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FSSD's #BaseBug part of the roll out of SDSU class's marketing campaign

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You may remember a year ago Fox Sports San Diego announced that they would enlist the help of SDSU's Marketing 472 class to promote their Padres coverage.  The project would benefit both FSSD with a cheap and youthful perspective while at the same time SDSU students (who are mostly Giants fans) could gain some real world experience.  Well, in June of last year a winning team was chosen and their project was put into action.

The problem was, from the article, I couldn't tell what exactly the winning campaign entailed.  Sure they had a slogan "This is my town" which on the surface seemed mostly meh, but the reasoning behind it felt more like an insult to the Padres fan base than a rallying cry.

Students Pitch for the Padres | NewsCenter | SDSU

"Through our research, we found that San Diego locals are very happy to be in San Diego and are extremely proud of the their city, but do not share that same pride with the local San Diego sports teams," Chow said.

While I'll begrudgingly admit that an element of that hypothesis is unfortunately true, it's not the fan characteristic that I'd want to brand the fan base with.  Yes, they're just trying to target that portion of the population, but I think that's putting the cart before the horse.  These fair weather fans are followers by definition.  If you invigorate the actual Padres fans, they will follow.

It'd be nice if Padres marketing related to Padres pride, but if they're intent on using civic pride then I'd prefer something like Dex's slogan "Don't be such a f_cking tourist. Go San Diego." which not only incites pride in San Diego, but adds an element of intense shame for those transplants that hold onto their out-of-town allegiances.

Anyway, there weren't many more details in the article about the proposed campaign, just some vague generalities about things going viral, creating synergy and references to social media.  It didn't sound like FSSD had much to work with from my outside perspective.

At Saturday's Padres FanFest however, I saw with my own eyes, the marketing campaign come to life.  It was in the form of the #basebug a Volkswagen bug painted like a baseball.

The idea itself isn't new, the Cardinals have a base bug too, but I'm told it was suggested by the SDSU program.  I liked it so much that I tried to convince FSSD to let Dex and I drive it to Spring Training, but no one was buying it.  But maybe they would buy an old beat up 60s or 70s era Volkswagen Bug and let fans take it places.  I could see a lot more people tweeting pictures of it, if it were broken down on the side of the road.

I look forward to more Padres focused marketing now that shaming TWC is no longer necessary.

Go Padres!


The 2014 Houston Astros Promotional Schedule

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Need one more bobblehead on your shelf? The Astros have got you covered in 2014.

There isn't much I mark down on my calendar anymore, most of my sport calendar is just alerts from my ESPN app. The few exceptions to that rule are fanfest (now over), the day that pitchers and catchers report, and the days they give out the "will stab to obtain'' promotions as Grant Brisbee puts it. Normally it doesn't come to violence to get a giveaway, but you never know.

Of course any bobblehead shoots up to the top of the list, the Astros have pulled back from their previous years with an overwhelming number of historical bobbleheads. I not sure if that is because the Astros lack a prominent faces to adorn in plaster and paint, or if bobbleheads are not longer a draw. Personally I'm a fan of the Brewers policy when it comes to bobbleheads, they give 40,000 of said bobblehead but 10,000 have an alternate jersey on. You don't have to fight for a bobblehead. Either way, you'll still find me hours before the game waiting outside MMP for one of these beauties.

Events

4/4 Big & Bright Friday Night

4/25 Big & Bright Friday Night

4/27 Dog Day

5/2 Big & Bright Friday Night

5/18 Big & Bright Friday Night

5/30 Big & Bright Friday Night - Civil Rights Game

6/13 Big & Bright Friday Night

6/14 Faith and Family Night featuring MerceyMe

6/27 Big & Bright Friday Night

7/11 Big & Bright Friday Night

8/1 Big & Bright Friday Night

9/19 Big & Bright Friday Night

9/20 Fiestas Patrias Event

Friday Night Fireworks presented by Marathon Oil Corporation - Every Friday Home Game

Explosions are always a good way to cap off a night at the ballpark. The team that puts together the fireworks show are truly top of the line and shouldn't be missed even if it's past your bed on Friday night. The removal of the left-field wall signs will only help the matter.

Dog day, I have mixed feeling about dog day. I prefer dogs but don't own one. The same question keeps popping to my head, what do you do when they have to go to the bathroom?

Useful

4/1 Schedule Magnet (40,000 Fans)

4/5 Gym Bag (10,000 Fans)

4/6 Green Tote Bag (10,000 Fans)

7/25 Big & Bright Friday Night - Beach Towel (10,000 Fans)

7/26 Sunglasses (10,000 Fans)

Much like the rings on a tree, you can tell how long I have lived at one place by the number of paper/magnet sports calendars are on the fridge. The bags are for the diehard fans and collectors to return another day and fill said bags with whatever cumbersome promotion may be given away that day . Living in Houston, a beach towel and sunglasses can be very useful, that is all.

Stuff

5/3 Los Astros T-Shirt (10,000 Fans) - Cinco De Mayo Event

5/31 Altuve Orange Jersey - (10,000 Fans)

6/28 Orbit Rainbow Jersey (10,000 Fans)

6/29 Orbit Antenna (10,000 Fans)

8/9 Cowboy Hat (10,000 Fans)

8/29 Big & Bright Friday Night - Lone Star Series Shirt (10,000 Fans)

9/21 2014 Team Poster (10,000 Fans)

These things fall under "stuff" because they are shirts/t-shirt jerseys in a size XL. An XL that never quit fits right on anyone. The Orbit Antenna is the most perplexing thing on the schedule, I would imagine there much like bunny ears. I'm no grammar expert, but I thought the plural of antenna was antennae? So maybe it's an antenna to signal Orbit's mother ship.

It's cool and all that the Astros embrace the image of Texas by giving away a cowboy hat. But, where is the fedora tribly day? The Rangers and Padres have one, why not the Astros? Houston is missing a golden opportunity, they have hat connoisseur Kevin Goldstein on staff. Goldstein is known (among his many talents) for his baseball knowledge, humor, and his hats. I'm not saying make it Kevin Goldstein night but let him design it. I'll happily embarrass myself with my 7 7/8 Kevin Mench head on the TCB instagram that day.

I WANT

4/26 Castro All-Star Bobblehead (10,000 Fans)

2014-01-25_11

5/17 Astros Gnome (10,000 Fans) - Bayou Bash Event

6/15 Father's Day BBQ Grill Set (10,000 Fans)

8/8 Big & Bright Friday Night - Cowboy Boot Mug (10,000 Fans)

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8/30 Nolan and Reid Ryan Dual Bobblehead (10,000 Fans)

$1 Hot Dogs presented by H-E-B - Every Thursday Home Game

Now the gold mine, a catcher is always a great bobblehead especially if you put in him in his full gear. I expect to find Terri waiting in line for the dreamy-eyed Castro bobblehead with me. While the Astros gnome doesn't match the glory of last year's Nolan Ryan gnome from the Hooks, it's still terrifying enough to be a must in my collection. The cowboy boot mug I imagine will be a prize among hipsters 50 years from know, just corny enough it works. Finally, we have the Nolan and Reid Ryan dual bobblehead. I don't know what to make of it, but this is what I might look like.

Ryans_bobblehead_medium

I haven't made up my mind if it's cool or disturbing.

Falling Padres Prospects

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What a recent ranking (or lack thereof) might mean for Casey Kelly and Rymer Liriano

Over at Baseball Prospectus writer Sam Miller took on the meaning behind top 101 prospects dropping in their rankings in Pebble Hunting: The Importance of Top Prospect Trajectories ($). There were a few noted sample size issues, but the idea was interesting. The concept is especially interesting to the Padres who, as mentioned in the article, had 2 prospects that fell off their top 101 prospects rankings from 2013 to 2014. Casey Kelly and Rymer Liriano both went from being ranking in their top 101 to no longer being ranked at all.

As an initial way of trying to illustrate what a drop like that could mean, Miller went back to the first two top prospect rankings the site ever did (2007 and 2008). Between those two years the following players fell off the rankings just like Kelly and Liriano:

Jeff Niemann, Philip Humber, Brandon Erbe, Chuck Lofgren, Donnie Veal, Billy Rowell, Troy Patton, Trevor Crowe, Sean West, Humberto Sanchez, Ryan Tucker, Ryan Sweeney, Will Inman, Matt Harrison, Glen Perkins, Sean Gallagher, Brad Lincoln, Sean Rodriguez, Cesar Carrillo, Chris Parmelee, Dellin Betances, Brett Sinkbeil, Cedric Hunter, Pedro Beato, Javier Herrera, Kyle Drabek.

I think even the casual fan would be able to tell you that is not a list you want to be on. There is one current closer (Perkins), a former opening day starter (Harrison) and a host of others ranging from complete bust to damaged goods to guys with uninspiring major league trials to sometimes useful utility players. It also includes 3 of the Padres' own prospects that never panned out (Inman, Carrillo and Hunter). As I mentioned earlier this is a small sample size, but it is one that makes you wonder if there is a trend here.

Since guys that fall off the rankings are, by definition, no longer ranked Miller took issue with trying to assess how much value is lost by falling off the rankings. Some tumblers may have simply become the 102nd best prospect and others the 1500th. So what he went on to analyze were players that dropped significantly in the rankings from one year to the next, but still were ranked in the top 101. He compared these prospects eventual value (using their player value stat WARP) to prospects that ranked similarly, but did not also tumble that year.

The results showed that the prospects that dropped probably should have been dropped even farther. Their value by WARP ended up lower than the prospects that they were now supposed to be similarly ranked. A similar finding held true when the author went back even further than 2007-2008 and used Baseball America's rankings from a few different season pairs (2003-2004, 2000-2001 and 1995-1996).

This does not say anything conclusive about Kelly or Liriano, and perhaps it bodes well that their drops were due to injury instead of production, but it does make you wonder about their futures. Judging by this data, however it would still seem that if you were a betting man you would not wager on either or especially both having long successful big league careers. However, if you were to write off every such player you would miss out on gems like Adam Wainwright, Carlos Gomez and Michael Cuddyer and solid contributors like Dexter Fowler, Danys Baez, Dustin Hermanson and LaTroy Hawkins.

A Look at Padres PECOTA Projections: Part I

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A breakdown down of how the Padres will perform in 2014, based on Baseball Prospectus' PECOTA projection system.

Our friends over at Baseball Prospectus recently released the 2014 edition of their PECOTA (Player Empirical Comparison and Optimization Test Algorithm) projection system. PECOTA was originally developed by Nate Silver, who is best known for his election predictions at FiveThirtyEight.  There are numerous systems that attempt to predict the future performance of baseball players, but PECOTA stands out among them as the most accurate.

Basics

PECOTA projects player performance based on historical player seasons. It incorporates information about how comparable players' stats changed over time and utilizes MLB equivalents to aid in projecting players who are yet to player in the big leagues. Linear weights and regression are also used to provide baselines for each player.

In the chart below, you'll see column for Breakout, Improve, and Collapse. The numbers you see there are percentage chances.

For example, a Breakout score of "8", as in the case of Kyle Blanks, simply means that there is an 8% chance that he will outperform his career baseline TAv of .268 (Total Average, I'll get to that in a minute) average by at least 20%. The "44" you see in the next column under Improve, means that there is a 44% chance that Blanks will outperform his career TAv by even the slightest measure. The "6" in the next column Collapse, indicates a 6% chance that Blanks will underperform his career TAv by at least 25%.

A quick note on TAv: Total Average uses linear weights to assess batting performance. Unlike most other hitting performance metrics, TAv factors in situational hitting and reaching on errors. It also includes park factors and league quality. More information on TAv can be found in Baseball Prospectus' Glossary

I spoke to Baseball Prospectus' Rob McQuown, who added:

Comparables are weighted by how similar they are to the player in question, so Buster Posey's BREAKOUT chance is more highly influenced by what Carlos Santana did in his age 27 season than what, say, Juan Pierre did.

With all of that information in mind, let's take a look at how Baseball Prospectus projects the Padres lineup for this season. (Table below)

Pos.

Player

PT%

AGE

PA

AVG

OBP

SLG

TAv

WARP

Breakout

Improve

Collapse

Comparables

C

Y. Grandal

70

25

458

0.25

0.349

0.396

0.277

2.1

5

39

3

Chris Iannetta, Buster Posey, Jeff Clement


N. Hundley

30

30

188

0.228

0.291

0.377

0.248

0.4

0

39

6

Mike Macfarlane, Ryan Doumit, Ozzie Virgil

1B

Y. Alonso

85

27

593

0.266

0.335

0.397

0.27

1.3

1

49

8

Willy Aybar, Ryan Garko, Daniel Murphy


K. Blanks

15

27

255

0.231

0.314

0.401

0.269

0.8

8

44

6

Nelson Cruz, Shin-Soo Choo, Casper Wells

2B

J. Gyorko

85

25

569

0.255

0.309

0.45

0.278

2.7

4

37

11

Danny Espinosa, Neil Walker, Travis Snider


C. Spangenberg

15

23

93

0.23

0.269

0.306

0.219

-0.1

0

0

0

Eric Young, Cesar Hernandez, Emilio Bonifacio

3B

C. Headley

85

30

610

0.26

0.342

0.405

0.278

1.5

1

38

2

Eric Chavez, Morgan Ensberg, Ron Cey


A. Amarista

15

25

267

0.235

0.273

0.347

0.231

0.4

1

59

7

Nate McLouth, Jordan Schafer, Shane Costa

SS

E. Cabrera

75

27

566

0.25

0.317

0.34

0.252

2.4

2

51

8

Erick Aybar, Jason Bartlett, Tsuyoshi Nishioka


A. Amarista

15

25

267

0.235

0.273

0.347

0.231

0.4

1

59

7

Nate McLouth, Jordan Schafer, Shane Costa


R. Jackson

10

26

62

0.235

0.291

0.325

0.234

0.1

3

16

9

Angel Sanchez, Oswaldo Navarro, Josh Wilson

LF

C. Quentin

60

31

426

0.245

0.337

0.454

0.293

1.8

0

39

1

Brian Giles, Rico Carty, Billy Williams


C. Denorfia

15

33

179

0.263

0.316

0.387

0.264

0.7

1

33

5

Jody Gerut, Kevin Mench, Ryan Spilborghs


S. Smith

15

31

364

0.245

0.323

0.411

0.271

1.4

0

41

6

Ryan Klesko, Will Clark, Benny Ayala


K. Blanks

10

27

255

0.231

0.314

0.401

0.269

0.8

8

44

6

Nelson Cruz, Shin-Soo Choo, Casper Wells

CF

C. Maybin

85

27

565

0.247

0.312

0.375

0.259

2.6

6

51

3

Dexter Fowler, Franklin Gutierrez, Nate McLouth


W. Venable

15

31

556

0.245

0.307

0.419

0.265

2

2

44

8

Ryan Church, Ryan Ludwick, Raul Mondesi

RF

W. Venable

60

31

556

0.245

0.307

0.419

0.265

2

2

44

8

Ryan Church, Ryan Ludwick, Raul Mondesi


S. Smith

30

31

364

0.245

0.323

0.411

0.271

1.4

0

41

6

Ryan Klesko, Will Clark, Benny Ayala


A. Dickerson

10

24

65

0.244

0.28

0.394

0.25

-0.1

3

14

5

John Bowker, Roger Kieschnick, Scott Van Slyke

The column PT% simply indicates the percentage of the playing time at each position that BP projects each player will see. Because some players will appear in multiple positions, you'll note that certain players appear more than once.

Aside from TAv and Breakout, Improve, and Collapse, I've included PECOTA's projections for some statistics you'll find familiar, the slash line (Avg/OBP/SLG) and WARP. WARP (Wins Above Replacement Player) is similar to Fangraphs WAR and Baseball Reference WAR, but is calculated differently.

PECOTA projects the Padres to finish 81-81, so it should be an interesting season in San Diego. How do PECOTA's stack up against your expectations for the Padres hitters this season?

Ryan Potter also writes at Beyond the Box Score and Dynasty Guru. You can follow him on Twitter @80GradeWant

Biogenesis Part 3 - The Future of PED Policy

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With his decision to drop his legal challenges against the MLB this week, Alex Rodriguez has effectively closed the record on the Biogenesis scandal. The long and torrid episode is indicative of the changing landscape of drug use in the MLB and the inadequacies of the current anti-PED protocols. Where do we go from here?

Perhaps nobody is happier to see this issue out of the headlines than baseball's cantankerous un-dead Commissioner Bud Selig. The same commissioner that oversaw unprecedented growth and success of the sport is going to retire with a legacy inexorably linked to the epidemic use of performance enhancing drugs in baseball and the subsequent moralistic Bob Costas soliloquies. Selig would like to be remembered as the man who cleaned up the sport, rather than the deaf and blind executive who silently rode the wave of chemically enhanced players to stratospheric success. With this legacy in mind, the MLB has drafted an intensely image-conscious steroid policy that reads like mad libs.

The never-ending Alex Rodriguez saga is endemic of Selig's Cold War on PED use. Rodriguez - a confirmed ego maniac who can't even escape jeers in his home town - is the perfect target for a proxy war in the theater of public opinion. You don't like him. Your mom probably doesn't like him because of what he did to Cameron Diaz. Baseball writers don't like him because he was a cocky Latin kid breaking all their childhood heroes' records. Most importantly, he publicly admitted to using PEDs and never getting caught by the MLB. A-Rod is Bud Selig's white whale.

For the league at large, the Rodriguez story also exposes why the current PED policy isn't working. If you believe Tony Bosch, then A-Rod has been flouting MLB's drug policy in multiple decades, and the testing protocols within that system haven't been able to touch him. If one of the game's most visible stars, with an openly dirty past, can have unfettered access to performance enhancing drugs, then the drug policy only exists to make sportswriters feel better about themselves for refusing to select Jeff Bagwell for the Hall of Fame. After all, you've got to take a moral stand against evil wherever it is found. #Kony2012

The Biogenesis fallout exposed several other players' PED use as well, but the consequences of their drug use have been cloudy. Jhonny Peralta served a 50 game suspension, then signed a $53m deal this offseason. Most of us have already forgiven Everth Cabrera and Yasmani Grandal. We've discussed the story of former PadreClay Hensley - a marginal prospect that arguably used PEDs to carve out a respectable career at the major league level. Evidently, the testing policy and the graduated punishments are not serving as enough of a deterrent for PED use. The current risk calculus for many players is tipped in favor of trying to circumvent the rules. Moreover, because this effect is cumulative, players find themselves in a sort of Nash equilibrium where they know that bubble-players and aging stars have impetus to use. The clean player is disadvantaged twice by staying clean.

"BUT UNIONS! THEY ARE PROTECTING THOSE CHEATERS #THANKSOBAMA." Even if the Ghost of Commissioner's Past wanted to reform MLB drug policy to make it more effective at deterring cheating, the MLBPA would block the plate and OH THE HUMANITY. With the divergent interests of the league and the union the belief is that that the steroid situation is intractable in the MLB; however, the big divides in the policy are tenable grounds where compromise can be reached in the interest of the game as a whole.

Improved Testing

HGH, like crushing loneliness, is undetectable through urine testing. Both the NBA and NFL are moving towards an Olympic-style blood testing policy that can account for HGH use, which is thought to be widespread. The MLB has finally instituted in-season HGH testing in 2013, but its specifics are hard to find. A single test for HGH in a 162-game season isn't going to cut it, especially with the established "Christmas day effect" - where users can take any substance they want after the final in-season test. The MLB knows one test isn't enough, and that's why it commissions investigations like the one that uncovered the Biogenesis scandal.

Before the Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program (JDA) instituted HGH testing, the only way anyone could be caught was if they showed up to camp with a needle in their arm or were somehow caught up in the Biogenesis investigation. Former Padres Jerry Hairston Jr.and Gary Matthews Jr. were both caught with HGH by law enforcement and faced no discipline from the MLB. Of course moral grandstanding against Hairston or Matthews wouldn't have made as good of a PR statement as taking down Colonel Alexander Rodriguez von Bismarck. Even since the inception of MLB's HGH testing in 2013, not a single player has tested positive for HGH. Keep in mind that this sample includes the players implicated in the Biogenesis scandal whose names were more or less on the receipt for HGH purchases. Even in a league where Andre Ethier continues to play center field in crucial games - nobody is dumb enough to use HGH before their HGH test. Once a year HGH testing serves no purpose other than to allow the MLB to say things like "(its HGH testing) continues to be the strongest in American professional sports." cleversmirk.jpg

Unequal Enforcement

When Selig goes to the big Denny's in the sky and passes the commissioner reins to a person with a human body temperature the MLB is going to have to say goodbye to its beloved for-camera investigations into PED users and sink-or-swim with an improved testing regime. Putting on a detective cap and unilaterally going after players that the commissioner's office decides are possible PED users is fundamentally unfair, and also ripe for abuse. Rodriguez's case is special in that he is so universally disliked that the baseball world was willing to forego the institutional safeguards designed to protect players. The circumstance made it possible for the MLB to lock onto Rodriguez in a way that 1. Allows the commissioner to appear tough on steroid use; and 2. Settles the score between the commissioner and the star player that publicly embarrassed him.

The union was unwilling to stand up for Rodriguez because his image was so obviously and irrepairably tainted that the MLBPA's own reputation could take serious blows in defending A-Rod. There was no love lost between either of them: the MLBPA wanted to go so far as to expel Rodriguez from the union, and A-Rod's own camp decided to go forego union representation during his appeal. As you know by now Rodriguez did not successfully reverse his suspension, but he did get the arbitrary 211 game sentence reduced to a tough-but-defensible 162 games. The league and the union are both happy to have some closure on the issue, but the precedent is dangerous for both. The implications of this lack of regular process for A-Rod can hurt player interests in the long term and give the public impression that the testing system is ineffective.

From a practical standpoint, the Biogenesis investigation dramatically backfired on the MLB. It implicated several players into what was effectively a criminal underworld. The league got its coveted Rodriguez suspension, but it took months of legal wrangling and public airing of dirty laundry. Rodriguez took the MLB to task for the arbitrary nature of its disciplinary procedures and even allegedly tried to call Bud Selig as a witness at the arbitration hearing ("THIS WHOLE COURTROOM IS OUT OF ORDER!"). A-Rod then flew off-script and went H.A.M. on Mike Francesca's radio show. The process unexpectedly began to rehabilitate Rodriguez's public image - casting him as a player who was unfairly singled out by a vindictive commissioner with an ironic first name. The investigation into Biogenesis has been a mess for all parties involved.

The JDA was sold as a program that would keep the game clean, but it was specifically grafted to appear hard on drugs while being minimally invasive. The commissioner's office has continued this philosophy in its prosecution of PED offenders. Perception is important in public campaigns, but PR concerns tend to tank initiatives when they take precedent over effective policy. Because the nature of PED use has changed since the steroid era - trending away from heavy-duty anabolics towards energy and recovery aiding compounds - PED use itself has become a less visible shadow on the game. Yet because of all the accumulated stigma and ill-will, the league is pressed to visibly work against drug use. It has chosen dramatic takedowns of offenders over honest institutional prevention of PED use. The goal was never to clean drugs out of baseball, but rather to ease the consciences of baseball's collective fanbase. There's no telling if this focus will shift after Selig rides off into sunset (please take the Diamondbacks with you). The commissioner's successor might be more of a pragmatist who wants to resolve the brewing conflict with the MLBPA. The clearest path to that would be to exchange some of the commissioner's non-JDA investigation powers in exchange for comprehensive testing reform. For a deal to get done, the MLB is going to have to fix the rules, then promise to actually play by them.

Padres' Pitchers and Catchers report to Spring Training Facility

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It's that day that baseball fans talk about all offseason.  It's always really anti-climactic but we still pine for the day when pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training.   I try to remain more even keel until at least Opening Day myself. I don't want to blow my load this early.  Besides I try to be more tantric and save some of my Padres enthusiasm for August and September when the team is 10 games out of first and Padres fans have transformed themselves into football fans.

So what's going on?  Well lots of sports reporters are commenting on the newly renovated Spring Training facility.  You may remember back in 2012, the Mariners and the Padres extended their lease with the city of Peoria and in doing so committed $15 million dollars each for upgrades to the club houses and $6 million each for their fields.  Strangely, none of the reporters are sharing pictures of the upgrades, they're just marveling at them on Twitter, trying to make us jealous.  It's barely working.

Bob Scanlan was the only one who would give us a peek:

What else?  Padres beat writer Corey Brock arrived.  He just filed his first story of the season.  It's about Tim Stauffer waxing poetic about the veteran players that were in Padres uniforms when he was a rookie.  Check that out:

Padres brimming with new faces this spring | padres.com: News

"We had guys like Trevor [Hoffman], [Ryan] Klesko and [Phil] Nevin, some older players," Stauffer said of big league camp in 2004. "I think it really set in when I first saw them on the field, in full game speed was pretty amazing to see … especially when that's your first taste of pro ball.

Also Jeff Sanders of the UT tells us that there will be no inning limit on Andrew Cashner this year.

Back at home Petco Park still finds itself in transition.  The new video screen in the Park at the Park, that we talked about last week is being installed. I once helped install a flat screen TV on a wall, so I'd be willing to lend a hand.

On the field, the grass is still covered in checkered spots from the Davis Cup Tennis Tournament and covered in seating for another event.

Sadly too, we have confirmation that the rumors that our all-time favorite sideline reporter, Kelly Crull, is officially reporting on the Cubs. I'll forever

Now we just have to wait for Laura to confirm her departure as well.

I can't wait for some good news to break.  I want to hear stories of players gaining muscle weight and slimming down in the offseason.

Jedd Gyorko, Will Venable, and Yonder Alonso Make Some Padres Clubhouse Confessions

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These are their confessions.

These are the Padres Clubhouse Confessions. It's all coming out.

Jedd Gyorko, Will Venable, and Yonder Alonso visited the Fox Sports San Diego studios to participate in a fun little game of talk about your fellow teammates with a whiteboard. Mike Pomeranz hosted the segment of #SDLive and gave the guys some pretty tough questions. In the 5 minute clip, he was able to get answers to five very important questions about their Padres teammates. Also, I hope when they report to Spring Training that the players being called out for being cheapskates and smelling bad won't be too angry with them.

The Five Questions

Who on the Padres roster is the best dancer?

Which teammate is most likely to pick up a dinner check?

Who is least likely to pick up the check?

Who smells the worst?

What quality in one of your Padres teammates do you most envy or admire?

Those were some pretty tough questions. I'd say each of the three gentleman answered the questions pretty well. In my opinion, the most surprising answers were for the question about who smells the worst. It's an answer that I never expected and I don't believe we'll think of that player the same way again.

Enjoy the video.

And if for some reason the video isn't working, you can check it out here.

But, it should work. Because technology is awesome.

Quiz: Hitless Padres Position Players

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There have been 222 players who have gone their entire Padres career without recording a hit. Of those, 206 are pitchers, so they don't count. That leaves us with 16 position players who went hitless in a Padres uniform, ranging from a catcher with 26 plate appearances to a catcher who only saw time in the field.

Since a quiz of this nature will of course have obscure answers, I've provided more clues than usual, as well as putting four full minutes on the clock. In addition to listing the amount of plate appearances each player failed in, I've also included their positions and seasons.

As is always the case, there's a poll in which to log your results when you're through. Feel free - nay, encouraged - to comment on the ones you got or missed, but be sure to place spoiler bars over names. For the uninitiated, this is how you go about doing that:

Snapshot_201303261_1207_medium

To quote Tim Armstrong, "OKAY, LET'S GO!"

Poll
How many players were you able to name?

  35 votes |Results


Headley doesn't think contract negotiations will take place until end of the season

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Chase Headley talked to a gaggle of reporters this morning which sparked a handful of articles being published.  The big question was whether Headley was any closer to signing an extension with the Padres.  In short, no.

Headley: 'I hope it's not my last spring' | UTSanDiego.com

"I don’t want to put my foot down and say nothing’s gonna happen, but at this point it certainly seems that we’ll table these until the end of the season."

Nothing has been happening for quite some time.  Not since Ron Fowler publicly offered Headley the opportunity to become the highest paid Padres player ever and was publicly denied.  Not wanting to be involved in contract negotiations during the season was one hurdle and the other was the actual offer.

Third baseman Chase Headley hopes to play for San Diego Padres beyond 2014 | padres.com: News

"I don't want to get too much into specifics … but certainly there's some ground to be made up or we wouldn't be having this discussion," Headley said.

I'll be really surprised if Headley is ever offered an extension.  I could see him playing out the rest of the season with the team if they get off to a decent start, but beyond that I'm not optimistic about the chances.

I don't put much stock in Headley's claims that he wants to stay in San Diego either.  Public relations being what they are, he doesn't have any alternative.

Evaluating the Forsythe and Lobaton trades

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Over the past two months, Andrew Friedman has made two trades we are not accustomed to as Rays fans: trading away young arms with high upside, or what you might call pitching depth.

January 22: The Tampa Bay Rays acquire infielder Logan Forsythe, right-handed pitcher Brad Boxberger and three minor leaguers -- right-handed pitchers Matt Andriese and Matt Lollis and infielder Maxx Tissenbaum -- from the San Diego Padres for left-handed pitcher Alex Torres and minor league right-handed pitcher Jesse Hahn.

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February 13: The Tampa Bay Rays acquire right-handed pitcher Nathan Karns from the Washington Nationals for catcher Jose Lobaton, and two minor leaguers -- left-handed pitcher Felipe Rivero and outfielder Drew Vettleson.

The first trade came somewhat unexpectedly. Jesse Hahn had just been ranked No. 6 by Baseball Prospectus and had the most electric arm in the farm system, and he was packaged off with the shockingly resurgent Alex Torres for an infield platoon bat and a slew of minor leaguers.

I would challenge that, packaged with the recent trade of Jose Lobaton and two prospects ranked No. 17 and 20 by Baseball America, these two trades give one another context.

Warning, the majority of what I'm about to write is subjective.

20120911_kkt_ar5_919Logan Forsythe -- Photo credit: Jake Roth-US PRESSWIRE

The following are the two recent trades by the front office overlayed, with years of control remaining or Baseball America's most recent prospect ranking in parentheses. I've also italicized the most recent trade.

Rays receiveRays give
UTIL Logan Forsythe (4 yrs)C Jose Lobaton (4 yrs)
RHRP Brad Boxberger (6 yrs)LHP Alex Torres (6 yrs)
RHSP Nathan Karns (No. 9)RHP Jesse Hahn (No. 15)
RHSP Matt Andriese (No. 15)LHP Felipe Rivero (No. 17)
RHRP Matt LollisOF Drew Vettleson (No. 20)
2B/C Maxx Tissenbaum

Identifying which trade is which makes for two seemingly uneven trades, but we can break the players exchanged into categories to see how the Rays generally upgraded through these moves:

The Bench Player: The Rays traded a bench bat with four years of control remaining from a position of surplus, for a bench bat with four years of control that should platoon in a very productive way from multiple defensive positions.

The Reliever: The Rays flipped a relief pitcher that has ranked between high and low points of 6th and 32nd in his farm system for a relief pitcher that has ranked between 9th and 18th.

The Electric Arm: The Rays sent off a high upside starter drafted out of college with two plus pitches and a recent injury history, for a high upside starter drafted out of college with two plus pitches and an older injury history.

The Safer Arm: The Rays exchanged a Double-A pitching prospect projected for the bullpen, for a Triple-A pitching prospect projected to the starting rotation.

The Fringe Prospects: Finally, the Rays gave away a former first round supplemental draft pick that had disappointed last season by not showing progress in power from the corner outfield, for a pitching project that fell from being ranked the 5th best prospect in his farm to converting to relief in the minors, and a switch hitting infielder converting to catcher in A-ball.

Everything preceding the final 'category' was a near even swap from a descriptive standpoint, with some places I might even say the Rays came out ahead.

Just last week, the Royals were unable to trade Emilio Bonifacio and he passed through waivers after a salary crunch. The Rays were in a more dire situation and had no place for Lobaton on the roster, but Friedman returned value for him. Who replaced him on the bench should prove to be extremely helpful.

183603154Lobaton's place in Rays history -- hoto credit: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

The Bench Players

We'll always love him, but the Rays didn't need a third catcher that couldn't be optioned, they needed a right-handed bat off the bench to effectively share duties with Matt Joyce in the Designated Hitter revolving door -- and if they were lucky, it might be a guy who can play the field.

For a while, it looked like the answer might be Jayson Nix, signed on a minor league deal with a meager projection, but the Alex Torres trade landed a long-sought-after player in Forsythe.

Even though Lobaton is a switch hitter, Nix was the answer before Forsythe's acquisition. Where Nix has a higher rate of stolen bases, Forsythe has the pop -- most notably, a 187 wRC+ vLHP in 2012 before last season was mired by injury (sore right knee and right foot plantar fasciitis -- both injuries would recur throughout the season).

At the simplest level of projection, Forsythe should contribute more than two wins of value over Lobaton through the next four seasons, if you believe in Oliver, and that's not taking into account Maddon's savvy managing.

The Relievers

Alex Torres was once a Top-5 pitching prospect that lost everything to his game, went back to his college coach, and then broke into the majors with a startling good performance. Recently converted from starting, pitching in succession seemed to hurt his performance in later trips to the mound, but he was our lights out little lefty. In winter ball he returned to starting, which to me was a sign that he didn't enjoy relieving and raised the red flag of regression. Committing to different off-season styles for working out are not a positive.

Brad Boxberger is not necessarily a safer bet, but he may be more reliable. Torres should do well in Petco, the Rays should do well with Boxberger and his many options. Performance will not be dramatically different, at most half a win per season between the two players at current pace, and the Rays had less need of Torres's high leverage arm with the many former-closer acquisitions this off-season. The bullpen is a place of depth for the Rays, and the team sold high on Torres to buy low on Forsythe. Hard to complain.

The Prospects

Between the five ranked prospects changing hands, only one is not expected to make the majors: Vettleson. If we're being realistic about prospect floors, he could forever be a Quad-A player with a few skills but never enough. He's not guaranteed to be a fourth outfielder in the mold of a better Guyer, which is the slightly optimistic projection after his power-sapped 2013. Perhaps leaving the FSL will help his bat, and perhaps batting at the next level will let everything click. But the Rays sold low, and that might be a good indicator of their expectations of his play.

Additionally, all of the arms listed above are at risk to be relegated to relief duty -- Karns for his lack of a third pitch, Andriese for the Rays lack of a place in the rotation, Hahn due to injury, Rivero due to projection -- however, the Rays hold the two less-risky arms of the bunch, and that's worth something.

Elsewhere, there are two question marks the Rays pried away from the Padres: Tissenbaum, a skilled switch hitter that is converting to catcher, and Matt Lollis, a project in the mold of Mike Montgomery. Both are a roll of the dice and sweeten the deal.

Much of this comes down to your faith in Hahn and Vettleson to over come their odds and be the great player they are or once were expected to be, but the Rays had good reason to abandon ship on both. Not to mention the possibility of Alex Torres coming back to earth, and the necessity of trading Lobaton.

The Rays are better today than they were before these two trades, filling the 25th man position with the proper player and maintaining depth with possibly safer bets: Karns instead of Hahn, Boxberger instead of Torres, and Andriese instead of Rivero.

It's hard to not love what Friedman has done this off-season.

Quiz: Can you name the Top 10 most common Padres first names?

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Yesterday we quizzed you on the most common Padres last names.  Today we will quiz you on the most common Padres player's first names.  How exciting!

In the quiz, you will be asked to guess the Top 10 most common names.  Keep in mind the data is coming from Baseball Reference, so the names will likely be the shortened nickname that they played under rather than the name on the player's birth certificate.  For instance, Tony Gwynn would be listed as "Tony" rather than "Anthony".

You'll see in the quiz that the first name that appears most frequently occurs 31 times, far more than the others.  Once we have the most common first and last names figured out, you'll know what to name your child to give them the best chance of playing for the Padres.

Discuss your results in the comments but be sure to use the spoiler button when using player's names so as to not spoil the quiz for others.

Hopefully I didn't make any mistakes in computing the names this time, so let's begin!

Poll
How many first names were able answer correctly?

  53 votes |Results

Definitive Padres uniform answer coming soon

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Today on Presidents Day, the beat writers of every MLB team interviewed their corresponding club president.  Clicking through each interview is a good way to figure out what's going on around the league.

Our favorite beat writer Corey Brock asked some good questions of Padres president Mike Dee.  The final question and answer, however, was the one that caught my eye.  It was about a possible uniform color change.

Padres president Mike Dee reflects on Petco Park, fan connection, more | padres.com: News

MLB.com: Fans keep asking about bringing back the brown uniforms. What are your plans this season to honor the brown and could we eventually see a shift in uniforms to bring back the brown on more than just an occasional basis?

Dee: We are doing a lot of research on this subject at the moment. We don't have a definitive answer today but will soon.

I was shocked.  A definitive answer is coming soon?  Why does this make me so nervous?

I know the Padres sent out an email survey that asked what "What colors come to mind when you think of the Padres?"  The results of that survey question have not been made public.  Other than that I have no idea what research they've been doing.

We here at Gaslamp Ball conducted our own informal and unscientific research.  You can see the results of the poll here.  Seventy-four percent of those polled were in favor of returning to uniforms with brown as the primary color.  Gold was the overwhelming most popular secondary color with 40%.  I'm happy with those results.

From attending a blogger meet up with Mike Dee, I really got the suspicion that he strongly favors returning to the Blue and Orange colors that were being used when he was last employed by the Padres.  He seemed to dismiss the intense push for brown and kept changing the subject to the 90's uniforms and colors. I said this at the time:

Hopefully someone in a position of power with the Padres will one day make the right decision. From my reading of his reaction I seriously doubt it'll be Mike Dee.

The Padres definitely need a uniform and color change and Blue and Orange would without a doubt be an improvement over the current uniform but it's a shame the team seems to resist returning to their original, classic and unique colors.  Let's keep our collective fingers crossed.

Is Brook Roberts a new Fox Sports San Diego host?

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Fox Sports San Diego can't seem to keep their field reporter and host positions filled for very long.  Since the Padres signed a contract with FSSD, we've sadly seen Britt McHenry, Cary Chow, Leila Rahami, Megan Olivi, Kelly Crull and likely Laura McKeeman all move on to bigger and better things.  It's like they know that when you just start to get attached, they leave and break your heart.  Meanwhile all the crusty old jocks who work at FSSD refuse to leave!  Go away!

With the season starting in less than two months you'd think we'd have heard about their replacements.  But maybe we have...

At the end of January I was watching #SDLive and Brook Roberts was one of the guests.  Usually the host (Mike Pomeranz in this case) will introduce the guests and and tell you their connection to San Diego Sports.  Brook received no such introduction.  I thought it weird and even rewound to make sure I didn't miss something.  Nope, no introduction and no explanation why she was a guest on the show.

She's a television personality who's done a little bit of everything that one can do in front of a camera except sports.  I only know her from The Amazing Race.  Her partner was the one who shot a watermelon from a sling shot that came back to hit her square in the face.

I thought for sure that she must be being considered for a spot as an FSSD host or reporter.  I asked around, no one from FSSD could or would confirm anything.  But if she was just simply a guest, then how do you explain this FSSD?!

I suppose she was just hanging out at FanFest as a fan and the FSSD microphone was just a prop, right?  Hmm, maybe that's it.

Is Katie Osborne a new Fox Sports San Diego Reporter?

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You may remember long ago when I suspected that Brook Roberts might be a new Fox Sports San Diego host.  I went through all the evidence that I thought backed up my suspicion and even linked to a picture of Brook with a FSSD mic in her hand while she was interviewing Cameron Maybin.  It all added up.  I was like a game of Clue and I had pieced it all together.  It was Brook Roberts with a microphone in the Fox Sports San Diego Studios!

Well ol' Nancy Drew has got another theory for you.  This next theory of mine has even less evidence to support it, practically none at all.  I think Katie Osborne (@ktmosborne) may be a new FSSD field reporter.  Why?

You tell me.  Why else would she be following Mike Pomeranz?!  For his hilariously witty tweets.  BWAHAHAHA!  I think not!

Following_pomeranz_medium

Then again maybe Twitter just suggested that they connect because they have friends in common.  You can just never tell with social media now a days.

UPDATE:

And the evidence continues...

Is Kris Budden a new Fox Sports San Diego reporter?

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Is Kris Budden the final piece missing in the Fox Sports San Diego puzzle? Well I guess if we've come this far with my crazy theories, what's one more? Rumor has it that Fox Sports San Diego is doing away with their show Padres Weekly and will have two reporters for games and one host for pre-game and Padres POV. Three new employees in total.

Now that brings us to Kris Budden who as a current NFL sideline reporter looks like she'll have the most sports experience of the three, unless you count The Amazing Race as a sport, like I do.

Take a look at her twitter follows. Seemingly out of nowhere she took an interest in the Padres a few weeks back. Coincidence? Maybe, maybe not.

Kris_budden_follow_medium

Then last Friday Kris meets up with our other suspected reporter Katie Osborne. And she hopes to see her again soon? IN SAN DIEGO WHILE THEY WORK TOGETHER COVERING THE PADRES FOR FSSD??? It's all there right between the lines. OMG.

I have a feeling we'll be seeing a lot of all three of these new reporters when we tune into Padres games this season. Then at the end of the season we'll never see any of them again as they move to different networks.


Are these the new Fox Sports San Diego reporters?

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Fox Sports San Diego can't seem to keep their field reporter and host positions filled for very long. Since the Padres signed a contract with FSSD, we've sadly seen Britt McHenry, Cary Chow, Leila Rahami, Megan Olivi, Kelly Crull and likely Laura McKeeman all move on to bigger and better things. It's like they know that when you just start to get attached, they leave and break your heart. Meanwhile all the crusty old jocks who work at FSSD refuse to leave! Go away!

With the season starting in less than two months you'd think we'd have heard about their replacements. But maybe we have...

At the end of January I was watching #SDLive and Brook Roberts was one of the guests. Usually the host (Mike Pomeranz in this case) will introduce the guests and and tell you their connection to San Diego Sports. Brook received no such introduction. I thought it weird and even rewound to make sure I didn't miss something. Nope, no introduction and no explanation why she was a guest on the show.

She's a television personality who's done a little bit of everything that one can do in front of a camera except sports. I only know her from The Amazing Race. Her partner was the one who shot a watermelon from a sling shot that came back to hit her square in the face.

I thought for sure that she must be being considered for a spot as an FSSD host or reporter. I asked around, no one from FSSD could or would confirm anything. But if she was just simply a guest, then how do you explain this FSSD?!

I suppose she was just hanging out at FanFest as a fan and the FSSD microphone was just a prop, right? Hmm, maybe that's it.

Remaining Padres report to Spring Training; Alex Torres is delayed

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Today is the day position players are due to report to Peoria for Spring Training.

Some came early. (I know.) Here are Chase Headley, non-roster invitee Xavier Nady, and Jedd Gyorko hanging out at camp yesterday.

Of course, pitchers and catchers have already been at camp since last Thursday.

Everyone else filtered in this morning.

Well, almost everyone.

Unable to report with the other pitchers last week, and still unable to report with the remainder of the team today, Alex Torres will be a little behind when he gets to camp sometimes between this weekend and the next, according to Corey Brock. When Torres was traded to the Padres from the Rays, he had to file paperwork for a new visa due to his change in employer, and that paperwork is still pending.

Per Brock:

The latest Torres is likely to arrive in Peoria would be the weekend of next week, though that wouldn't put him too far behind. If Torres were a starter, that would be a different story, but since he's a reliever, he figures to have time to prepare.

The Padres play their first Spring Training game on Feb. 27 against the Mariners. If anything, Torres' late arrival will give the organization a little more time early in camp to evaluate a handful of other bullpen hopefuls.

For now, we can enjoy seeing more pictures of the rest of the team working out in Peoria and getting ready for game action starting with their charity game against the hated Mariners on February 27th.

Padres Are In Wait-And-See Mode For 2014

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Despite a payroll increase and optimism surround the current team, the future still has many question marks and it seems the Padres front office has put some of them there themselves.

The Padres have done a number of things that point to their belief that they will contend this season. Chase Headley is going into his last year before free agency and the team has not traded him and is not currently in negotiations to extend his contract. That's a win now move. One of their players that was a season away from hitting the market was Luke Gregerson, and they only traded him for another player that come October will be a free agent. Another win now move. The team signed a 36 year old relief pitcher to a 2 year, $15.5 million contract. Again a win now move. There a couple other little moves that also signal a competitive 2014, but I think you get the picture.

On the flip side, the team has hedged its bets some. The team did not give up many young prospects this offseason. The ones they did give up were in the trade from Alex Torres and Jesse Hahn, two young players who will be under team control for a long time. This combination of moves is certainly laudable. It gives hope to a fan base that has not seen a playoff game for its team since 2006. But, it does come with some curiosities.

Over in Atlanta the team is coming off a division-winning year and features a number of young players. They are certainly prepared to win now, even more so than the Padres. Yet, they have spent their offseason giving their young players contract extensions. Freddie Freeman, Julio Teheran and Craig Kimbrel all got them and Andrelton Simmons is rumored to be next in line. None of these players were even close to free agency.

The Padres did nothing like that this offseason. Despite having young players like Jedd Gyorko, Everth Cabrera, Andrew Cashner, Tyson Ross, Yasmani Grandal and Yonder Alonso, no contracts were given out that would buy out arbitration or free agent years. This is where it seems like the team is in wait-and-see mode. Cabrera and Grandal have both had injuries and suspensions that would cause apprehension. Cashner and Ross have only begun to find consistency when it comes to performing at a high level. Yonder Alonso is yet to find that. And Gyorko was a just a rookie in 2013, but still could have been an exception. The Padres are waiting on these players to earn something instead of showing faith that they know this is the core for the future. Both strategies are defensible, but the former is far more conservative and could force difficult decisions about who to pay if the young players hold up their end.

The wait-and-see approach does not just apply to the young players. Josh Johnson is signed to a one year deal and GM Josh Byrnes said recently that the team would make every effort to re-sign him if the right hander has a good year. And, of course, there is Chase Headley. The contract situation that will not go away. Recently, talk about it has even heated up again. But it is really just talk. The team is waiting to see what Headley will do in 2014 and then ostensibly compete with 29 other teams for his services in 2015 and beyond should they like what they see. There are alos the contracts of Huston Street and Nick Hundley who each have only an option year left after 2014. Ian Kennedy is in a situation much like Clayton Richard's 2013 where the team could cut him loose and forgo have to pay him for another arbitration year if his 2014 season is not up to snuff.

Hopefully, this is all just a matter of circumstance. That if there had been more consistency in ownership over the last number of years, then the Chase Headley contract situation would have been settled sooner. And that with many of the young players, if there were not for so many question marks surrounding them then they would have similar contract extensions to what other teams dole out to their young cores. And that players with options for 2015 will make good in 2014. However, I think there are some additional reasons with regards to a payroll as to why the team must wait-and-see before opening the checkbook any further than they already have. More on that later.

Padres Have Created Payroll Flexibility For 2015

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The Padres have a wait-and-see approach to 2014 that seems to be setting them up for some important financial decisions after the season. The payroll has been set up to help them with that.

As I mentioned in a previous article, the Padres, despite being considered as a contender for 2014, are in a wait-and-see mode with regards to many of their players. A couple are approaching free agency, a few are extension candidates and a couple more could be cut loose after 2014 if they do not perform well. What this all adds up to is that come the end of the season, the team will have a lot of payroll flexibility.

In 2014, the team is committed to close to $90 million in payroll. You can see some of the details here at Cot's Contracts. That bottom line only adds up to $82.5 million, but if you include the likely $2 million combined that Alonso and Grandal should make plus about $500K for each player that fills out the roster it adds up to something between $88 million and $90 million. In 2015 that number drops to $32.725 million committed. In 2016 it is just $11.35 million.

That 2015 number is a little deceptive. The team does not have $50 million in flexibility. Everth Cabrera, Andrew Cashner, Tyson Ross, Alonso, Grandal, plus maybe some others will have have salaries in the millions, but do not have the exact dollars figured out yet. If you do some quick and dirty math they will take up around $20 million combined. You also will have a number of those $500K guys. Still you could see somewhere on the order of $25-30 million in payroll flexibility.

That flexibility comes at the cost hinted at in the introduction paragraph and in the previous post. Chase Headley, Josh Johnson, Chris Denorfia, Seth Smith, Nick Hundley, Tim Stauffer, Ian Kennedy and Huston Street all will or could come off the books. That is quite a talent drain and would be difficult to bounce back from. Which leads you to believe that some of the flexibility will go to keeping those players. However, given how much earning power both Headley and Johnson would have coming off good years it certainly won't be all of them. And at most would include Headley OR Johnson, but probably not both without trading other players to create additional wiggle room.

Speaking of wiggle room, the team does have some of that due to what happens after the 2015 season. It is almost inconceivable that the Padres will want Carlos Quentin follow that season, so his contract comes off the books. Benoit may prove a vital cog in the bullpen, but he will be 38 after his contract is up which is after the 2015 season as well. The Padres will also have the option to buyout Corey Luebke's deal. Will Venable will be a free agent. If Street and Kennedy are retained for 2014, then they will also reach free agency in 2015. What this means is that the Padres could be somewhat creative if they were to hand out a big multiyear contract to someone (cough, Chase Headley, cough) after the 2014 season. The team could slightly backload the deal making the first year salary lower than the other years in order to meet the 2014 payroll, but fit in easily for 2015 and beyond.

Of course, handing out big contracts decreases the payroll flexibility in future years. In order to stay competitive the team will have to rely on cheap young players to come through. The Padres have some of those that could help. Names like Rymer Liriano, Austin Hedges, Matt Wisler, Casey Kelly, Joe Wieland, Robbie Erlin, Kevin Quackenbush, Leonel Campos, Max Fried, Joe Ross and others are on the way and could be the help that would be needed. Still, the team would need some cost certainties along the way.

Signing young, talented players to contracts that buy out their arbitration years helps with providing that cost certainty. The Braves, as mentioned in the other article, are one of the teams doing that and those extensions went along with acquiring players like the Uptons who make big money as well as having to say goodbye to other expensive players like Tim Hudson, Chipper Jones and Brian McCann. This is the financial land that the teams with middle tier payrolls live and the Padres will need to adapt as they attempt to move on to that new frontier.

Quiz: Padres Who Played In Game 163

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It happened. We can't keep pretending like it didn't.

Each of us remember where we were the day the Rockies "beat" the Padres in Game 163 of the 2007 season. What this quiz will test is how many of the participants on the good guys' side you've failed to block from your memory in the six years and change that have passed since then.

You know how these quizzes work, right? Just keep hammering in last names and wiping away tears until time runs out. Then comes the poll and spoiler-proofing your comments.

Dive right in. Embrace the pain. Without it, the eventual trophy won't mean as much.

Poll
How many were you unable to forget?

  46 votes |Results

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