Month: June 2008 (Page 30 of 40)

Dontrelle Willis demoted to Single-A

Dontrelle Willis’ week just got worse. After getting shelled by the Indians for eight runs in only 1.1 innings of work Monday night, the Tigers’ starter was demoted to Single-A Lakeland on Tuesday.

The Tigers completely botched Willis’ return fron the DL by having him throw one inning in his first 12 days on the active roster. He obviously needs to pitch as much as possible if he’s going to get through these command problems, and the Tigers weren’t doing anything to get him there by having him throw 6 1/3 innings in nearly three weeks. Triple-A Toledo’s Eddie Bonine is the favorite to replace him in the rotation, but it’s doubtful that he’d prove adequate. The Tigers just don’t have any solid alternatives.

After struggling the past two years in Florida, one had to assume Willis wasn’t going to fair much better in a tougher American League. He seems like a really good kid, so hopefully he can get his mind and mechanics right and get back up to the big leagues. Either way, that $29 million extension the Tigers signed him to in December doesn’t look too good. But hey, at least they didn’t give $126 million to Barry Zito, right? I mean, am I right?

Lakers return home for a must-win game

One thing’s for sure – when you’re heading home, down 0-2 in a best of seven series, Game 3 is a must-win situation.

Kobe and Co. have their backs against the wall tonight, but the good news is that they’ll have the support of the Laker faithful in the friendly confines of the Staples Center. Laker fans aren’t the most knowledgeable, but they love their team and they’ll be out in force (once they all arrive by the end of the first quarter).

The Lakers are bound to attack the paint more, so expect the free throw shooting to even out. The bench usually plays better at home as well, so there is reason for optimism if you’re a Laker fan.

Conversely, the Celtics have a golden opportunity to take whatever wind remains out of the Laker sails. They’ll have to play the (almost) perfect game to overcome the Lakers’ home court advantage and an officiating crew that has heard Phil Jackson complain about the foul disparity for the last 48 hours. But if they can squeak out a win, you can put a fork in L.A.

Big Brown’s trainer being big ass again

SPORTSbyBROOKS.com notes that Rick Dutrow Jr., the trainer for Triple Crown flop Big Brown, is taking one final opportunity to be a real horse’s ass (pun intended). Dutrow has decided to aim at Jockey Kent Desormeaux and blame him for why Big Brown pulled up lame at last Saturday’s Belmont Stakes.

Dutrow’s response? “I don’t see the horse with a problem, so I have to direct my attention toward the ride. That’s all I can come up with.” We’ll take “the horse didn’t work out for three weeks before the longest race of its life” for $100,000, Alex.

We haven’t heard one nice word about Dutrow over the last week from noted horse racing writers. Andy Beyer sounded like Dutrow had turned his Belmont-sized gardenia bed and turned it into his own personal compost heap by his actions before and after the race.

I agree with the boys from SbB – if the horse couldn’t work out leading up to the race because of a slight crack in his foot, he’s probably not going to fair to well now is he? Sure, blame the jockey for not wanting to hurt the horse when he saw the animal didn’t have anything in the tank.

Clemens, other athletes popping Viagra to help performance?

A source tells the New York Daily News that Roger Clemens used to pop Viagra in order to help his on field performance.

Clemens stashed the clearly marked, diamond-shaped pills in a GNC vitamin bottle in his locker at Yankee Stadium, according to a source familiar with the clubhouse, perhaps keeping the drug undercover to avoid the inevitable wisecracks about all the girlfriends he needed to please.

Clemens wasn’t alone. The pitcher, who is believed to have scored the drug from a teammate, joined the burgeoning number of athletes who have turned Vitamin V and its over-the-counter substitutes into one of the hottest drugs in locker rooms.

The drug is so widely used for off-label purposes that it has drawn the attention of anti-doping officials and law-enforcement agencies in the United States and beyond.

“All my athletes took it,” BALCO founder Victor Conte, whose acolytes included Jason Giambi, Barry Bonds and Marion Jones, said of an over-the-counter supplement he claimed mimicked the effects of Viagra.

“It’s bigger than creatine. It’s the biggest product in nutritional supplements.”

Among the off-label uses for Viagra, which first went on the market in 1998, it:

· Helps build endurance, especially for athletes who compete at high altitudes
· Delivers oxygen, nutrients and performance-enhancing drugs to muscles more efficiently
· Counteracts the impotence that can be a side-effect of testosterone injections

Boy, when people say athletes will do anything to gain an advantage on the field, they really mean anything. Forget the endurance and oxygen benefits – I couldn’t imagine playing an entire game while sporting massive wood the whole time.

So Clemens went as far as to pop the little blue pill for an advantage on the field, but not HGH or other performance-enhancing drugs? Come on.

Tuesday Morning Baseball Musings

Reds 9, Marlins 4. Congratulations to Ken Griffey Jr., who hit home run No. 600 Monday night. From what we know, he did it the right way and only further cemented a trip to the Hall of Fame. Imagine how many home runs he could be sitting at now had he not suffered so many freak injuries throughout his career. What a class act, too.

Pirates 5, Diamondbacks 3. Arizona has now lost 10 of its last 14 games. Good thing they play in the NL West where they’re the only team above .500, but the Dodgers and amazingly, even the Giants are creeping closer to first place.

White Sox 7, Twins 5. What’s in the water in Chicago? First the Cubs win nine straight and now the Chi Sox have made it seven in a row Monday night thanks to Nick Swisher’s two dingers. A week ago Ozzie Guillen’s head was about to explode again, now his club has a rather commanding 6.5-game lead over Minnesota in the AL Central.

Indians 8, Tigers 2. The Tribe welcomed Dontrelle Willis back to the mound by thumbing him for eight runs on just three hits. Willis lasted only 1.1 innings before being chased…How about Cliff Lee (10-1, 2.52 ERA) for Cleveland? Who would have thought that he would be the rock of the rotation at this point in the season?

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