Live from Tucson (RSS)

Spring training reports from Sox camp in Tucson.

LFT2: A big, fat wrap-up

GUYS WHO IMPRESSED ME

John Danks:  I talked about this before, but he looked under control against a lineup of major-leaguers.  Not great major-leaguers, but people who know how to hit to some degree.  If Gavin Floyd and Danks keep doing what they're doing, I'd gladly give the ball to Danks to see what he has.

Jim Thome:  Early on this spring, he was chopping the ball to first a lot.  It seems like he started to find his stroke in the 'B' game, when he hit a 385-foot double to left (Hi Corbett's practice field is 400 feet to both corners).  He hit a homer two days later, and then added two in today's game.

Paul Konerko:  Looks balanced, appears to be stinging the ball.

Joe Crede:  His bat didn't wow either way, but he was flopping around with no problem.  Didn't miss any routine plays, and his only error in my presence was going far to his left.

Josh Fields:  I still wish he were an outfielder.  Made a lot of good contact, even with two strikes.

BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENTS

Ryan Sweeney: 
Definitely needs another year.  He didn't show anything aside from a decent arm.  Nice guy, though.

Tadahito Iguchi:  He's having a bad spring.  What else is new?

Alex Cintron:  His arm looks a little weak from the offseason surgery right now, and his bat is behind as well.  At least Juan Uribe looks somewhat rejuvenated.

OUTFIELDER DERBY


Brian Anderson:  Might've hit rock bottom on the second day of the trip, but he's on a roll now after his 'B' game.  Made all the plays he'd be expected to make in the outfield.

Darin Erstad:  Could make positive contributions if his spring is any indication, but I only saw real great contact from him once.

Luis Terrero:  He should be far better insurance in Triple-A than we had last year, but I don't know what he offers that Anderson doesn't.

Rob Mackowiak:
  His problems in center have carried over to left field, but I'd take him seven days a week over last year's version of Scott Podsednik.

RANKING THE STARTERS

1. Danks
2. Contreras
3. Buehrle
4. Floyd
5. Vazquez
6. Haeger
7. Garland

If Gio Gonzalez were legitimately under consideration, he'd be No. 2.  At any rate, I'm glad to see Don Cooper getting slightly agitated.

COOLEST MOMENT

Duh.

DAY-BY-DAY

LFT2: Day 5 photos and video

The bad news, aside from being back in New York:  Hi Corbett Field's screen is made of thick black rope, which made taking pictures and video during the game a bitch, due to focus issues. 

The good news:  We got to the game early enough to stake out a spot right by the bullpen pitching rubbers, so I got some decent video and pictures of Mark Buehrle before the game for all you mechanics geeks out there.
If you see black screens for the videos, YouTube's still chewing on them.  They've been "processing" for a couple of hours, and I just got tired of waiting.  But they'll be up eventually, I hope. 

Also, I've added some missing video to the Day 2 gallery, with footage of Oneli Perez (who got shelled) and Tyler Lumsden.

LFT2: The losing half

The White Sox played two games in Tucson today -- against Oakland at Tucson Electric Park, and against Colorado at Hi Corbett Field.  They won the former, lost the latter.  Guess which one I went to?

After losing a 15-11 slugfest to the Rockies, my spring training record fell to 0-6. 

The bright spot is that I got to see Mark Buehrle pitch, meaning I've seen all eight possibilities for the rotation over the five days I've been here.  His line -- 4 IP, 6 ER, 6 H, 2 BB, 4 K -- wasn't as ugly as it looked.

Buehrle almost got a double play ball from Kazuo Matsui to end the inning, but Willy Taveras knocked out Alex Cintron's legs on the double play relay toss to extend the inning.  After a walk, Ryan Spilborghs homered to tie the game at 4.

John Mabry had the other big shot off Buehrle, a two-run job in the fourth.

There are a couple reasons why I wasn't discouraged by his outing.  One is that his fastball sizzled from where I sat, which was three rows up about 30 feet down the first-base line.  Right-handed hitters had a hard time getting around on his inside fastballs, and it set up his offspeed stuff nicely for a couple of backwards K's.  Hi Corbett doesn't have any visible radar guns, so I'm going off what I saw.  At this point in the season, I'd rather his problems be location-based rather than velocity-based.

I'll tell you what was ugly -- Mike MacDougal's day.  After looking so dominant two days ago, MacDougal experienced a meltdown today.  He walked the first guy he faced entering the fifth inning, and then went triple-double-single-single-walk to allow the Rockies to take the lead.  But when he finally appeared to right himself by getting a chopper back to the mound with the bases loaded, instead of zipping it back to Toby Hall for a 1-2-3 double play, he lobbed it short-armed a few feet over Hall's head, allowing two more runs to score.

Boone Logan came on after MacDougal got his first out via a strikeout and looked tough in his 2-1/3-inning outing.  He didn't allow any more runs to score in the fifth, pitched around a Josh Fields error (it was a tough play -- funky spin off a shattered bat) starting off the sixth.  In the seventh, Rob Mackowiak got Logan in and out of trouble when he horribly misjudged a dive in left field, giving Omar Quintanilla a chance for an inside-the-park homer.  However, Mackowiak hit the cutoff man, and the throw beat Quintanilla just in time for Donny Lucy to tag him out.

Nick Masset finished the game in the loosest sense of the word, giving up all four of his runs with two outs in the ninth.

It's a shame the pitchers were so erratic, because this was the first time I actually saw a legitimate offense, and it was keyed by Eduardo Perez, who had an interesting day.  He scored the Sox's first run when he singled, stole second (!!) and scored on Darin Erstad's two-out double.  Perez also added two homers, one off righty Jason Hirsh with two outs, and the other in the ninth off lefty Tom Martin. 

Rob Mackowiak had a two-out, two-run double off Denny Bautista, Jim Thome also launched a two-run shot and Andy Gonzalez hit his first homer of the spring.  Alex Cintron was the only Sox starter to not reach base.

Thomas Collaro impressed me considerably for a guy I'd never heard of.  He entered the game in the first inning after Luis Terrero fouled a ball off the inside of his knee, and turned an 0-1 count into a walk after fouling off a few pitches.  He had two other hits before flying out to right.  Not bad for a split-squad guy.

Photos may be coming later today, but videos will wait until tomorrow, since I have an early flight to catch.

LFT2: Day 4 photos and video

Today's a pretty light day in the A/V department, only because for whatever reason, it seemed like everybody in the section got up twice per inning.

A lot of photos and clips were interrupted by people leaving to get food, bringing back food, going halfway down an aisle before realizing it's the wrong one, etc.  I know you all are devastated.

At any rate, there are some clips of John Danks and Gio Gonzalez in there. 

LFT2: Danks for a good show

While the Sox dropped to 0-5 in the four days I've been here today, today's loss actually had two quite pleasant developments -- namely John Danks and Gio Gonzalez.

Danks became the first Sox pitcher I've seen throw three scoreless innings, and he did it quickly.  He reminded me of Mark Buehrle, the way he basically returned to the rubber immediately.  There isn't a lot of wasted motion or mechanics at play there. 

He made it faster by facing the minimum of nine batters, even though he allowed a couple solid singles.  He erased them with two double plays, and was also aided by a 5-6-4 putout when Joe Crede flopped and knocked the ball to Juan Uribe, who threw it to Pedro Lopez for a putout.  The second DP featured a nifty flip by Lopez, so the defense made Danks look great.  Which is maybe another similarity to Buehrle.

Gonzalez relieved him, and like Danks, Gio didn't strike anybody out.  That's where the similarity ends, because Gonzalez has a vastly different delivery.

His leg kick is higher, and because of his smaller frame, it looks like he uncoils and explodes towards home plate.  Given the more complicated delivery, I wasn't surprised that his control wasn't nearly as sharp as Danks', walking two in two innings, but nobody made great contact off him either.

(For a breakdown of Gonzalez's mechanics, this is the best I could do with my camera.)

Gio could use some refining, but Danks looks like he has a decent shot at the fifth starter job.  Today could be a great start towards that end, and it wouldn't be a bad idea if he does all he can in the spring.  If Buehrle and the Sox grow further apart with regards to contract talks, then it might be good to let Danks take some big-league shots with another similar lefty around.  Remember, mentoring Buehrle was the only purpose David Wells served in a Sox uniform.

The man Danks relieved, Jon Garland, didn't look much different than the other Sox starters I've seen.  After two scoreless innings to start, he hit a wall in the third when Chris Young (ugh) and Alberto Callaspo started the inning hitting the first pitches they saw well over the fence.  After retiring the next two batters, the Diamondbacks collected four two-out hits, three for extra bases, and two of those down the lines.

Also similar to other games I've seen, the Sox offense struggled as a cohesive unit.  They had the bases loaded on Micah Owings in the third inning with no outs after a single and two walks, and Matt and I guessed how many runs would cross -- Matt guessed two, I guessed one.

I won.  Toby Hall hit a sacrifice fly, and then Brian Anderson grounded into a tough double play to end the inning.  It was a rocket shot that deflected off Owings, and then the shortstop Callaspo made a great diving stop and flip to start the 1-6-4-3 double play.  Anderson did hit his first homer of the season, and drew a walk as well.

Pictures and video later.

LFT2: Day 3 photos and video



Lots of YouTube videos this time around -- 16 in all.
Off to the Sox-Diamondbacks game.

LFT2: Fun at the old 'B' game

While I've never been to SoxFest, I'm pretty sure there's no way to get closer to the players than to attend a "B" game during Spring Training.  And by close, I mean so close that Ryan Sweeney tells you who's starting, Ozzie Guillen and Kenny Williams set up folding chairs next to you and Jim Thome squeezes by you twice en route to a port-a-potty.

Matt and I hit a Rockies-Sox exhibition at a Hi Corbett practice field this morning, only to discover that the "B" game was played on a true practice field.  There were no bleachers or seats of any kind outside of the dugouts, which were not fenced in.  There was nothing between the players and the fans except for the understanding that the Sox were working.

Also, the field was one foot deeper to dead center (401 feet) than it was down the lines (400), so it's really not meant for regulation play.

We were leaning up against the fence by home plate when Kenny came by with a chair and sat down.  Ozzie wasn't far behind.  They were no more than five feet away, and we'd assumed that we were somewhere we weren't supposed to be.  We asked Ozzie whether we needed to move, and he said we were cool.

So I spent the next 2 1/2 hours watching the game next to Ozzie and Kenny, keeping score, taking pictures, and trying my best to be a fly on the wall.  I did do a lot of laughing, because Ozzie really doesn't shut up.  Some things overheard:
  • After Alex Cintron dropped a second ball on the day, Ozzie said something loudly in Spanish, and the Latin players on both sides started laughing.  Clint Hurdle told him, "Now, I can't say that."  Ozzie asked him if he understood, and Hurdle said, "Yes, and I can't say that."  Ozzie asked again, and Hurdle said, "I can't get away with calling that glove a piece of sh-t!"  Laughter ensued.
  • Ozzie repeatedly directing media types to non-existant beer.
  • Ozzie saying "holy sh-t" a couple of times to himself when Sean Tracey hit the backstop, though more in amazement since Tracey was effectively wild that inning.
  • Ozzie getting on Hurdle's case, calling him a baby when Hurdle disputed the ump's count, saying that the ump forgot a ball when a Rockie thought he walked.  Hurdle got revenge when the player doubled on the next pitch.
  • Ozzie pleading with the ump a couple times that a 450-foot shot over dead center was foul.
  • Ozzie offering encouragement to Brian Anderson both at the plate and on the field after Anderson made a nice running catch.
  • Kenny talking to Bruce Levine (pictured right) and saying that he's trying to be as political as possible when talking about contracts.
  • Kenny saying that Anderson and Luis Terrero have an advantage over the rest of the field for an outfielder spot, presumably because of their right-handedness and ability to cover ground (it was shortly after Anderson's catch, I believe). 
I did ask them who No. 92 was, since he was an outfielder I didn't recognize.  Ozzie took a second, mumbled and then came up with the name "Pedro Jest."  I didn't write it down, and Kenny followed up politely by saying, "It's a guy we brought up from the minors named Daron Roberts."  Ozzie laughed.

Roberts played at the end of both the "B" game and the "A" game, but I'm not sure what that means since he hasn't really done anything in the minors.  I will be calling him "Pedro" if he manages to make the big leagues at any point.

Other observations:
  • Whatever "veteran presence" is, Eduardo Perez has.  He was arguably the most vocal and supportive player out there today.
  • Thome turned down a couple autograph requests from adults during the game, or at least said he would get to them later.  He did, however, sign one in-game for a little girl.
  • That little girl had a heck of a day -- she also had a picture taken of her on Ozzie's lap.
  • Anderson looked a lot better at the plate, and he was facing major-league pitchers (Aaron Cook and LaTroy Hawkins, to name two).
  • Charlie Haeger had a hard time finding the strike zone, and I'd be surprised if he were anywhere else but Charlotte at the start of the season.

LFT2: Formalities

It's kind of funny that the "A" Game takes a backseat to the "B" game, but it was definitely anticlimactic after the morning session.  Some notes:
  • Gavin Floyd:  Like every other starter I've seen so far, Floyd looked erratic, although a grounder ate up Joe Crede on what should've been the last out of the third inning, leading to four unearned runs.  He was doing a nice job of throwing strikes, and was getting plenty of ground balls until the game got away from thim.
  • Mike MacDougal:  Most dominating relief outing I've seen so far.  Matt Thornton gave up an early hit that scored, and Bobby Jenks gave up a couple of decently hit fly balls.  MacDougal, on the other hand, wasted no time with his inning.
  • I'm not sure where "slowing the running game" stands on Sox pitchers' priority lists at this time, but the Rockies were getting huge jumps off the lefties.  Neither A.J. Pierzynski nor Gustavo Molina had any chance to throw anybody out, as Colorado went 4-for-4 stealing second.
  • Error aside, Joe Crede had himself a nice game, cranking out his first homer over the left-center wall.
  • Darin Erstad, on the other hand, didn't do much good.  He drew one of four walks by Danny Graves in an inning, but was picked off when he left early stealing second with runners on the corners and two outs.  Juan Uribe was actually tagged out heading home to try to make something out of nothing.
  • On the other hand, Erstad improved his grinder rating with an ill-fated dive on the warning track.

LFT2: Day 2 photos and video

It was good to see Ross Gload do well, even though I still wish he were still on the Sox.  He drew a walk in his first at-bat, smoked a triple to the right-center gap in the second, and lined out to deep left in his last one. 

He looked just like the Gload we wished would get more playing time, and I hope that's the case in Kansas City, though not against the Sox.

Click on the photo to the right, or here, to see pictures from today's action.

The YouTube gallery is a work in progress, since my connection in the hotel is being interrupted every 45 seconds or so.  There are three videos posted, and more to come as long as I can get a big enough connection window.

LFT2: A new detrimental Perez

So, the Sox entered the ninth inning of today's game against the Royals having just tied it up with a four-run eighth.  Meanwhile, Sox pitchers had a combined nine strikeouts, and with one more, everybody in the stadium would win a free 44-ounce drink from Circle K.

In came Oneli Perez, and there he foiled Sox fans on both fronts.

Perez was hammered to the tune of seven hits and five runs in two-thirds of an inning, and even though 11 batters came to the plate in the final inning, not one went down by way of a strikeout. 

The Sox lost 10-5, and no free pop.  Oh well.

Truth be told, nobody really came away looking good, except for Josh Fields, who showed some potential in two-strike situations.  He crushed a homer after Dewon Brazelton had him down 1-2, he drew a walk when he was down by the same count to former Sox prospect Tyler Lumsden, then flew out deep to right field on an 0-2 count in his last at-bat.

Until the eighth inning, Fields had provided the only run, and the Sox had squandered a couple opportunities.  Pablo Ozuna got things started by leading the first off with a single and stealing second, and then he advanced to third on Alex Cintron's groundout to second (which he appeared to beat out).  But Paul Konerko struck out looking, and Jermaine Dye flew out to center to end the threat.

The same thing happened in the second, when Rob Mackowiak doubled and advanced to third when Toby Hall's bloop single dropped in with one out.  But Brian Anderson hit a weak pop-out to Ross Gload, and Ozuna grounded out.

It wasn't until the eighth when the offense actually perked up.  Royals pitchers only struck out four Sox, but they produced a whole lot of weak contact.  Billy Buckner, who came on in the eighth inning, was the only pitcher the Sox could solve.  Luis Terrero came up with a huge bases-loaded, two-run single, and Eduardo Perez followed up with the same two batters later to tie up the game.

And while Oneli looked rough, Sox pitchers on the whole didn't dominate.  Nick Masset looked the best -- Ross Gload scored after leading off Masset's second inning of work with a triple, but Gload was the only baserunner he allowed.  David Aardsma dominated his first inning and struggled in the second.

Jose Contreras, who started the game, struck out six hitters in his first inning three innings, and when the Royals weren't hitting him, they were hitting him, if that makes any sense.  Either good contact, or none at all.  Go figure.

OUTFIELDER DERBY:

Brian Anderson had a lousy game at the plate going 0-for-4, whereas Rob Mackowiak and Luis Terrero won points, getting a hit apiece and making some nice plays defensively.  Mackowiak made a couple of nice running catches on drives that would've confused him in center, and Terrero made a great throw to the plate and nearly gunned down a runner from right field.  Cole Armstrong couldn't apply the tag.

More photos and video later.

LFT2: White Sox spring training photos and video

If you're wondering what that is to the right, the guy in front of me brought a Brett Favre beer cozy to the ballpark. 

I can't say I've ever seen somebody bring their own cozy of any kind to a game, but I suppose if anybody would, it would be a Packers fan.

Anyway, click on the photo or here to see photos from Day 1

Click here for a YouTube gallery.

Tomorrow should have more variation, as we'll be hitting the morning practice, then getting to the game super-early.

Live From Tucson 2: We're back

So far so good -- even though my flight connected in O'Hare, I somehow managed to get to Tucson at 12:30 for a 12:45 arrival.  So we made it to Tucson Electric Park in time for the first pitch.



Turns out we wouldn't miss much, in terms of actually watching the Sox perform.  A brief rundown:

PITCHING:

Javier Vazquez was Javyesque -- wholly inconsistent.  The Rockies had their full lineup out there, and they hit Javy hard in the first inning, with Garrett Atkins and Matt Holliday with a pair of RBI doubles.  His offspeed stuff was fooling hitters, but Colorado hitters were getting around on the fastball. 

If we didn't know Javy was pitching, he started out the second by striking out the first two batters, then couldn't get a glove on a chopper, botched a Willy Taveras bunt, and a Kazuo Matsui triple later, the Rockies were up 4-0. 

(And I just found out that they signed Vazquez to a three-year, $34.5 million contract extension.  Greeeeat.)

Matt Thornton continued to look good, only giving up a Jeff Baker opposite-field single.  Boone Logan worked a perfect inning, and Heath Phillips looked especially impressive in his inning of work, striking out two.  Some video of him in action coming up later.

Adam Russell is not ready for primetime quite yet, because the Rockies crushed him.  Even the outs were hard, and Brad Hawpe hit a titanic shot over the center field batter's eye that still hasn't come down yet.

HITTING:

Darin Erstad fans will be pleased to find out he went 2-for-3 in the leadoff spot, with two somewhat weak opposite-field singles.  Juan Uribe crushed a couple balls, though one was a 4-3 double play because he smoked it up the middle on a hit-and-run.  The other was an RBI double down the line, and A.J. Pierzynski followed it up with a long homer just inside the right field line:



Jim Thome is hitting a lot of ground balls.  Luis Terrero laid down a perfect bunt single.  Ryan Sweeney played the whole game, but didn't do anything worthwhile.

FIELDING:

Aside from Vazquez's miscues, the Sox had a solid day in the field.  Andy Gonzalez has a nice arm at short, and Joe Crede made one of his trademark flop, stop and throw plays.

More photos and videos later.

LfT Day 5: I wish

(Finally, the Day 4 photos can be found here)

Technically, I did spend a fifth day in Tucson.  Unfortunately, it ended at 6:55 a.m., when my flight left. 

If I had four weeks of vacation every year, I'd probably make Spring Training an annual stop.  But since I'll only have two weeks for the next few years, it'll at least be a couple years before I return to Tucson. 


If anybody's on the fence, I highly recommend the experience -- if everybody in your party loves baseball, that is.  It's not for fans who only know and care about a handful of players, because most of spring ball is checking out the up-and-coming players, as the established stars usually leave the game (and the park) early.  And if bad weather strikes, as it did this past weekend, you might be stuck watching two teams you don't care about.  The Diamondbacks and Mariners were of no consequence to us, but it worked for us given the circumstances.

Round up a group that can't get enough baseball, and it can't be beat.  You'll never see major-league players that close for that cheap -- the most expensive tickets cost us $15 apiece, and they placed us four rows behind the on-deck circle.  The food is good, the weather is usually comfortable (this weekend was an outlier), and it's much easier to get autographs and the players' attention in March than in April.

As much as we railed on Tucson, I do wish I had a couple of extra days there.  If we had better weather, we would've been able to golf, for one.  And it wasn't a weekend for swimming, either. 

Arizona isn't without its charms, and spring baseball is the greatest gift it offers.  I hope I'll be able to take it up on that again in the near future.

LfT Day 4: Wrapping up

(I’ll prep the Day 4 photos tomorrow.  Meanwhile, here’s a 20-second movie I took of Mark Buehrle warming up.)

After the game, we found another decent strip on 4th Avenue in central Tucson to help upgrade the status of Tucson to “not bad.”  We still can’t understand why anybody would want to live here, but as long as there’s White Sox baseball and a couple of places to go at night, I don’t see why it’s not worth visiting every couple of years.

It’d help more if it rained every once in awhile.  Definitely made it easier to breathe, and I didn’t feel like I needed to wash my face every hour.  Unfortunately, the cold weather (low ‘50s) made me forget to put on sunblock, and I developed a nice case of sunburn that traces where my sunglasses were.

With seats two rows up down the left field line, we had a pretty nice view of the game, and sat in prime foul ball territory.  Jermaine Dye almost gave Matt another gift during the game when he hit a screaming liner towards our section.  Unfortunately, a guy two seats down brought a glove and snagged it.  

If you’re heading to Tucson this year or next year, here are a couple things I’ve forgot to point out over the past three days.

*Don’t get fooled by the PA announcer.  During the first game at Tucson Electric Park,  the man on the microphone would read a PSA for designated driving, saying something like, “White Sox fans are the best fans around, so when you’re leaving the park…”  And that made me feel pretty good.

But when I went to the D-Backs-Mariners game at TEP, the PA announcer said “Diamondbacks fans are the best fans around…”  I then felt used.  Now that I think about it, that opening clause really didn’t make any sense, because it didn’t relate in any way to designated driving.  Unless he wanted the worst fans to drive drunkenly into a telephone pole.  What an applause whore.

*We came up with a surprisingly fun game while driving around town.  It’s called “Restaurant or Furniture Store?”  It may not sound interesting, but let me tell you, it has legs.

Not being from the Southwest, we’re used to seeing Spanish-named places only as ones that offer Mexican food.  So when we were looking for places to eat on Thursday and Friday night, we discovered that a lot of places that seemed like they had dinner potential ended up being furniture stores.  So one of us would give each other the name of the establishment, and the other would have to guess whether it was a restaurant or a furniture store.  

It sounds easy, but it proved rather difficult.  Give it a shot.  (Answers at the bottom)

1)    Tres Amigos
2)    Diego’s
3)    Zoteca
4)    Casa

I’ll be heading back to Albany on a 7 a.m. flight tomorrow, so I don’t have time to get to the photo gallery tonight.  I’ll prep the photos during my layover in Atlanta and post them there if I can.  

I’m going to miss the baseball, but at least the World Baseball Classic is going on.  I highly recommend it – the USA-Japan finish was incredible (just like ALCS’ Game 2), and Puerto Rico looks good against the Dominicans.  Javier Vazquez shut down a lineup with Alfonso Soriano, Miguel Tejada, Albert Pujols and David Ortiz as the top four hitters, so hopefully he’ll be able to do the same against the Royals in August.

Anyway, it’s back to Albany and back to work tomorrow.  Only three weeks until the regular season starts, and hopefully the Sox will look better then than they do now.


Answers to “Restaurant or Furniture Store?”

1)    Furniture store
2)    Restaurant
3)    Furniture store
4)    Financial services center – gotcha!

LfT Day 4: Game recap

Angels 6, White Sox 1

The first five innings were a treat to watch, because Mark Buehrle was on his game.  Nobody hit the ball particularly hard, he didn’t walk anybody, he picked a guy off, and he only used 49 pitches in five innings by my count, and he might’ve had more if the Angels’ Triple-A team didn't swing at first pitches so often.

Unfortunately for Buehrle and everybody in attendance, the sox didn’t score.  The rest of the team was negligible at best, scary at worst, starting with…

The running game – Brian Anderson led off with a first-pitch single in the first inning, then he was thrown out trying to steal.  I don’t know if they were trying a hit-and-run with Uribe because there were latecomers standing in front of me, but it was the second time Anderson was caught stealing in games I attended.  They also failed a hit-and-run with Joe Crede on base and Chris Widger at the plate later in the game, and Tadahito Iguchi was thrown out trying to stretch a single into a double.

The bullpen – Once again, Dustin Hermanson got rocked.  He pitched the sixth and to one batter in the seventh, and he might’ve tweaked his back then.  Ozzie and Herm Schneider came out after he threw his first pitch to Brian Specht, but he stayed in the game for four more pitches until Specht doubled off him.  Then he left the game.

His line:  1+ IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 0 BB, 0 KK.  After inducing a weak flyout to start the inning, everybody else he faced hit him hard.  It doesn’t look encouraging.

Tim Redding’s line wasn’t pretty either, giving up three earned runs on three hits and a walk.  And he just looked like the Tim Redding of the last couple years.  

On a positive note, the LOOGYs fared well – Armando Almanza came on after Hermanson and retired all three batters he faced including a strikeout, though he did allow an inherited runner to score.  Paulino Reynoso struck out the side in the ninth.

The offense –  Eight baserunners in nine innings.  That about sums it up, and as was said before, they often erased themselves on the basepaths when they did get on.  The sixth was the pinnacle of ugliness, when Nick Adenhart retired the Sox 1-2-3 on four pitches, including a first-pitch out from Jim Thome.  Jered Weaver started the game for Anaheim, and he looked less erratic, both with his control and his technique, than his brother Jeff.

On the other hand, Juan Uribe is encouraging me in the No. 2 spot.  He went 1-for-2 with a walk and a single, and two days ago, he worked two three-ball counts against the Giants.  He seems to be using a different approach than he showed for most of last year.

That’s about it.  Chris Stewart scored the only run when he singled, advanced to second on Darren Blakely’s single, advanced on a wild pitch and scored on Jerry Owens’ groundout, but it wasn’t the sort of scoring you can build on in the next game. 

Lft Day 4: Morning update

The rain has lifted, and it's scattered showers and partly cloudy the rest of the day.  The breeze has also lessened, so between that and the damp ground, we shouldn't be tasting the air as much today. 

Mark Buehrle and Dustin Hermanson are expected to see extensive work, and the Sox may be taking their cuts against Jeff Weaver.  Anaheim's going split squad today, so it's hard to tell.

LfT Day 3: 142 out of 143 ain't bad

(Day 3 photos can be found here)

Starting the recap of the day with the end of it, we ran into a couple of Sox fans at a bar who said they made the trip to Phoenix today and wished they didn’t, so settling for Diamondbacks-Mariners wasn’t all that bad.  It was warmer in both Chicago and Albany than it was in Tucson today, but at least we got to see some baseball.

We spent the hours we would’ve spent driving watching Albany knock off Vermont for the America East championship, so I’m done complaining.

Aside from the wind, cold and rain (the first time in 143 days or so), the game was enjoyable to watch, aided by a 25 mph wind blowing out to center.  We got to see Kenji Johjima, the new Japanese Mariners catcher, rack up two hits including a homer.  Jeff Bajenaru struck out three of the five hitters he faced, yet still allowed a run.  Luis Vizcaino retired the Double-A Diamondbacks 1-2-3.  There were plenty of wind-blown pop-ups that Joe Crede would’ve lost track of, and it helped spark some wacky defensive play. 

The one thing about the Tucson climate is that it might be the only weather that gets stuck in your teeth.  You have to remember to walk into stiff winds with your mouth closed, lest you be spitting out sand for the next few hours.

Speaking of Tucson, we finally found an area that resembled a modern urban area instead of a desert outpost on the far, far east side of town.  You know, the places that make any city resemble a modern American one – including a Buffalo Wild Wings, which is all right by us.

It’s been raining since about 5:00, and the forecast predicts it’ll continue to do so tomorrow.  We have tickets for the Sox and Angels with plans to attend Rockies practice in the morning, so let’s hope it’ll let up enough to catch both of those. 

Next week looks like a beauty, though.  Figures.

LfT Day 3: Game recap

The White Sox-Padres game was cancelled today thanks to way too much rain.  They just missed seeing a rare snowstorm in Arizona, where Flagstaff supposedly saw a foot of snow.

It was just rain here in Tucson, but they managed to get the Diamondbacks-Mariners game in here.  We got a chance to see Jeff Bajenaru and Luis Vizcaino in action, so it was as close as we could get.  The Sox will be back in action tomorrow here in Tucson tomorrow against the Angels, and we'll be there.

Lft Day 3: You gotta be kidding me

It's currently 47 in Tucson, windy with a forecast for rain, which would make it the first time in about 150 days that it has done so.  It's already raining in Phoenix, with thunderstorms predicted the rest of the day. 

Now, we're weighing traveling three hours in crappy weather for a game that may very well be rained out versus staying put, and from looking out the window, staying put is winning.  That means we may be watching some Diamondbacks-Mariners action if that game is even playable.

But it gets worse.

Here's the latest weather bulletin from the National Weather Service: 
TUCSON METRO/MARANA/GREEN VALLEY- 1001 AM MST SAT MAR 11 2006

...HEAVY SNOW WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 4 AM MST SUNDAY... ... SNOW ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 4 AM MST SUNDAY...

A STRONG AND COLD PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM WILL AFFECT THE AREA TODAY AND SUNDAY....PRODUCING THE FIRST SIGNIFICANT SNOW OF THE SEASON. THE SNOW LEVEL WILL LOWER TO 4500 FEET BY LATER THIS AFTERNOON. TOTAL STORM ACCUMULATIONS OF 8 TO 14 INCHES ARE EXPECTED ABOVE 7000 FEET...WITH 3 TO 8 INCHES ABOVE 5000 FEET. GUSTY WINDS WILL ALSO PRODUCE BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW AT TIMES.

A SNOW ADVISORY MEANS THAT PERIODS OF SNOW WILL CAUSE PRIMARILY TRAVEL DIFFICULTIES. BE PREPARED FOR SNOW COVERED ROADS AND LIMITED VISIBILITIES...AND USE CAUTION WHILE DRIVING.

I don't think we've had one heavy snow advisory in Albany this winter for chrissakes.

LfT Day 2: Tucson, take two

(For Day 2 photos can be found here)

There are two sides to Tucson – the day and the night.  

During the day, there’s baseball, and it’s fantastic.  At night, there’s…nothing.  And sure, most of the University of Arizona students are out for Spring Break, but even if they were here, I don’t see where they could even go.

But first, the good stuff.  Matt and I went to Tucson Electric Park at 9:30 to see practice, and we got there as they were warming up.  We decided to throw the ball around the parking lot for a bit, because watching players jog from 175 yards away didn’t excite us greatly.  (It would be nice if they set up fan seating closer to the field, but we were stuck watching through not one, but two chain-link fences.)

While walking around the grounds to see if we could get closer, we came across the players’ parking lot, which also had a chain-link fence covered in that green mesh netting.  But looking through a couple holes, we think we might’ve seen a couple of cars owned by people we’re familiar with.  

First, there was a Chevy truck in the same model of the one Jermaine Dye received along with the World Series MVP trophy.  There were no markings that would indicate that it belonged to Jermaine, but we couldn’t think of a reason to drive a car that ugly unless we got it for free.  Next to it was a Hummer with the license plate “KW.”  Perhaps it wasn’t Kenny Williams’, but a Hummer sure seems to fit his persona.

Anyway, when we returned to the practice diamond disappointed that we couldn’t get closer than two football fields away from home plate, batting practice had started.  Thanks to a hefty tailwind, a number of balls reached the parking lot, and Matt and I grabbed four of them.  One was Jim Thome’s, another was Jermaine Dye’s, and the other two were hit by some faceless righty who I couldn’t identify from one county over.  Matt had to fend off a tenacious 60-year-old for one of them.

Between the last batter and the start of the game, we returned to the hotel because we didn’t realize Arizona’s spring also meant “light jacket weather” like everywhere else, and came back to find out our seats were four rows behind the on-deck circle on the first-base side.  But great seats aside, Tucson Electric Park would be enjoyable from any vantage point.

Hi Corbett was a nice minor-league field that got all the basics down right.  Tucson Electric Park took it one step further, with better food (Chicken quesadillas were $8, but they filled me up better than two $3.50 hot dogs would’ve) and an awesome bullpen set-up where you could watch pitchers warm up from various angles.  The seats themselves were a little cramped – especially after the quesadillas – but that was the only complaint.  Aside from the score, of course.

After the game and writing the recap, we set out to try to find out what there is to like about Tucson.  Yesterday, we felt we might’ve been a little premature in declaring Tucson a dump, for lack of a better word.  After spending an evening driving and walking around to find a single place to eat, our stance hasn’t changed.

It wasn’t just the periphery that was troubling.  For dinner, we searched a better part of the downtown area by both car and foot and found nothing.  A couple of wine bars, a questionable-looking regular bar, a few chain eateries (closed, except for Subway), and that was it.

The downtown area reminded me of a Grand Theft Auto city.  There were some tall buildings, but none were notable.  City Hall itself was a bland establishment.  Basically, just like in the video game, the tall buildings existed to make turning corners more difficult.  We saw a tattoo parlor, a library, a movie theatre, the visitor’s bureau, and that’s all I can remember.  That’s not fair to GTA cities – they actually had places to eat.

It took about 45 minutes of driving back and forth across the town to find a restaurant that was local to Tucson, since you can eat at chains anywhere.  After driving by a strip joint, a store that sold goods related to strip joints next to it, and a C&W restaurant that we mistook for a gay bar called the “Bashful Bandit,” we finally found what appeared to be a reputable group of restaurants in a strip by the University.  The local microbrewery there had decent food, but it’s a shame that we’ll have to return to eat there at least one more time due to a lack of other options.

Tomorrow we’ll head to Phoenix on I-10, which Matt said is just as thrilling of a ride as the one around Tucson today. 

LfT Day 2: Game recap

In one day, I got a taste of what the first couple week of Spring Training has been like for the Sox:

The first-stringers looked good, the starting pitching looked solid, the defense looked inconsistent, and the bullpen looked, as a whole, crappy.

The Sox jumped out to an early lead, only to watch Charlie Haeger give them the lead, and after the Sox tied it up, Cliff Politte and Javier Lopez handed it right back to them.  Given that the dreck has been ruining the results for the rest of the team, it’s only fair to grade the parts individually.

Jose Contreras:  He was facing the equivalent of a Triple-A team, so the fact that he allowed only one run in four innings doesn’t mean much.  But he looked solid, maintaining his control while changing arm slots.  He struck out five hitters, and walked none, and made a nice play on a 3-6-1 double play.  Covering first base isn't his strong suit.

First-string offense:  I really like what Jim Thome brings to the offense.  He didn’t put a ball in play, but he drew two walks, the second of which started a third-inning rally with two outs.  He sees a lot of pitches and gives the Sox a perpetually tough out – something they didn’t have last year.

After preaching patience throughout the spring, Paul Konerko was fairly aggressive at the plate, swinging at the first pitch twice.  He had a double and a came a few feet short of a homer.  Nobody could beat the Widge, either, racking up a double and a walk in his two plate appearances.

Jermaine Dye went 2-for-3, and could’ve reached base the third time had he run one out.  He watched a towering infield pop-up blow back into fair territory and land between home plate and the mound.  Except he didn’t run, so he was thrown out at first easily.

Reserves:  Chris Stewart, Robert Valido, Darren Blakely, Ryan Sweeney and Pedro Lopez went a combined 1-for-9, but they were solid defensively.  Valido made all three assists in Bobby Jenks’ inning, and Casey Rogowski started and finished a clutch 3-2-3 double play to bail out Cliff Politte.

Whole-gamers:  Brian Anderson, Joe Borchard and Josh Fields played all nine innings.  Borchard hit an opposite-field two-run shot in the second and drew a walk, but he also misplayed a ball in left field.  Overall, I’d call it a good day for him.  Fields went 1-for-3 with a walk, and Anderson went 1-for-4 with a walk.  After starting his day with three ground balls to short, I think Anderson should be an adequate replacement for Aaron Rowand.

Bullpen:  Oy.  It was like they turned a solid starting effort into a game of "Red Light, Green Light" with the San Francisco offense.

Red light:  Contreras.

Green light:  Charlie Haeger was first, and got beat up for five runs on five hits in one inning.  The hitters weren’t exactly all over him – in a lot of cases, they managed to get enough foul tips until finding a pitch they could rip, and rip they did.

Red light:  Neal Cotts looked Cotts-like.

Green light:  Cliff Politte’s inning could’ve been a lot worse.  A group of minor-league hitters were ripping the first pitch they liked – they had four straight hits, but a conservative Giants third-base coach kept the Giants to only one run.

Red light:  Jenks brought the heat in his inning, inducing three weak grounders to short.

Green light:  Javier Lopez.  The LOOGY frontrunner faced four lefties in his inning, and they went 3-for-4.  Righties fared all right against him, too.  Put them together, and they scored four runs on five hits against him.

Matt was surprised to know Lopez was likely to make the Sox bullpen, given what he saw Lopez do in Colorado.  “He got cut from the Rockies’ bullpen last year, and that should’ve been a telltale sign for any major-league team,” he says.

“The biggest problem with Javy Lopez is with his stuff, he should not get himself into as much trouble as he does.  I just wouldn’t suggest him as your second left-hander under any circumstances.”

LfT Day 2: Morning update -- No Bonds

Looks like we won't be seeing any Barry today, according to an e-mailer and a corroborating article:
"I'm not making that trip," he said Sunday after practice at Scottsdale Stadium. "The farthest I'm traveling this spring is right out there to home plate."
Bawk. Bawk. Ba-gawwwwk.

LfT Day 1: It's new to me

(Day 1 photos can be found here)

After the flight I had from Atlanta to Tucson, the rest of the day was only marginally strange.

What happened is the guy on the aisle seat in my row warned me that he has seizures nearly each time he wakes up, and they lasted anywhere from 10-15 seconds.  I didn’t know if he was joking until he told the flight attendants the same thing.

Sure enough, he falls asleep, and halfway through the flight, he jolts bolt upright, stiffens and starts shaking violently.  I’m just watching him as people around me are punching their flight attendant call buttons, because he said not to worry.  He continues convulsing until he slumps into the unoccupied middle seat between us.  Then, he wakes up out of breath.

I ask him if he’s all right, and he said he was okay, and asked me how long it lasted.  I said “About 15 seconds,” and he said, “That’s good.”  Seemed like a nice guy, but even with the advance notice, it still scared the hell out of me.

But on to Tucson!

My flight was delayed about 25 minutes, but it really didn’t matter because Matt’s was delayed an hour.  So he got to the Tucson airport the same time I did.  The airport was nicely adorned with a “Home of the World Champion White Sox” banner, by the way.  I’ll try to snag a picture of the banner, if not the banner itself on the way out.

We took our ultra-sweet rental Ford Focus (the Chevy Cobalts must’ve been taken) to Hi Corbett Field for the Rockies-Cubs game, since the Sox were out of town.  We found parking relatively close to the stadium and managed to get there at the end of the third inning.

Hi Corbett is a great place to watch a game.  The hot dogs were overpriced (that’s what you get with Aramark), but the seating was comfortable and so was the temperature (high 60s, partly cloudy).  It’s also the home of Arizona’s women’s pro softball team, which makes me wonder how that’s possible since it’s 366 feet down the left field line and 400+ feet to the power alleys.

The Rockies did all their damage before we got there, staking a 6-0 lead after three, and the Cubs didn’t show much from there on out.  Jacque Jones struggled to get reads on the ball in right field, and the offense didn’t amount to anything until Mike Restovich broke the shutout bid in the seventh inning with an RBI single.

Cub fans outnumbered Rockies fans to Matt’s chagrin, but they provided some entertainment, in both the forms of good Cub fans and ones that fit the stereotype.

The people in front of us were great, asking us to not call Felix Pie “the next Corey Patterson” – and Felix did earn our temporary respect by actually working the count full before flying out to left.  And then there were the stereotypical Neifi jokes, and Matt, a man who witnessed the dawn of the Neifi Era in Colorado, actually got to make a joke at somebody else’s expense.  A rare occasion for a Rockies fan.

But then there were the women in the Mark Grace jerseys.  And the fans who left en masse early.  And the ones who chanted “Throw it back! Throw it back!” for a solid 20 seconds towards a guy who caught a ball tossed by the Rockies third baseman after he caught the final out of the inning.  And that never gets old.

As a city, Tucson itself was… well…

I don’t want to use the word “slum,” because I’ve only seen half of it, and probably the half that’s closer to the University of Arizona and downtown has some nicer parts.  But the parts we saw, in between Hi Corbett and our hotel, often brought to mind what the end of the earth might resemble.

It’s all brown, which is to be expected from a desert, and the air is accordingly dusty.  But because there hasn’t been rain in about 140 days, it’s even more arid.  You’ll drive over “rivers” that are now ditches, and by clusters of homeless people sleeping in parks with brown grass (a homeless man also caught up to us from behind on bicycle while we were entering a restaurant, asking for hotel money).  A majority of windows are covered by security bars, plywood or graffiti.  It’s hard to tell what land has been set aside from development and what’s just plain ol’ land that can’t grow anything, because low-rise buildings pop up along the road in a random fashion.

The mountains are beautiful, and the temperature was just about perfect, but the half of the city I saw today was in desperate need of a powerwashing.

Nevertheless, it has what only a few other cities can claim right now – live, Major League Baseball action, and for that I’m thankful.  We’ll be heading out bright and early to Tucson Electric Park to catch the White Sox practicing before the game, and of course the game itself.  They’ll take on the Giants, and if I'm up to it, I'll have the opportunity to boo Barry. 

(Count Chocula was unavailable for comment.)

Tucson bound

I'm catching a 6 a.m. flight out of Albany, connecting in Atlanta, and if all goes well, will land in Tucson just in time for the Rockies-Cubs game at 1:05.  I'll be meeting my friend and Rockies fan Matt down there (his username is MattTheRock around these parts), so we're splitting time between the two teams.  Unevenly, of course, as it'll be mostly Sox from there on out. 

I'll also try to track down the hotel the Sox are staying at -- hopefully we'll be able to see Scott Podsednik in action.