Archive for December, 2009

c8611 hohokamlawn medium Cubs Spring Training Belongs In Arizona. Heres Why.
BCB Photo by Lisa Dreishmire

New Cubs owner Tom Ricketts professes to be a die-hard Cubs fan, with respect for the club’s history and traditions. He’s pledged to keep the current atmosphere at Wrigley Field while upgrading facilities for players and fans.

Why, then, would Ricketts even consider leaving Arizona for Florida spring training? Arizona and the Cubs have a long history — dating back 57 years, to 1952 — but it’s not just the history that makes Arizona the only place Tom Ricketts and Co. should consider building their grand new spring training complex. Follow me after the jump to find out why.

The Cubs trained at the Wrigley-owned Catalina Island off the California coast from the mid-1920′s through 1951. In 1952, they moved to Arizona and have been there since, except for 1966 when they moved for one year to Long Beach, California. They have trained at several different sites in Arizona. From 1952-65 they were at Rendezvous Park in Mesa. When they returned to Arizona in 1967 they used the facilities at the old Scottsdale Stadium (now, with a new stadium, the spring home of the Giants), and moved to the current location in 1979. The Ho Ho Kam Park that the Cubs currently use for spring training is the second stadium with that name on the site on Center St. in Mesa; it was completed in 1997.

The White Sox and Dodgers moved into the mega-complex called Camelback Ranch last year and the Cubs, justifiably so, would like to have a similar complex to call their own. The Cubs outdraw every team in the Cactus League and also hold the attendance record for any spring training team, Florida or Arizona.

Why should the Cubs stay in Arizona? Let’s examine some of the reasons.

Proximity: of the 15 teams that train in Arizona (as of next spring, when the Reds will become the 15th team in the Cactus League), 13 of them are in the Phoenix metropolitan area. The longest distance between any two of those parks is 45 miles, the drive from Ho Ho Kam Park in Mesa to Surprise Stadium in Surprise. The Diamondbacks and Rockies will finish their final season in Tucson in 2010 and then move to this complex off Loop 101 near Scottsdale in 2011 — at that point, all 15 teams will be within less than an hour’s drive. Meanwhile, from Naples, Florida, the proposed site for a Cubs training complex in Florida, the two closest teams (Twins and Red Sox) are 40 miles away. The next closest (Rays, in Port Charlotte) is nearly 80 miles away; next closest after that are the Orioles‘ Ed Smith Park in Sarasota and the Pirates‘ McKechnie Park in Bradenton, both approximately 120 miles from Naples. The other ten teams training in Florida are 150 miles or more from Naples. This would provide logistical problems for the Cubs playing more than just three to five different teams in spring games, instead of the fourteen other teams they can now play with easy drives. It also would mean, as Jim Hendry noted, trouble for scheduling spring games for Cubs minor leaguers. Now, it’s an easy bus ride (less than 30 minutes) for Giants or A’s minor leaguers to drive to Mesa to play Cubs minor leaguers, or vice versa. Not so in Florida.

History and tradition: not something to so easily dismiss. Not only do thousands of former Chicagoans live in the Phoenix area, many of them have winter homes there — among them, many Cubs employees and players. There’s a reason you hear so many cheers for the Cubs when they play the Diamondbacks in Chase Field during the regular season — that’s all the ex-Chicagoans living there who go to root for the Cubs. It’s one of the reasons the D’backs scheduled two exhibition games vs. the Cubs there next April — they know they’ll draw thousands of Cubs fans. Chicagoans seem to have a more natural affinity to the West rather than the Southeast — there are far more former Midwesterners who retire to and winter in Arizona than Florida, which draws its “snowbirds” primarily from the Northeast.

Player evaluation: this is a false reason raised last year by Lou Piniella, who claims it is “easier” to evaluate players in spring training in Florida. Admittedly, the lower humidity and higher altitude in the Phoenix area makes the Cactus League more of a hitters’ league than the Grapefruit League. You’re telling me that a man who has spent more than 45 years in baseball, 22 years as a manager, can’t adjust for this? Of Lou’s 22 years in managing, more than half — 13 — have been spent managing teams (the Cubs and Mariners) who trained in Arizona. Ten of those 13 seasons were winning ones, and six of those ten (four with Seattle and two with the Cubs) resulted in playoff berths. I’d say Lou did pretty well with “player evaluation” in Arizona.

Weather: obviously, the two places both have good, but very different, climates. Arizona’s weather in March is almost universally perfect. I have been to spring training in Arizona 19 times since 1984; I don’t have an exact count of games I’ve attended there, but it must be over 150. In all that time I can only remember two games that were rained out, and the rest of the time there is unlimited sunshine and temperatures generally in the mid-80′s. (I would, however, not recommend night games in the Phoenix area in mid-March, when it can be coolish in the upper 50′s and lower 60′s, and one game last March had to be called due to high winds.) Florida’s temperatures are similar, but there’s a much greater chance that a cold front will blow through the state in March and bring rain.

Team performance: let me once and for all explode the myth that’s being promoted by some that “World Series winners train in Florida”. It is undeniably true that in the Wild Card era — the last 15 seasons — 12 of the winners of the World Series have trained in Florida (the exceptions: 2001 Diamondbacks, 2002 Angels, 2005 White Sox). First of all, until 1998 the Cactus League had only eight of the then-28 teams — so you would expect, mathematically, that only a little over a quarter of championships would come from Arizona-based spring teams, since only a little over a quarter of the teams trained there. (Here’s a comprehensive history of Arizona spring training.) Arizona spring teams totalled ten from 1998-2002 with the addition of the expansion D’backs and White Sox; the Royals and Rangers moved to Surprise in 2003 and the Cactus League was 12 teams from 2003-2008, and in 2009 the Dodgers and Indians made the Arizona total 14. The 2010 addition of the Reds to the Cactus League makes next spring, for the first time ever, the first year that an equal number of teams (15) will train in Florida and Arizona. Finally, of the 15 World Series winners from 1995-2009, seven of them (nearly half) are the Yankees and Red Sox. I can’t imagine anyone seriously arguing that those teams won the World Series because of their spring training site.

Finally, the last team to move from Arizona to Florida for spring training and not come back was the Red Sox — in 1965 (the Indians left Arizona for Florida in 1993, but returned in 2009). There are many reasons they’re all moving in one direction — all the factors I’ve explained above. The Cubs are the #1 draw in Arizona and the engine that drives the Cactus League. Would they really want to move to an isolated outpost on the southwest coast of Florida and be third banana there behind the Yankees and Red Sox?

Tom Ricketts, it would be a colossal mistake to relocate the Cubs away from Arizona for spring training. The people running the show in Mesa want you there and clearly understand how much the Cubs mean to the Cactus League and the Valley. You do deserve to have a spring training complex second to none — and I believe the city of Mesa will build that for you.

I’ll have more on this later this week.

 Cubs Spring Training Belongs In Arizona. Heres Why.

 Cubs Spring Training Belongs In Arizona. Heres Why.

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With the passing of the non-tender deadline (which comes at a stupid time, but that’s another story), the Cubs have cut ties with Neal Cotts and now have a few other names to look at. MLB Trade Rumors does a good job listing the players who were let go by their teams over the weekend [...]



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 Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On  Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On  Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On  Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On  Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On  Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On  Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On  Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On

 Two Non Tendered Players I’d At Least Kick the Tires On

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d1fd9 cubhistory121309 medium Cubs Historic Photos: Second In A Series
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The date that was attached to this photo when originally sent to me would have solved a mystery of history, if true. It was tagged by the photographer “June 6, 1969″. On that date the Cubs beat the Reds 14-8.

But Ron Santo’s heel clicks after victories, according to research I did for “Cubs By The Numbers” (shameless promotion: “Cubs By The Numbers” makes a great and inexpensive holiday gift for your favorite Cubs fan!), didn’t begin until the last week of June. Go past the jump to find out the actual date of this heel click.

Divisional play began in 1969, and although the Reds were and are in the Eastern time zone, east of Chicago, they wound up in the NL West. Apparently, the presence of the Braves and Reds in the NL West was due to the influence of the Cubs; the Cubs wanted to be in the same division with the Cardinals but neither wanted to be in the West, where they’d have many more late-night TV dates. So the Cubs used their pull to push Atlanta and Cincinnati to the West, where they would stay till realignment in 1994.

Anyway, that meant that the Reds only traveled to Wrigley Field twice in 1969 and the Cubs only beat them twice in seven games (should have been only six, but the June 7 game was delayed by rain and then halted for darkness in a 5-5 tie and replayed). The photo was definitely part of a set taken in a game vs. the Reds; the temperature on June 6 was only 60 degrees, so Santo wouldn’t have been wearing short sleeves that day.

Thus, this is the heel-click after a 3-1 win over the Reds on August 28, 1969. Incidentally, that was also the day that the 40-year-old team attendance record was broken with the crowd of 29,092, bringing the season total to 1,502,222 (it would later finish at 1,674,993; that record stood until 1984).

In an era with curtain calls, Jose Valverde acts and outfielder bumps after wins, those of you in your 20′s or 30′s might wonder what the fuss was over Santo’s heel clicks. It was a different time. Players just didn’t do that “in your face” kind of thing in 1969 — it was widely panned by broadcasters, writers and fellow players, and Santo became one of the most disliked opponents around the National League. It may, even to this day, be one of the factors keeping him out of the Hall of Fame.

It was innocent. Santo was just happy with winning. If he only knew what was to come after that August 28 game, he might not have done it at all, and the heel clicks disappeared after 1969.

Once again, if you’d like a print of this photo, email Leo Bauby for ordering information.

 Cubs Historic Photos: Second In A Series

 Cubs Historic Photos: Second In A Series

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In a non-surprising move, the Cubs today non-tendered LHP Neil Cotts. I have no grudge against Cotts but I was glad to see this – sometimes the Cubs have a tendency to believe too much in a rejuvenation project and Cotts was certainly that. Here in Nashville we would refer to him as [...]



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 The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)  The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)  The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)  The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)  The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)  The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)  The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)  The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)

 The time has come for us to say sayonara (to Neil Cotts)

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Recently, I was introduced to Leo Bauby, who owns a very large collection of historic Chicago sports photos, including hundreds of Cubs photos from the 1960′s and 1970′s. They were taken by a photographer primarily working for the Sporting News and Baseball Digest. Leo has graciously granted me permission to post these photos — there’s more information after the jump. Here’s the first one; see if you can guess the pitcher and the date:

9d5a8 cubhistory121209 medium Cubs Historic Photos: First In A Series
Click on photo to open a larger version in a new browser window

There are so few pitchers in major league history who have thrown with motions like that, it’s easy to guess who it is — the answer is Ted Abernathy, who set the major league save record in 1965 with the Cubs (31, broken the next year) and was later traded away; he returned in 1969. This photo was taken in 1969; Leo’s information had a date of July 14 on it, but Abernathy didn’t appear in the July 14 game.

This was with a large group of photos that all had that date on them, but it must have been taken on July 16, because they all were from a game vs. the Mets; the July 16 game was the only game in that series in which Abernathy appeared.

The Mets blew out to a 6-0 lead after the top of the 2nd; the Cubs closed to within 6-5, but wound up losing 9-5. Abernathy came into the game to start the top of the seventh and if you look behind him, you’ll see second baseman Glenn Beckert standing around, not ready for action. This photo must be of one of Abernathy’s warmup throws. You can also see some empty bleacher seats; attendance that day was a full house of 36,795, but you can understand why people might have left early with the Cubs down 6-0 before they even batted twice. The game also ran three hours. That doesn’t seem long to us now, but it’s far longer than the average game in the late 1960′s.

You’ll also see a watermark on the photo. That’s because one of the reasons Leo Bauby is granting permission to me to post these photos, is that they are all available to purchase as prints. Here’s Leo’s photo website; as you can see it’s a work in progress, but if you are interested in purchasing a print of this photo — or any of the others I’ll be posting over this offseason — you can contact him at this email address.

 Cubs Historic Photos: First In A Series

 Cubs Historic Photos: First In A Series

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Dec
11

GirlieView (12/11/2009)

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Another week, another nothing to talk about. My TwitterBox (that sounds crude) has been overflowing with all sorts of  interesting MLB news … Cubs? Nuttin’ but rumors. Still awaiting something exciting. Until then …
Lizzies

I think Andy White has a great glove and, apparently,…



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 GirlieView (12/11/2009)  GirlieView (12/11/2009)  GirlieView (12/11/2009)  GirlieView (12/11/2009)  GirlieView (12/11/2009)  GirlieView (12/11/2009)  GirlieView (12/11/2009)  GirlieView (12/11/2009)

 GirlieView (12/11/2009)

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The winter meetings have come and gone, and it sure wasn’t a bad week to be a mediocre pitcher. Jon Heyman lists the winners and losers of the week, from Brad Penny to Mike Lowell.

 Jon Heyman: Winners and losers from relatively uneventful winter meetings

 Jon Heyman: Winners and losers from relatively uneventful winter meetings

 Jon Heyman: Winners and losers from relatively uneventful winter meetings

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Dec
11

Cubs Haiku Friday

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4f7d4 haiku medium Cubs Haiku Friday

After Indy, there’s
A need for peace and quiet
So I’m suggesting

A BCB day,
Today, where everyone will
Post baseball thoughts in

Haiku only. Use
The traditional format
For it, that is, write

Five syllables, then
Seven in the second line,
then five ‘gain. See how

Easy it is? So try
It yourself, think of baseball
Thoughts you can express

In traditional
Japanese haiku format.
I will be the first:

Hendry tried. Really,
He did. But no teams wanted
Milton, so he stays.

(With a hat tip to
Chicago Sports In Haiku,
The best site for this.)

 Cubs Haiku Friday

 Cubs Haiku Friday

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Dec
11

Who’s Your 5th Starter?

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Carrie Muskat mentioned in her blog that the 5th starter spot would come down to Sean Marshall, Jeff Samardzija, and Tom Gorzelanny. In my latest edition of the projected 25 man roster, Marshall was my projected 5thstarter, with Samardzija and Gorzelanny going to the bullpen. I’m not sure if…



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 Who’s Your 5th Starter?  Who’s Your 5th Starter?  Who’s Your 5th Starter?  Who’s Your 5th Starter?  Who’s Your 5th Starter?  Who’s Your 5th Starter?  Who’s Your 5th Starter?  Who’s Your 5th Starter?

 Who’s Your 5th Starter?

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — As general managers headed out the hotel doors and into the bone-chilling air, most had much work to do. Only the New York Yankees, Houston, Texas and Milwaukee accomplished a lot this week during the winter meetings.

 Winter meetings end; plenty of work to be done

 Winter meetings end; plenty of work to be done

 Winter meetings end; plenty of work to be done

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