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Chris Denorfia traded to the Mariners

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After 5 years with the Padres, the outfielder is on the move. He goes north in exchange for OF Abraham Almonte and RHP Stephen Kohlscheen.

The Seattle Mariners are deep with left-handed outfielders. Trading for someone who can hit a southpaw makes sense for them. Enter Chris Denorfia and his career .301/.367/.443 triple slash line against sinister hurlers. His numbers have not been as good this year, but still respectable when you compare him to the Mariners' current options. So, he heads north today to take his platooning duties to a team in contention for a playoff spot. He will be a free agent after the season, so any fans of his can still hold out hope that the Padres will bring him back for another spin in 2015.

In exchange the Padres receive OF Abraham Almonte and RHP Stephen Kohlscheen. Those that pay attention in Spring Training may remember Almonte. The Mariners had a acquired a number of unathletic, bad defense corner outfield/first baseman and looked to badly need a more athletic outfielder like Almonte. He was a stud in March, which followed an excellent campaign in AAA in 2013. The 25 year old made the opening day roster and looked to be holding his own until the shine wore off mid April. In May, once his batting average dipped below .200 he was option back to AAA where he has been okay. Similar to recent acquisition Yangervis Solarte, he has been in the minors for a long time after signing as a 17 year old. He has never stood out, but is old enough and talented enough to get a real chance to see if he can have a role on a major league club.

Stephen Kohlscheen has never made the majors. Like Almonte he is 25 years old. He has solely been used as relief pitcher for the past few seasons and has good strikeout rates and his walk numbers have come down this season, which would seem to suggest that he should survive in a major league 'pen one day. He is exactly the type of player you expect to get acquired in a trade for a platoon player.

And with that we say goodbye to Chris Denorfia and his, somewhat surprising, solid half decade of service. His heart and hustle will be missed, but it was likely to be missed anyway once he hit free agency. The break up just occurred a couple months earlier and netted the Padres some younger, controllable players.


Mariners acquire Chris Denorfia from Padres

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The Padres got two minor leaguers for the outfielder.

The Mariners have acquired outfielder Chris Denorfia from the Padres, according to Jon Heyman of CBSSports.com. The Mariners are getting outfielder Abraham Almonte and minor league right-hander Stephen Kohlscheen, according to Ken Rosenthal of FOXSports.com and Corey Brock of MLB.com.

The Mariners have been looking for a right-handed outfield bat all summer, looking into options like Marlon Byrd, Dayan Viciedo and Jonny Gomes before settling on Denorfia. The 34-year old Denorfia has hit .242/.293/.319 with one home run and 16 RBI, so he may not pack the offensive punch that some Mariners fans were expecting to receive at the deadline. He will provide depth for starters Dustin Ackley, James Jones, and Endy Chavez in the Mariners' outfield.

Almonte, 25, has split the season between the big leagues and Triple-A Tacoma, hitting .198/.248/.292 in 27 games at the major league level. He has been better in 72 games with Tacoma, hitting .267/.333/.390 with six home runs ad 31 RBI. He was ranked as the Mariners' seventeenth best prospect before the season and will likely join the Padres' major league outfield.

Kohlscheen, 25, has split the season between Double-A Jackson and Triple-A Tacoma, posting a combined 2.70 ERA in 38 relief appearances. The former 45th round pick could be a reliever in the majors, but is not considered a highly-ranked prospect.

Padres looking to end July with a sweep of the Cards

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An impressive 12-1 victory last night put the series win in the hands of the Padres, but they're not done with the Cardinals yet. As the two teams complete their three-game set at Petco Park with some getaway day baseball this afternoon, the Friars will go for the sweep in front of their home crowd as they send rookie Odrisamer Despaigne to the mound.

Along with Jesse Hahn, who pitched a veritable gem last night to earn himself a win on his birthday, Despaigne has been an incredible addition to the Padres rotation in place of injured starting pitchers and backups. He's made a great impression and taken advantage of the opportunity he's gotten since joining the staff on June 23rd, going 2-2 with a 1.66 ERA in six starts, including one in which he flirted with Padres history and was just four outs away from the franchise's first no-hitter. He had a bit of a rough time his last outing, however, when he gave up five runs (only two earned) and lasted only 3 2/3 innings.

Hopefully the Padres offense can give him even a fraction of the run support Hahn got last night. Another rookie, Yangervis Solarte, helped led the charge with four hits in last night's offensive explosion. Since he came over in the trade that sent former San Diego Savior Chase Headley to the Yankees; Solarte has hit to the tune of a .364 batting average, homering twice and driving in eight runs through eight games. Also adding to last night's runfest were Will Venable and Jedd Gyorko, who each homered. Gyorko has gone 6-11 since his return from the disabled list. That includes last night's home run, three hits, and four RBI.

The Cardinals will give the ball to Shelby Miller to try to keep the Padres offense quiet this afternoon. The right-hander is 7-8 with a 4.20 ERA on the season and has been struggling to pitch deep into the game lately. In each of his last five starts, a stretch in which he'sgone 0-2 with a 6.85 ERA, he's failed to make it past 5 2/3 innings. In Miller's sole career start against San Diego, last May, he surrendered three runs to Padres batters, which was enough for the loss.

Three runs might also be enough for a loss this time around if the Cardinals offense continues to sputter like it has been recently.  While the Friars continue to be at the bottom of the ranks in all the offensive stats across the league this season, the Cardinals are not that far above them with the second-worst offense in the majors. Last night was the third time in a row that they've been kept to just one run. Today they'll try to avoid their seventh loss in nine tries and avoid a sweep on the road.

Start time for today's series finale is 12:40 PT so grab your lunch and join us in the game thread.

And don't forget to check out today's SB Nation Fantasy Baseball league on FanDuel. It's $2 to join and first prize is $2,000. There's also an MLB Squeeze (Late Night) league with a first prize of $1,200 if you miss the first one. You can join at this link.

Padres trade Chris Denorfia to Mariners for Abraham Almonte, Stephen Kohlscheen

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The San Diego Padres traded outfielder Chris Denorfia to the Seattle Mariners this afternoon. In exchange, the Padres receive outfielder Abraham Almonte and pitcher Stephen Kohlscheen. Here's a report on the prospects.

Abraham Almonte, OF: Almonte was originally signed by the New York Yankees from the Dominican Republic in 2005. He was traded to the Mariners in February 2013 for pitcher Shawn Kelley. Almonte opened 2014 in the Mariners outfield but didn't hold the job, hitting .198/.248/.292 in 27 games. Sent down to Triple-A Tacoma in May, he's hitting .267/.333/.390 on the season with 28 walks, 66 strikeouts in 277 at-bats.

Almonte is a switch-hitter listed at 5-9, 205, born June 27, 1989. He has above-average running speed and a strong throwing arm that will work at all three positions. He can flash good power but has an aggressive hitting approach which major league pitchers exploited. He had a terrific 2013 season (.314/.403/.491 with 26 steals for Tacoma) but hasn't been able to duplicate it this year.



Stephen Kohlscheen, RHP: Kohlscheen was a 45th round pick in 2010 out of Auburn University. Although he hasn't ranked highly on prospect lists, he has a good minor league track record and has been effective this season for Tacoma, posting a 3.28 ERA with a 22/6 K/BB in 25 innings for the Rainiers. He had a 2.25 ERA in 32 innings with a 33/6 K/BB in Double-A before moving up to the Pacific Coast League in June.

Kohlscheen is a 6-6, 235 pounder born September 20, 1988. He doesn't excite scouts with an 88-92 MPH fastball and a mediocre slider, but he throws strikes, has some deception, and does a great job against right-handed hitters, holding them to a .161 mark this year. On the other hand, lefties hit .387 against him. He projects as a ROOGY.

ANALYSIS: The Mariners trade a couple of spare parts for, well, a spare part, albeit one with more experience than Almonte. Seems fair to me on both ends.

Cardinals at Padres Recap: Big trade precedes must needed win

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Oh right... there was a game today.

pregame

As I write this, I am still quite stunned about the trade the Cardinals just made with the Red Sox. It is a good trade, and I think the team got quite a bit better, but it is still fresh. All I can picture in my head is the media going up to Craig asking for him to comment, and him telling them "No", barely above a whisper, discouragingly shaking his head while in the background Joe Kelly tries not to cry as he packs his skateboard into his backpack. It breaks my heart.

On top of all that, Shelby Miller has to pitch today, just hours after one of his best friends and groomsman in his wedding was traded. That has to be tough. I am pretty wrecked over it - my productivity at my job has been shot, and I don't even really know them. Yes, they are professionals and have a job to do, but they are also human. This cannot be easy for them.

With Allen gone, Matheny's hands are now tied. Here are the lineups for today:


game

I have come to realize in my short life that I am a terribly empathetic person. Sometimes this gets me into trouble or, shall we say, possibly dangerous situations. Empathy is not all it is cracked up to be. In fact, on days like today, I wish I could shut it off, become an unfeeling automaton who views people as a means to an end. But I cannot, not even for people I do not know.  And therefor I simply  cannot distance myself from the human element of this child's game.

And for those reasons, this game was really difficult for me today. I should have been happy. The Birdos seemed to be responding positively to the roster shake-ups, in a manner of speaking. Oscar Taveras hit a beautiful two-run home run in the second to give the Cardinals a temporary lead, then after Shelby Miller surrended two runs on solo shots in the bottom of the frame, the top of the Cardinals order pieced together a few singles to give the team a 4-2 lead. Peter Bourjos tacked on another run with a RBI base hit and Matt Carpenter earned a RBI walk in the top of the sixth to round out the scoring. Runs, that is really what we all wanted. Shelby Miller even pitched well. His breaking ball looked good, he was hitting his spots with his fastball, the only mistakes he really made being the second inning home runs to Jedd Gyorko and Will Venable. But the mood was still somber, like the game was being broadcast in sepia.

But I do not mean to bum you out. The Cardinals traded two players today,yes, and because of that they probably made themselves a stronger team. So let think some happy thoughts. First of all, Oscar Taveras hit a home run. Matt Carpenter is a stud and we should bask in his studliness at every possible opportunity. Shelby Miller pitched like a man on a mission, allowing only three hits (although two were homers). Kevin Siegrist, Pat Neshek and Trevor Rosenthal used thirty-three pitches, not allowing a single baserunner, to tear through Padres order like a Ragnar Lothbrok did to Jarl Borg. Matt Holliday suddenly realized it was the second half of the season. Yadier Molina and Michael Wacha will hopefully be back in September. And now the rotation has been bolstered with the additions of Justin Masterson and John Lackey. There are a lot of good things to look forward to.

post game

LIL SCOOTER'S PLAYER OF THE GAME:

Oscar Taveras is the most honorable recipient of this award, going 1-4 with a home run and two RBI. He led all players in WPA with .119 (with Matt Holliday right on his heals at .109).


Source: FanGraphs

TWEET/GAMETHREAD COMMENT OF THE GAME:

Screen_shot_2014-07-31_at_5.52.04_pm

The Cardinals end the road trip 5-5 and head home to take on the Brewers. Adam Wainwright toes the rubber against Wily Peralta. The game beings at 7:15pm CST. Despite recent struggles, a sweep of the Brewers could leave the Birdos alone in first place!

And so here's to Allen Craig and Joe Kelly. No longer on our team, but still in our hearts. Eventually all good things must come to an end. The best of luck to you fine gentlemen in Boston. I wish things could have played out differently. Thanks for thememories.

Cardinals 6, Padres 2: Despaigne Struggles Again

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The shine is appears to be wearing off of Odrisamer Despaigne, who gave up 6 runs on 9 hits in 5.2 innings today. He didn't get much support from his offense, with the Padres bats only picking up 3 hits all afternoon, but there's only so much slack you can ask a lineup to reasonably pick up.

The Cardinals got on the board first, with A.J. Pierzynski singling ahead of a homer by Oscar Taveras to put the redbirds up 2-0. That lead didn't last long, as Jedd Gyorko and Will Venable both homered in the bottom half of the inning to tie things back up. That was it for the Padre offense, but St. Louis showed no signs of slowing. A trio of hits in the third put them up by 2 yet again. Matt Carpenter singled and then scored courtesy of a double from Kolten Wong. Wong came home himself when Matt "Never Touched Home" Holliday hit another single.

The last two runs of the day scored during a particularly ugly sixth inning. Matt Adams hit a leadoff single, and was joined on the basepaths by a beaned Jhonny Peralta and walked Pierzynski. Taveras then mercifully lined out to Everth Cabrera, who easily doubled up Peralta. Unfortunately, that third out was elusive. Peter Bourjos knocked Adams in with a single, and then Shelby Miller hit another single to load the bases again. Bud Black turned to Blaine Boyer, who issued an RBI walk to to Carpenter before getting Wong to strike out and stop the bleeding.

The Atlanta Braves come to town this weekend, and Eric Stults will get the first shot at them. First pitch at 7:10 PM.

http://www.gaslampball.com/2014/7/31/5956443/game-thread-07-31-padres-vs-cardinals

FriarFever was mostly absent today, allowing C Callahan to take the lead with 33 comments. Jodes led the recs again with 5.

MLB trade deadline: Recapping the Yankees' moves

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The Yankees didn't make a big splash at the deadline, but they did make their team better.

Thursday's trade deadline was full of 12 trades that saw big names such as Jon Lester, David Price, and Yoenis Cespedes change teams for the stretch run. The Yankees were not players in any of the big name trades that went down, instead choosing to continue the trend of making incremental upgrades to their team without trading away their top prospects to do so. Including trades that happened ahead of Thursday's deadline, here is how the Yankees have upgraded their team this trade season.

LHP Vidal Nuno traded to Arizona Diamondbacks for RHP Brandon McCarthy

The first Ninja Cash move of the season saw him trade Nuno to Arizona in return for McCarthy and cash. Nuno had worn out his welcome in New York after being moved into the rotation due to injuries. His 5.42 ERA and 1.73 HR/9 numbers were ugly, especially being particularly prone to fly balls in the smaller confines of Yankee Stadium. Cashman flipped Nuno for a more proven commodity in McCarthy, who has thrived in his starts since the trade. McCarthy credits returning to his cutter, a pitch that the Diamondbacks didn't want him to throw. Nuno has done alright for himself since switching to the NL, but I think most Yankee fans are pretty happy with the switch off, especially now that some improved infield defense should help with McCarthy's ground balls.

IF Yangervis Solarte and RHP Rafael De Paula traded to San Diego Padres for 3B Chase Headley

Solarte had been the star of the Yankees for the first month of the season before falling on harder times as the season wore on. He was optioned to Triple-A for a brief stint after his struggles became an unavoidable issue. The career minor leaguer before 2014 will always have a special place in Yankee fans' hearts for being the reason the team finally gave up on their undying love for Eduardo Nunez. Rafael De Paula has an electric arm that may carry him to the majors, but concerns about his identity and whether or not he is destined for the bullpen made him an expendable piece in the eyes of the Yankees. The strikeout numbers are dazzling but the walks have been a concern. Parting with both players was worth getting Headley in return, who has hit very well in his brief time with the Yankees. He also plays a sparkling third base, which has already been evident since he switched coasts and uniforms.

It's possible that Headley spends the rest of the year auditioning for the Yankees' plans beyond 2014, since it seems unwise to count on Alex Rodriguez spending meaningful time in the field after being out of baseball for practically two seasons. This is another trade where people on both sides seem pretty content with their return so far. Solarte has hit well in his new west coast home and Headley's bat lengthens a Yankee lineup that desperately needs some pop in it.

IF Kelly Johnson traded to Boston Red Sox for SS Stephen Drew

The Yankees and Red Sox haven't traded with one another since 1997 until minutes before the 2014 4:00 pm deadline. Kelly Johnson, who is currently on the disabled list with a groin issue, was sent to Boston in return for shortstop Stephen Drew. Drew went unsigned until quite late in the season after his offseason demands proved to be more than teams were willing to pay. As a result, his numbers have been ugly after a very slow start. He has heated up recently, though, and the Yankees will be hoping that that is a sign of things to come for the rest of the season. Drew won't be playing shortstop as he is accustomed to, though. Instead, he'll be sliding over to play second base with Derek Jeter entrenched at shortstop.

You can argue that Johnson didn't get the fairest shake with the Yankees, playing out of position for most of his time in New York. He played basically everywhere except second base while Brian Roberts stayed surprisingly healthy. He proved himself not to really be adequate at first base in Mark Teixeira's absence and he wasn't great at third base. He won't get to play second base in Boston either, due to the presence of Dustin Pedroia. The Yankees obviously felt like the defensive upgrade was worth whatever offense they may be sacrificing in the swap.

C/1B/DH Peter O'Brien traded to Arizona Diamondbacks for 2B/3B/OF Martin Prado

The final move of the day saw the Yankees upgrade their right field situation by acquiring Martin Prado from Arizona. After Carlos Beltran's elbow rendered him unable to play the outfield, Ichiro Suzuki has had to become the every day right fielder. As expected, playing every day turned Ichiro from helpful bench bat into dead weight with a sub-80 wRC+. Bringing in Prado will allow Ichiro to move back to the bench as the 4th outfielder. Prado also brings the benefit of playing two infield positions, which will help when Joe Girardi needs to give players the day off.

Peter O'Brien's power display in the minors this year has been nothing short of amazing. Unfortunately, the home run show has been about all that would impress you on O'Brien's resume. The Yankees had pretty much given up on O'Brien's future behind the plate as a catcher. A brief stint at third base was quickly abandoned and a short trial in the outfield didn't render positive results either. He'd been moved to first base pretty permanently with the Trenton Thunder, likely under the guise that anyone can play first base or fake it enough to get by. The Diamondbacks have Miguel Montero locked up behind the plate and Paul Goldschmidt is entrenched at first. The National League hasn't gotten with the times and adopted the DH yet, so it's unclear how O'Brien fits into their future plans. As if that wasn't enough, O'Brien practically refuses to walk and has his strikeouts pile up at an alarming rate. That combination doesn't usually spell good things for the future. That being the case, it's easy to see why the Yankees were willing to part with such an impressive power source.

Which of these moves do you think helped the Yankees the most? Which former Yankee are you most disappointed to see go?

Poll
Which deadline move helped the Yankees the most?

  356 votes |Results

1999: Double nickels on the dime

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This week in 1999: Todd Hundley returns to Shea while the Mets fulfill Bobby Valentine's prophecy.

The Mets had just completed a road trip to Chicago and Milwaukee that featured grueling weather but successful results, five wins against only one loss while leapfrogging the Braves for first place in the NL East. When they returned to Shea on August 6, it marked another return of note: Todd Hundley, in town with the Los Angeles Dodgers for four games.

The switch-hitting catcher provided some highlights for mid-1990s Mets teams that ran low on that commodity, such as setting the record for most homeruns hit by a backstop (41) in 1996. Then elbow injuries slowed Hundley down, and the team's acquisition of Mike Piazza made him redundant, as did the failed experiment to turn him into an outfielder.

Hundley also clashed with manager Bobby Valentine. Many players had done this, but few in as ugly and public fashion as him. When Hundley's production fell off late in 1997, Valentine heavily implied to the press that his catcher partied too much. Whatever Hundley got up to off the field, his struggles were probably more due to ligament issues that required Tommy John surgery in September of that year. In 1998, while still recovering from that surgery, Hundley was wounded further when he was told point-blank by Mets ownership that the team wouldn't trade for Piazza, only to watch them do exactly that the next day. Conveniently timed whispers about Hundley's nocturnal activities bubbled up immediately after the Piazza deal went down, rumors that Hundley assumed were started by his manager.

In the following offseason, Hundley was sent to the Dodgers in a three-way deal with the Orioles and Mets that sent Roger Cedeño and Armando Benitez to New York. During spring training, Valentine gave a TV interview in which he manager implies some ethnic animus on Hundley's part toward himself and Piazza. ("Todd does a lot of that Italian stuff.") "I'm going to try and meet him in a dark alley and talk about it," Hundley growled.

Thus, much was made of Hundley's return to Shea by a press corps anticipating (and perhaps hoping for) an ugly confrontation. When asked about how Hundley would feel about being on the same field as him again, Bobby Valentine responded, "Why would I give a shit?" But no fisticuffs ensued, as Hundley spent most of his time extolling the virtues of a city he clearly missed ("To me, the skyline of Manhattan is god's country") and signing autographs for boatloads of fans during batting practice. Valentine studiously kept his back to such scenes.

Hundley was greeted warmly by the Shea crowd during his first at bat, receiving a standing ovation in memory of all he'd done for some mediocre Mets teams. They were even more appreciative when he went down on strikes three times, as Octavio Dotel fanned 10 batters over seven brilliant innings. The Mets scraped out a pair of runs and hung on for a 2-1 victory.

Back in early June, when an eight-game losing streak threatened to end the Mets' season before it began, Bobby Valentine made the prediction that his team was good enough to win 40 of its next 55 games. The statement was dismissed as insanity at the time. But the Mets' win in the Dodgers series opener fulfilled Valentine's prophecy to the letter. In the 55 games since the manager gazed into his crystal ball, the team went exactly 40-15. A press corps that once maintained a Bobby V Death Watch can only shake its collective head in utter disbelief.

"I didn’t want this to turn into something where every week was a referendum on whether or not I was going to get fired," Valentine explained. "So it was like, Let’s have a deadline and see what we all can do….When I talked about 55 games, I remember saying, ‘Who knows, maybe we can win 40 of them.’ Now we’ve got the chance. Now let’s see how we do over the next 55."

The media was so impressed by Valentine's powers of prognostication that they let it slide when the Mets dropped the next three games to the underachieving Dodgers, an outcome that would have induced panic a month prior. First, the newest members of the bullpen, Billy Taylor and Chuck McElroy, imploded in the ninth inning and turned a thin Mets lead into a 5-4 defeat. The next day, Rick Reed threw only 26 pitches before straining his middle finger (an injury that would land him on the DL), and the relief corps fell apart completely in a 14-3 blowout that saw Matt Franco take the mound for the second time that season. The Mets were then held in check by the Dodgers' ace Kevin Brown in the finale, a 9-2 loss.

The home team shrugged it off in their next series hosting the San Diego Padres. Tony Gwynn had just collected his 3000th hit a few days earlier when the Padres came to town on August 10, but the New York press was less interested in asking Gwynn about this feat than asking him to react to former teammate Jim Leyritz. After being traded to the Yankees, Leyritz blasted Gwynn for not traveling with his team while rehabbing a calf injury and accused him of drawing too much attention to himself about his impending milestone. Normally accommodating to a fault, Gwynn canceled a pregame press conference, weary of all the questions. "I just need a day," he begged.

The Shea crowd offered Gwynn a standing ovation. They were less kind to Kenny Rogers when he allowed three runs to a weak San Diego lineup, and to Mike Piazza, who heard boos after going 0-for-4, extending a slump that began in the losses to the Dodgers. "You can take it a couple of ways," Piazza said after the game, which the Mets won 4-3 despite his struggles. "You can take it badly, or take it as a challenge. I know that. That’s why I signed here….You’re going to fail seven out of 10 times. If you didn’t, what would be the triumph? What would be the drama of the challenge?"

The following evening, growing pains on the part of Octavio Dotel (five runs in less than five innings) were offset by stellar long relief from Pat Mahomes and a late outburst from the offense in a 12-5 victory. In the final game of the series, Al Leiter was given an early 6-0 lead, only to give three of those runs back. But Leiter, a notoriously bad hitter, regifted himself a six-run advantage by hitting a bases-loaded double against Woody Williams. The Mets cruised the rest of the way for a 9-3 win.

The sweep of San Diego ensured that the Mets would head out on their next road trip with a share of first place. Their next challenge would be a trio of West Coast swings in quick succession. In days of yore, California was where Mets' seasons went to die. To keep pace with the Braves, they'd have to buck that historical trend.


Signs pointing to A.J. Preller as next GM

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Announcement of the hire is anticipated early next week.

After the Padres game on Monday, I decided to give the Darren Smith show a little listen. They talked briefly about the next Padres GM. Darren had a burrito bet with Marty Caswell about when the GM would be announced. Marty had one guess that came before the trading deadline and Darren Smith countered that would not happen and that he had heard the announcement, if the front office already knew who they wanted, would come early next week. Smith went a little farther tweeting this today:


While this is by no means hard evidence, my gut tells me that Smith is dead on here. The rumor mill has been pointing at A.J. Preller over the other candidates for a while. Here is a tweet by the Union Tribune's Dennis Lin calling Preller the favorite back on July 21st:


On the same day, Peter Gammons elaborated as to why Preller was being considered a favorite:


Here was a tweet from Fox Sports San Diego and Bleacher Report's Scott Miller from about a week ago:


A few days after that, the San Diego Union Tribune's Tom Krasovic also called Preller the favorite:


Although, that could just be a regurgitation of Lin and Miller's comments. Bleacher Report's Will Carroll also mentioned Miller's comment:


The way that he references it seems to me that he may have checked on the information. I say that because he is not crediting Miller, but instead seems to be affirming his report of Preller as the favorite.

Must Reads

It is still all just speculation, but it is telling that it seems to be the only speculation. There are no other candidates that have these sort of rumors floating around on the interwebs. Given that the Padres finished their candidate interviews days ago and most would agree that hiring so close to the deadline would not be beneficial, they likely have known who they wanted (and perhaps even the candidate secretly knows) and it's hard to keep a secret like that under wraps.

Going back to the Gammons tweet about international scouting, it makes sense that the Padres brass would value this. The Padres need to bring in young talent. The need it now, in the future and in the future's future. It's the lifeblood of a lower revenue club. The draft is now structured so that there is nowhere near as much wiggle room. Everybody scouts everybody that will be in the draft and every draft pick has restrictions about how much money you can pay the prospect. There does not seem to be a way to get a big advantage. In international scouting, there is no way that everybody scouts everybody. There are gems to be unearthed. There are indeed restrictions on how much you can pay for players, but if you find players that you like better than other teams you don't have to throw big money at them and thus have more money to spend on more players you like. That is my theory anyway. So, if ownership sees that as an opportunity and Preller is the candidate that can best exploit it, then it makes sense that he is their choice.

"Hey, Hey Number 19" by Steve Poltz

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Traveling Bard, minstrel and Padres fan Steve Poltz wrote a song to honor Tony Gwynn.  You just knew it was only a matter of time before the prolific songwriter would pen a tune for the man we all loved.

Song for Tony - San Diego, California News Station - KFMB Channel 8 - cbs8.com

"He brought so much joy to my life, watching him play and he would get those hits and drive in those runs," he said.

So when he saw his baseball idol slighted at this year's All-Star Game, Steve did what he does.

"I thought it would be fun to sing a song for Tony, I loved him so much," he said.

I just saw Mickey Koke tweet a fantastic live rendition. I transcribed the lyrics the best that I could, below.

Chorus:
Hey, hey number 19!
Standing in right field, grass of green
When you played that game, you played to win
I'm talkin' about Tony Gwynn
Yeah, I'm talkin' about Tony Gwynn

Chorus

I could give you a thousand reasons
He played for the Padres for 20 seasons
When he stepped to the plate, he had no fear
Won 8 batting titles in his career

Chorus

He lived to play the beautiful game
My life will never be the same
He hit the 5.5 hole with the perfect slap
And the ball would fly right into Jack Murphy's gap

Chorus

They retired his number in 2004
He was Mr. Padre right down to his core.
In 1994 we all fell to the floor
He all almost hit .400 man!
it was .394

[Spoken] Now batting playing in right field number 19 Tony Gwynn

Chorus x 2

God bless you Tony Gwynn
We're going to miss you Tony Gwynn

In the version he performed for CBS 8 (linked above) he played a slightly different version of the third verse:

Alternate Verse:

Five silver sluggers and five gold gloves
We jumped to our feet when the announcer spoke his name
In 1994 we fell to the floor
When his batting average swelled to .394

I can't wait for the official version.

Stults looks to redeem himself against Braves

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Th last time Eric Stults took the mound against the Braves, he didn't fare so well.  That was less than a week ago, his most recent start, when our Padres traveled to Atlanta for a series at Turner Field. Stults surrendered six runs through six innings of work, resulting in his NL-worst 13th loss of the season. Prior to that, however, he had gone 2-1 with a 1.93 ERA in his three previous appearances against the Braves. Stults has had a rough season, to put it lightly, and doesn't seem long for the Padres rotation. He'll get another chance against the Braves tonight, but with Cashner's return impending, this is looking like one of his last starts. (At least most of us hope so.)

Tonight's contest will be a complete rematch of last week's with Mike Minor once again taking the mound opposite Stults. Minor allowed three runs on eight hits, lasting 6 2/3 innings against the Friars in that last start. He hasn't had the best season for the Braves either, posting a 5.23 ERA with a 4-6 record in 16 starts.

Tune in at 7:10 PT to see how our Padres look to kick off the month of August.

And don't forget to check out today's SB Nation Fantasy Baseball league on FanDuel. It's $2 to join and first prize is $2,000. There's also an MLB Squeeze (Late Night) league with a first prize of $1,200 if you miss the first one. You can join at this link.

Padres 10, Braves 1: Medica Leads Surging Offense

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Eric Stults tossed a gem tonight, giving up just a single unearned run on 2 hits and 4 walks in 6.1 innings. And thus ends what needs to be said about the lefty tonight, because he could have completely imploded tonight and still won, thanks to an incredible 20-hit game. Tommy Medica led the way, going 5-for-5 with a pair of home runs, including a 438-foot monster shot to left field in the bottom of the third inning. Of course, it wasn't just the rookie dreamboat getting us all hot and bothered. Everth Cabrera went 4-for-5 and Chris Nelson went 3-for-5. That's a dozen hits from just a third of the lineup. Every single spot in the lineup had at least one hit. Even Jeff Francoeur got in on the action, hitting the bloopiest bloop to have ever blooped in the second inning. There's really no way to do this game justice with words. If you were unfortunate enough to miss it, do yourself a favor and watch the highlights.

Ian Kennedy takes the mound tomorrow at 5:40 PM. It's Scripps Hospital night at the ballpark, so if you're going, be prepared for a huge crowd.

Roll Call Info
Total comments90
Total commenters11
Commenter listB Cres, CurbEnthusiasm, Dex, Friar Fever, Hormel, OtherLisa, Sam (sdsuaztec4), abara, ariz2cali, jodes0405, podpeople
Story URLs

FriarFever edged out abara by 2 comments, with Jodes once again topping the recs at 3.

IPK gets back on the mound looking to extend win streak

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Something has gotten into our Padres lately, and it is wonderful. They've scored more than any team in the National League since the All-Star Break, averaging 5.1 runs per game in that span. Tonight they'll try to lock up the series against the Braves, which they were unable to do last week in Atlanta when they dropped the final three of the four-game set.

Ian Kennedy was scratched from his latest scheduled start due to a sore oblique, but will be back in business tonight, making his first appearance wince July 23rd. It's good news for the Friars having Kennedy back on the mound considering the success he's seen lately. Prior to his missed start last week, Kennedy put together a 3-0 July record with a 2.53 ERA in five starts during the month. And he's been especially effective at home, going 30 in his last five at Petco Park.

A lot of Kennedy's success has had to do with an increased amount of run support from the Padres offense. Through those last five home outings, Kennedy has gotten over five runs of support on average, a stark contrast to the 2.21 run support average he received through his first six home starts this season while going 0-5. The team has gone 10-4 at home since June 29th and has batted an improved .282 at Petco Park in that stretch. Last night's 20 hits was the most by the team since 2012, with each spot in the lineup producing at least one base knock. They'll try to keep the hot streak going tonight against Ervin Santana.

That might be a tall order, however, if the Padres perform like they did last week against Santana. He kept them to only five hits through eight innings of work while matching a career-high 11 strikeouts. That was both his third straight win overall this season and his second straight win against the Padres in his career, whom he's kept to a .197 batting average. Tonight he's tasked with getting the Braves the first win of their road trip, after having been swept by the Dodgers and then losing last night's series opener. They're also riding a five-game losing-streak overall at Petco Park, which Kennedy and co. will try to extend to six tonight.

See if they can keep the runs coming in game 2, which kicks off at 5:40 PT.

Padres 3, Braves 2: Will Walks Off

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Well, that game was a marathon. Thirteen pitchers took the mound over four and a half hours.

Ian Kennedy had a weird night. He only allowed a pair of hits while striking out seven, but he also walked five in his five innings toeing the rubber. That very first walk was what got him into trouble. IPK served it up to B.J. Upton to start the game. A ground out by Tommy La Stella moved Upton to second, and Freddie Freeman got the first of those two hits to bring the run home. After that, it was shutdown city for Ian. He was still on the hook for the loss though, with Ervin Santana shutting down the Padres through six.

It was that seventh inning that got to Santana. Rene Rivera led off with a single, and moved into scoring position on a sacrifice bunt by Alexi Amarista. A ground out from Everth Cabrera got him to third, but with two outs, it wasn't looking good. Enter Yangervis Solarte, who roped a single to left to tie things up. Solarte got to third himself on a single from Seth Smith. After Jedd Gyorko walked to load the bases, Santana got yanked in favor of Jordan Walden. That didn't work out so well for the Braves, with Solarte scoring on a wild pitch.

The lead didn't last long. Kevin Quackenbush issued a one-out single to Jason Heyward. Heyward went to second on a wild pitch, and then scored on a single by Chris Johnson. The game would stay tied at two until the twelfth inning. There were certainly some close calls in the meantime. Dale Thayer had some trouble in the tenth, giving up a leadoff double to Heyward. He managed to escape unscathed by retiring the next three batters, including a huge strikeout. Tim Stauffer nearly lost the game in the twelfth, loading the bases with nobody out. A textbook double play caught the runners at home and first, and a ground out wrapped things up.

Solarte walked to start the bottom of the inning and reached second a wild pitch. Gyorko walked, and then Chris Nelson did the same. That brought Will Venable to the plate. A line drive over Heyward's head ended the game and gave the Padres their second series win in a row.

Tyson Ross will take on former Padre Aaron Harang at 1:10 PM tomorrow. Get your brooms ready, folks!

Roll Call Info
Total comments238
Total commenters11
Commenter listDarklighter, Friar Fever, Hormel, Jay Stokes, Sam (sdsuaztec4), TheThinGwynn, ZagaZags, abara, floop, podpeople, raw_toast
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FriarFever led the comments and recs, with 67 and 10, respectively.

Padres go for the sweep behind Ross

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For the second time in a row, our Padres find themselves on the verge of a sweep. This afternoon they will wrap up the series against the Braves, and they'll look to their All Star to lead them to victory.

Tyson Ross had a fantastic July, going 4-2 with a 1.10 ERA through six starts, the second best mark in the National League over that span. He comes into today's matchup having won three straight starts (a career best) and he looks to extend that streak even further in his first career start against Atlanta. He struggled with his control a bit his last time out, issuing five walks in his first three innings against the Cardinals. But he did eventually settle down, allowing only one run and earning himself the win.

For the finale the Braves will counter with former Friar Aaron Harang, who also had some trouble in his latest outing. He surrendered four runs on nine hits in a six-inning effort against the Dodgers last Tuesday. But other than that, Harang has been a pleasant surprise for Atlanta. This season he's allowed two runs or fewer in 14 of his 22 starts, going 9-6 overall with a 3.43 ERA. The 36-year-old has gone seven straight starts without a loss, and facing the Padres may be exactly what he needs to bounce back from his shaky appearance against the Dodgers. In his last five starts against his former team, Harang is 3-0 with a 1.35 ERA.

Catch the finale this afternoon at 1:10 PT and cheer on our boys to a sweep.


Padres 4, Braves 3: Chop. Stopped.

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Sweep!

This was a weird game, full of instant replays, mishandled balls, extra innings, odd double plays, and even a rundown, but our boys emerged victorious to complete a sweep of the Braves. They went 5-1 on this homestand, scoring 33 runs while allowing only 14. Great pitching has been essential to that success, and Tyson Ross's performance today was no exception. He went 6 innings, allowing only 2 runs on 5 hits and 2 walks while striking out 7.

The Padres struck first, with Will Venable hitting a leadoff single in the second. A one-out grounder put him in scoring position with two away. It also brought Tyson Ross to the plate. Tyson isn't exactly the greatest hitting pitcher in the world, but he managed to squeak a single up the middle to score Venable. Will led off again in the fourth, this time drawing a walk. He went to third on a single by Alexi Amarista, and that's when the weirdness started. The little ninja tried to take second on the throw, and his slide came up a little short. On review, it turned out that Lexi had dodged the tag not once, but twice, and then there were two Friars in scoring position with nobody out. Venable got caught in a rundown on a grounder from Rene Rivera, but managed to stall long enough for Rene to make it to second. Ross drew a walk to load things up, and a sacrifice fly by Everth Cabrera brought home a run.

Ross held down that 2-0 lead through the sixth inning, but ran into a mess of trouble in the seventh. A leadoff four pitch walk to Justin Upton turned into a run when Jason Heyward hit a triple to right field. Evan Gattis brought home Heyward with a double to center to tie things up. With nobody out and the go-ahead run in scoring position, Nick Vincent took over. He gave up a double to Chris Johnson, but Gattis read it poorly and only made it as far as third. A walk to Ramiro Pena loaded the bases, and there was still nobody out. Vincent finally fixed that problem by striking out Emilio Bonifacio. And then the baseball gods, in their infinite mercy, got B.J. Upton to ground into a double play.

Things got really weird in the top of the eighth. Tommy La Stella hit a leadoff single. Freddie Freeman followed up with a grounder to shortstop. It should have been a textbook double play, but Amarista dropped the ball on the transfer, and La Stella was called safe. Bud Black came out to ask for a review, and the call was overturned. The exact same play repeated itself in the next at-bat, but the second base umpire called an out at second, bringing Fredi Gonzalez out to challenge. This time, the call on the field was upheld. Justin Upton then foolishly tried to take second, but Rivera gunned him down.

Tommy Medica (he's so dreamy) led off the bottom of the eighth, and he did it with style. A laser of a home run put the Padres on top and gave Joaquin Benoit his first save opportunity in San Diego. It didn't go well. Heyward hit a leadoff double. A routine grounder to the pitcher of the bat of Gattis turned into disaster when Benoit tried to catch Heyward at third. An error on the play sent him home and tied the game again. He retired the next three batters, but the damage was done.

The bottom of the ninth started out with some promise. Yonder Alonso led off with a pinch hit single. A sacrifice bunt moved him into scoring position. Yangervis popped out, and things got tense again. Juan Jaime threw 8 balls in a row to load the bases and bring up Jedd Gyorko. Three more balls and it looked like we might see a walkoff walk, but Jaime battled his way to a full count before getting Jedd to ground out. Bonus baseball!

With both bullpens worn down by yesterday's marathon, the Padres turned to Tim Stauffer, who cruised through the tenth easily. David Hale took the mound for the Braves. That seemed good for the Friars, since they hammered him on Friday night. Venable hit another leadoff single, and Amarista drew a walk to put him in scoring position. Rivera came to the plate to bunt the runners over. Instead, he popped up the bunt, leading to a double play catching the runners at first and third. Chris Nelson drew a walk to keep hope alive. That brought up Cabrera. Amarista and Nelson put together a double steal to make his job easier, and he hit a grounder right up the middle to wrap up the sweep.

Our boys get a much-needed off day tomorrow, and Jesse Hahn will take the mound in Minnesota on Tuesday. First pitch at 5:10 PM.

Roll Call Info
Total comments285
Total commenters16
Commenter listC Callahan, Darklighter, EnglishChris, Hormel, OtherLisa, SDCole24, TheThinGwynn, abara, ariz2cali, daveysapien, jodes0405, overkill94DT, podpeople, raw_toast, usupadres, walkoff59
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Podpeople led with 58 comments. TheThinGwynn dominated the quality game, with a whopping 27 recs.

Braves lose 4-3, drop sixth straight

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Things somehow keep getting worse

On the tv show The Wire, Steve Earle's character describes how a drug addict cannot begin to recover until he hits his bottom. The big problem as Earle describes it, is for many addicts the bottom keeps dropping further and further beyond where they thought it could drop. That is what watching the Braves feels like right now. A team that seems to hit rock bottom but then nope, the bottom drops even further. On Sunday afternoon the Braves lost their sixth straight game 4-3 to the Padres in ten innings, finding brand new ways to frustrate Braves fans.

The game started off poorly with Aaron Harang doing his usual getting in trouble constantly but limiting the damage routine. Harang allowed two baserunners in the 1st inning but no runs. Harang wasn't so lucky in the second inning as a single by Will Venable lead off the inning. Venable reached second on a ground out and came around to score on a single by Padres pitcher Tyson Ross. The Padres were up 1-0 because Harang allowed a hit to the Padres pitcher.

The Padres doubled their lead in the bottom of the 4th inning. Venable reached base on a walk and reached third base on a single to right field by Alexi Amarista. Amarista reached second on Heyward's throw that was cut off by Ramiro Pena. Pena actually threw back to second and Amarista was initially called out but on review the call was changed to safe. Everth Cabrera would knock in the Padres second run of a sac fly and it was 2-0 after four.

Harang managed to go six innings in typical Harang fashion. Harang walked four batters, only struck out three, and allowed five hits but that only resulted in two runs. Harang wasn't sharp and was frustrating but he gave the Braves a chance to win.

The Braves finally looked to make the game competitive in the top of the 7th. Justin Upton lead off the inning with a walk and scored on a Jason Heyward triple. Evan Gattis then doubled to tie the game at two but after the double things got ridiculous for Atlanta. Chris Johnson smacked a double off the wall but Gattis Lonnie Smith'd himself and only reached third base. Gattis misread the ball completely and cut back to second as if it were going to be caught. However, the Braves were still in business with runners at 2nd and 3rd with no outs.

Ramiro Pena walked to load the bases and it seemed almost impossible that the Braves wouldn't take the lead. Emilio Bonifacio was rung up looking at a ball off the plate for the first out. BJ Upton then came up because he is the team's leadoff hitter and grounded into an inning-ending double play. The Braves scored two runs to tie the game but blew a major opportunity to take the lead.

The Padres took the lead back in the bottom of the 8th inning when Superstar Tommy Medica homered off Anthony Varvaro to give the Padres a 3-2 lead. Medica is 13-27 against the Braves this year and has been inexplicably dominant against the team with the tomahawk across their chest.

The Braves offense rose to the occasion in the top of the ninth to tie the game thanks to some poor defense by the Padres. Jason Heyward continued his good run with a double to lead off the inning. Gattis hit a weak grounder to the pitcher who foolishly tried to get Heyward at third. The throw was late anyway but it got past the third baseman and Heyward was able to score to tie the game at 3-3.

The Padres somehow wasted a prime opportunity to win the game in the bottom of the 9th inning. A Yonder Alonso single and two walks issued by Juan Jaime loaded the bases with two outs. At one point Jaime threw 11 consecutive balls, including four straight to a batter trying to sac bunt. The 11 balls were aided by a poor strike zone by the umpire who suddenly seemed eager to go home. With the bases loaded Jaime got behind 3-0 to Jedd Gyorko and one more ball would have ended the game. Jaime managed to battle back with two strikes and then got Gyorko to ground out to end the inning.

The Braves did nothing in their top of the 10th and the Padres mercifully ended the game in the bottom of the inning. Venable and Amarista reached via a single and walk respectively. Rene Rivera tried to bunt the runners over but popped the ball up. David Hale just missed catching the ball but it worked out because he was able to throw to third for one out and Johnson threw back to first for the second out as Rivera wasn't running until he saw the ball drop. Hale had a chance to escape the inning but a Cabrera single brought Amarista home to give the Padres the 4-3 win. The Braves have lost six straight and are five games behind the Nationals in the loss column.

Prospect Note: Tommy Medica, 1B-OF, San Diego Padres

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San Diego Padres rookie Tommy Medica provided some thunder this past weekend, hitting two homers Friday night then adding a single and double on Saturday. Through 63 games for the Padres he's hitting .279/.321/.474 with six homers, nine walks, 46 strikeouts in 154 at-bats for a wRC+ of 126. Medica didn't get much attention outside of Padres circles entering the season, although he was the recipient of the 2014 Josh Willingham This Guy Can F**king Hit Award, which I give in my book every year to a guy who can hit but who doesn't rank highly on prospect lists for one reason or another, oftentimes defense or age.

He didn't exactly come out of nowhere. Medica was a successful college hitter at Santa Clara. He hit .342/.408/.509 with good reviews for his defense behind the plate in 2008, but a severe shoulder injury cost him most of 2009 and made his future as a catcher quite doubtful. He returned to hit .386/.464/.667 with 13 homers and 15 steals in 2010, but was used mainly as an outfielder. This was enough to get him drafted in the 14th round. This had to be disappointing for him because he was seen as a possible second round pick before the injury, but at least he got drafted.

He split '11 between Low-A Fort Wayne (.268/.366/.465, wRC+139 in 44 games) and High-A Lake Elsinore (.302/.440/.504, wRC+144 in 42 games), showing power and good strike zone judgment at both levels, used primarily as a first baseman. More injuries limited him to 93 games for Lake Elsinore in 2012, but he was extremely productive in those 93 games, hitting .330/.406/.623 with 19 homers, wRC+161.

Despite his outstanding hitting record in A-ball, he was left off most prospect lists entering 2013 due to his age (25 in April), history of injuries, and questionable position. He got hurt again in 2013, limited to 76 games for Double-A San Antonio with a strained lat, but he continued to rip the ball, hitting .296/.372/.582 with 18 homers, wRC+165. He continued to hit well during a major league trial late last year (.290/.380/.449 in 69 at-bats). The main red flag in the majors thus far is his BB/K/PA ratio, which is unattractive at 19/69 in 244 PA.

Medica is a 6-1, 190 pound right-handed hitter and thrower, born April 9, 1988. He can pull the ball for power but isn't a strictly pull type and will drive the ball the opposite way on occasion. His swing was critiqued as being too long when he was younger and scouts weren't sure it would work against advanced pitching, but so far he's done fine. He lost nothing when he reached Double-A and has remained productive against major league pitching.

The former backstop is solid enough as a first base defender, although his lack of speed is a problem in the outfield. He hasn't seen any catching time since 2012 although I suppose you could use him there in an emergency.

In 162-game notation, we see a line of .283/.340/.466, 131 OPS+, 130 wRC+, with 20 doubles, 18 homers, 38 walks, and 136 strikeouts in 482 plate appearances. That's not out of line with his minor league numbers, although definitely on the upper edges of expectation. Pre-season projection systems see him as somewhere between a .225/.293/.408 hitter (most pessimistic, Oliver) to .256/.326/.456 (most optimistic, weighted mean PECOTA).

I think many of the pre-season projections were too pessimistic; I think the mean PECOTA is about right, I see him as a .260/.330/.450 hitter in the long haul, not outstanding but useful power in the current major league context. Medica is a little over his head right now but not terribly so; there's enough bat here for him to be a productive player. He's another sleeper type that I root for; I respect guys who work there way back from tough injuries.

Editor's Note: SB Nation's partner FanDuel is hosting a one-day $18,000 Fantasy Baseball league for tonight's MLB games. It's $2 to join and first prize is $2,000. Jump in now. Here's the FanDuel link.

Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 8/5/14

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Pinstripe Pundits | Derek Albin:Adam Warren has taken a major step back from the time he was considered to be a shutdown reliever earlier in the season.

Fangraphs | Jeff Sullivan:Dellin Betances and Brandon McCarthy invoked some of the worst swings of the week.

CBS Sports | Jon Heyman: Yankees assistant general manager Billy Eppler is reportedly the favorite to land the Padres' open GM job.

SB Nation | James Dator: Here are some maps showing that the Yankees are the most hated team in the US, Canada, and the entire world.

The Record | Bob Klapisch: As impressive as it is to see Dellin Betances hit 100 mph, he also needs to be careful.

ESPN New York | Wallace Matthews: New additions to the team like Chase Headley, Martin Prado, and Stephen Drew seem to have revitalized the Yankees.

NJ.com | Brendan Kuty: Esmil Rogers is ready to replace David Phelps in the rotation if he gets the opportunity.

CBS Houston | Brett Dolan: Ex-Yankees farmhand Neil Medchill is willing to give up his career to donate bone marrow to a stranger.

Newsday | David Lennon: With David Phelps now on the disabled list, the Yankees could use a healthy Michael Pineda.

Pinstripe Pundits | Chris Mitchell: A look at how some of the Yankees' lesser prospects, like Miguel Andujar and Jose Ramirez, have done over the last month.

NoMaas | SJK: With this year's power surge, Brett Gardner is only now getting the recognition he has deserved for years.

CBS Sports | Mike Axisa: Check out this recently discovered footage of Babe Ruth playing baseball.


A bigger and better Padres Hall of Fame

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Now that the Padres are bringing back their Hall of Fame, who should get consideration going forward?

In case you missed it this past Friday, Tom Krasovic announced via "The" Twitter that the Padres Hall of Fame is finally rising from the dead.

Here's what I gathered from his tweets: the top secret voting committee was assembled in one day, they all got matching tattoos and gathered together in one room, looked at each other and agreed that it was strange that one of the Padres all-time greats, Trevor Hoffman, had his number retired but wasn't in the Padres Hall of Fame. Nodded in approval at each other and then went and got a pizza and a few beers.

Yesterday the Padres made it official:

From the Press Release:

The San Diego Padres Hall of Fame committee, comprised of members of the local sports media and San Diego Padres front office, voted unanimously to induct Hoffman, who retired in January 2011, following a playing career that spanned 18 seasons, including parts of 16 years with San Diego.

In case you didn't know, I'm a huge Padres history nerd and have been pleading for the Padres Hall of Fame to return for years and years now. In fact the Padres have been one of the worst teams at honoring their past in all of baseball. Before we get to the topic at hand, here's a quick refresher as to who is already enshrined.

1999 - Nate Colbert, Randy Jones & Ray Kroc
2000 - Dave Winfield
2001 - Buzzie Bavasi & Jerry Coleman
2002 - Tony Gwynn
2009 - Dick Williams
2014 - Trevor Hoffman

Yes Randy Jones was inducted in 1999. Not 2002 like the Padres website suggests.

Screen_shot_2014-08-05_at_9.40.34_am_medium

We do know that the committee is comprised of both local sports media and the Padres front office. My guess is Bill Center and Randy Jones are in the group, along with Krasovic. Judging by the tweets Nick Canepa is not. There are currently no known guidelines as to how they vote for players, nor is there any word on what being in the Padres Hall of Fame entails. Will there be something besides a dusty locker space in the Hall of Fame Bar and Grill? I'd propose working out something with the Hall of Champions if they can't find proper accommodations at Petco Park.

So for my first order of business here at Gaslamp Ball I will start a series where I state a case for past Padres who I think are worthy. For my selection process, I will use the method similar to what the Cincinnati Reds use for their Hall of Fame, which I think is one of the best, if not the best, in all of baseball.

1. Had to have played for the team for 3 seasons.

2. Played his last game 3 seasons ago.

3. Stats, Awards & Accomplishments and Fan Adoration will all be taken into account.

There will be 5 parts to this series and it will be broken up as so:
1. 1969-1979
2. 1980-1989
3. 1990-1999
4. 2000-2009
5. 2010-2011

Each part I'll include the people who I think are worthy from that time frame. In addition to that, I'll choose a group of players who were on the bubble for one reason or another and have a fan vote for one more player. Reader participation!

I hope you enjoy the series and possibly even learn something along the way.

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