Wanna Make a Trade? Peavy to White Sox!

Breaking News:  The Padres have traded former Cy Young winner Jake Peavy to the White Sox for four minor leaguers including stud pitcher Clayton Richard!

Now that the MLB trade deadline is officially over it seems like everyone has getting in on the action.  In the last hour so many players have changed teams that it is hard to keep track.  Here is a recap of the trades that have happened so far:

  • Boston Red Sox acquire C/1B Victor Martinez from Indians
  • Cincinnati Reds acquire 3B Scott Rolen
  • Red Sox send 1B Adam LaRoche to the Braves for 1B Casey Kotchman (terms not final)
  • Yankees acquire Jerry Hairston, Jr.
  • Rockies acquire reliever Joe Beimel
  • Twins acquire Orlando Cabrera
  • Tigers acquire LHP Jarrod Washburn
  • Pirates trade away more players, send pitchers John Grabow and Tom Gorzelanny to Cubs
  • Dodgers acquire reliever George Sherrill
  • Marlins acquire 1B Nick Johnson from Nationals

Rumors still circulating:

  • Possible trade between Dodgers and Padres that would send 1B Adrian Gonzalez to the Dodgers and 1B James Loney to the Padres.
  • Trade talks still seem to be “dead” for Roy Halladay

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It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Football

Now that it will soon be August it is time for that special time of year called football season.  The time of the year when beer and car commercials rule the television screen.  When it becomes acceptable to paint yourself purple, orange, green, or gold in 12 degree weather to support your favorite team, all while grilling on the tailgate of your F Series truck.  Well, before the extravaganza that is the NFL regular season, the teams have training camp.  It used to be that training camp was nothing to the media.  Coaches evaluated new talent to see how they can improve their team, while the veterans worked gradually towards getting into top shape for the season.  Now, training camp is all about scandals, holdouts, money, and Brett Favre.  From T.O. going all Lance Armstrong on us to Michael Crabtree demanding 3rd overall pick money, training camp has become a circus, but not in Philadelphia.

Earlier this week the Eagles lost Defensive Coordinator Jim Johnson, lost his battle with melanoma.  Jim was 68 years old, but as players, coaches, and others who knew him would say, he was the toughest 68 year old they had ever known.  Jim battled his cancer til the very end, and he was even on the practice field as late as May of this year.  The Eagles will never be the same without you Jim, and I would like to thank you for the 10 best years of defensive football that I have known.  Since 1999, the Eagles had the 3rd best defense in the league, and were 2nd in that time span with 390 sacks.  Jim coached 26 players to Pro Bowls, and he got his recognition for it.  Jim could have left Philadelphia to take a head coaching job numerous times, but he elected to stay where he was and lead a defense that was as ferocious a defense as anyone had ever seen.  My heart goes out to the Eagles organization, the Johnson family, and everybody who knew what a great man Jim Johnson was.  Rest in peace Jim.

When I think about the loss of Jim Johnson it just gets me more frustrated at the Eagles Front Office.  I can’t understand for the life of me why they decided to let Brian Dawkins leave Philadelphia and finish his career on another team.  They were the closest to the situation, and could obviously see that Jim Johnson might not be back to coach in 2009.  When evaluating the Eagles defense, the two most influential people were Jim Johnson and Brian Dawkins.  Johnson ran the defense off the field, but Dawkins was the catalyst and the inspiration, the man who made this defense go.  If someone wasn’t motivated enough, or if someone wasn’t lined up correctly, Brian was there to lead, and once the defense stopped the other team, Jim was on the sidelines to coach everybody up.  Now, the Eagles are left without either of these two great men.  People will say that somebody will step up on the defense, but I don’t see it.  That fire is gone now, and I pray that somebody will be the spark that fills the void Dawkins and Johnson left, but as of right now I can’t think of who that could be.

What disgusts me even more about the front office is the fact that they easily could have brought Dawkins back if they wanted to.  They were $41 million under the salary cap!  Spend an extra couple million bucks to keep the heart and soul of your team so he can retire as an Eagle!  I know the front office likes to get rid of veterans once they peak, and I agree that Dawkins’ playing ability may have peaked last year, but you can’t replace his leadership, and that is what this defense will miss.

So, with the start of training camp comes new questions.  Was the 2008 playoff run a fluke?  How much does Donovan have left in the tank?  What is wrong with Westbrook’s legs and will he be a force in 2009?  Andy Reid and the Eagles staff is generally very tight lipped when it comes to the team, so I’m sure we won’t hear much about injuries.  Throughout the month I will do my best to evaluate the 2009 Philadelphia Eagles.  I will begin with a position by position overview, highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of this year’s team.  Then I will probably go over the schedule and try to figure out just how good the chances are that the Eagles can make it to the promised land this year.  Follow along for what will be a wild ride to the start of the season in September.

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Updates Galore: From Cliff Lee to PEDs to all things Phillies!

What a disgrace to baseball.  I actually feel bad for Red Sox fans, who need 2004 like we needed 2008.

What a disgrace to baseball. I actually feel bad for Red Sox fans, who need 2004 like we needed 2008.

Breaking News: David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez tested positive for PEDs in 2003.  Is that really a shock anymore?  I can’t stand what the media/government/whoever has this document is doing.  Somebody has this list of 104 names and is leaking one or two every month.  What the hell is wrong with the world we live in today?  The 2003 tests were supposed to be anonymous and the names never leaked, but if one is going to be leaked (starting with A-Rod), then shouldn’t they release all 104 names and spare the current players the detriment of being implicated in something that they may not be guilty of.  It’s getting ridiculous, and the sad thing is that I am not the least bit surprised by any name that pops up anymore.  The only ones that will really shock me would be Derek Jeter or Ken Griffey Jr.  Come on baseball, release these names and let’s move on and get away from this Steroid Era.

Sorry for the prolonged absence everyone.  I have been very busy as of late and haven’t been able to sit down and put my views down on paper (or in today’s world, in a word document).  I sure picked a hell of a time to get busy.  While I was gone what happened?  The Phillies won series against the Cardinals and Diamondbacks, improving to 58-41.  The Eagles lost a legend in Defensive Coordinator Jim Johnson, and my prayers go out to his family.  The Phillies then backed off negotiations with the Blue Jays and Roy Halladay and decided to make a magnificent trade that brought 2008 AL Cy Young Winner Cliff Lee to the team (along with a very good right handed bat in Ben Francisco).  I will be commenting more on the passing of Jim Johnson, the reinstatement of Michael Vick, Eagles training camp, and other things football in a different column that will be up shortly.

The first thing I want to say about the Cliff Lee trade is that Ruben Amaro Jr. showed amazing determination and poise in finding the Phillies an ace pitcher to bolster the staff.  Also, J.P Ricciardi, the GM of the Toronto Blue Jays, is an idiot.  The guy overplayed his hand, which is understandable considering he was dealing the best pitcher in baseball, but he ended up losing any chance of getting great value for Halladay.  I can’t see Halladay staying in Toronto for the remainder of his contract and there is no way in hell that the Blue Jays will get anything close to the offers they are getting now for him once the offseason rolls around.  The only way they will get value for Halladay is by trading him to the Red Sox for Clay Buckholtz, which is also ludicrous.  The best example that I can think of that would mirror that would be the Mets trading Johan Santana to the Phillies right now for Kyle Drabek.  Do the Jays understand how stupid that is to trade your star pitcher to a team that is better than you in your own DIVISION?  Anyway, that’s my two cents about Halladay.

Back to Cliff Lee.  I think the move is excellent.  Amaro and his staff did such a good job of realizing that J.P. Ricciardi wasn’t going to budge on Halladay so they went a different route and came up aces.  What I love about this deal is that not only did the Phillies do something they never do and trade for an ace pitcher, they also bolstered their bench while not losing any pieces of their major league squad.  OF Ben Francisco is just the type of player the Phillies need to help give the other outfielders some rest down the stretch while also providing a capable right handed bat off the bench.  With Victorino getting hurt yesterday (knee contusion), it is starting to look like this move was even better, although I hope Shane’s injury isn’t serious.

Of the four minor leaguers that got traded to Cleveland, Jason Knapp was probably the centerpiece, and he is only 18 years old.  As I said earlier, I think he has the potential to be a great pitcher, and most likely will fit into a team as a lights out closer, but overall, the Phillies didn’t give up too much.  We are set with pitchers so Carrasco was expendable, Jason Donald plays middle infield, which is currently taken up by Rollins and Utley, and Lou Marson is an up and coming catcher, a spot taken by Carlos Ruiz.  Marson is probably our biggest loss because we really don’t have a backup for Ruiz, so maybe Amaro’s next move will be to get some minor league depth at catcher.

Now the Phillies are the favorites to repeat as National League Champs (at least in my mind, betting sites still have the Dodgers slightly in front).  With a rotation that includes Hamels, Lee, and Blanton, along with their pick of Happ, Moyer, Martinez, Lopez, etc, what’s not to like?  The offense has been unstoppable (except for last night, I don’t know what happened there), and now we have depth at pitching, which also allows Charlie Manuel to bolster the bullpen by maybe moving J.A. Happ back there.  Also, Brett Myers is recovering very quickly from hip surgery and is considering a mid-August return, which means there could be competition for the closer spot.  Very exciting stuff!  Tell me what you think about everything that has been going on, and sorry I was gone for so long.

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The Beard: A Sports Phenomenon

Canadians teach the Art of the Beard

Canadians teach the Art of the Beard

What is a beard?  Some might say it’s just facial hair.  Some argue that it symbolizes laziness or lack or direction.  Others just argue that it is annoying and “gets in the way”.  These people, my friends, don’t understand the true meaning of the beard.  Since the dawn of time, men have been growing beards.  From Moses, to Jesus, it seems that the most prolific people to ever walk the earth sported graceful, majestic, scruffy, beards.

In sports, the beard has taken on a meaning unto itself.  Back in the early days of baseball nearly every player wore facial hair.  The earliest proponent of facial hair that sticks out in my mind is Cap Anson, who compiled over 3000 hits in his major league baseball career, all while wearing a very dignified mustache.  On the mound, Rollie Fingers groomed one of the most perfect mustaches ever known to man, and many believe it was one of the main reasons for his success.

Facial hair was prominent throughout the sports world, but the New York Islanders of the early 1980s started a trend that has gone on now for almost 30 years: the Playoff Beard.  The Playoff Beard trend has recently come into popular culture, but most lifelong hockey fans have sworn by it for years now.  The theory goes like this: if your team makes the playoffs, you must not shave until your team wins it all or is bounced from contention.  This past year, the NHL promoted a league-wide Beard-a-Thon, where fans could grow playoff beards for their teams and raise money for charity.

To analyze the playoff beard theory more closely I want to discuss the Stanley Cup Finals.  On one side you had the Detroit Red Wings who sported unbelievable beards.  Unfortunately, they were all topped by Maxim Talbot, Craig Adams, the ageless Bill Guerin, who grew beards majestic that it carried the Penguins to the Cup.  Many people would say Crosby and Malkin were the main catalysts for success, but I beg to differ.  The beards were the difference.

Mike Commodores Beard led the Hurricanes to the Cup in 2006

Mike Commodore's Beard led the Hurricanes to the Cup in 2006

Another Stanley Cup Finals that will forever go down in history is the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Calgary Flames.  I remember the series because I was trying to forget May 22, 2004, when the Lightning ousted the Flyers from the playoffs in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals, the last game the Flyers would play until after the NHL Lockout.  Anyway, the Flames came in to the series prepared, with possibly the best set of beards ever assembled.  The Flames had many redheads on the team, from Mike Commodore (who’s beard appeared when he was a Hurricane during the 2006 Stanley Cup Finals) to Martin Gelinas, to Mikka Kiprusoff, who has the best beard of any goalie, all time.  In Game 6 of the series with the Flames up 3 games to 2, Martin Gelinas scored what seemed to be the Cup winning goal for the Flames.  The officials reviewed and said that the puck never crossed the goal line.  In my opinion, the puck clearly crossed the line and the Flames should have been 2004 Stanley Cup Champions, thanks in large part to their beards of greatness, but the referees screwed them.

So, what does a beard symbolize?  Beards are a symbol of dedication, toughness, and strength, plus they are downright intimidating if worn by the correct person.  For some reason most professions frown upon the untidy mess of hair that is a beard and instead insist on a clean shave.  This makes no sense.  Some of the best performances of all time have come when people believe in their beards.  The Playoff Beard theory clearly states that if you are on a hot streak you must not do anything to interrupt that streak.  Just look at Eric Gagne during his 84 consecutive saves streak (although HGH may have had something to do with that as well).  Apollo Anton Ohno, the Olympic Gold Medalist in Speed Skating, believed so highly in his soul patch that he wouldn’t dare shave it.  What has it earned him?  5 Olympic medals and 1st place on Dancing with the Stars.  Even Kimbo Slice, a bum who fought on the street, used the beard to his advantage.  Do you think he would’ve made millions of dollars if he looked normal?  That beard of his was so intimidating it forced ESPN to let it grace the cover of their magazine.  The man went from nobody to superstar overnight, and has his beard to thank.  Look at Zach Galifinakas.  Imagine what his image would be like if he shaved his beard.  I bet he doesn’t shave it until he hits a string of 3 or more terrible career moves.

Johnny Damon attends to his beard

Johnny Damon attends to his beard

Take Johnny Damon’s epic 2004 playoff run.  His mane of hair has been enshrined in Cooperstown (as well as the movie Fever Pitch), and most of Red Sox Nation believes that if he had shaved that beard, or if Big Papi changed his facial hair, then the Red Sox would never have broken the Curse of the Bambino.  In 2007, the Red Sox went the opposite route, shaving their heads in the playoffs, and what was the result there?  Another World Series title.  The Tampa Bay Rays, a perennial 100 loss team, sported RayHawks, a form of mohawk, during the 2008 campaign.  It powered them all the way to the World Series, where they eventually lost to my Philadelphia Phillies.

The phenomenon of the beard can apply to other things besides sports.  If you are a salesman and are on a hot streak, don’t shave until you miss a sale.  If your employer tells you to shave, decline.  Tell him or her that you are growing the beard as a commitment to reaching your goals, as well as the goals of the business.  As a fan, I firmly believe in the power of the beard.  Believe me, beards are hard to keep going and take endless commitment.  They are itchy, they get in the way, and they are unpredictable.  I grew my playoff beard for the Phillies last season, and refused to shave it for over a month.  I didn’t even shave until a week after we won the World Series.  During the playoffs I discussed not shaving until after the BCS National Championship because my Penn State Nittany Lions were undefeated at the time.  I decided to shave the playoff beard in the first week of November.  In the second week of November Penn State lost to Iowa, ending the perfect season and a chance to go to the National Championship.  I still feel that I am to blame because I shaved off the beard too soon.

You might be asking, what prompted me to write such a long expose about the art of the beard?  I actually came up the idea while watching Chan Ho Park pitch 3 perfect innings a few nights ago.  His beard is like nothing I have ever seen.  Based on the sheer size of the beard, I estimate that it has been growing since early June.  On June 2nd, Chan Ho Park had a 7.32 ERA with a 1-1 record.  Since then, Chan Ho has been unstoppable.  He is 2-1 in that span with 7 successful holds.  In his last 17 outings, Park has pitched 26.1 innings while allowing only 5 earned runs and racking up 29 strikeouts against 4 walks.  With the bullpen in shambles, it looks like Chan Ho has become the rock that is keeping them steady.

7/31/2009:  To update, after writing this article Chan Ho Park trimmed his beard.  What happened in his next outing?  Well he let up a run of course.  It didn’t cost the Phillies, but it just goes to show how powerful the beard really is.

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Happ Is Human: Phillies Lose to Cardinals

Yesterday was a busy day for me so I didn’t have time to express my views on the game last night.  Our air conditioner broke at the Jersey shore so I’ve been sweating profusely in 85 degree heat.  Anyway, back to baseball.  Overall, J.A. Happ didn’t pitch poorly, he was just a victim of good hitting.  I don’t know what it was about that 6th inning, but every hit that the Cardinals had was a bloop single that somehow found a way to fall.  It reminded me of that game Cole Hamels had earlier in the season where he allowed 10 hits, all of which were singles.  Happ suffered his first loss last night as the Phillies lost to the Cardinals 8-1.  He had good composure and control on his pitches, but in the 6th inning things fell apart.  Going into the game I felt like Happ would have a mediocre game due to all of the pressure that has been on him lately as a rookie pitcher in the spotlight, but he pitched admirably for the most part.

Who didn’t show up last night?  The Phillies lineup.  The Phillies had three or four innings where they stranded a man on 3rd base, showing that they couldn’t hit in the clutch at all.  It was a weird night.

I was in shock that Matt Holliday played in the game not even 24 hours after he was traded to the Cardinals.  That team is scary now.  Holliday and Pujols is a good 1-2 punch.  I wasn’t surprised that Holliday had 4 hits in the game.  The guy kills us, and he is one of my most hated players in the league.  I am one of the firm believers that he was out at home in that game against the Padres that got them into the playoffs in 2007.

The one thing about the Cardinals this year is that they have been unable to score runs and have relied on Pujols to carry them to 1st place in the NL Central.  Joel Piniero improved to just 9-9 on the season when he has an ERA under 3.00.  He could have 14 wins this season if the Cardinals provided him with more than 3.9 runs per start on average.  Anyway, now that they have added people like Matt Holliday, Mark DeRosa, and Julio Lugo, the Cards have a chance to ramp up the offense and be a real threat to the Phillies and Dodgers in the race for best team in the National League.

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