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AUHR*T&@H)*&@!)!!!!!!

Orioles 6, Blue Jays 5.

Gruesome, like the one before, and the two three before the one before. But for some reason, now that the initial shock has worn off, I'm having no difficulty at all maintaining my happy face. Not sure why. Might just be that I feel kind of detached from this year's team, even though I know they're pretty good. It gets tiresome after a while, watching helplessly as JP's expertly built pitching-and-defense juggernaut hits its stride and then he does his damnedest to cancel all his hard work out by means of Shannon Stewart.

Or maybe it's that last night's loss actually was largely attributable to the most glaring holes in the team. In June, if you've gotta lose, that's how you want to do it, right? At least it helps keep you from kidding yourself. Stewart contributed his third straight oh-fer in the leadoff spot, this one an 0-5 highlighted by a groundout to the pitcher with the potential tying run on third and one out in the eighth inning. Stewart is now batting .247/.321/.305. On the pitching side, after Brian Tallet's command vanished and left the Jays up 4-3 with the bases empty and one out in the eighth, the Jays called on their secret, proven weapon to protect the lead: Armando Benitez. Benitez had a couple of false starts sandwiched around an untimely and gritty David Eckstein error but he struck two Orioles out to end the rally emphatically. Experience is always crucial in high-leverage situations, especially when you're trying to win despite a young, untested bullpen, as the Jays are.

There were also some actual positives. Like Rod Barajas, who continued his hot hitting by going 2-3 with a walk, as well as his recent streak of wily defensive trickery by hosing Freddie Bynum at second and nearly scoring a pickoff at first. This after his chicanery in last weekend's series at Anaheim, throwing at Reggie Willits inside the baseline on a sac bunt and pump-faking Torii Hunter at third base. Anyone on a hitting streak is easy to like, but Barajas' smarts are shooting him up my list of random favorite players in a hurry.

Brandon League Watch: Maybe it's a bit soon for the all-out freedom movement, but he's doing pretty well. 17 appearances, 32 innings, 31 K, 10 BB, 68% GB, 31 hits, 2 homers, a .242 average and a 4.22 ERA.

Reed Johnson Watch: He's hitting .308/.410/.446 against lefty pitchers in 78 PA. Didn't see that coming. In fairness, he's doing it in the NL, which is either an advantage or a ridiculous advantage, and I'm looking forward to more interleague play so we can clear up that distinction once and for all.

And also so we can see some AL teams flail at Edinson Volquez's changeup. That's gonna be fun.

This afternoon, A.J. Burnett looks to stem the tide against Jeremy Guthrie. Light 'em up, blow 'em out, etc. First pitch is at 1:07.
7 June 2008: Ain't Lost Yet | 42 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
brent - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 10:17 AM EDT (#186789) #
After the road trip, I'll give the Jays a pass. However, they sooner they get 5 games over .500 the happier I'll be. I think the sooner JP can make a move for a bat the better. I hope he can get one before July to put the team into legitimate contention. On the draft, I think JP did well enough on a down year and middle round picks.
scottt - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 11:04 AM EDT (#186790) #
The pitching was great but there was no offense. Now they're actually scoring some runs, so the bullpen has to give everything back. Sigh.

I can't wait for Benitez to be dropped.  Isn't Wolfe ready to come back? Then theres' League and Accardo.

Mike Green - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 12:00 PM EDT (#186792) #
Benitez had a couple of false starts sandwiched around an untimely and gritty David Eckstein error but he struck two Orioles out to end the rally emphatically. Experience is always crucial in high-leverage situations, especially when you're trying to win despite a young, untested bullpen, as the Jays are.

Da Box doesn't have Primeys (or Boxies), but this was award-worthy. 

Random managerial second-guessing.  If you are going to take out Marcum for Tallet after Roberts (to face Markakis, Mora, Huff), why not go whole hog and let Tallet start the inning.  Roberts hits right-handed pitching much better than left, and Marcum only had his B game yesterday. I am not suggesting that this would have changed the result.
Magpie - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 12:07 PM EDT (#186795) #
Greetings from the ballpark.

Benitez has been DFA'd, and Wolfe has been recalled from Syracuse.

Wells and McDonald have both been activated from the DL. Neither is in the lineup, but both should be here by game time. Aaron Hill to the DL, Inglett optioned to Syracuse.

Mike Green - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 12:40 PM EDT (#186796) #
Hosanna Heysanna Sanna Sanna Ho

Thanks, Magpie.  I needed that.
Magpie - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 01:02 PM EDT (#186797) #
So I'm watching some players tossing the ball around. There's someone in medium centre field playng catch with someone standing on the foul line just behind third base. He's zipping the ball pretty good, can't tell who it is. He comes trotting it in, and it's...

Eckstein?  Eckstein?  Or someone else else wearing his uni?
John Northey - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 01:09 PM EDT (#186798) #
Thanks Magpie. 

Hill was overdue for the DL, and I guess the Jays decided keeping Wilkerson (253/309/368) and Mench (225/267/250) was more important than Inglett (281/347/391).  I know if I was on the team I sure wouldn't trust a word out of Gibbons mouth given he promised Inglett he was here long term...

May 23rd: "This is where he belongs," Gibbons said. "He belongs in the big leagues. He doesn't belong in the Minor Leagues anymore. He's too good of a hitter."

From May 24th on (13 games) Inglett has played in 11 games and had just 19 plate appearances going 250/333/375.  Not amazing but certainly better than Mench (6 games, 22 PA's 316-318-368) and in eyeshot if not better than Wilkerson (8 games 32 PA's 300-281-500) over that stretch and overall.

Ah well.  Inglett can be sent up and down and all around by the Jays this year without fear so I guess that is why they do it.  Hope Inglett has a good frequent flier program.
Magpie - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 01:22 PM EDT (#186799) #
Inglett can be sent up and down and all around by the Jays this year without fear so I guess that is why they do it.

Which gives them a little more time to make a decision on Mench or Stewart (one of them must go, right?). It didn't help that Mench got banged up early on, and Wells is coming back ahead of schedule. Hill's eligible to return next weekend - if he's ready, an outfielder will be cut loose.

Which will still leave Inglett as the 14th man, hoping they go to a six man bullpen.
scottt - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 02:33 PM EDT (#186801) #
That was one day too late for Benitez.

Tallet has reverse split numbers. That's one of the reason I think he's better suited to long relief than pitching a batter or two.
I mean, he's one guy that could be moved to the rotation eventually.

Did Wells get to the game late?

Chuck - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 02:43 PM EDT (#186802) #

A.J. Burnett is pitching like Carol Burnett which is a shame, because I really like this CBC broadcast team and now no longer have an excuse to put off yard work.

Hughson/Mulliniks/Barfield is more enjoyable to me than Campbell/whoever and way, way, way more enjoyable than Black/Tabler, who I rank on par with PBS pledge drives.

Burnett needs a Crash Davis in his life to do the thinking for him.

Original Ryan - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 02:58 PM EDT (#186804) #
Some days Burnett is as dominant as any pitcher in baseball.  Other days Jesus Figueroa would be a better choice to start the game.

I'll tip my cap to any pitching coach who can get Burnett's head on straight.
Sherrystar - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 03:02 PM EDT (#186806) #

I like Hughson too (much more than Campbell).

As for Burnett, well, like many posters on this site have said on numerous occasions, you never know what you're going to get when he takes the mound. At least some other teams fans will feel the same frustration we feel next year in the first year of his 5-yr $80M contract.

Chuck - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 03:11 PM EDT (#186807) #

Burnett was predictably booed upon his removal and while he didn't flip the crowd the bird, he did mockingly salute them by tipping his cap. I don't know that any of the other starters would have been booed so mercilessly. I don't know that any of the other starters would have reacted as he did.

Here's hoping we see him in pinstripes next season.

Chuck - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 04:10 PM EDT (#186809) #

Oh merciful God is Trachsel ever bad. If the Orioles want to be taken seriously, they have to release him and stop bringing him back.

After signing him as a FA in 2007 on the heels of a 79/78 K/BB ratio with the Mets, they wisely unloaded him after his K/BB ratio dropped to 45/69 (yes, many more walks than strikeouts). But come 2008 they just have to bring him back. Surprise, surprise, he's stinking the joint out. Who saw that coming?

His K/BB rate is now 16/27. Do the Orioles simply have no better options or are they incapable of recognizing that Trachsel has to crane his neck upwards to even sniff replacement level?

Quick quiz: what year will the Orioles next not finish in last place in the AL east (nowithstanding their current 31-30 record)?

VBF - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 05:42 PM EDT (#186813) #
As someone who has avidly defended Burnett on most occasions, today was probably 'it' for me. He pitched like crap, he got all hot and bothered and showed no maturity whatsoever. Jesse Litsch in his year as a major leaguer has shown so much maturity as a young pitcher, it makes me wonder if Burnett has some sort of mental condition.

He was signed to be the second ace of the staff. To put his talent together in a place he was supposed to be most comfortable (Arnsberg). He has shown no ability to make the decision, and it seems every year we read stories about how Burnett is learning by example from Halladay, which has amounted to nothing. Waving to the crowd today was immature and pretty unfair. It's been three years, AJ, and you still aren't doing anything do deserve that contract. We, the fans have been pretty patient and you definitely wouldn't have lasted in New York or Chicago with three years of injuries or inconsistent performances.

This isn't a Mets fans boo Delgado because of a bad April kind of thing. It's been three years of not earning his contract.
Some call me Tim - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 05:58 PM EDT (#186817) #
You have to respect Burnett though.  He really stepped up, took responsibility and said there's no way I'm letting the bullpen blow this game for us.
Impossibles - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 06:00 PM EDT (#186818) #
I had to chime in on AJ's mock gesture to the fans.

Why is it ok for the home fans to boo the starter and say whatever they want, but as soon as a player does anything negative in retaliation, the player is the immature jerk? These guys are humans, not robots. Some of the crap that fans get away with just riles me up. You cheer your team, you don't boo and heckle. They are out there trying hard, some days they just don't have it and the other team hits the ball hard. Home fans jeering the home team doesn't help.
brent - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 07:03 PM EDT (#186823) #
game 63- WPA hero Eckstein (12)     WPA let down Burnett (8)*3
Glevin - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 07:20 PM EDT (#186825) #
"Why is it ok for the home fans to boo the starter and say whatever they want, but as soon as a player does anything negative in retaliation, the player is the immature jerk?"

When I start making $11 million dollars a year for doing very little actual work, I'd live with people booing me when I performed poorly. Fans boo for a variety of reasons. 1) Sometimes it's to show displeasure at the organization 2) Sometimes they feel a player isn't trying. 3) Sometimes they are from Philidelphia.
VBF - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 07:21 PM EDT (#186826) #
Why is it ok for the home fans to boo the starter and say whatever they want, but as soon as a player does anything negative in retaliation, the player is the immature jerk?

The guy has simply not lived up to the expectations placed onto him by the management, fans, coaches and his fellow players. He was supposed to be a second Cy Young candidate and he isn't. Instead, he has responded to this with dugout temper tantrums, sarcastic waves to the crowds, and by being as stubborn with his ptich selection as when he came here. The fans have been nothing but great to him since he came and surely would not have lasted this long in many cities.
VBF - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 07:32 PM EDT (#186827) #
From: Burnett:

"At the time, I was [frustrated], but once I sat back and thought about what happened, it was something that I never should have done," Burnett said. "With [the way I pitched] out there today, they have the right to boo. So it was a mistake on my part.


Magpie - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 07:50 PM EDT (#186828) #
When I start making $11 million dollars a year for doing very little actual work

You're right about the money, you're wrong about the work.
Jdog - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 08:17 PM EDT (#186829) #

The guy has simply not lived up to the expectations placed onto him by the management, fans, coaches and his fellow players. He was supposed to be a second Cy Young candidate and he isn't.

Wow those are some lofty expectations, i myself never had those expectations, i was just praying his arm didn't fall off, not sure what managements expectations were, but im sure they weren't expecting him to be a CY Young candidate(at least not a serious one), they may have hoped for such, but really had no reason to expect that given his track record.  I have no real problem with his sarcastic exit to the game today, he pitched bad, didn't get any breaks and was rightfully frustrated.

King Ryan - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 08:33 PM EDT (#186830) #
Have I ever mentioned how much I opposed the AJ Burnett signing?    

God, I can't stand watching him pitch.  Even on his good days he runs me up the wall.

Did not see his "hat tip."  If it is anything like I picture it though, it's pretty funny and makes me hate AJ a little less.

Impossibles - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 08:37 PM EDT (#186831) #
Its not like he pulled out a gun and shot the people who were booing him, he just made a mocking gesture to show his own displeasure with the fans who were probably being rude and disrespectful. Tit for tat, I see no deal about it at all.
Original Ryan - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 09:16 PM EDT (#186833) #
The hat tip isn't that big of a deal, but it was unprofessional on Burnett's part.  Heckling/boos from fans go with the territory when you're a professional athlete, and the athlete needs to deal with it.

To use a different example, if someone deals with customers on a daily basis, occasionally you're going to get a customer who is having a bad day and unfairly gives you a hard time.  It's generally considered unprofessional behaviour to respond to the customer by yelling at them.  Tit-for-tat is a poor way to deal with these situations.

Should the fans have booed Burnett?  That's open to debate.  Should Burnett have reacted in the way he did?  No.
92-93 - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 09:48 PM EDT (#186836) #
KR, here's the hat tip for ya, courtesy of Yahoo!.

http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/photo;_ylt=ArxYbKVYJYPld5S.sgqO7zepu7YF?slug=4c136f46ab9f4c16a488dd47582dc234.orioles_blue_jays_baseball_ajw105&prov=ap
King Ryan - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 10:30 PM EDT (#186837) #
He didn't yell at them though, Ryan, he just, uh, took his hat off.

I see it almost as him poking fun at himself, like, "yup ... I was terrible."

China fan - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 11:09 PM EDT (#186838) #
    At least Burnett tried to do the mature thing after the game by speaking to the media and apologizing for his unprofessional gesture to the fans.  I appreciate a man who knows he did wrong and quickly apologizes for it.  But in the same post-game talk to the media, he admitted this:  "I wasn't mentally prepared today, and I didn't execute any pitches. That was the bottom line."
     He wasn't mentally prepared?  Isn't that the least excusable thing to admit? A pitcher might sometimes lack the physical ability to get his pitches where he wants them to go, but mentally unprepared?  For $11-million a year, you should at least be mentally prepared for each game.  I think Burnett has finally admitted the real reason for his inconsistency.  He has all the physical talent in the world, but often he is mentally unprepared.  Not focused, distracted, undisciplined....   And that's the most frustrating thing for the fans, and that's why they boo him.  They know he is one of the most talented pitchers in the game.  And they know he is often "mentally unprepared" for the game.
VBF - Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 11:31 PM EDT (#186840) #
Wow those are some lofty expectations

To be in the race for the Cy Young, you probably post an ERA around 3 and 18+ wins. I don't see how Burnett, someone who many people believe has the best arm in baseball uncapable of that. The whole signing and justification of the signing was that he was going to be reunited with Arnsberg and untap all the potential that he had. He has untapped exactly zero of that potential despite showing flashes of brilliance that make fans want to rip out their hair. He's absolutely got the stuff to win 5 Cy Young Awards.
John Northey - Sunday, June 08 2008 @ 12:38 AM EDT (#186843) #
AJ is an interesting one.  Just looked at his B-R page and noticed in his first 2 years here his ERA+ was better than his career average - 115 and 119.  Only in '02 and '99 did he have better ERA+'s.  His games started though were just 21 and 25 - however he only did more than that 3 times, just once reaching 30+. 

In the end the Jays have gotten exactly what should've been expected from AJ.  Someone who is basically a Juan Guzman type - can be amazing but inconsistent and suffers lots of injuries and brain cramps at exactly the wrong times.  We all hoped for more, and given he only cost cash and

FYI: the Marlins picked a guy named Christopher Coghlan (3B) in the 1s round and a catcher named Torre Langley in the 3rd round (the pick the Jays lost for AJ).  Langley (who the Jays could've taken as well with that pick) is now 20 years old and hitting 179-232-342 in A ball with a lifetime line of 218-240-353.  Coghlan is 23 and hitting 284-356-401 in AA, lifetime 288-370-438 while mainly playing 2B with a little time at third mixed in.

The Jays took Travis Snider that year with the 14th pick overall - luckily they were just outside the range where they would've lost their first rounder.  The 2nd round pick was lost to the Orioles for BJ Ryan and they took Pedro Beato RHP in the supplemental round and Ryan Adams (3B) with what would've been the Jays 2nd round pick.
  Adams is now hitting 294-349-435 in A ball, lifetime 261-334-383 at second base with 14 games at SS mixed in over those 3 years.

If the Jays could get two picks for AJ this offseason that would be fine, but I'd rather see them go get two quality prospects instead.  The Cardinals are a tempting target for a trade as they have 3 good starters and then a few guys I wouldn't want starting plus their pen has been good but their closer has a 52 ERA+ and another guy they've used a lot is at 57.  In AAA they have a guy called Joe Mather in the outfield who is tempting - 315-406-671 and has hit decent at AA and AAA last year as well as this year, is right handed, 25 and can play 3B or 1B in an emergency.  He actually is in the majors right now playing RF.  Their hottest prospect at the moment, I suspect, is Brian Anderson - a 21 year old catcher hitting 338-398-438 in AAA, lifetime 314-372-430 in the minors batting from the left side (#3 on the Baseball America rankings pre-season for the Cards).  I doubt they are anywhere near desperate enough for a starter to give him up for AJ and a reliever but I can dream that they are thinking Yadier Molina is enough and will give up Anderson for a rotation boost.  Get Anderson and Mather for AJ and a random reliever and I'd be very happy but I really doubt the Cards would go anywhere near it.
Magpie - Sunday, June 08 2008 @ 02:11 AM EDT (#186846) #
Someone who is basically a Juan Guzman type - can be amazing but inconsistent and suffers lots of injuries and brain cramps at exactly the wrong times.

Guzman, rather obviously,  was considerably better than Burnett. Alas, he was just 5-11, 195 and throwing the way he did  just took too much out of him.

Burnett has a great arm, great fastball, great curve, pretty good control. His natural stuff is so overpowering that he's had a decent career and made a lot of money. But he still doesn't know how to pitch. Some guys never get it.

As the Orioles have rather emphatically reminded us (not to mention Messrs Benitez and Burnett)  these past couple of days, most of the hitters in this league can hit a fastball.
Mike Green - Sunday, June 08 2008 @ 10:23 AM EDT (#186850) #
Guzman is a helluva comp for Burnett statistically.

My perspective on Burnett is a bit strange.  When he was acquired by the Jays, the Box ran a poll about the acquisition.  I gave it a 1 (on 5), the worst possible rating. I felt that it was very unlikely that he would be an ace, and that there was a significant risk of serious injury. I didn't like the 3 year opt-out.  Now, though, I subjectively llike him more as a pitcher than I did.  Why?  The issue with him is simply maturity.  He has the raw ability and he needs to apply himself to his craft.  Some men take longer to develop maturity than others, and Burnett is definitely well past the hump of the bell curve.  But, there are signs that it is coming slowly.  Last year, his approach to his injury was very good and disciplined.  Today, he apologized for his gesture to the fans. 

The main thing for Burnett has always been his performance with runners on base. The stolen base and the wild pitch have been his enemies. He has always suffered pitching from the stretch.  This year has been no different; the kicker so far has been that he is giving up a higer opposition BABIP than usual, and consequently more hits, but that is likely to return to close to normal levels. Can he learn to become more effective with runners on?  Why not? He is 31 and 1/2, and now it is simply about pride in his craft, and hopefully truly trying to help his team win.

King Ryan - Sunday, June 08 2008 @ 07:57 PM EDT (#186869) #
Burnett is a classic case of someone being overrated and overvalued because of his "stuff."  Why people act like "command" is not a part of talent and instead is a character flaw or something is beyond me.  Burnett's lack of command is a part of his ability, and is what separates him from the truly greats.  He's not some awesome pitcher who just doesn't try hard or whatever nonsense.  He is a pitcher who is good at one part of pitching (throwing an awesome fastball, throwing an awesome curveball,) and bad at another part of pitching (having the ball go where he wants it to.) 

There are plenty of pitchers who have it the other way around and seem to be lionized (Litsch,) but I don't think the difference is overall that large, other than the aesthetics.

brent - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 08:27 AM EDT (#186878) #

game 64- WPA heroes Wells (8), Ryan (12), Barajas (9), Scutaro (7)        WPA let downs Rios (20), Rolen (10)

The TDIB threads seem to be only one per Jays series. How about just creating one series thread for everyone to post under and keep it at the top until the series is over. I know you roster members didn't want just open threads, but I think discussion could be more vigorous when the thread isn't buried and none replace it quickly enough. Does anyone have some good ideas? AN and Lookout Landing among others still have their open game threads (but they reach ridiculous lengths like 800 comments), but discussion here seems to be slowly dying out.  

Pistol - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 08:40 AM EDT (#186879) #
UZR numbers..... take particular note to CF.
Paul D - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 09:48 AM EDT (#186880) #
Pistol, that is interesting.  RF makes me feel a lot more comfortable about Wilkerson's role on the team.  And 3b just makes me happy.
Mike Green - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 01:59 PM EDT (#186886) #
Does the latest version of UZR include arm ratings for outfielders?  I imagine that it does.  If not, Rios' advantage over Wells in centerfield (in an admittedly small sample) would be very, very large.
John Northey - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 04:43 PM EDT (#186899) #
Checking the Hardball Times for RZR instead (as we get a bit more detail this way) I see the following for our outfielders.
OOZ= balls reached out of zone (ie: ranged really wide to get).  Stats shown are innings played - RZR - OOZ

LF
Stewart: 310 - 896 - 13
Stairs: 54 - 818 - 0
Inglett: 52 - 1000 - 4 (guess that explains him as defensive replacement)
Lind: 52 - 1000 - 1
Mench: 39 - 846 - 1
Scutaro: 25 - 1000 - 1
Wilkerson: 30 - 750 - 1

CF:
Wells: 341 - .828 - 8
Rios: 244 - .946 - 12

RF:
Rios: 308 - 884 - 20
Wilkerson: 178 - 947 - 4, In Seattle 148 - 867 - 5
Stairs: 39 - 857 - 1
Inglett: 33 - 1000 - 3
Mench: 27 - 833 - 1

Interesting to look at.  Surprised that Inglett has reached every ball hit into his zone in the outfield plus got to a few outside of it.  Not bad for an infielder.  Wilkerson has been hot in RF for the Jays but his overall skills are more at the level shown in Seattle, so I suspect as the year goes on it will move back to under Rios but above Stairs.  Under 100 innings played is really secondary as those stats can shift drastically quickly - fun to look at but don't take too seriously.

Something I wonder is if having Rios in CF has helped guys like Wilkerson & Stewart focus more on their key area while Rios takes up the slack on the edges.  Logically it should have an effect - the more range from one fielder the less another has to worry about covering up their errors.
Mike Green - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 06:36 PM EDT (#186900) #
The evidence prior to 2008 suggested that Wells was about as good in centerfield as Rios.  Of course, Rios played there sporadically prior to this year, and it did seem that he got better in the field the longer he played there. My sense is that Rios is better there now; it is a shame that because of the GGs, it will be difficult to move Wells to a corner position (ideally left-field when Snider arrives). 
Alex Obal - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 06:40 PM EDT (#186901) #
Mike, since you just threw that out there, who's your right fielder - Lind or Snider or someone else? Do those guys have better arms than Verno's, or some other attribute that justifies playing them in right?
Mike Green - Monday, June 09 2008 @ 08:00 PM EDT (#186903) #
Snider has a better arm than Wells. Leaving Snider in right-field also has the small ancilliary advantage of letting him focus on his hitting, rather than switching corners.  Wells would be a very good defensive left-fielder for a few years, if they did make the move.  The other long-term option is to make Snider a DH and  play Wells in right and Lind in left. 

In the short run, the optimal thing is to promote Lind (and probably platoon him) in left and play Wells in right.  It aint happening though.

7 June 2008: Ain't Lost Yet | 42 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.