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Goin’ mobile

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

After a successful test run on State of the Sox, I’ve activated a plugin that will make browsing and commenting on this blog a lot easier on many smartphones, such as the iPhone, Droid, Pre, various Blackberries and others.

Give it a shot, and let me know if you have any problems.  My phone ain’t smart enough to handle it yet, so I’m flying blind and relying on the kindness of strangers to inform me of any issues. So far, the feedback has been positive, and I hope it improves the experience for those of you on the go.

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Baseball America has the list of minor-league free agents, which I always have an unusual amount of fun browsing. The White Sox system’s casualties:

Chicago White Sox (10)
RHP: Dylan Axelrod (Hi A), Fernando Hernandez (AAA), Kelvin Jimenez (AAA), John Van Benschoten (AAA), Ehren Wassermann (AAA)
C: Justin Knoedler (AAA)
SS: Eider Torres (AAA)
OF: David Cook (AA), Josh Kroeger (AAA), Michael Restovich (AAA)

A few thoughts…

Click to continue »

Daniel Hudson, come on down (updated)

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

I’ll give Kenny Williams credit — his moves may not go over well with the mainstream media or a large percentage of the fan base, but it’s going to be pretty interesting for the baseball geeks among us.

Daniel Hudson, from Kannapolis to Chicago in one season.

Daniel Hudson, from Kannapolis to Chicago in one season.

While Ozzie Guillen was preparing to not use Bobby Jenks in a key late-inning situation in favor of Tony Pena once again, the Sox cut Dan Hudson’s start against Norfolk short to let him know he’s heading to the big leagues, according to The Daily Press (Newport News, Va.):

The 22-year-old pitcher, who starred at Princess Anne High School in Virginia Beach and at Old Dominion University, came back as a member of the Charlotte Knights and pitched three shutout innings against the Norfolk Tides. After the third inning, pitching coach Richard Dotson pulled Hudson out of the game and told him he was being called up to the majors by the Chicago White Sox.

“It couldn’t have happened in a better place,” Hudson said between games of a doubleheader. “To get the news here, at this park with all of my friends and family here, it’s crazy to think about.”

I had no strong feelings either way on a potential Hudson promotion. He hadn’t mastered Triple-A yet, as he still had some issues with efficiency, slider command and a very high flyball rate.  On the other hand, he had no problem limiting the damage, which is a skill that has served him well so far on his five-level climb:

evel
W-L
IP
H
HR
BB
K
GB%
WHIP
ERA
A
1-2
22
15
0
2
30
52.8
0.77
1.23
A+
4-3
45
31
3
13
49
48.8
0.98
3.40
AA
7-0
56.1
37
1
10
63
37.8
0.83
1.60
AAA
2-0
24
22
1
9
24
29.4
1.29
3.00
Total
14-5
147.1
105
5
34
166
41.8
0.94
2.32

But really, the biggest obstacle preventing a Hudson promotion was the 40-man roster. However, after trading Jim Thome and Jose Contreras, the White Sox have the room.

Click to continue »

Go West, Old Men: What do the Thome, Contreras trades mean?

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

As August came to an end, Kenny Williams officially brought his team’s postseason hopes to a close.

The Gentleman Masher is now a Gentleman Dodger.

My favorite piece of Thome art, courtesy of thecip.

My favorite piece of Thome art, courtesy of thecip.

The White Sox traded Jim Thome for Justin Fuller,  who will never be more famous than he is right now.  Somehow, they also sent Jose Contreras to Colorado for something of value.  More on that later, because Thome’s departure is the much bigger story.

Now, it’s entirely possible that this is merely a rental.  The Sox need a left-handed bat, and there’s nothing stopping them from re-signing Thome in the off-season.  Of course, if Thome is willing to be a bench player for a World Series ring and comes away empty, he may be short on reasons to come back to the South Side.

If he’s absolutely, positively no longer in the plans, there are implications abound:

No. 1: Williams has made a number of surprising deals before, but this is the first one that shakes the team’s true veteran core.  Other moves had been made to accommodate Thome, Jermaine Dye and Paul Konerko. Not anymore.

No. 2: If Thome isn’t re-signed, then the Sox have an opening for a left-handed bat.

No. 3: The Brandon Allen trade becomes much, much more confusing now.

No. 4: Evidently, Williams isn’t going to hold piss-poor attendance over the final month against White Sox fans.

No. 5: This can’t hurt the Sox’s reputation among free agents.  With the Sox throwing cash in the deal, they’re basically paying for Thome to get a chance for a championship.  The Sox have the reputation of trashing players on their way out, and this definitely helps combat that.

No. 6: It opens the door to sign Frank Thomas to a commemorative deal for the last few weeks of the season.

No. 7: The Sox had maxxed out their 40-man roster, but without Thome and Contreras, there’s some breathing room.  Bartolo Colon can also be removed at any time.

No. 8: One of those spots will be used on Tyler Flowers, who will be more than a ceremonial third catcher.

Flowers becomes the biggest priority for Ozzie Guillen, who will hopefully continue his recent trend of giving young players a long leash.  I’d personally like to see him rotate between DH and catcher with A.J. Pierzynski, since it would give Pierzynski his desired playing time while saving some mileage on his knees.

Click to continue »

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.

Click to continue »

Lillibridge down, Nunez up

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

Jhonny Nunez gets a chance to prove the Nick Swisher trade wasn’t just a pure salary dump, as he replaces Brent Lillibridge on the 25-man roster.

More tonight.

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.

Beckham called up — never heard of him (updated)

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

A press release confirms the inevitable:

CHICAGO – The Chicago White Sox have announced that prior to tomorrow’s game vs. the Oakland A’s they will purchase the contract of infielder Gordon Beckham from Class AAA Charlotte and designate infielder Wilson Betemit for assignment.

He will be starting, too, after going 3-for-5 with two doubles in his last night with Charlotte, while the law firm of Cahill, Mazzaro & Outman finalized the paperwork for their injunction against the White Sox offense.

While Kenny Williams is attempting to give his team a swift kick in the butt, it’s not a desparate maneuver.  Any fears should be calmed by looking at his Charlotte career:

That’s not to say he’s here to stay.  He could very well join the Robin Ventura Rookie Year Re-Enactment Society, find himself back on the Knights in July and not appear back in Chicago until September.

However, until it’s proven that major-league pitching overwhelms him, every at-bat in Charlotte is a wasted one.  Now, there are three questions:

No. 1:  What should we expect?

Minorleaguesplits.com sets Beckham’s MLE at .273/.312/.438, which sounds about right OPS-wise.  I’d probably knock about 25 points off the slugging and add 20 points to the OBP, but having zero walks at Charlote probably suppresses that projection a bit.

I think he’s going to be shaky at third, maybe equivalent to Josh Fields in the early going.  He should have a little more range, but inspire less confidence on routine plays.

What I’m hoping to see is an abundance of line drives, which amounted to roughly a quarter of Beckham’s batted balls.  Right now, the White Sox have the fourth-lowest line-drive rate in baseball, and their performance over the last two nights illustrates that problem.  Just to scare you, they finished fourth-worst in 2007 as well.

The Sox are aware of this problem, which is why every spring they trot out lines like “getting back to basics” and “playing more smallball.”

Unfortunately, they compound the problem by getting guys who can only hit the ball on the ground.

Beckham is the kind of guy who can help usher in a genuine culture change, and not a flimsy, fake one. Unless he’s an uncannily quick study, I’m just hoping to see a few glimpses of that potential at this point.  It won’t be the end of the world if he flops, so I’m going to focus on signs.

No. 2: What will happen to Josh Fields?

He’s going to move across the diamond and start an apprenticeship under Paul Konerko.  With the Sox designating Wilson Betemit, they have no backup first basemen.

Hey, he should be better there than Timo Perez.

No. 3:  Which 1990s Saturday Night Live cast member will Beckham’s career most closely represent?

Without a doubt, this is the issue Beckham is most concerned with.  Some options:

  • Will Ferrell:  A scene-stealer.
  • Phil Hartman: Polished in every way, and performance doesn’t seem to age.
  • Tim Meadows: Solid complementary player, never takes anything off the table but leaves you feeling like he could do more.
  • Chris Rock: The talent is there, but it doesn’t emerge with the Sox.
  • Norm McDonald:  Good, but limited, and disliked by management, which rips him after he leaves.
  • Mark McKinney: Great resume on smaller stage, but never found a fit in the majors.
  • Rob Schneider:  Interesting for a year, then nothing.
  • Chris Elliott: Completely forgettable.

I’m open to other suggestions if you have ‘em.  And there’s a fourth question for me:

No. 4:  Jim, aren’t you going to make fun of Wilson Betemit? C’monnnn, he was … he was just awful.

Yes, but wait for the noontime post.

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Minor league Bon Voyage Beckham party:

  • Columbus 6, Charlotte 4
    • Josh Kroeger went 3-for-4 with two doubles and an RBI.
    • Daryl Ward had two hits, including a double.
    • Justin Cassel resumed struggling, allowing six runs (five earned) on nine hits
      and two walks over 4 1/3 innings, striking out three.
    • Randy Williams (2 2/3 IP) and Ehren Wassermann (2 IP) didn’t allow a hit.
  • Huntsville 3, Birmingham 1
    • John Shelby had two of the Barons’ three hits, including a double.
    • Dayan Viciedo had the other one.
    • Kyle McCulloch pitched well in defeat, allowing two runs over seven innings, scattering five hits and a walk with three K’s.
    • Jhonny Nunez allowed a solo homer and walked two batters in an inning of work.
  • Kannapolis 7, West Virginia 6
    • Justin Greene went 2-for-3 with a walk, and also stole his fifth base.
    • Jon Gilmore drove in two with a double.
    • Gregory Infante posted nice peripherals: eight strikeouts, no walks, eight hits
      over seven innings.  He did allow five runs, one unearned.
    • The Intimidators committed four errors, and have 10 over their last two games.
  • Winston-Salem vs. Myrtle Beach PPD