• In case you missed it, the Indians traded Jhonny Peralta to the Tigers just before last night's game against the Yankees. Peralta came up through the Indians system and debuted in the majors in 2003, then replaced the great Omar Vizquel as the Indians' shortstop beginning in 2005. He never really lived up to the expectations the Tribe front office had for him. In '05, at just 23 years old, Peralta hit .292 with 24 home runs (the latter number a team record for a shortstop) and appeared to be a budding superstar. But he's never had another year that good. He's been a good enough hitter for a shortstop, except that he was never a very good defensive shortstop, which is why they moved him to third this year to make way for the slick-fielding Asdrubal Cabrera at short. He is just 28 (barring any forged documentation; he is Dominican, after all) and may have more good years in him, but I wouldn't put money on it. And since he is in the walk year of his contract and the Indians aren't going anywhere, there was really no reason not to move him.
• Coming back from Detroit is Giovanni Soto, who is not to be confused with Cubs catcher Geovany Soto. This Soto is a 19-year-old minor league pitcher who hails from Puerto Rico, and is 6-6 with a 2.61 ERA in A-ball. He's a long way from the majors, but his early results are promising. He's struck out more than three times as many hitters as he's walked, and he's given up just two home runs in 82 innings. Still, though, a lot can happen to a young arm, and the proverbial streets are proverbially littered with the proverbial bodies of many promising young pitchers who never made it because their young elbows and shoulders couldn't handle the strain they were putting on them. I'd have thought the Indians could have gotten more than that for an established major league infielder who can play short or third and has some pop in his bat.
• I love this a lot more than I feel I should: Some douchebag showed up at the Indians-Yankees game last night wearing a Miami Heat LeBron James jersey, and got screamed at and taunted so much, he had to leave. The police escorted him out. I don't know if he left voluntarily or what, but he probably should have known better than to pull that crap. Nobody seems to know who he is, but he looks young, which, as anyone who's lived through adolescence and is old enough to reflect on it knows, equals stupid. He probably intentionally showed up in that to get attention, but he's lucky he didn't receive that attention in the form of fists to the face.
• Oh, yeah, the Indians lost 8-0 to the Yankees. Fausto Carmona had his worst outing of the season. The Tribe offense couldn't get anything going. Alex Rodriguez didn't homer, so he's still stuck on 599. The end.
• But how about Tuesday night's game! Josh Tomlin beats the freaking New York Yankees in his major league debut! That's fantastic. Tomlin outpitched former Indian (and Cy Young winner) CC Sabathia, taking a shutout into the eighth inning, then came out after giving a leadoff double to Robinson Cano. He held the Yankees to three hits and zero walks in his seven innings of work. Bully for you, Josh! Keep up the good work! (Oh, and he struck out just two. Now, don't be negative.)
• Rest in peace, Jack Tatum, 1948-2010. The Ohio State great is best known for paralyzing a guy on a hit in an NFL game, but it was a perfectly clean, legal hit. That's just the nature of football. He wasn't a dirty player, he was just a hard hitter.
The Dery Brothers Guardians Cast S6:E8 – Home sweep!
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Matt and Todd are in a great mood coming off the sweep of Oakland. Your
first-place Guardians are on fire. The boys talk rotation worries, Josh […]
8 months ago
1 comment:
Mullett,
The Indians had a pretty good 4-game stretch attendance-wise with the Yankees in town last week, however it still wasn't quite enough to pull them out of last-place in MLB attendance.
The four games with the Yankees drew an average of 28,015 fans:
27,224
27,416
22,965
34,455
4 of the 6 largest crowds of the 2010 season!
...yet STILL, Steve, the Tribe ranks 30th out of 30 teams in attendance:
http://espn.go.com/mlb/attendance
That goes to show you how truly horrible the fan support has been this season, Steve -- the only time we draw a large crowd is to root for the opposing team! (see Stephen Strassburg's start at Progressive Field on June _)
Adding insult to injury, the Tribe carried out its annual fire sale of the players with name recognition, among them Jake Westbrook, Jhonny Peralta and Kerry Wood.
It's not a good sign when the Tribe's best profit strategy is not to draw fans to the ballpark (see the statistics above); not to win games; but to sell off veteran players and dump their salaries.
Hell, next year they could field a team composed entirely of players earning the major league minimum and save EVEN MORE money -- think of how much money they could save that way!
And even though most Tribe fans would see through the ruse, they will still draw 28,000 Yankees fans when they visit town, and thus earn enough income to pay the minimum salaries.
Steve, let's face it -- the professional sports scene in Cleveland is looking pretty grim right now.
What do you think?
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