Spring Training- 3/21/07

I can still remember the day I stopped being a baseball fan.  
It was the day Tony Tarasco’s career was snatched away by
a boy named Jeffrey Maier.  It was the day that my beloved
Orioles led the AL East wire to wire only to fall to the
Yankees.  The Yankees became a dynasty of champions.  
The Orioles became a dynasty of losers.  Baseball was never
the same for me.  Innocence lost around the time I turned 11.  
I’ll tune in for a couple playoff games if the teams are
interesting or the game is close in the late innings but the love
is lost.  I guess it wasn’t meant to be.  
Somehow ten years later I find myself watching a Boston
Red Sox spring training game.  Flipping channels I saw that
Daisuke Matsuzaka was pitching.  Apparently hype does
work.  The hundred million dollar myth from Japan had piqued
my interest.  I’m an automatic skeptic when it comes to
prospects.  There is no way a pitcher who has never pitched
in the big leagues could be worth over fifty million dollars just
to negotiate.  That price still blows the mind but in today’s
free agent market it may be a bargain after all.  He looks
good though.  He looks very good.  The gyroball may not exist
but whatever he’s throwing is bending around the bats.  Dice-
K was facing spring training Pirates so it’s a little early to be
extremely impressed.  Yet he had attitude, reaching back for
a 95 mph fastball strike in response to a called ball that he
didn’t agree with.  A player willing to fight, willing to be angry,
willing to put a little extra on that fastball when he’s frustrated
but still level enough to put it over the plate is a commodity
indeed.  That’s the kind of head you want on your pitcher.  My
favorite moment though was when, with two strikes, he threw
some kind of screwball that the announcers said is the
gyroball if anything is considered the gyroball.  The batter
tipped it into Varitek’s mitt but the umpire ruled that the ball
had hit the dirt first.  Dice-K threw the exact same pitch in the
exact same place on the next pitch.  The batter swung and
missed.  Inning over.  That is a strikeout pitch.  They say this
guy has somewhere in the area of four and six quality pitches
he can use.  Yet he throws the same bizarre curveball out of
the strike zone twice in a row and the batter can’t deal with it.  
I think we may have something special ladies and gentlemen.
Another interesting moment was listening to the announcers
talk about Jonathan Papelbon.  They consider him the fourth
best starting pitcher on the Red Sox.  He was moved from
closer to starter because doctors believe the regularized
routine will help keep his arm healthy after he broke down at
the end of last season.  The announcers didn’t agree with this
assessment.  Their secondary argument was that Papelbon
should remain closer but that Terry Francona should just
manage him better, giving up a game here and there by
putting in someone else.  In other words, keep Papelbon the
closer but use him in a more routine fashion and don’t let him
pitch two innings at a time or too many days in a row.  This
seems like a good idea although who knows how it would
actually fly in practice.  Maybe having a shutdown fourth
starter will be more beneficial than having a closer you have
to worry about every time you call his name.  The thing that
caught my attention was the first argument given by the
announcers.  They were explaining about how the move was
related to health issues rather than baseball issues and
finished up their explanation by saying “doctors don’t make
baseball decisions”.  The thrust of the following exchange
was that maybe the doctors were right but who cares
because they don’t know baseball and the Red Sox need
Papelbon to be a closer.  Papelbon is only 26 years old and
very obviously talented.  If he can start he should start.  If
being a closer may ruin his arm he should not be a closer.  
Having a quality starter for the next ten years is a lot better
than having a great closer for this season until his arm falls off
and he turns into Kerry Wood and Mark Prior.  They are
starting the season on the DL again.  Their careers are never
going to get back on the track of promise where they began.  
The doctors are there to tell you which baseball moves will
ruin your players.  They are there specifically to tell you that
Papelbon’s arm will stay healthier for longer as a starter
instead of a closer.  Plus there is the moral issue of treating
your players the right way.  Hearing announcers actively
encourage disregarding the orders of doctors in such a
nonchalant way and making it sound like it was obvious, wise
advice was somewhat shocking.  They backed off to some
extent by talking about managing Papelbon as a closer and I
hope the Red Sox have discussed that option.  If he can be a
closer without hurting himself then he might as well be a great
closer.  Either way I hope he can stay healthy and as much as
I dislike the Red Sox these days I hope they destroy the
Yankees who will never be sufficiently avenged for that night
in October ten years ago.
The Gospel of Luke
The Staff
Zak