Category: MLB (Page 159 of 448)

Jed Hoyer hired as next Padres GM

Hoyer

Jed Hoyer, who joined the Red Sox in 2002 and was one of the co-general managers during Theo Epstein’s brief absence, has been named the GM of the San Diego Padres.

The 35-year-old Hoyer emerged as a favorite immediately after Padres CEO Jeff Moorad fired Kevin Towers during the last weekend of the regular season.

Moorad has said he wants a more “strategic approach” from his GM. Towers was known more as a seat-of-the-pants GM who built four NL West winners during his 14 seasons as GM, and had his 1998 club reach the World Series, where it was swept by the Yankees.

oyer will face the same obstacle Towers faced through the years – a payroll significantly smaller that baseball big hitters. The payroll for next season will probably be in the $40 million range.

This is the second time Moorad has hired a Red Sox assistant GM. When he ran the Diamondbacks, Moorad hired Josh Byrnes as general manager in October 2005.

Hoyer was hired by the Red Sox as assistant to the GM following the 2003 season. He was later promoted to assistant GM, and later was given the title of senior vice president.

Good luck, Jed. With a $40 million payroll set for next season, nobody is expecting much. Personally, I’d use that money to flee to South America.

ALCS Game 6 rained out

rainout

Bill Shaikin is the bearer of bad news for baseball nerds everywhere:

The Angels and New York Yankees have been rained out tonight. The teams will play Game 6 of the American League championship series tomorrow at 5:20 p.m. PDT at Yankee Stadium.

Game 7, if necessary, is scheduled for 4:57 pm. PDT at Yankee Stadium.

I bet Andy Pettitte is pleased, as the veteran will get an extra day of rest. Still, Pettitte probably won’t go more than seven innings on Sunday, giving the Angels a shot at the Yankees troubled bullpen.

Nobody likes a rainout, especially during the postseason. Well, if you’re not a fan of college football, I’m sure there’s a hockey game on tonight! Check your local listings for the times. Also, be sure to read our 2009 NHL Preview, courtesy of On Goal Analysis.

MLB will use veteran umpires in World Series

umps

It’s the playoffs, and everyone needs to step it up, including the umpires. Subjectivity is part of the game, but this year’s postseason has been riddled by an obscene amount of unforgivably bad calls. The proper teams advanced to the League Championship Series, so any prior mistakes are now all but forgotten. However, recent blunders are scarring a tight competition between the Yankees and Angels, thereby affecting their chances at facing the Phillies in the World Series. As a result, MLB will have their veteran umpires call the games.

Longtime crew chiefs Joe West, Dana DeMuth and Gerry Davis, along with Brian Gorman, Jeff Nelson and Mike Everitt will handle the games, three people with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press this week.

In each of the last two years, there were three new umps working the World Series.

CB Bucknor was in line to work the World Series for the first time this year. But he missed two calls in Game 1 of the division series between the Red Sox and Angels, damaging his chance to get picked, one of the three people said.

Umpiring mistakes caused anxious moments for MLB in the first two rounds: Phil Cuzzi’s foul call on a drive by Joe Mauer that was fair by a foot, Jerry Meals’ error on a ball that bounced off Chase Utley’s leg, Dale Scott’s miss on a pickoff and Tim McClelland’s call on a tag play, among others.

Scott missed again Thursday night in Game 5 of the AL championship series, ruling New York’s Johnny Damon out after he clearly beat Angels first baseman Kendry Morales’ toss to pitcher John Lackey.

This year, instant replay on home run calls didn’t cause too much of a stir during competition. It was rarely used, and when umpires actually had to review a play, they were very efficient. Still, I don’t think one postseason is enough to enact a full-on video surveillance of the game. Unlike other sports, baseball games can go on for ages, given the extra innings. Sometimes, even the most loyal sports fan just needs to go home.

While I appreciate the angles Fox gives viewers during a game, it’s almost bittersweet. While an umpire’s subjectivity still reigns supreme, Fox supplies damning evidence. Imagine if one call a cost a team the World Series, and the video proved the umpire was incorrect. That umpire would have to live with that for the rest of his life. I know, I know — then the game would be completely fair.

Still, baseball is the one American sport that hasn’t advance with the technology of the times. The game was designed for error and I appreciate the utter humanism involved. I’m sure instant replay will gradually envelope the game, but I hope this doesn’t happen in a single instant.

As for this postseason’s umpires, they’ve been terrible. Bring in the old guys.

Brett Myers gets denied!

Hey, we’ve all been there. We go in for a kiss with that special someone who wasn’t expecting it and all of a sudden they pull away as if you have a combination of tuna fish and dirty diaper on your breath.

But in most cases, your failed smooch doesn’t occur after you won a game to get you back into the World Series, nor does it happen on national television.

Unless of course, you’re Phillies pitcher Brett Myers.

Seeing as how he was accused of punching his wife in 2006, Myers deserved every bit of that humiliation.

Dodgers’ owner fires CEO…who happens to be his wife.

A day after the Dodgers were eliminated from the NLCS, owner Frank McCourt fired Jamie McCourt, his CEO and his wife.

From ESPN.com:

Attorney Dennis Wasser said his client learned she was no longer employed by the Dodgers, who ended their season Wednesday after being bounced in the NLCS by the Philadelphia Phillies for the second straight year.

Last week the couple confirmed in a terse statement that they have separated. Jamie McCourt sat in the first row of the owner’s box for Game 1 of the NLCS. Her husband was in the third row next to former Dodgers manager Tom Lasorda.
The McCourts have been married since 1979 and have four grown sons.

In March, Frank McCourt promoted his wife to chief executive officer of the team he gained ownership of in January 2004 after moving from his native Boston. The promotion made her the highest-ranking woman in Major League Baseball.

Good thing they’re separated or else this would have made for a couple of awkward moments around the dinner table.

“Uh honey, can you pass me the peas?”

“Go to hell.”

“That’s okay honey, I’ll get them myself.”

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