Elliott founded Peak Performance Project, a program based in Santa Barbara, Calif., that develops specialized workout programs for athletes. He has worked with athletes ranging from Olympians to the New England Patriots and Utah Jazz, and Mariners are the first major league organization to use his system.The program, in basic terms, gets away from the heavy lifting that’s been prevalent in baseball and uses body-weight movements to develop strength, particularly in the core muscles and legs.Players perform such exercises as box jumps and skater jumps, activities designed to develop the horizontal explosiveness a hitter needs with his legs. In the spring training facility — and soon to be installed at Safeco Field — is a compressed air-driven pulley system that helps strengthen the muscles vital in the rotational movements that are so important in baseball. That machine measures a player’s development in watts, not weight.
Navigating the seas of Mariner fandom
via a most buoyant direction and optimistic hue-point
Friday, February 26, 2010
Wait... no weights?
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
More love and pub for our own Jackie Z
Sports Illustrated has a big story coming out in this week's editions singing the praises of Seattle Mariners general manager Jack Zduriencik and the franchise's commitment to building a winner through defensive measures.
Titled "Feel the Glove," the five-page story by Albert Chen talks glowingly about the Mariners' willingness to take a different approach and ability to find the right players for that system since Zduriencik took over a year ago.
The main photo showing a leaping Chone Figgins was shot by local sports photographer Rod Mar.
Chen notes that the Mariners were last in the American League in runs scored and near the bottom in nearly every offensive statistic, yet improved by 24 wins last year in getting to 85-77.
Chen notes that no team in the history of the AL had scored so few runs and won as many games.
"Seattle is a team straight out of a different era, with defense as its backbone," Chen writes.
The story details how the Mariners uncovered Franklin Gutierrez as a key element and then watched in amazement as he blossomed in center field last season. It talks about this year's additions and how Zduriencik has blended Billy Beane's Moneyball theories with his own deep history in scouting.
Feel the Glove
OBP? Sooo 2003. This winter baseball's smart guys—most
notably the ones running the Mariners—turned run prevention into the Next Big
Thing....
Monday, February 22, 2010
Tools of Ignorance? .... not!
"I love catching him, but it's very difficult," Johnson said. "Felix doesn't throw a pitch straight. Ever. You just never know what it's going to do, but it was an honor catching someone of that stature."
"He's very smart and we just seem to think alike," Hernandez said. "Every time he calls for a certain pitch, I am thinking the same thing. I almost never shake him off."
Friday, February 19, 2010
The simultaneous encore and finale begin...
To new third baseman Chone Figgins: “You looked a lot bigger in red.” To center fielder Franklin Gutierrez, who signed a four-year, $20.25 million contract over the winter: “I’ll be getting some of your money now that you got that big contract.” Griffey is the judge of the team’s kangaroo court. Pointing to new pitcher Cliff Lee: “I’m going to throw bunting practice to pitchers this year. That guy might get one behind his back.” Six years ago, Lee was suspended for six games after throwing a pitch behind Griffey during an interleague game between the Cleveland Indians and Cincinnati Reds.
“It got a lot louder in there,” manager Don Wakamatsu said. “It’s amazing how one guy can change the karma of a room.”
Ready and rarin'...
"I saw such growth last year, and he's just continuing that, obviously," Wakamatsu said. "What we have to watch for is this guy signed an awfully big contract and how he's going to handle that in the right way. And so far, we're just trying to explain to him that he needs to be the same guy. And that's difficult for professional athletes sometimes because they want to put a lot of responsibility on themselves, but he doesn't need to."
:::
"You'll see a guy that over a period of time, the leadership abilities will come out even more," Rick Adair said. "There's a lot in Felix. You see the passion. You see the personality, the intensity. That's not false bravado. It's real because his work ethic and preparation is getting better and there's passion within that."
"They let me go last year,” Hernandez said. “I did what I thought I could always do, pitch deep into games, throw a lot of innings. They gave me the opportunity.”
Thursday, February 18, 2010
They have reported...
“I visited with the staff yesterday and I told them there’s so many things we have to find out,” Wakamatsu said Wednesday. “Do we go with an 11-man pitching staff? If we’re going to go with an 11-man staff, who are the long-man candidates? With the lack of roster spots, are we going to be able to see everybody and give everybody a legitimate shot? There’s all kinds of stuff we have to find out in the spring.”
“I have expectations. I have optimism. I trust our players. I trust the staff,” Zduriencik said. “And I know from my experiences from watching them last year that I know the kind of effort that they’re going to give. It is about a four-letter word called TEAM. It’s that simple. From that standpoint, they experienced what that means and what can be accomplished. Knowing that you do the things you have to do on a day-to-day basis, and when you left Seattle a year ago you were a part of that parade that went around the field. Many of these guys want to experience that again, and beyond.
“It’s going to be fun to watch them compete. Where it takes us, it’s going to depend on the outcomes, but the journey is fun.”
“People say that when I get older it’ll look bad,” he said. “But when I’m 60, women won’t be interested in me anyway.”
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
PECOTA guesses, but the REAL work begins...
Saturday, February 13, 2010
"He likes it! Hey Mikey!"
“Last year was the most enjoyable year of my career,” Sweeney said on conference call from his home in San Diego. “Ever since I carried Ken Griffey Jr. off the field on my shoulders the last day of the season, I wanted to be back as a Seattle Mariner.”“They’ve made it clear to me that it’s going to be an uphill battle to make the team,” Sweeney said.
“I like to think of myself as a fighter,” Sweeney said. “And come April 1 if I’m not coming north it may be a bitter pill to swallow, but at least I can live my life in freedom knowing that I played the game the right way, I played it hard. I definitely won’t have any regrets, nor will I wonder ‘what if.”’
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Eight days until P.A.C.R.
Friday, February 05, 2010
Here's hoping this isn't like the SI curse....
No need for arb .... yes to Bedard?
Free-agent pitcher Erik Bedard confirmed to a Canadian newspaper that he has agreed to terms with the Mariners on a one-year contract for 2010.
Bedard, who turns 31 on March 5, was in Seattle undergoing a physical examination on Friday. The Mariners' medical staff was believed to be still evaluating test results on Friday, but an announcement of the deal could come as soon as Saturday, barring unforeseen issues.
According to Le Droit, a Canadian French-language newspaper in Ottawa — Bedard is from Navan, Ontario — the left-hander said he accepted a one-year deal with a base salary of $1.5 million. He can earn considerably more with incentives, likely based on how much he pitches and time spent on the active roster.
The paper quoted Bedard saying he "hopefully" could make "roughly the same" as the $7.5 million he earned last year if he hit all his incentives.
"I am truly happy. It was my first choice to return to Seattle," he told the newspaper in French. "I think the team will be really good this season. I very much like the direction the team is going."
Wednesday, February 03, 2010
Chemistry ~ it's not just for players
Tuesday, February 02, 2010
Unique mini-camps begin in Peoria
“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.”
uh-oh, Spaghetti-Os!
“I was surprised when Cliff was traded, and I’m excited to play with him again. He’s the best,“ Garko said. “Franklin and I came up together and broke into the big leagues together. I’m really proud of him. He’s big-time now.”