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caulfield12

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Everything posted by caulfield12

  1. QUOTE(PlunketChris @ Apr 19, 2007 -> 09:16 AM) This one's pretty good too. http://www.theheckler.com/news/templates/?a=845&z=2 As Millwood and Dye traded punches during his fifth-inning trip to the plate, the All-Star right fielder would occasionally trade glances with Buehrle in the dugout in between pitches. "During my at-bat, I was fouling off all those pitches, and every time I would step out, he would be on the top step looking at me and laughing, telling me to do something," said Dye of Buehrle. "When I hit the home run, I came around third and looked at him. It was funny. "It's been good for me when he pitches. I've always done something to help him out. We joke around about it all the time. It was good to contribute, especially when you have a guy going out there and doing what he was doing." In a way, Dye can relate. When he was in high school and considered an up-and-coming pitching prospect, Dye threw a no-hitter of his own. "I threw one with nine walks," said Dye with a laugh. chisox.com/mlb.com QUOTE(caulfield12 @ Apr 19, 2007 -> 09:24 AM) As Millwood and Dye traded punches during his fifth-inning trip to the plate, the All-Star right fielder would occasionally trade glances with Buehrle in the dugout in between pitches. "During my at-bat, I was fouling off all those pitches, and every time I would step out, he would be on the top step looking at me and laughing, telling me to do something," said Dye of Buehrle. "When I hit the home run, I came around third and looked at him. It was funny. "It's been good for me when he pitches. I've always done something to help him out. We joke around about it all the time. It was good to contribute, especially when you have a guy going out there and doing what he was doing." In a way, Dye can relate. When he was in high school and considered an up-and-coming pitching prospect, Dye threw a no-hitter of his own. "I threw one with nine walks," said Dye with a laugh. chisox.com/mlb.com http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article_perspectiv...s&fext=.jsp Fickle nature of baseball By the way, Buehrle now has retired 47 of the last 50 hitters he's faced. Wow.
  2. QUOTE(greasywheels121 @ Apr 19, 2007 -> 08:55 AM) Not that I know of, as he's got 16 recaps right there, and everyone is recognizing this as the 16th White Sox no-hitter. We're not tied for 2nd with the Red Sox, for the most no-hitters. The Dodgers have the most with 20, IIRC. http://www.brainyhistory.com/events/1990/j...990_163826.html July 12, 1990 in History Event: Chicago White Sox Melido Perez no-hits Yankees 8-0 in a rain shortened 6 inning game at Yankee Stadium (7th no-hitter of 1990)
  3. QUOTE(Steve9347 @ Apr 19, 2007 -> 08:45 AM) http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/6704342 Rosenthal http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dw...de.311cad4.html Good article, lots of quotes from Rangers' players...reactions to Buehrle's "stuff" and how/why he was so effective
  4. QUOTE(StatManDu @ Apr 19, 2007 -> 08:25 AM) WHITE SOX NO-HITTERS (This also appears on www.whitesoxalmanac.com) April 18, 2007—Mark Buehrle vs. Texas, 6-0 Notes: Mark Buehrle faced the minimum in plowing through the Rangers. He allowed just one baserunner when he walked Sammy Sosa. Buehrle quickly erased the careless Sosa when he picked him off first base. Defensive gems were fashioned by third baseman Joe Crede, second baseman Tadahito Iguchi, right fielder Jermaine Dye and shortstop Juan Uribe. It took Buehrle 2:03 and 106 pitches to throw the first no-hitter at US Cellular Field. Aug. 11, 1991—Wilson Alvarez at Baltimore, 7-0 Notes: Wilson Alvarez became the eighth-youngest pitcher to throw a no-hitter in the White Sox 7-0 win vs. the Orioles in Baltimore. Alvarez became the first Sox left-hander and the first Venezuelan to toss a no-no. Alvarez struck out the side in the first inning and recorded his seventh strikeout against Randy Milligan to end the game. The defensive gem of the game was turned in by Lance Johnson, who made a diving catch in center to keep the no-no alive. The win jacked the Sox record to 65-45 and moved them to within a game of first place. Sept. 19, 1986—Joe Cowley at California, 7-1 Notes: Joe Cowley threw the 14th no-hitter franchise history in a 7-1 win at California. Cowley walked seven and gave up a run on a Reggie Jackson sacrifice fly in the sixth. The burly right-hander escaped disaster in the ninth when he induced Doug DeCinces to bounce into a game-ending double play. The win improved Cowley’s record to 11-9 but was the last of his big league career. After the no-hitter, Cowley dropped his last two decisions of 1986. Following the season, Cowley was dealt to the Philadelphia Phillies for outfielder Gary Redus. Cowley struggled mightily in Philadelphia in 1987, losing all four of his decisions with a 15.43 ERA before leaving the game. July 28, 1976—John Odom and Francisco Barrios at Oakland, 2-1 Notes: Francisco Barrios and John "Blue Moon" Odom combined to no-hit the A's 2-1 at Oakland. They issued 11 walks in the club's only combined no-hitter. Odom started and went five innings. He gave up an unearned run and nine walks while striking out three. Barrios went the final four frames with two walks and two strikeouts. Jim Spencer broke a 1-1 tie with a homer in the sixth off Paul Linblad. Sept. 10, 1967—Joel Horlen vs. Detroit, 6-0 Notes: Joel Horlen no-hit the Detroit Tigers in a 6-0 White Sox win in the first game of a doubleheader before 23,625 at Comiskey Park. Eddie Mathews reached on a Ken Boyer error but was erased on a double play and Bill Freehan was hit by a pitch for the only Tigers to get on against Horlen. Wayne Causey saved the “no-no” with a lunging grab of Jerry Lumpe’s ninth-inning grounder. The no-hitter was the last by a Sox pitcher at Old Comiskey Park. Cisco Carlos pitched a 4-0 shutout in Game 2, making this the last doubleheader shutout in club history. The sweep got the third-place Sox to within 1.5-games of first-place. Aug. 20, 1957—Robert Keegen vs. Washington, 6-0 Notes: Bob Keegan fired the first nocturnal no-hitter in the history of Comiskey Park in the White Sox 6-0 win over the Washington Senators. The game was the nightcap of a scheduled doubleheader and was the franchise's first no-hitter in 20 years. Keegan walked two and fanned one and got help from one double play as well as great defensive play from outfielder Larry Doby and infielder Nellie Fox. June 1, 1937—William Dietrich vs. St. Louis, 8-0 Notes: Bill Dietrich tossed the first no-hitter by a White Sox pitcher in two seasons by whitewashing the St. Louis Browns 8-0 before an estimated crowd of 1,500 at Comiskey Park. Dietrich walked two and struck out five in the 10th "no-no" in club history. The Sox offense made things easy on Dietrich by scoring three times in the first. Aug. 31, 1935—Vernon Kennedy vs. Cleveland, 5-0 Notes: Vern Kennedy registered the first no-hitter by a White Sox pitcher at Comiskey Park in 43 years in a 5-0 win over the Cleveland Indians. Kennedy walked four and fanned five as the White Sox turned two double plays behind him. He was also the hitting star with a bases-loaded triple. Aug. 21, 1926—Ted Lyons at Boston, 6-0 Notes: Hall of Famer -to-be Ted Lyons fired the only no-hitter in his illustrious career. Lyons defeated the Red Sox 6-0 at Fenway Park. Lyons fanned two and walked three in facing the minimum. The no-no was one of Lyons' Sox-record 260 wins and 27 shutouts in his21-year career. April 30, 1922—Charles Robertson at Detroit, 2-0 (perfect game) Notes: Rookie Charlie Robertson pitched the only perfect game in White Sox history by shutting down the Tigers 2-0 in Detroit. Making his second start of the season, Robertson mesmerized the sellout crowd of 25,000 at Navin Field with his fastball and slider. So frustrated by Robertson were the Tigers, they insisted he was doctoring the ball. The great Ty Cobb personally inspected every inch of Robertson's uniform but could not find any foreign substances. The Tigers managed just one hard ball off Robertson, who struck out six, but Johnny Mostil ran it down in left field while fighting off spectators and mounted police. The spectators were on the field -- a common practice during this era -- and the police were there to keep the crowd in check. The Sox scored twice in the second inning on Earl Sheely's single, which scored Harry Hooper and Mostil. When Robertson retired pinch-hitter Johnny Basler to end it, he had the sixth perfect game in big league history and even earned a standing ovation from the normally harsh Detroit faithful. The "perfecto" was the highlight of the Texan's big league career. Robertson played for the Sox in 1919 and from 1922 to 1925. He pitched for the Browns in 1926 before finishing his career with the Boston Braves in 1927 and 1928. Robertson won 14 games for the 1922 Sox and then 13 for the Sox the next season. After that, Robertson never won more than eight games in a season. (Source: Rich Lindberg's White Sox Encyclopedia). April 14, 1917—Eddie Cicotte at St. Louis, 11-0 Notes: Ed Cicotte no-hit St. Louis in an 11-0 Sox win at St. Louis. It was the fifth no-hitter in club history. Cicotte gave up three walks, hit a batter and struck out five in the only no-no of his career. The Sox gave Cicotte a lead right away with one in the first and added seven more in the second inning. May 31, 1914—Joseph Benz vs. Cleveland, 6-1 Notes: Joe Benz fired the second no-hitter in Comiskey Park history by besting the Cleveland Indians 6-1. The gem marked the only time a losing team scored a run in a no-hitter at Comiskey Park. Three fourth-inning White Sox errors prevented the shutout. Benz walked two and fanned three in a game that took only one hour and 45 minutes to play. Aug. 27, 1911—Ed Walsh vs. Boston, 5-0 Notes: Future Hall of Famer Ed Walsh tossed the first no-hitter at Comiskey Park in the White Sox 5-0 win over the BostonRed Sox. Walsh walked one and fanned eight in facing the minimum. The no-hitter was the only one of Walsh’s career and the first of eight at Old Comiskey Park. Sept. 20, 1908—Frank Smith vs. Philadelphia, 1-0 Notes: On the sixth anniversary of the first no-hitter in White Sox history, Frank Smith tossed the second "no-no" of his career in a 1-0 win over Philadelphia in Chicago. The White Sox pushed a run across in the ninth to make a winner out of Smith, who fanned two and walked one. Smith’s gem came six years after Nixey Callahan no-hit Detroit for the first no-hitter in White Sox history. Smith’s first no-hitter came Sept. 6, 1905 against Detroit. Sept. 6, 1905—Frank Smith at Detroit, 15-0 Notes: Frank Smith tossed the first of his two club-record no-hitters in the White Sox 15-0 win at Detroit. The White Sox made things easy on Smith by scoring eight in the first inning. Smith fanned eight and walked three. The “no-no” was the second in White Sox history and part of the first doubleheader sweep in franchise history (the White Sox won the opener 2-0 behind Doc White). Smith's other no-hitter would come Sept. 20, 1908 at the 39th Street Grounds. Sept. 20, 1902—James Callahan vs. Detroit, 3-0 Notes: James “Nixey” Callahan fired the first no-hitter in the White Sox 3-0 win over Detroit in the first game of a doubleheader in Chicago. The White Sox gave Callahan, who walked two and fanned two, three in the first and he did the rest. Editor's Note: Information for these entries is gleaned from the author's files, retrosheet.org, various Internet sources, press reports of the day, White Sox media guides and the many White Sox books written by the great Rich Lindberg. Don't they count Melido Perez's abbreviated no-hitter?
  5. http://cbs.sportsline.com/mlb/story/10136060 Miller column http://insider.espn.go.com/espn/blog/index...%3dolney_buster http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/daily?page=dd/070418 Tim Kurkjian http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=Akex...o&type=lgns Jeff Passan column
  6. QUOTE(hitlesswonder @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 12:27 PM) Speaking of the Twins...I recently saw the OPS ranks of the piranhas (2B,3B,LF,SS): Twins Positional OPS ranks among AL teams: OPS RANK C .708 5th 1B .982 1st 2B .525 13th SS .509 12th 3B .461 14th LF .384 13th CF .872 4th RF .911 5th DH .752 6th Which I think goes to show that I wouldn't want Ozzie Guillen picking out who gets to play on my team (if I owned a team). I'm sort of biased towards liking Walker because he played for the Sox when I first started paying attention to baseball (which may have been one of the great mistakes of my life). But I'm all for moving him to some other organizational job if the Sox have a decent replacement in mind (someone that's a disciple of the Texas hitting coach?). I don't think that alone will fix the Sox. The offense has been bad for several months now going back to the second half of last season. It's possible Crede's year of excellence was a fluke (or he's hurt), and AJ, Iguchi, and Dye are all of an age where diminishing skills are a possibility. Still, it's hard to sit any of those guys given their track records. The place the Sox can upgrade is the outfield where they decided to play 2 sub .700 OPS outfielders (Pods start nothwithstanding). If Williams wants to try to salvage the season, he needs to fill those spots with players that aren't complete ciphers at the plate (and I don't mean Brian Anderson). Otherwise, I think he should just get ready for a big firesale in month or so. OTOH, Jaramillo has been under a lot of fire for the regression of hitters like Blalock, the loss of power for Texeira, Mench, Lance Nix, Brad Wilkerson, Phil Nevin...etc. Texiera was their leading HR hitter, and he didn't even get 20 in a ballpark made for power. Sure, Young's great, Kinsler is like Brian Roberts/Brady Anderson of this year (hopefully Shelton), he took some credit for GM Jr. last season
  7. QUOTE(Steve9347 @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 01:16 PM) There you go, it's already a part of culture. Thanks for all the comments so far, much appreciated. I will read the websites/links when I get an opportunity, after soccer practice and before Soxytime/"Sexytime." (copyright, Borat)
  8. QUOTE(Maverick0984 @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 11:17 AM) So, I've been away from baseball for a day or so. I'm reading that Garland said he gave up mentally? Where was this reported? Direct quotes in both the Sun-Times and the Tribune.
  9. QUOTE(Milkman delivers @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 10:30 AM) I'd hardly call hitting coach a limelight position. He's just a pretty private person and I think family considerations would win out over making $200,000 or whatever it is they pay hitting coaches. I think he enjoys spending time on the West Coast too much to be in Chicago so much.
  10. QUOTE(RockRaines @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 09:41 AM) MMAC had to throw it right on the fat part of his bat for him to hit it out. But it was horrible pitch selection by AJ. EVERYONE knows that Sosa couldnt even pick up that slider, yet we went with the fastball. Is your avatar from Beerfest II: When Drunk Catchers Call A Fastball for Sosa
  11. QUOTE(RockRaines @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 10:25 AM) Nope. He was an opposite field doubles hitter. Now he is a pull hitter. Robin Ventura. Ventura's set for life and enjoys spending time with his family, and he doesn't really enjoy the limelight. Wasn't that the problem with him not wanting a radio or TV job with the White Sox?
  12. QUOTE(RockRaines @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 09:35 AM) He has reached career highs in K's and Hr's with the sox. Coincidence? You also have to take into consideration the stadiums and his stroke. He's a doubles hitter...balls in SF (unless hit by Bonds) don't easily fly out in RF, unless they're hit down the line. In Minnesota, you have the equivalent of the Green Monster, and he usually didn't the ball over the Hefty Bag. I would hope almost any player would hit more homers at New Comiskey, unless they came from Colorado. They should completely retool their line-up and move the dimensions back to that of Old Comiskey. Short of that, we're always looking to be a 3 run homer and a cloud of dust type of offense. With players such as Sweeney, Fields, Owens and Anderson coming up, I would hope JR and KW would seriously consider this option.
  13. QUOTE(StrangeSox @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 09:24 AM) He doesn't strike out, he flys out on pitch 1 or 2. http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/players/stats?playerId=3948 His pitches per plate appearance numbers have actually improved over his time with Minnesota and SF, especially in 2005. He's been trending backwards the last 7 months. His career average is 3.29 3.56 in 2005, 3.36 in 2006 and down to 3.29 so far this year. He just SEEMED more pesky (along with Mientkiewicz, Koskie, Hocking, LeCroy, Guzman, Rivas) because of when he got the hits to give them one or two run victories over us.
  14. QUOTE(BigSqwert @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 09:11 AM) Which AJ have you been watching? I saw somewhere that he led the league in fewest pitches seen per at bat. EDIT: It was a stat they showed on TV during a game late last year. Seems no different this year. Maybe the at-bat against Mariano Rivera last year and the fact that he's one of the hardest hitters in the AL to strike out caused me to think this.
  15. QUOTE(Jenks Heat @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 08:54 AM) Dice K's OBP is .355 when he pitches out of the stretch and .235 when he is in the wind up. Pitchers are now pulled after throwing 100 pitches on a regular basis and most bullpens blow. These are the reasons you make pitchers work as the more pitches they throw the sooner they are out of a game. This is what both the Red Sox and Yankees do and Oakland used to, very well. The things that the Sox have never done is foul off good pitches to extend the count. Take good strikes early in the count. Recognize ball four is coming. They are all in the 16" softball mode which is not going to win. The theory of Greg Walker and the White Sox is this. The stroke used by a player is what worked to get them to majors so they do not change it, they only work to keep it consistent. This bothers me in that the pitchers that these hitters faced in AA and AAA were not MLB pitchers so how can the same swing be applied across the board. The fire sale may not be far off for Dye and Crede (Angels could use both). Also the Darin Erstad pulled hamstring can not be far off. When you think about it, Uribe/Cintron/Crede/Anderson/Mackowiak/Thome/Iguchi all look the same up there, pretty much. Mackowiak to a lesser extent (he was close to .300 all last year), but they're not hitters, they're swingers. AJ, Konerko, Erstad (when he was healthy!) and Dye are/were probably the best "pure" hitters in terms of spraying the ball all around and using the entire field. Thome is a hitter period, but he's in a different classification. The Tigers can get away with it because of their starters and bullpen. The Twins have Bartlett, Punto, Tyner and Castillo who can be counted on to make contact...and Mauer's a pretty good contact hitter as well. We don't have enough of those guys who work the counts, foul off pitches (Pods is probably the best, AJ is good at this too), work the pitchers and take any hit they can get. Maybe Erstad too, but certainly not this season. We're impatient, and we're swinging for the fences no matter the situation. Even guys like Cintron and Mack that aren't by any stretch of the imagination "power hitters" are copying the middle of the line-up in this "all or nothing," make or break type of offensive strategy. We might be the slowest team in baseball, without Pods. We're going to end up with fewer SB's than Oakland, Toronto and Boston at this rate. Look at the Yankees....Abreu, Jeter, A-Rod, Cano, Cabrera, they have a lot of talented athletes that can run a little, unlike the Sox.
  16. I'm going to be moving to China for at least one year to teach. I was just curious what ideas you guys had for promoting baseball, and, specifically, the White Sox? When I lived in Colombia last year, I met with Renteria's brother and his agent, but it seems that only a few teams have a presence on the Caribbean coast, and I taught in Armenia, which is in the Andes Mountains between Cali and Medellin, where soccer (futbol) is King. Has anyone here been to China? Obviously, baseball's future vision is for more exhibition games and even a franchise (or division) in Japan/Korea/Taiwan/China. Although I'm a teacher, I also spent two years working for the Augusta GreenJackets and have an MS in Sports Administration (I also worked for an NFL football player as director of his non-profit organization), so I understand the basics of sports marketing and promotions (of course, we had one of Bill Veeck's books in my sports marketing class and I met his son while he was running the St. Paul Saints). Any thoughts or ideas would be greatly appreciated. The biggest cities in China are Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong. I will be living in Wuhan, which is about 9 million people and known as the "Chicago of China." Except no White Sox there, :-(
  17. QUOTE(witesoxfan @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 02:09 AM) They want bad trades, how about Esteban Loaiza for Jose Contreras? Or Nick Johnson, Juan Rivera, and Randy Choate for a near 5.00 ERA version of Javier Vazquez? Or how about Jeff Weaver, Yhency Brazoban, and a minor leaguer (who never made it to the majors) for Kevin Brown? Or Javier Vazquez, Brad Halsey, and Dioner Navarro for Randy Johnson? Or maybe I should start talking about Jaret Wright, Carl Pavano, Tony Womack, and Rondell White? Or do those not count because they can sign every player that hits the market and not feel the ramifications? It'd be bad for the Yankees, no doubt, but they'd be able to replace Cano's production, and Garland would give them, at the very least, a stable pitcher in their rotation until the day they let him go. It's not like they're trading a horse that was a huge reason a team won a World Series for a long reliever. ''Mentally, I didn't stay on,'' Garland said of the two homers. ''I gave up, and it showed.'' Someone called into the Royals' pre-game show yesterday and was going on and on about Charlie Lau and how George Brett never hit .300 in the minors and that the Royals should fire their hitting coach and hire Charlie Lau, Jr. and players like Tony Pena, Jr., Sweeney, Ryan Shealy, Buck, LaRue, etc., would be magically transformed in a similar fashion. The radio host made the comment that you don't teach great players how to be "gamers" or "winners," that it's either inside you or its not. The White Sox had that fire in 2005, and they're struggling to find that missing "it" that is so easy to lose, that mysterious chemistry, "grinderism," "small ball," "Ozzie Ball," well, whatever it was, they better relocate it soon, because the train's leaving the station and the Fat Lady is warming up behind Logan in the pen.
  18. QUOTE(witesoxfan @ Apr 18, 2007 -> 12:38 AM) I love it. Homers are the most effecient method of producing runs. The Yankees have scored 800 runs every year this decade, and they've hit 200 homers every year this decade. It's not a coincidence. BUT the only year they didn't score 870+ runs was also the only year their team OBP wasn't above .350. In fact, it was .334. Is that coincidental dude? No, not in the least. This year's White Sox team will be no different in the home run department. However, seeing as how they have the second worst OPS in the AL (to Oakland), and the fact that they have been caught stealing more times than most teams and have one of the worst stolen base percentages of teams in the league already makes it perfectly clear as to why this team can't do s*** offensively. Homers are not the problem. The goal to hit a 5-run homer with no one on base is the problem, and it has been since July of last season. that should have been your first option I said it in a chat one day Irish, that's the guy I wanted the Sox to throw like a $750K at come the offseason. It's overpaying, and I don't give a s***. He's amazing at what he does. The Sox take good hitters and make them s***ty. Why do I not think that will work? Wouldn't it be be better to spend $2-3 million and lure the Twins' Director of Scouting away from them....which would be better, having Pods/Cintron/Mackowiak, or an investment that keeps paying you back over time, one that's not depreciating? "There were a whole lot of 'what ifs' in the game," Garland said. "Mentally, I didn't stay on it. I gave up, and it showed." Nice quote Garland...I hope it was taken out of context, because it doesn't sound very encouraging on the surface of it.
  19. QUOTE(BobDylan @ Apr 17, 2007 -> 11:35 AM) Agree on a lot of points. But I don't think the writing is on the wall for this team, nor do I think they've been passed pitching staff-wise by the Tigers. Aside from the first two games of the year, the Sox pitching staff has been pretty darn good. Jenks blew a save, but that's going to happen. Aardsma and Masset have been as good as advertised and MacDougal/Thornton both have the ability to step in if Jenks can't get the job done. There's nothing wrong, IMO, having MacDougal close and sliding Jenks down an inning or two. I don't think there's much of a drop off there. The question that needs to be answered is whether these guys will be as good when the weather warms up with the bats. The future does look problematic, but KW stockpiled pitching last year for a reason. It's no secret that he's banking on a younger team come perhaps even next year. For 5-6, I'm very excited about this team. All the starters look pretty good, the bullpen looks absolutely fantastic. The bats just need to get going. Every night, the arguments against "staying the course" grow stronger and stronger, especially with Pods looking to be on the shelf for quite some time....
  20. QUOTE(shawnhillegas @ Apr 17, 2007 -> 09:00 PM) I used to like Hawk, but I wont be able to handle him this season. White Sox seemingly an insurmountable 3 games behind in the race already. This might be the ugliest three game stretch since August/September 2005...or maybe it was our series at Boston late last year where Jenks blew one game and we lost to Kason Gabbard, I think Vazquez only gave up one run. Royals fall to 3-11. That franchise is snakebitten...only good start was 03, 7 games up over the Sox at the break and they got passed by both the Twins and the Sox down the homestretch.
  21. QUOTE(Frankensteiner @ Apr 17, 2007 -> 08:44 PM) Who, outside of Thome, is old in our lineup? Iguchi and Dye will both be 34 to start next season. AJ is younger, but, as a catcher, he might as well be the same age with all the wear and tear on your body. Konerko is still in his prime, but every year from here on out should see diminished returns. Pods and Erstad are both on the downside of their careers. Uribe and Crede are it, and Crede's horrible right now.
  22. QUOTE(Jimbo @ Apr 17, 2007 -> 08:43 PM) paging josh fields I don't know if we could get Dallas McPherson or Casey Kotchmann, let alone Santana or Figgins for Crede...
  23. QUOTE(The Ginger Kid @ Apr 17, 2007 -> 08:39 PM) seems like they walk into the box 0-2 Okay JOE, please don't waste AJ's best at-bat of the season... Has Crede hit a fastball over 90 all season?
  24. QUOTE(Flash Tizzle @ Apr 17, 2007 -> 08:33 PM) Uh, do you want to raped? That sounds like the VA TECH campus shooter's 10 page essay called "Mr. Browstone" NOTE TO KONERKO: Please stop shaking your head after every lazy flyout you get under.
  25. QUOTE(fathom @ Apr 17, 2007 -> 08:30 PM) This might be the best I've ever seen Garland pitch. I think Arnie Munoz or Mike Porzio might have a 3 hitter going right now. Perhaps even Danny Wright or Josh Stewart in these conditions. If it was a little colder, Parque, Diaz and Adkins.
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