Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Big Money, Big Disappointment, Big Mouth

The $103 million gamble by the name of Daisuke Matsuzaka is now blaming the Red Sox workout program for his recent pitching struggles. Dice-K, who makes insane money thanks to the 2006 bidding war and pissing contest with the Yankees, has for his three seasons in the Majors been an often over-rated player. He had a season in 2008 that, by the numbers, was spectacular as he earned 18 wins and had a 2.90 ERA. Throughout the season, however, I expressed fear of his pitching to anyone who would listen; he was getting it done, but I couldn't figure out how. He rarely made it out of the sixth inning and always had runners on base. He seemed afraid to pitch from the stretch and looked very uncomfortable with men on base, and he was often, rightly I think, criticized for being too fine; he was simply afraid to pitch for contact. But he kept getting the job done (though not without taxing the bullpen) so my criticisms seemed, even to me, unfair.

This year, on the other hand, he has posted an abysmal 8.23 ERA and was 1-5 before being placed on the DL with shoulder soreness, a condition which he apparently blames on the Red Sox. According to WEEI, who translated a Japanese newspaper interview with Dice-K, the pitcher thinks that the Red Sox workout program is hindering his performance. He told the paper,
"If I’m forced to continue to train in this environment, I may no longer be able
to pitch like I did in Japan,” Matsuzaka said. “The only reason why I managed to
win games during the first and second years (in the U.S.) was because I used the
savings of the shoulder I built up in Japan" (Boston Herald)


Really? The only reason he doesn't pitch here like he did in Japan is because the Sox strengthening program is deficient? I'm not so sure. Let's look at some other reasons that Dice-K may be having problems here.

1) Uh, duh, this isn't Japan. Dice-K got a lot of criticism in the Japanese media when he first came to the states because he wasn't pitching complete games like he did in Japan. This was of course unfair to Dice-K, for the same reason that Dice-K may be having a hard time getting batters out here. Hitters are better in the Major Leagues than they are in Japan. This may seem like an obvious point, superfluous for this discussion, but Dice-K seems to be forgetting, or neglecting, this truth in his Japanese interviews. Without a doubt, the Japanese leagues are gaining legitimacy, but they are not the Major Leagues. After all, Japan is where players go when they realize they are never going to make it above AAA in the states and they want the bigger contracts that the Japanese Leagues can offer compared to the minors over here.

2) Here, Dice-K must pitch every five days. In Japan, where games are never played on Sunday and most teams work on a six man rotation, pitchers will generally pitch only once a week. With this type of schedule, it is clear how Dice-K would be able to pitch complete games. More time to heal after each start + mediocre hitters = pitching dominance.

3) The final reason is, imagine the audacity, his own pitching. When Dice-K first came to the states, many hitters were perplexed by him. His style was curious (though not as curious as his countryman who was brought with him, Hedeki Okajima), he was deceptive, he had a lot of different pitches, and there were rumors that he threw a version of the screw-ball, a mythical pitch with unearthly, physics defying movement that may or may not actually exist, and which no one can actually explain how to throw. But it only takes big league pitchers so long to scout a pitcher, learn how he pitches in certain situation, and begin to see his pitches better. In this case, it seems to have taken two years. Dice-K blames "ethnic, racial, and physiological differences" that require different conditioning for causing Japanese pitchers to fade after a couple of seasons in the states. Here again, he seems to forget about big league hitters. Japanese pitchers' problems must be because Japanese are built differently, not because their stuff isn't nearly as dominant against big league hitters as it was against Japanese hitters. Furthermore, Dice-K has shown an intense fear of throwing strikes. He tries to paint the corners and throw out of the strike zone in an attempt to get batters to chase. the problem is, he has not shown that he has dominant stuff inside the the strike zone so hitters have learned not to swing at his junk and wait for a pitch in the zone. If a pitcher can't throw strikes, hitters always have the advantage.

So, Dice-K's problem is likely less about the way he's being conditioned (by a program that has developed Jonathan Papelbon, Jon Lester, and Clay Buchholz) and more about his ability to pitch in the Major Leagues. I'm convinced that the Red Sox mistake was not in the way that they have developed him, but in the amount they were willing to pay - $103 million for a mediocre number three starter.

Monday, July 13, 2009

"This One Counts"

In 2003, after watching ratings for the All Star Game drop steadily, and after receiving criticism for allowing a tie in the 2002 All Star Game, Major League Baseball decided to spice the game up by awarding the winning league with home field advantage in the World Series. So, for six years now, we've been subjected to commercials that feature the tag line "This one counts," a now tired (and inaccurate - since it is the sixth to count, not the "one") phrase. After these six years, there have been no shortage of people who decry MLB's system of awarding home field advantage based on this game. It is, therefore, perhaps redundant for me to add mine, but I cannot help myself.

To me, this move by MLB is yet another example of baseball selling its soul (or at least its integrity) in order to win fair weather fans. The problems making the game count and forcing the leagues to play players from every team, and not just the best players of the league, have already been beat to death. Many writers like the idea of making the game count, but conclude that each league should be able to put the best team on the field, regardless of whether each team is represented. I, on the other hand, like the idea of each team being represented, since the teams are to represent each league as a whole. Each team should be able to send its best player as a reward to that player. That's the whole point.

The All Star Game is designed to be an honor to the best players in the game. It is extraneous to the season, and so it ought to be inconsequential to the season. The idea of the game is to bring together the game's elite and allow them to play with and against each other in front of fans who are getting to watch their dream team. It doesn't have to (and the beauty is that it shouldn't) "count." It's supposed to be a showcase - a laid-back, back yard style game (but with the best players on Earth) that takes place during the only break in the pressure cooked grind of the Major League season. And, to me, putting false importance in it ruins what makes the game great, and fun.

So let the ratings drop. If they're so bad, put the game on ESPN2 and let it become an event for the die-hard fan. After all, in the end, its crazy fans like me and my wife that are going to follow the game no matter how low the ratings get. And fans like us care about the tradition, the honor, and the integrity of the game.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Hiatus

My twin boys were born last week but they are early and not able to leave the hospital yet. So I have little time to pay attention to baseball until I get them home (at which time I will have only slighly more time). I am slowly reading the S.L Price book "Heart of the Game" about the career and the death of minor league coach Mike Coolbaugh. I will report ASAP.