will remain an important part of the Rays organization, with only Jose Molina, Jose Lobaton, and Robinson Chirinos ahead of him on the catching depth chart. Here are his career numbers:
Year   Age        Team   AB   H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS  BB  SO   BA  OBP  SLG  OPS
2006    21   Princeton  153  51  8  1  4  28  7  3  21  40 .333 .440 .477 .917
2007    22    Columbus  429 120 13  8 12  60 20  8  49  92 .280 .354 .431 .785
2008    23  Vero Beach  327  77 12  1  4  26  5  6  49  79 .235 .348 .315 .663
2009    24   Charlotte  200  48  7  3  2  21  7  4  22  47 .240 .343 .335 .678
2009    24  Montgomery  118  25  7  1  1  15  0  0  18  31 .212 .331 .314 .644
2010    25  Montgomery  341  87 14  3  7  45  4  2  34  76 .255 .333 .375 .709
2010    25      Durham   24   4  0  0  1   2  1  0   1   7 .167 .200 .292 .492
2011    26  Montgomery  279  78 15  2  6  33  2  3  36  66 .280 .387 .412 .799
2011    26      Durham  101  22  1  1  2  15  0  1   5  29 .218 .273 .307 .580
6 Seasons              1972 512 77 20 39 245 46 27 235 467 .260 .353 .378 .731

And finally, while we wait for news on Ashley, make sure to visit his wife's photography website. She even has a small section dedicated to baseball, which includes a nice shot of the top prospect in baseball during his time with the Biscuits. If you're in the Evansville area and need a photographer give her a call, she does nice work at very reasonable rates.

7 comments:

  1. Very nice read on the Johnson roller coaster story, after I was one of many thousands screaming last Sept.28th as his HR hit the fair pole !

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  2. Rays also added Matt Mangini to a minor league deal.

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  3. Looking at your list of players that still haven't been signed, John Matulia is hitting .323 down in the Dominican right now, which many could argue is more competitive baseball than AAA. Why not bring him back to Durham?

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  4. Jay Buente was also awarded a minor league contract.

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  5. Ashley cleared waivers and was outrighted back to Durham, as expected. Good news for everyone involved.

    Agree on Matulia, he's always flown under the radar and other than last year he's put up decent numbers. And I think we forget how young he is, still only 25. Drafted in 10th round in 2005. I would like to see him re-signed for depth at AA and AAA, see if he can bounce back.

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  6. Forgot to mention, if you follow the link at the end of the article to Ashley Ashley's baseball pics, the first one that comes up is a nice one of Matulia.

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