Adam Everett DFA’d

After today’s game the Tigers designated the contract of Adam Everett for assignment. Danny Worth has been recalled and will be in a time share with Ramon Santiago most likely at shortstop.

Everett’s value of course came as a defensive specialist and his bat was always going to be considered “weak” at best. However offensively futility was taken to another level this season with an OPS south of .500. Only 11.1% of his balls in play were line drives and he continued to pop out meekly to the right side. He’s also striking out more and walking less than at any point in his career.

Everett’s 600ish OPS’s over his career were pretty much the minimum that could be justified and that was only because he was a defensive wizard. To take 25% off an otherwise meager production is just too much to warrant a spot in the lineup.

Worth definitely appears to have the defensive chops to man the position based on scouting reports and our chance to see if him during his brief stint at second base. His minor league hitting numbers aren’t especially encouraging but he should be able to outperform Everett.

It would seem that Gerald Laird would be the next player sweating his position, though there isn’t another internal option. He’s likely to see less playing time, but barring an acquisition from outside the organization he will stick on the 25 man roster.

Tigers Minor League Wrap 6.5.2010

Toledo 4 Rochester 8
Billy Buckner was rocked for 8 runs on 14 hits in just 4.1 innings. Scott Sizemore went 4 for 5. Casper Wells had a triple and 2 singles.

Erie 2 Bowie 4
Wilkin Ramirez doubled, tripled, and walked. Cesar Nicolas went 2 for 3 with a walk. Jon Kibler allowed 3 runs on 4 hits. 2 walks, and 4 K’s.

Fort Myers 3 Lakeland 8
Kody Kaiser went 3 for 5 with 2 doubles. Francisco Martinez also had 3 hits. Alden Carrithers, Ben Guez, and Gustavo Nunez each had 2 hits. All that offense was more than enough for Charlie Furbush who only recorded 8 K’s in 6.2 innings.

West Michigan – suspended

Tigers Minor League Wrap 6.4.2010

Toledo 5 Rochester 3
Ryan Ketchner pitched 6 shut out innings. Brendan Wise was knocked around for 3 runs on 3 hits and a walk while only recording 1 out. Daniel Schlereth pitched well fanning 2 in 1.2 innings. Ryan Strieby went 4 for 5. Jeff Larish, Danny Worth, and Jeff Kunkel all had 2 hits.

Erie 6 Bowie 3
Andy Dirks was a triple short of the cycle on a 4 for 5 night. Audy Ciriaco went 3 for 5 with a double. Andy Bouchie doubled and homered. Thad Weber struck out 5 and despite allowing 3 homers, only allowed 3 runs in 7 innings. Zach Simons finished the game with 2 scoreless innings.

Bradenton 0 Lakeland 3
Alden Carrithers had 2 hits, as did Daniel Fields and Julio Rodriguez. Kody Kaiser tripled and walked. Adam Wilk went 6 innings and allowed only 2 hits and no walks while K’ing 5. Cory Hamilton and Lester Oliveros finished off the shut out.

Peoria 4 West Michigan 9
Michael Rockett was a double short of the cycle. Chris Sedon homered and added 2 singles. Avisail Garcia singled twice and doubled. Giovany Soto only lasted 4.2 innings as he scattered 7 hits and 3 walks and allowed 2 runs. Victor Larez did the heavy lifting in relief going 3.1 innings and striking out 3.

Roster Moves

There were a bevy of roster moves the last few days as things got shuffled around. Toledo welcomed in Billy Buckner and they activated Jeff Larish from the disabled list. That marked the end of Ben Guez’s stay in Toledo and he returned to Lakeland. Lakeland made room for Guez by sending Chao Ting Tang to the GCL Tigers.

Jeff Kunkel went from Erie to Toledo because Max St. Pierre hit the DL. Angel Flores was the other part of the cascade moving from Lakeland to Erie. And Luis Sanz was called up from EST to Lakeland.

Game 2010.054: Tiger at Royals

The Tigers head into Kauffman Stadium to take on the Kansas City Royals. Max Scherzer is on the bump for Detroit and Bruce Chen takes the ball for the Royals.

Scherzer is of course coming off his strike-out-a-palooza against the A’s. His other best start of the year came against KC back in the first week of the season.

Bruce Chen is a career left hander. He’s made 11 appearances this year, but it is just his second start. He’s walked 10 batters in 13.1 innings but has a 2.70 ERA. Go figure.

Detroit Tigers at Kansas City Royals – June 4, 2010 – MLB.com Preview

The cowardly commissioner

Baseball commissioner Bud Selig responded to the Armando Galarraga/Jim Joyce situation. Sort of. It took him 18 hours to issue a statement that said little. Instead his decision to not reverse the call came out through “anonymous source with knowledge of the situation.” Why Selig couldn’t do this himself is beyond me.

The statement is below, for the sake of completeness. I trust everybody has seen it at this point.

“First, on behalf of Major League Baseball, I congratulate Armando Galarraga on a remarkable pitching performance. All of us who love the game appreciate the historic nature of his effort last night.

“The dignity and class of the entire Detroit Tigers organization under such circumstances were truly admirable and embodied good sportsmanship of the highest order. Armando and Detroit manager Jim Leyland are to be commended for their handling of a very difficult situation. I also applaud the courage of umpire Jim Joyce to address this unfortunate situation honestly and directly. Jim’s candor illustrates why he has earned the respect of on-field personnel throughout his accomplished career in the Major Leagues since 1989.

“As Jim Joyce said in his postgame comments, there is no dispute that last night’s game should have ended differently. While the human element has always been an integral part of baseball, it is vital that mistakes on the field be addressed. Given last night’s call and other recent events, I will examine our umpiring system, the expanded use of instant replay and all other related features. Before I announce any decisions, I will consult with all appropriate parties, including our two unions and the Special Committee for On-Field Matters, which consists of field managers, general managers, club owners and presidents.”

It’s not that I think Selig is making a mistake by not reversing the call. While I would love for Galarraga to get the credit he deserves and Joyce the peace of mind he is lacking, there is definitely a case to be made for not reversing a judgment call. Of course Selig doesn’t bother to make this case in the statement or in a media session.

Instead a Selig lackey somehow manages to get with every major sports news outlet and inform them that Selig isn’t going to overturn the call. Given that Fox, ESPN, SI, AP… all had this information about the same time as the release of the statement leads me to think that this anonymous source either had a conference call or sent out an email with a big BCC list.

My guesses for the reason for this approach are:

  1. Selig didn’t want to overturn the call but didn’t want to actually make the decision and seem like the bad guy
  2. Selig hasn’t decided what to do yet, and by not saying anything in the statement and instead floating information from “a source” he can evaluate the response before making his decision.

The irony is that this ordeal has been an exercise in grace, class, accepting responsibility for decisions, and humbly asking for forgiveness. Jim Joyce received applause from fans of the team who he just took a perfect game away from because he didn’t hide behind prepared statements. He stood up in front of everyone and with extreme sincerity said he screwed up.

Joyce had to make his decision in a split second. Selig had time, replays, advisors, and a host of options that Joyce didn’t have. Yet Selig still chose to act without any sort of meaningful authority.

Though Selig mentions the courage of Joyce and the dignity of the Tigers organization, he fails to display any of that in his handling of the reversal decision. Galarraga, Joyce, the Detroit Tigers, and baseball fans deserve far better.

Postscripting Perfection

Some news and notes in the aftermath of the Armando-Galarraga-perfect-game-that-wasn’t-due-to-Jim-Joyce-blown-call-heard-round-the-world.

Nobody’s Perfect

The title of the post comes from Armando Galarraga himself in discussing the blown call by Jim Joyce which cost Galarraga a perfect game. That says it all doesn’t it? It speaks to the game, to the call, to everything. There’s no getting around the frustration in this one. A game in which pretty much everyone feels awful when it is done.

Galarraga was sublime in his composure throughout the evening. He never wavered, commanding all of his pitches. He barely even threatened to walk a batter, only once getting to 3 balls in a plate appearance. That he threw a complete game in 88 pitches is a feat in and of itself. When Austin Jackson made a terrific running play on Mark Grudzielanek‘s shot leading off the 9th inning, Galarraga merely grinned slightly. But never was that composure more evident than in Galarraga’s immediate reaction to the call and in the aftermath.

As for Joyce, he’s devastated as well though it is little consolation to most fans. Detroit sports writer Dave Hogg, @stareagle on Twitter, interviewed Joyce after the game. He tweeted some of Joyce’s quotes:

Joyce said he didn’t know if he would try to talk to Galarraga. “I don’t know what to do. I just cost that kid a perfect game.”

“Biggest call of my career, and I kicked the s**t out of it.”

“I don’t blame the Tigers for anything that was said. I don’t blame one person a bit.”

“If I were Galarraga, I would have been the first one in my face, and he didn’t say a word to me.”

The firestorm around instant replay has been launched as have calls for reversals, scoring decision changes, and Bud Selig overruling Joyce’s call and awarding Galarraga a perfect game. Only the former has a real chance of happening. The latter would set precedents that MLB likely isn’t eager to pursue.

As for my thoughts on instant replay, I don’t know right now. I haven’t been a big proponent of it. Joyce was asked about instant replay and on this we agree tonight: “He was asked about it and said that he was having trouble thinking about anything beyond what he had just done.”

That’s the shame of it all. We’re talking about the wrong things because Jim Joyce screwed up. We should be weaving story lines about Galarraga starting the year in the minors. And Alex Avila calling a perfect game in just his 46th game behind the dish. Instead at best we can think back to Milt Wilcox and Jerry Hairston in 1983, and at worst we’ll curse Joyce’s name and talk about what he took from Galarraga and the fans. One day we can even look back and view this game as the catalyst for expanded use of instant replay. But it will never feel right or good.

Congratulations Armando. You did everything you could, and you did it with the utmost class and composure.

Game 2010.052: Indians at Tigers

Armando Galarraga pitches for the Tigers tonight, but if the bats can’t get something going it doesn’t really make that much of a difference does it? The Tigers will face the reanimated Fausto Carmona.

Carmona has his walk rate under 5 for the first time since 2007 and his ERA has followed suit. Unfortunately for the Tigers he is another sinker ball pitcher, the kind they haven’t fared well against at all of late.

Galarraga makes his first start since being anointed the 5th starter with the dismissal of Dontrelle Willis.

Tigers Minor League Wrap 6.1.2010

Lehigh Valley 3 Toledo 5
Ruddy Lugo went 5.1 innings and allowed 3 runs on 3 hits and 3 walks. Scott Sizemore homered and doubled. Brent Dlugach singled and homered.

Lehigh Valley 0 Toledo 3
Scott Sizemore added 2 singles in the other half of the double header. Ben Guez homered. LJ Gagnier pitched 5 shut out innings fanning 6 and walking 1. Daniel Schlereth and Jay Sborz each pitched an inning to finish off the shut out.

Erie 3 Arkon 5
Andy Dirks went 2 for 4. Wilkin Ramirez homered and walked. Brooks Brown allowed 4 runs on 6 hits and 2 walks in 6 innings.

Lakeland 8 Bradenton 3
Rawley Bishop homered, singled, and added 2 walks. Billy Nowlin homered and walked. Alden Carrithers, Kody Kaiser, Angel Flores, and Francisco Martinez all had 2 hit games. Luke Putkonen went 6 innings scattering 3 walks and 7 hits allowing just 2 runs while fanning 4.

Burlington 8 West Michigan 4
Jacob Turner pitched 5 shutout innings before running into trouble in the 6th. His final line reads 5.1 IP, 6 hits, 3 runs, 1 earned run, no walks, and 5 K’s. Jamie Johnson had 2 hits. Jordan Lennerton doubled, walked, and singled.