Brethren,
Last week’s Bellyflop was another masterpiece from Brother
Underbelly, chocked full of his wry and keen observations about
contemporary baseball players, fantasy baseball and life. As soon
as his lucrative retirement plan at the Art F/X shipping department
is fully vested, I think he should tell The Man to “stick it” and
then make his way out on the stand-up comedy circuit. Cult worship
awaits him if he can perfect an arid delivery (think Bob Newhart) of
his fabulously funny material.
Mindful of the act that I am following, this issue of From the
Bullpen will be mostly factual and informational, with little to
no attempt to evoke any laugh-out-loud responses. With the bar
thusly set low, we will begin with the standings through games of
last night, Wednesday, August 20, 2014:
1 |
Monarchs |
9831.00 |
2 |
Wahoos |
9532.10 |
3 |
Bums |
9336.40 |
4 |
Chiefs |
9301.90 |
5 |
Redbirds |
9154.20 |
6 |
Tigers |
9147.90 |
7 |
Cubs |
9071.60 |
8 |
Bears |
9047.50 |
9 |
Tribe |
8908.20 |
10 |
Blues |
8685.60 |
11 |
Bombers |
8512.00 |
12 |
Skipjacks |
8480.40 |
13 |
Senators |
8405.30 |
TOP TEN HITTERS
TOP TEN PITCHERS
1. |
Félix Hernández |
Tigers |
730.00 |
2. |
Johnny Cueto |
Monarchs |
715.00 |
3. |
Corey Kluber |
Tribe |
642.00 |
4. |
David Price |
Bombers |
635.00 |
5. |
Clayton Kershaw |
Cubs |
630.00 |
6. |
Max Scherzer |
Blues |
624.00 |
7. |
Adam Wainwright |
Cubs |
605.00 |
8. |
Jon Lester |
Wahoos |
581.00 |
9. |
Julio Teherán |
Wahoos |
547.00 |
10. |
Chris Sale |
Tribe |
543.00 |
WILL THE THRILL GOES TO COLLEGE
I
just moved Will into his dorm room at TCU in Ft. Worth yesterday,
and for all of you who have dropped a kid off at college in another
state, you know how bittersweet the feelings are. Thrilled to death
to see your young man or young woman ready to begin one of the most
exciting and enriching times of their lives, and yet, not yet quite
ready to let them go. At 19 years of age and living with a dorm
full of boys more than 600 miles away, I have to realize that
there’s not a lot more I can do at this point in time to impact
young Wilbur’s manifest destiny. It’s time for someone to grow up.
Me. Will, he’s going to be fine.
After moving Will into Clark Hall, we met up with my brother Dan—who
lives in the Dallas area—for lunch at Dutch’s, a greasy burger joint
about two blocks from Will’s residence hall. After watching the
events of the lunch hour, the comings and goings of the excited
coeds starting or resuming their college careers, I can imagine
Will being a frequent flyer at Dutch’s. And thinking, it probably
wouldn’t take much to convince me to trade spots with him, given the
chance. Four years of college at TCU wouldn’t be a bad way to spend
anyone’s next four years.
As
I steeled myself to say goodbye and hit the road for parts north,
and after capturing one final hug as the emotions torrented through
my head, Will calmly and rationally reminded me, “See you in three
weeks, Dad,” (TCU family weekend). Yes, that’s true, and it is time
for someone to grow up.
Son
comforts dad.
AT THE OLD BRICKTOWN BALLPARK
As
I was motoring home from Ft. Worth, right around 6:00 p.m. last
evening, I was passing through Oklahoma City when I saw a sign that
there was a ballgame at the old ball yard, the Chickasaw Bricktown
Ballpark, to be precise. What luck. A venue which I have long
yearned to visit, and wouldn’t you know it, the hometown RedHawks
were playing in a PCL game against El Paso there that very evening
at 7:05 p.m. Not one to turn his back on such pure kismet, I
persuaded my Ford Explorer off the interstate and across the
Cinderella City until I reached 2 South Mickey Mantle Drive. I
parked my car, walked past the impressive granite tributes to
hometown hero Johnny Bench and the winningest southpaw of all time,
Warren Spahn, and plunked down my 13 bucks at the ticket window for
a seat inside Bricktown.
Once inside the ballpark, I immediately understood all of the
hullaballoo about this beautiful baseball cathedral. Red brick and
green steel forming the structural elements of the ballpark, green
grass and Oklahoma-red dirt on the pitcher’s mound, batter’s boxes,
base lines and warning track. Two tall red brick hotels just beyond
the left field fence, close enough so that motel guests on the upper
floors can stand on their balconies and watch games in progress. It
isn’t hard to see why the Bricktown Ballpark is the annual site of
the Big 12 baseball championships.
Yet
in spite of its visceral appeal, the Brickyard Ballpark this night
played host to fewer than 500 paying customers, by my unofficial
estimate. The 97-degree heat and blazing sun at game time might
have had something to do with this. As a beneficiary of this sparse
attendance, I watched the ballgame and drank my cold ales and
enjoyed my salted goobers from some of the best seats in the house.
Not a single Turk in sight.
I
caught the first six innings of the game between the RedHawks, the
Triple A affiliate of the Houston Astros, and the El Paso
Chihuahuas, the Triple A farm club of the San Diego Padres, before
heading back to the interstate so I could make it to Wichita before
calling it a day on the road. When they announced the Chihuahuas’
starting lineup, I learned that former Senator Jeff Francoeur was
now back down in Triple A after a stint with the Padres (both as an
outfielder and pitcher), and that Jason Lane was batting in the DH
hole for the Chihuahuas. You may recall an earlier reference to
Lane’s comeback attempt on the Message Board earlier this year, in
which it was reported that after finally reaching the end of the
road as a hitter in the Major Leagues, Lane was trying a comeback as
a pitcher for the Padres. After several seemingly successful stints
on the mound, Lane continued to inexplicably find himself back on a
Triple A Minor League roster. Undaunted by the odds, Lane continues
to pursue his quest to prolong his professional baseball career,
either as a pitcher or a hitter.
At
37 years of age, Lane has a remarkable baseball resume, as reported
on Wikipedia:
Jason Dean Lane
(born December 22, 1976) is an American professional baseball player
for the San Diego Padres of Major League Baseball. Originally
starting his career as an outfielder, Lane has since switched
positions and is now a pitcher.
He was drafted into MLB in the sixth round in 1999. Lane graduated
from El Molino High School in Forestville, California in 1995.
Notably, Lane is one of those rare pitchers in major league history
who throws left-handed but bats right-handed.
Amateur career
First attended Santa Rosa Junior College, where he was selected as
the 1997 California Junior College Northern California Player of the
Year and Bay Valley Conference MVP before transferring to University
of Southern California. At Southern California, Lane earned
All-America honors during his senior season (1999), including
pitching 2.2 innings in the 1998 College World Series championship
game to pick up the win and help USC to its 12th NCAA baseball
championship, topping Arizona State University 21-14. Lane served
as the DH in the game, going 3-6 with a ninth inning grand slam
setting a CWS record with 11 hits overall, and led the tournament
with a .417 batting average. Morgan Ensberg was also his college
teammate on the USC national championship squad.
Professional career
Houston Astros
The Astros believed Lane’s future was at the plate rather than on
the mound, so he began his professional career as a first baseman.
He was later moved to the outfield because of Jeff Bagwell, who
played first base.
In 2005, while hitting 26 home runs, he led the major leagues in fly
ball percentage (51.3%). When asked after Game 4 of the 2005
National League Division Series (an 18-inning game) who would pitch
if Roger Clemens had begun to tire, Astros manager Phil Garner
stated that he would have had Lane pitch for the victory with
Clemens taking his place in the outfield. Lane hit the last home
run and made the last out at Busch Memorial Stadium on October 19,
2005.
On July 12, 2006, Lane was optioned to Triple-A Round Rock after
Houston acquired utility slugger Aubrey Huff. In August, Lane was
called back to the majors, and on August 29, 2006, he hit a pinch
hit grand slam off Milwaukee Brewers relief pitcher Dan Kolb in the
8th inning.
Lane finished the 2006 season with 15 home runs, although he hit
just .201 over 112 games.
Lane began the 2007 season with the Astros, but carried an abysmal
.165 batting average into June. With Rookie of the Year candidate
Hunter Pence's spectacular play earning him the starting job in
center field, Lane became expendable and was demoted to Round Rock.
On July 23, with Pence out with a fractured wrist and Lance Berkman
struggling with a hand injury, Lane was called back up to the big
league club. Lane had hit well at Round Rock (.308 with 8 HR and 35
RBI in just 42 games), but then again, he has always hit well at the
minor league level where he has a lifetime batting average just
under .300 and has hit over 100 HR. The Astros hoped that he could
repeat his 2005 success and become the outfield mainstay that they
had long expected him to be, but it would not happen despite Lane
being given every opportunity to succeed. While Pence was on the
DL, Lane received the bulk of the playing time at center field
despite an abysmal .172 average as of August 12, 2007.
On August 22, 2007 Lane was demoted once more to Triple-A. The
Astros recalled relief pitcher Travis Driskill to the majors to help
their bullpen. Lane was recalled when rosters expanded in
September.
San Diego Padres
On September 24, 2007, he was traded to the San Diego Padres for
cash consideration. Lane was not offered a new contract by the
Padres and became a free agent on December 12, 2007.
New York Yankees
On January 10, 2008, Lane agreed to a minor league contract with the
New York Yankees and was invited to spring training. However, he
did not make the team, and was assigned to the Yankees Triple-A
affiliate in Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
Boston Red Sox
On August 19, 2008, after opting out of his contract with the
Yankees, Lane signed a minor league contract with the Boston Red
Sox. He became a free agent at the end of the season.
Toronto Blue Jays
Lane signed a minor league contract with the Toronto Blue Jays in
December and was invited to spring training. Lane had a chance to
take the DH role, but instead it went to Adam Lind. He was then
sent to triple-A Las Vegas.
Southern Maryland Blue Crabs
Lane signed an Atlantic League (independent league) contract with
the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs. His first appearance for the Blue
Crabs was pinch hitting on June 28, 2010. At his first and only at
bat of the game he was walked.
Arizona Diamondbacks
On December 9, 2011, Lane signed a minor league contract with the
Arizona Diamondbacks, now playing as a pitcher. He was invited to
spring training, and in his first professional outing, allowed 3
hits and an unearned run in an inning.
Sugar Land Skeeters
In June 2012, Lane signed a contract with the Sugar Land Skeeters of
the Atlantic League. In July 2012, Lane was awarded "July Pitcher
of The Month" of the Atlantic League. This coming as Lane's first
year as a full-time pitcher since his college days at University of
Southern California. At the end of the Sugar Land Skeeters 2012
season, Jason has been named as the Skeeters first ever MVP. He was
the ace of the pitching staff and an anchor in the middle of the
batting order. Lane returned to the Skeeters for the 2013 season.
Second stint with Padres
Lane signed a minor league contract with the San Diego Padres on
July 23, 2013. He was called up to the major leagues on June 3,
2014, entering the game (against the Pittsburgh Pirates) in the 4th
inning. Lane retired all 10 hitters he faced. He was designated
for assignment on June 7. He was called back up to start on July
28, 2014 against the Atlanta Braves. Lane became the oldest
starting pitcher to make his debut for the Padres, breaking the mark
set by Walter Silva, who was 32 in his first start for San Diego.
Lane pitched well, allowing just one earned run in six innings in a
losing effort. He was designated for assignment for the second time
the next day. [Editor’s note: And hence his appearance with the
Chihuahuas in OKC.]
Like Chelsea, Jason Lane is a Warrior.
IT’S A WRAP
That’s it for this issue of From the Bullpen, lads. Next
week: The Monarch Missive, aka Butterfly Bullshit.
Best,
Skipper
|