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Front office talk, occasionally about baseball

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Don Cooper, occasionally sounding like he’s on autotune, appeared on Boers and Bernstein, and the rumor is true — he’s not a fan of the cameras.

B&B: Coop, are we going to see you prominently displayed on that MLB reality show? Or are you trying to hide when the cameras are popping up.

Cooper: You know what? To tell you the truth, I’m not all that comfortable with it … it’s kind of like foreigners being in on our meetings and things like that… the other day, I kinda got miked up for the game, and I hadn’t done that in seven years. Seven years ago, I got miked up for a game, felt extremely uncomfortable, did not enjoy it, and for the life of me, I have no idea why I said “yes” to it the other day. And 10 minutes after I got started, I said, “What in the hell did I get myself into?” Because I could not have fun with it. I just didn’t feel like I could be myself.

The guy who heckled Cooper the other day?  He’s 80 years old, and not an MLB Network plant, according to Scott Reifert.

Meanwhile, Ozzie Guillen says he has dropped plans for a personal website because “a few guys from the front office didn’t like the idea.”  Reifert said the communications staff didn’t have any problems.  Maybe Kenny Williams did, though:

‘‘Don’t ask me another question about Twitter, websites [sic], blog, radio shows, non [sic] of that [crap],’’ Williams wrote in a text message. ‘‘All I care about is players playing, coaches coaching and managers managing. If they do that and do it well, we got no problems, but if they don’t …’’

Opening Day can’t come soon enough.

*********************************

Rick Hahn, by comparison, got off easy.  He sat down for a conference call with some White Sox bloggers/site operators, and while he had to take numerous questions about unpopular/unclear decisions — Scott Linebrink’s contract, the rotating DH, Mark Teahen’s extension — at least he was talking about baseball, and not social media.

But who knows? Maybe he’s a big Mashable guy.  Some highlights…

Click to continue »

Look busy, do nothing: Damon a Tiger

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

It’s safe to say The Cheat nailed his headline from Feb. 11:

Report: White Sox Finally Planning Failed Bid For Above-Replacement-Level DH

Yes, Johnny Damon is going to be a Detroit Tiger.

I largely bit my tongue on the issue, because 1) it’s never as bad for Scott Boras as it seems, and unless Damon had a visceral hatred of Detroit, the duo 2) wouldn’t break down to take a lower offer by the White Sox.

How did it happen?  Detroit ponied up $8 million, none deferred, meaning that Damon actually will earn more in 2010 from the Tigers than he would’ve had he signed the two-year, $14 million contract the Yankees allegedly offered.  That’s a victory, as is the no-trade clause. Damon preferred Chicago, and told the Tigers he’d sign Kenny Williams’  $6 million final offer (with deferred money) if they didn’t create a bigger disparity.

Williams called the spat with Frank Thomas back in 2006 a clash between two strong-willed men.  This is a similar deal.  Neither side blinked, but Boras came out a winner because Detroit did. Damn third parties.

What else do we know? That A.J. Pierzynski is as good of a closer as Scott Linebrink.

At least I can proceed with finishing the book this weekend.  The Johnny Damon section will remain in the “discarded” pile with Cole Armstrong’s 40-man roster preview.

When is flexibility constraining? When you’re Ozzie Guillen

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

The first rule of talking about Ozzie Guillen’s decision to pass on Jim Thome is, “Don’t talk about Jim Thome.”

There are reasons on passing on the Gentleman Masher himself.  He lost something off his bat speed, he missed more fastballs, his contact rate overall dropped, his strikeout rate increased, and he lost something off his isolated power, too.  He’d still be productive with another year of a gentle decline, but he’s a risk to fall off a cliff, get hurt, or both.

Here’s why the Thome decision is causing so much outrage.  Even at age 38, high-maintenance and declining, Thome still handily outproduced the players he’s being pushed aside to make room for:

PA HR BB K BA OBP SLG
Thome 417 23 69 116 0.249 0.372 0.493
DH Stew 732 22 73 120 0.247 0.321 0.407

Plus, Andruw Jones, Mark Kotsay and Omar Vizquel don’t. solve. anything.

Thome’s too old.  So are they.
Thome’s too slow. They don’t get on base enough to matter.
Thome hits for a low average. So do they.
Thome’s an injury risk. He’s better conditioned than Jones, and Kotsay’s had two back surgeries in four years.

It’s not only remarkable that Guillen is choosing the clearly inferior option (with negligence on Kenny Williams’ part) to satisfy his fetish of managing a National League team in the American League.  It’s that, no matter how you look at it, any benefits are immediately nullified.

Inflexible about flexibility

The Sox made versatility a priority this offseason, re-signing Kotsay, signing Jones and Vizquel, and trading for Mark Teahen.  Those four players cover the entire diamond, and that’s great.

Unfortunately, Guillen’s on the verge of turning it into Rob Mackowiak all over again.

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Hard times make White Sox warmer

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Last Friday, Kenny Williams tried his hand at improv comedy in a Second City show benefiting Gilda’s Club.  Scott Reifert said he was trying to track down the video, but nothing has turned up thus far.

On the surface, Williams and comedy is a fairly unusual combination. However, something hit me after reading this line by Scott Merkin:

But how about Ken Williams, Improv comedian or Improv actor?

Well, I would put that description right up there with the likelihood of ‘Ken Williams, lover of blogs.’

Williams might be the last person you’d associate with light-hearted laughs, but it’s not that foreign a concept when tying it to a number of other events and developments concerning the White Sox organization. Maybe it’s just me, but it seemed like they made a conspicuously strenuous attempt to make customers feel good. If 2005’s Journey song was “Don’t Stop Believin’,” 2009’s song was “Open Arms.”

Actually, you could say Williams started the warm and fuzzies at SoxFest when he invited a 12-year-old on stage after he engaged in an entertaining back-and-forth with Ozzie Guillen, so it’s fitting to see Williams cap off the season by stepping out of character for charity.

The Sox extended fan outreach in a number of other ways thereafter:

*The “White Sox traditions” ad campaign, which began with a caricaturish approach similar to the South Side Tourism Board campaign a few years ago, ended up incorporating average fan stories accompanied by a gentle piano.

*They ramped up their social media efforts. Reifert and Southpaw were all over Twitter. Hawk Harrelson routinely asked Steve Stone about “the Twitter,” although Stone is more for preaching than interacting. Even Joey Cora and Oney Guillen allowed fans to see them spar verbally and criticize members of the team before their toys were taken away.

The Sox PR department went so far as to organize an outing for their Tweeps, one of two group outings dedicated to its online community.

*They invited bloggers to a ballgame. Williams may not care for blogs, but the Sox made their first effort to embrace the independent media in May, inviting about a dozen of us to talk to Rick Hahn, Brooks Boyer and Moose Skowron, then watch a ballgame from a suite.

Hahn also made an appearance for Baseball Prospectus night, another group with which the Sox had a formerly cold relationship.

Throw in a lot of charity work and small gestures, as well as a couple stories I’ve heard about tremendous customer service, and the Sox front office definitely gave off a different vibe this season, compared to previous years.

Of course, it’s not by coincidence that this all took place in the worst economy in decades, and with a baseball team that often left fans wondering why they bothered paying to watch.

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The Linebrink problem, and playing for now

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Depending on how you look at it, one could say that Scott Linebrink needed this outing.

Nice work, Vince.

Nice work, Vince.

Before allowing two walks and a game-tying homer to Mike Jacobs on Monday night — all with two outs — opposing announcers had the habit of saying Linebrink was having a nice season, just by looking at these three stats:

42 1/3 IP, 42 K, 2.98 ERA

After Monday’s debacle, that ERA is now up to 3.53.  And now that none of his numbers are easily mistakeable, maybe the late-inning strategy can shift away from their $19 million man. Though his salary may suggest otherwise, Linebrink doesn’t belong in high-leverage situation.

Two pointless walks — Mark Teahan and Mitch Maier, with two outs with a three-run lead? — underscore the fact that his walk rate has more than doubled compared to last season. Jacobs’ blast was the seventh allowed by Linebrink, which is just about equal to his career-worst gopher ball rate of 1.6 per nine innings.

The last time the Linebrink problem was seriously addressed was after his collapse against the Cubs in June. At the time, Ozzie Guillen considered it a “slap in the face” to yank Linebrink from the setup role.

This time, it’s simply not a valid excuse. Acquiring Alex Rios had the potential to hurt the feelings of more useful players, such as Jermaine Dye and Scott Podsednik. Especially Dye, who was in the last year of his contract and slumping at the time.

Maybe the timing is officially right to make a big switch. Jeopardizing a must-win game should provide enough of an impetus, but since they won the game, Guillen isn’t turning Linebrink into a real scapegoat. Otherwise, if not now, when?

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His name is Rios and he cost just 20 grand

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Hey, who knew Kenny Williams had the ability to make a $56 ticket for jaywalking look like a bottle deposit?

If you take the cost of that citation and multiply it by a million or so, that’s roughly what Williams spent on his ballclub Monday.  J.P. Ricciardi dropped a right fielder in the water, Williams bit, and Ricciardi cut the line.

The result: Alex Rios is a White Sox, and Jerry Reinsdorf is now on the hook for the remainder of Rios’ six-year, $69 million contract.

Plus $20,000 for the waiver claim.  Again, chump change.

As a fan, I’m thrilled. It’s not like ticket/parking/concession prices are going to come down if he doesn’t make this move (why do you think I’m watching minor-league games all week?).

As someone who tries to guess along with Williams, I’m nervous.  And that makes this like almost every other Williams move. When somebody flies in the face of the industry’s status quo, it’s always going to feel weird.

The sticking point is simple: Tilt your head and squint, and there isn’t a lot separating this deal from the Scott Linebrink trade.  Much like when Williams made the industry shake its head by putting the “ink” in “Linebrink” to the tune of four years and $19 million, the Sox are throwing convention wisdom a curve by signing Rios to this six-year deal while he’s in the midst of a sizable three-year decline:

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Writing was on wall for four-pack of pitchers

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

While Jake Peavy won’t begin his rehab stint for another couple of weeks, Clayton Richard made an immediate impact for the San Diego Padres.  He allowed just one run (a solo homer) over 5 2/3 innings, allowing more walks (three) than hits (two).

He seemed to lose effectiveness his second and third time through — certainly nothing new, but hopefully the strong first run helps Padres fans warm up to him.  As far as I can tell, so far, so good.

It didn’t exactly come as a surprise that Kenny Williams dealt Richard, although Richard said he was blindsided by the news. I think a lot of people on the other end were sad to see him go. For instance, Williams wished him a warmer farewell than he did to, say, Brandon McCarthy:

“Clayton Richard, we believe, especially going to the National League and in San Diego’s ballpark … I told him, you are about to be a very successful and rich man. You are going to do well over there.”

Richard was nearly impossible to dislike, mainly because he was like Mark Buehrle’s awkward, larger younger brother; the Robert Barone to Buehrle’s Raymond. He rose from obscurity like Buehrle, worked as fast as Buehrle, and somehow avoided balks like Buehrle.  One could say we saw far too much of his teeth, but it’s partially because he doesn’t sulk — even though he took some pretty thorough beatings, and Ozzie Guillen shifted him between the rotation and the bullpen.

If you don’t hold Richard up to Buehrle’s standard of consistency, the only other difference is that Richard can’t field his position worth a damn. Not for a lack of effort, though.

Add up those factors, along with having seen him throw a nice start on his way to the big leagues, and I was hoping to see Richard develop into that rich man in a Sox uniform. For a rookie, he acted like a pro’s pro. Alas, since Williams had already traded him once, the second time’s not much of a surprise.

The same can be said for the other arms included in the deal.

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White Sox acquire Peavy (update)

Friday, July 31st, 2009

It’s a done deal. The final tally: Jake Peavy for Aaron Poreda, Clayton Richard, Dexter Carter and Adam Russell.

Kenny Williams is the master of “Shock and Hm.”  After getting leveled by the surprise of it all, I recover and find that I have no strong feelings either way.

It’s a fair deal. The Padres give up a Cy Young-caliber pitcher for four guys who aren’t great bets to be even half the starter Peavy is. The White Sox can’t use Peavy right away (he’s going to start rehab in the middle of August), and when he’s (hopefully) at full strength in 2010, he’ll be commanding front-line starter money with no cash from San Diego. He’ll enter a three-year, $52 million extension next season with a $22 million option ($4 million buyout) next season.

If you’re hankering to get fired up, here’s the key:

  • Mark Buehrle
  • Jake Peavy
  • John Danks
  • Gavin Floyd

That’s what this deal is all about. The Twins take Orlando Cabrera off Oakland’s hands, which could be a downgrade if he doesn’t shape up. The Tigers shore up their rotation by picking up Jarrod Washburn for a couple of so-so prospects, a solid starter who’s either en route to a career year or back to Earth.

Just when you think the Sox are standing pat, Williams beats the clock by sending two exciting pitching prospects, one decent big-league starter and one Loch Ness Monster for Peavy. After which, he hangs up the phone and does the Sam Cassell Dance:

I’ll have more on the guys the Sox sent packing tomorrow, but I wouldn’t overlook Adam Russell’s involvement in this trade. Three reasons:

No. 1: Russell’s had a nice season in Charlotte.

No. 2: The Padres know how to get through to really tall guys (see: Chris Young).

No. 3: The Padres know how to work with other team’s disappointments (see: Heath Bell, Cla Meredith, Mike Adams).

What happens to Russell won’t really matter to the White Sox since he wasn’t in their plans, but I wouldn’t be surprised if he ends up having a nice season for the Friars next year.

One man’s guess: Williams might hold, but won’t fold

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Many men have damaged their reputations trying to predict what Kenny Williams will do, and many more will fall.

However, since I’ve taken the bait so many times already, there’s no risk in making a bold, declarative statement.  So hell — barring a collapse over the next few weeks, I am convinced that Kenny Williams isn’t going to sell.

Here’s what does it for me:

IP
H
BB
K
ERA
WHIP
76 1/3
52
21
60
2.00
0.96

That line represents the combined Junes for Gavin Floyd and John Danks.  Floyd saw Danks’ seven shutout innings against the Cubs on Sunday and raised him two more outs, blanking the Indians for 7 2/3 innings in the White Sox’s 6-3 victory over Cleveland.

As long as the Sox’s young starters are locked in and Mark Buehrle is healthy, this is a team that’s much closer to competing than they are to falling off a cliff.  But allow me to flesh out my thoughts further.

Cash in?  For what?

By my count, there’s one guy on the White Sox with optimal trade value: Bobby Jenks.

Now that he’s back to striking out a batter an inning, it’s hard to find a way to knock his performance.  And while he’s going to get expensive eventually, he’s still two years away from free agency.  Any team that needs a big-time bullpen arm would want Jenks.

Nobody else on the Sox could command that kind of return.  Octavio Dotel is very tradeable, but probably only for a Jon Link-type arm.  Maybe a little more if the team in question won’t hesitate to offer Dotel arbitration.

Jim Thome has a complete no-trade clause, and any team closer to a World Series ring doesn’t need a full-time DH at his salary.  Not to mention that he’s not worth any draft picks.  Paul Konerko and Scott Linebrink aren’t exceptional enough at their salary commitments, plus they have no-trade protection.

Even if you think the Sox’s Cubans could trudge forward without Jose Contreras, he just tweaked his back in his last start.  Half a season of a high-maintenance “37-year-old” probably isn’t going to net a player who can improve a team.

That leaves Jermaine Dye, and even though his name has been tied to the San Francisco Giants as they try to restore the 2005 team, the Sox would be better off planning for a reduced one-year extension instead of trading him.

Salary relief isn’t necessary

This became pretty clear when Kenny Williams showed himself as willing to trade league-minimum types for Jake Peavy’s $52 million contract.

The Sox are carrying a $96 million payroll this year.  They have just $45 million committed toward their 2009 salary.  If you want to count Jenks in next year’s plans, consider it $53 million. 

On top of that, Doug Laumann has not referred to any budgetary concerns in their quest to sign picks with signability issues.

Maybe the Sox could save $5 million or more in ditching a veteran by July 31, but the net cost would show a lower figure — especially since, as Ozzie Guillen put it, the fans don’t show when the team is (expletive).

The next wave is already setting up shop

For the next couple of years, the Sox have a chance of running out a five-man rotation that costs less than $25 million, especially if Aaron Poreda can stick as a starter.

They have half of the diamond covered with long-term solutions at depressed prices (Gordon Beckham, Carlos Quentin, Alexei Ramirez and eventually Tyler Flowers).  Brandon Allen could be in the plans as soon as the start of next year, and Jordan Danks won’t be far behind.  In 2011, Dayan Viciedo becomes another true impact possibility, and maybe even Jared Mitchell if all goes well.

Even if a couple of the names above fall flat at the big-league level, they’re giving Williams plenty of reasons to supplement them with a veteran core…

What has the past told us?

…if Williams doesn’t trade them.

After the 2007 season, everybody expected Kenny Williams to officially close the window of opportunity.  Instead, he extended Dye, Buehrle and A.J. Pierzynski, traded his most attractive asset for an older shortstop and mortgaged the farm for Nick Swisher.  It worked.

Williams is nearly impossible to predict, but here are two things I know about him:

No. 1:  He doesn’t make obvious decisions in obvious situations. 

This is a guy who let a 90-win team sink under its own weight, then went and bolstered a 72-win team.  Given that this team is literally a .500 club, there may not be a clear-cut path Williams “should” pursue. 

It’s probably something along the lines of, “Get something for Dye, Thome and Dotel, because you aren’t going to get draft picks,” so I’m going to go in the opposite direction.

No. 2:  He’s loath to make public concessions.

Williams does know when start over, and 2007 is a good example.  He chose to reshape his rotation aggressively by trading for Danks and Floyd, but they had to take their lumps before his vision came to fruition.

This time around, the new guys are getting the hard-knocks treatment, but the Sox aren’t taking on water yet.  I don’t see Williams bowing out, especially with the money coming off the books.

So, hold or buy?

When the idea of a playoff push deserved a Jim Mora-style reaction earlier this month, I didn’t see Williams making a trade simply to make a trade.

Even though they’re in better position to buy, I haven’t changed my mind on that front.

At the risk of reading too much into one incident, I’m going to bank on the Peavy non-trade being the template for the White Sox’s deadline maneuvering — sidling up to other teams and saying, “Hey, baby, if you don’t want that extended contract in this economy … here’s my number.”

If the deadline comes and goes without any activity from the Sox, I wouldn’t be surprised — especially if Quentin is anywhere near 100 percent after the All-Star break.  That’s a big acquisition in and of itself.  Alternatively, I can see this year being an active one for post-deadline deals with payrolls being an issue.

What I can’t see is any scenario that makes the Sox a lesser team in August.  Nor can I see any reason to be disappointed by that prospect.

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I haven’t compiled a list of trade candidates (the Cheat has tried to figure out Williams’ “safe” column) but here’s one hunch I’ll throw out.

Dan Hudson and Dexter Carter each began the year in Kannapolis.  Hudson received a promotion to Winston-Salem, took a few lumps, then dominated to such an extent that the Sox boosted him to Birmingham.

Carter, on the other hand, remains in Kanny despite a strikeout-to-walk ratio that’s roughly 4:1.

It reminds me of the second time the Sox traded Gio Gonzalez.  Though he appeared to have mastered Double-A despite spending the entire previous season at that level, the Sox refrained from testing him in Charlotte.  Then they dealt him in the package for Swisher, and given his struggles in the majors with Oakland, the Sox did indeed appear to trade him at his peak value.

Using seat-of-the-pants analysis, it wouldn’t surprise me if the Sox are waiting until the deadline before giving Carter more difficult competition.  They’d rather have his adjustment period take place in August than July, if you get my drift.

Although, now that I think about it, the same thing could be said for Flowers.  I hate it when I scare myself.

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The Cleveland Indians, on the other hand, are definitely in sell mode, and I’ve found a couple of interesting reads exploring their fate.

Jerry Crasnick at ESPN.com touches on a lot of the same points made by a better Let’s Go Tribe piece that beat him to the punch by a week, but this part is worth singling out from a Sox fan’s perspective:

The Shapiro-Antonetti tandem gets more love from national media outlets than, say, White Sox GM Kenny Williams, who is perceived as arrogant and overly blunt. Is it because the Cleveland guys are media favorites? Perhaps. But their front office peers also regard Shapiro and Antonetti as extremely bright, people-oriented, innovative thinkers.

Jay at Let’s Go Tribe says the problem may be that the “bright, people-oriented, innovative thinkers” all think the same things.  If the relationship between Williams and Guillen is any indication, it’s likely that the Sox front office might encounter slightly more internal dissonance.

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Minor league roundup:

  • Charlotte 12, Buffalo 7 (10 innings)
    • Lucas Harrell threw a quality start in his Triple-A debut despite allowing too many baserunners.  Six innings, three runs on nine hits and three walks.  He struck out three and recorded 11 groundouts.
    • Three-hit games: Norris Hopper (three RBI), Miguel Negron (double, two RBI, two walks), Josh Kroeger (double, RBI) and Wilson Betemit (double, two RBI).
    • Cole Armstrong hit his third homer, a solo shot.
    • Brian Omogrosso continues to struggle, allowing two runs on three hits and a walk over an inning of work.  He struck out one.
    • Brandon Allen went 0-for-6.
  • Mobile 6, Birmingham 5
    • Tyler Flowers went 4-for-4 with a walk and an RBI, not to mention his second stolen base.
    • John Shelby went 2-for-5 with a double, RBI and his 11th steal.
    • Stefan Gartrell hit a solo homer, his 13th of the year.
    • Justin Cassel, who switched places with Harrell, allowed three earned runs on eight hits and two walks over seven innings, striking out four.
    • Dayan Viciedo went 1-for-5; Christian Marrero drew the collar.
  • Potomac 6, Winston-Salem 2
    • Making his first start since his no-hitter, Levi Maxwell strugged: 4 IP, 8 H, 5 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, 1 HR.
    • Jimmy Gallagher went 2-for-4, providing the runs with a two-run homer.
    • Brent Morel went 1-for-4.
  • Elizabethton 11, Bristol 5
    • Steven Upchurch didn’t have much: 4 2/3 IP, 12 H, 7 ER, 1 BB, 4 K, 2 HR.
    • Jimmy Ballinger (11th round) was also hit around in his debut, allowing two runs on five hits over 2 1/3 IP.  One walk, two K’s.
    • Misael Tavarez went 3-for-4 with a double; Shaydon Buckridge drove in three.
  • Great Falls 7, Missoula 4
    • Zach Kayne and Nicholas Ciolli both went 2-for-4 with a double.
    • Kevin Dubler and Orlando Santos joined them with two hits apiece.
    • Brett Graffy struck out five over three scoreless innings of relief, allowing three hits and a walk.