Showing posts with label ST. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ST. Show all posts

Saturday, February 26, 2011

baseball ... on the radio ... tomorrow!

Sure, it's only the annual charity game vs. the Padres ... 
but it's a real, live baseball game we can actually listen to!

And then, the realization sets in that a voice will be missing ...

from Shannon's blog

No lineup yet, but Erik Bedard will take the mound...
How's THAT for exciting?!?  Other pitchers slated to see action:  Luke French, Manny Delcarmen, Denny Bautista, Justin Miller, Cesar Jimenez, Yusmerio Petit and Chris Smith

Other news and notes...

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Tomorrow, there is a baseball game!!!

OK, it's only intra-squad, but it's still baseball!

with two 22-year-olds taking the mound...

Pineada vs. Beaven


And, several countdowns have commenced...
  • Charity game w/ Padres = this Sunday
  • First Spring Training game = Tuesday, March 1st
  • My trip to Arizona = Wednesday, March 16th
  • Opening Day @ Athletics = Friday, April 1st  
  • Home Opener vs. Indians = Friday, April 8th 
Some news and notes from AZ...


Charlie Riedel / AP





Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Unique mini-camps begin in Peoria

In an article today, Kirby Arnold explains why the M's are serious about player development. Armed with detailed evaluations from last season and information from in-home scout visits this winter, 24 Mariner coaches will work under the direction of Minor League Director Pedro Grifol and performance enhancement expert (those p.e. words are always a bit scary ;-) Dr. Marcus Elliott to present a new strength and conditioning program to 41 top Mariner prospects over the next month. It sounds very individualized with lots of emphasis on player accountability.
“If we’re going to be a really, really good organization, our best players should come through our system,” Zduriencik said. “The core of our team should be guys we’re building, developing and training ourselves. This is a step in that direction.”

Friday, February 27, 2009

Spring ~ time for mental growth as much as physical readiness


Wakumatsu gives Mariners hitters chance to grow | HeraldNet
In these early games of spring training, Wakamatsu is letting the hitters choose their approach at the plate, right or wrong. It's part of the mental growth he and the coaching staff are hoping the Mariners will experience before the regular season begins.

"Say you're leading off an inning and there's a 3-0 count," Wakamatsu said. "In spring, I want to see their decision-making process rather than just giving them the take sign. When you're trying to control their thought process, they don't grow as much."

Whether it's hitting, baserunning or defense, Wakamatsu and his staff are taking the mistakes they see in the games and working the next day on drills designed to prevent them from happening again.

"We're going to attack them as soon as they come off the field, then we're going to design drills the next day to eliminate some of those things," he said.

Baserunning will get some attention during today's workout after the Mariners had five more runners thrown out on the bases during Thursday's 4-4 tie with the Padres.

Reegie Corona was picked off first base twice, Jeff Clement was thrown out at home by a wide margin after third-base coach Bruce Hines sent him and Mike Morse was thrown out at third base after he'd tried to stretch a two-out RBI double in the fifth.

The biggie was Callix Crabbe, who tried to score from second base on Rob Johnson's high-chop infield single.

"With baserunning being such a huge emphasis, we're going to try and simulate those situations in drills," Wakamatsu said. "Rather than just talk about them, we're going to talk about them and execute some drills."

Two pitchers = minus 63 pounds


Carlos Silva reports to camp 30 lbs. lighter | Seattle Times

The four-year, $48 million deal given Silva about 14 months ago remains one of the most criticized of any move by the previous regime of general manager Bill Bavasi. Silva jumped out to a quick start, going 3-0 with a 2.79 ERA in April, then managed a lone victory the rest of the way.

Though some of Silva's misfortune was due to poor fielding behind him, his weight came under increased scrutiny as the season wore on. By the time it was done, Silva, often the target of fan scorn, was ready to try anything.

"I knew as soon as they signed me here that they had very big expectations," said Silva, who arrived with the rest of the team's pitchers and catchers at the Peoria Sports Complex on Friday to take a physical ahead of today's scheduled on-field workout. "I didn't cover those expectations at all. But as soon as the season ended, I went back home and the only thing I had on my mind is what I've got to do."

What the Mariners made him do was stop eating so much and get himself into the yoga class. They wanted to see more flexibility and core strength out of a pitcher whose back could barely make it through last season's second half.

"I feel great," Silva said of his increased strength and flexibility. "It's easier to work out because I'm not as heavy as before."

And now, the team hopes Silva is poised for a rebound on the mound.

"He looks like somebody cut him in half," Mariners manager Don Wakamatsu exclaimed. "He's in good shape. He looks great."

:::

More advanced pitching metrics seem to suggest that his fielders were largely to blame for his bloated ERA in 2008.

The Fielding Independent Pitching (FIP) stat showed him at 4.63 compared to the 6.46 ERA. While an ERA of 4.63 is still not what the Mariners wanted for $12 million per season, it would have been far preferable to the Jeff Weaver-like number Silva finished with.

Silva also stranded fewer runners last year than he had in previous seasons with better defenders behind him.

That seems to suggest that with better defense — something Wakamatsu and new general manager Jack Zduriencik have made paramount to their overall strategy — Silva's numbers are poised for a rebound even if he stays the same. But Silva feels he has to make big mound improvements, something that, if successful, could cut him slack with a skeptical fan base.

Messenger sharpens focus | Seattle PI
Randy Messenger only looks like a new man. Absent 35 pounds and the facial hair he sported when he pitched for the Mariners late last season, the right-hander feels like one, too.

"It feels better just waking up in the morning," he said. "I used to hit the snooze five or six times, and now I'm just hitting it once just to get my marbles working.

"At the end of the season, they wanted me to come in at a certain weight. I just took it a lot further."

Although the current coaching staff didn't know the 6-foot-8 Messenger last season, when he weighed a robust 284 pounds, tales of his dedication, and his performance thus far in camp, have their attention.

"Him coming in in great shape and the sacrifice he made over the winter brings into our discussions how motivated he is to make this club," manager Don Wakamatsu said. "That's the kind of stuff we're looking for."

Messenger, 27, who spent his early career in the Florida Marlins organization, was signed by the Mariners in July after his release by San Francisco's Triple-A affiliate. On Aug. 25 he was called up to Seattle, where he held opponents scoreless in 10 of 13 relief appearances.

The Mariners released him in January, making room on the 40-man roster after the trade with the Cubs that brought in Garrett Olson and Ronny Cedeno. Two days later, the Mariners re-signed Messenger to a minor league deal.

Shortly before his call-up last fall, Messenger's wife, Vanessa, gave birth to the couple's first child, daughter Francesa. He said fatherhood was a major factor in his offseason turnaround.

"It's a health thing," he said. "I want to make sure I'm around a long time for my daughter. I just realized I wanted to get my butt in shape.

"The only thing that was hard was that first month, trying to eat right. Once I got that down, it became natural. I didn't have any cravings anymore."