
Working on one of the pitching mounds.



PHOTOS BY EDDIE MICHELS




PHOTOS BY EDDIE MICHELS

The Houston Astros were not brought to justice. General manager Jeff Luhnow should have been exiled for five years. Their share of national TV revenue should have been revoked and reallocated among the other 29 clubs. They should have lost the entire 2020 and 2021 drafts, not just the first two picks. All their 2020…
Whicker: No winners in Spyball scandal, not even the Dodgers — Press Telegram
By MARK WHICKER | mwhicker@scng.com | Daily NewsPUBLISHED: January 20, 2020 at 2:26 pm | UPDATED: January 20, 2020 at 2:26 pm
The Houston Astros were not brought to justice.
General manager Jeff Luhnow should have been exiled for five years. Their share of national TV revenue should have been revoked and reallocated among the other 29 clubs. They should have lost the entire 2020 and 2021 drafts, not just the first two picks.
All their 2020 games against the Angels should be canceled.
Okay, too harsh.
Given all that, spare us the petitions on behalf of the Dodgers.
They did not lose the 2017 and 2018 World Series because Alex Cora was sitting in the other dugout with his two-way wristwatch, autographed by Dick Tracy.
They began losing Game 5 in 2017 because they felt it was important to pitch Brandon Morrow into puddling exhaustion, and then because Kenley Jansen walked a batter and hit another before Alex Bregman’s game-winning single.

“No fair! Cheater!” It’s been shouted by kids on every schoolyard and during every rainy-day game of Scrabble, Clue and Candyland since time immemorial. The cheating chant prompts parents and schoolyard proctors to offer the stock admonition, “Winners never cheat and cheaters never win.” But cheaters do win. Sometimes they win bigly. And kids know…
A society of cheaters — Daily News

The Boston Red Sox have a lot of questions surrounding them as they head into the 2020 season. But the biggest of them all is who will replace Alex Cora as manager? Cora and the Sox mutually agreed to part ways Tuesday night. He was named in the Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred’s report…
What Jerry Remy Believes Red Sox Should Do In Managerial Search — NESN.com

PHOTO BY EDDIE MICHELS
From the Minneapolis StarTribune
By Phil Miller JANUARY 15, 2020 — 12:06PMTEXT SIZE75EMAILPRINT
Rocco Baldelli said he spent a lot of time thinking about lineups last season, had almost daily conversations about some wrinkle or new possibility with bench coach Derek Shelton. The result was 145 different batting orders over the season’s 162 games.

Now he’s got Josh Donaldson to add to the mix, in the wake of the free agent third baseman’s decision on Tuesday to accept a four-year, $92 million contract from Minnesota, and it will be fascinating to see where the Twins’ manager slots in one of the more versatile and dangerous hitters in the league. Donaldson’s huge comeback season last year in Atlanta came mostly from the cleanup slot, batting right behind Freddie Freeman to form a formidable left-right combo. But that might not be the best spot for him in Minnesota.
For one thing, Nelson Cruz, another right-handed hitter, occupied the No. 3 spot in Baldelli’s lineup whenever he was available. Baldelli normally chose Eddie Rosario, his second-best left-handed power hitter — Max Kepler, who hit 36 home runs and slugged .519, normally hit in the leadoff spot — to bat behind Cruz. Baldelli could choose to keep that alignment intact in 2020, perhaps lining up Donaldson to bat fifth, a spot he’s occupied only 75 times in his career.
Then again, perhaps the left-right dynamic isn’t as critical for Donaldson, who experienced an unusual, but pronounced, reverse split in 2019. Donaldson normally feasts on left-handed pitching — a career .951 OPS catches your eye — but last year was an outlier. Donaldson batted .215 against lefties in 2019, albeit with a .395 on-base percentage, and hit only seven of his 37 homers off left-handers. He started the year 3-for-20 against lefties, and went 3-for-17 in September.
There’s a pretty good chance, however, that Baldelli may arrive at the answer several other managers have chosen: Bat him second. That’s where Donaldson hit during his best seasons, including his 2015 American League MVP season, and the reason is an obvious one: In addition to being an elite hitter, Donaldson’s plate discipline is among the best in the league.
more….http://strib.mn/38aWr1v

I’ve been thinking a lot about the limits of how technology is applied to baseball – where the limits exist today, where they might exist in the future, where they should exist. There’s an obvious reason to ask the big questions. Baseball is reeling from the fallout of sign-stealing investigations into the 2017 and 2018…
Is technology bumping against its limits in baseball? — Press Telegram

PHOTO BY EDDIE MICHELS

At least one Boston Red Sox observer predicts change might be coming for the team. Peter Abraham, who covers the Red Sox for The Boston Globe, said Monday night on “NESN After Hours” potential penalties against manager Alex Cora and the team could “change the organization completely.” Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred suspended Houston…
Boston Globe’s Peter Abraham Analyzes Alex Cora’s Future With Red Sox — NESN.com

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (WJHL) – Daniel Norris is coming off career highs in games started and strikeouts, but as the Science Hill alum gears up for another season in the Motor City, Norris hosted his annual pitching clinic Saturday at RBI Tri-Cities in Johnson City. The Detroit Tigers hurler avoided arbitration on Friday and agreed […]
Daniel Norris Holds Tri-Cities RBI Pitching Clinic — WJHL | Tri-Cities News & Weather


Travis Shaw thinks his hitting woes are in the past and he’s quite thrilled about getting a new lease on baseball life in Toronto. Read More
New Blue Jays slugger Shaw thrilled to join team with ‘bright horizon’ — Toronto Sun