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Manny Ramirez

#24 / Left Field / Boston Red Sox

6-0

200

R

R

May 30, 1972

G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Manny Ramirez 92 334 61 99 19 1 19 61 47 82 1 0 .296 .396 .530

BCB Interviews Corey Kemp


No, the Brewers did not just draft right-handed pitchers; there are a few position players salting the draft haul. One of the more intriguing of the bunch is East Carolina catcher Corey Kemp. Kemp hit .341/.444/.628 for the Pirates and was named second-team All-America for his trouble. Hits well and plays catcher? Sounds good to me.

BCB: Are you in Arizona now?

CK: Yes I am.

BCB: I hear the weather is brutal.

CK: True, thank God we practice in the morning.

BCB: So, did you know the Brewers were interested in drafting you before they did?

CK: Yes I did. [Brewers’ scout] Dan Nellum was in contact a lot.

BCB: What other teams talked to you?

CK: The Reds, Cardinals, and Cubs were the most interested.

BCB: Were you surprised at where you were drafted? Were you expecting to go higher or lower?

CK: I wasn’t sure really, I was told anywhere from [round] 8 to 20. I was happy to go in the 14th.

BCB: Did you know they were interested in your teammate, [42nd-round pick, shortstop] Ryan Wood, too?

CK: Yeah, probably more so than me.

BCB: Oh, really? Did they discover you while scouting him?

CK: Yeah, Ryan is a stud; no one knows how he fell so far. Not real sure really.

BCB: Signability? Do you think he'll sign?

CK: Might be, be but he said he would sign anywhere before the 15th [round]. He was my two-year roommate.

BCB: So you're pretty good buddies with him then?

CK: Great friends.

BCB: So if the Brewers are willing to give him top 15-round money, he might be interested?

CK: I'm pretty sure.

BCB: How's his defense at short? You think he'll be able to stick there?

CK: For sure. Cannon for an arm.

BCB: How are you defensively behind the plate?

CK: I'm okay, I suppose; I still have a lot to learn.

BCB: Did you just recently take up catching?

CK: Full-time, last year.

BCB: What did you play before that?

CK: Third base, but I was back and forth for about five years, just never really focused on catching till this year.

BCB: What are your strengths as a player?

CK: Work ethic and love for the game. I also believe I bring positive energy to a team.

BCB: Do you know yet whether you'll go to Helena when their season begins?

CK: Not real sure; we'll find out in the next day or two.

BCB: Do you know anyone in the organization?

CK: Sam Narron, who is in AAA, is from ECU, and I’ve talked to him on a few occasions. Great guy.

BCB: I'm rooting for him to make it back to the big leagues, just because the one game he was up with Texas a few years ago was so terrible.

CK: Yeah, he had a tough outing, but that happens. That's baseball.

BCB: As an African-American, does the presence of so many young black talents on the big league club make you more comfortable in the organization than you might otherwise be?

CK: I mean, that's great to see. I don't know if that makes me more comfortable--I've always been the minority on every team; mostly I was the only black kid.

BCB: Did you ever see being the only black kid on the team as a problem?

CK: No, not really. I didn't really ever focus on it, but I definitely always noticed.

BCB: Is that a problem to be fixed, or is just one of those things?

CK: I’m not sure. Baseball can get very expensive to play competitively; some summer teams charge $1000 to play in the summer.

BCB: How did you get into baseball?

CK: Most of my family is from St. Louis, so as a young kid I spent summers in St. Louis dressing in Cardinal red. Went to my first game and didn't eat for three hours, which was a record for me, and I begged my dad to sign me up. From that, game on.

BCB: Oh so you're a Cardinals fan? Well, better than the Cubs, I suppose.

CK: (laughs) Yeah, that's true.

BCB: Is there a Major Leaguer you pattern your game after?

CK: I really love watching Manny [Ramirez] and Big Albert [Pujols] hit, and I love to watch Yadier Molina and [Brian] McCann catch.

BCB: Molina is primarily known for his defense, while McCann is mostly known for offense. Who do you identify with more?

CK: That's why I love to watch both--mixing the two makes the perfect catcher, and McCann's defensive skills are underrated.

BCB: So when you make it to the big leagues, we'll call you McYadi, yeah?

CK: Sure, great comparison. (laughs)

BCB: Do you have any favorite baseball books?

CK: Moneyball was interesting. That and Ball Four.

BCB: What did you take away as the message of Moneyball?

CK: Just that this is a business now, and that there is a whole other side to the game that is very statistical.

BCB: Do you get into statistical analysis at all?

CK: Nah, I just play the game as hard as possible.

BCB: Fans can’t ask for anything more. We appreciate the time, and we’ll be cheering for you.

CK: Thanks.

6 comments | 1 recs

5 Questions with Marc Normandin

Interleague play starts today, and the Brewers have a three-game series against the Red Sox at Fenway.  To get us ready for the set, I asked my good friend--and non-card-carrying member of Red Sox Nation--Marc Normandin to tell us a little about his team. 

You may know Marc from Baseball Prospectus, where he writes Player Profiles and Fantasy Beat columns.  He also was one of the original bloggers at SBN's stats site Beyond the Boxscore, and he contributes weekly columns to Heater Magazine.

Q: Last year, Daisuke Matsuzaka was pretty good.  So far this season, he's been great, even though he's had to work around 30 walks in 48 innings.  Are we seeing a new, improved, Dice-K, or will a start against the Brewers start regressing him to the mean?

A: This is something I covered the other day over at Baseball Prospectus. Matsuzaka has essentially cut his home run rate in half, but other than that he has lost over a full strikeout per inning and tacked on two additional walks per nine to a total that was already close to iffy. He's been lucky so far with a .209 Batting Average on Balls in Play (BABIP) and has also posted a lofty strand rate thanks to an assist from a Red Sox defense that is converting 71% of all batted-balls into outs.

Supposedly he's been mixing in random pitches less often so he can focus on getting hitters out, but there's a few things that don't jive with that thinking. First, look at his pitch distribution at
Fangraphs; there are some slight changes in usage, but nothing too significant. The second part of this is that he's stopped "nibbling" as much, but he's walking additional hitters and still using the same pitch distribution, and is in fact throwing 4.2 P/PA after 4.0 (3.98 without the rounding) last year.

Basically, I'm waiting for the other shoe to drop when he's walked the bases loaded at some point after tiring himself out in the 4th inning. His FIP calls for an adjustment to a 4.12 ERA, which seems about right if the homers don't come back. If they do though, well, sigh. I'm not sure if the Brewers are the team where we will see him regress to the mean--that's a pretty awesome .316 team OBP you have going on there--but it will happen sooner than later.


Q: Talk to us about the shortstop situation.  From an outsider's perspective, it looks like Julio Lugo sucks and Jed Lowrie's ready now.  Yet Lowrie is back in Pawtucket and Alex Cora is starting until Lugo is healthy again.  Please explain.

A: Lowrie can't field the position, and Lugo's biggest problem at present is an inability to field the position. It looks as if Lugo is jealous of Youkilis' errorless streak, and he's doing his best to force Youk to collect an error scooping an errant throw. His Rate2 from the Davenport Translations is 78 (22 runs below average per 100 games played) and he's already 7 runs below average defensively by that metric. I'll admit here that I thought signing Lugo was a good idea at the time, but my mind was apparently clouded by the previous shortstops we had in tow.

The Sox haven't announced a long-term plan with Lowrie--I think he's a future third baseman with second handled by Pedroia--but he may be their younger version of Alex Cora with more pop and less defense to be deployed as a utility guy.

It's tough to figure the Sox out sometimes, they just like to play with smoke and mirrors and never tell you their true intentions. Sometimes it works out nicely, and other times they do weird things like tell Josh Beckett to stop throwing a curveball for an entire season during side sessions, or sign Mike Lowell to an extension when you have someone ready to take the position, etc. I try to ignore those times to avoid frustration.


Q: Speaking of "ready now," the same can be said of Jacoby Ellsbury. Now that the Cubs signed Jim Edmonds (tee hee), there's one less suitor for Coco Crisp.  Do you see Crisp being dealt, or is there another way the Sox can handle having four outfielders who either deserve or want to start?

A: Crisp doesn't deserve to start, no matter what his friends and relatives might tell him. I like the production of the "I'm not guaranteed playing time" Covelli much more than the one who was phoning in at-bats daily for two years. It looked like he picked up some bad habits at the plate while recovering from his finger injury in 2006, and he never worked around them until now. Of course, we're talking about an 89 at-bat sample. He could certainly slug under .400 again by year's end.

Defensively, he's excellent, but so is Ellsbury. Ellsbury's the better hitter, the better baserunner, and after some more experience out in Fenway's center, probably at least his equal defensively due to his speed and solid instincts. Crisp may deserve to start elsewhere in the league (how about the Padres? Please?) but the Sox can afford to use him in a role where he spells the other outfielders and comes in defensively late. If at some point you're forced to witness the Ellsbury/Crisp/Drew defensive alignment in the 8th-9th when the Sox have a flyball pitcher on the mound, you might hate yourself a bit. I like that much better than what the Mets have cooked up, where they are sometimes forced to do things like start Angel Pagan in their outfield. Covelli is an excellent fourth outfielder :-)


Q: Here's a fun fact: relative to league average, every offensive position on the Sox is above average.  The two "worst," though, are second base and DH.  Pedroia, ok--average is respectable.  But...David Ortiz?  People have been forecasting his possible demise for years, but is this finally the year he begins morphing into Mo Vaughn?

A: Ortiz is dealing with a knee injury that has sapped some of his power. I know an ankle injury was the beginning of the end for Maurice, but I'm hoping Ortiz hasn't lost it all at once. One of the reasons I didn't like the extension the Sox gave him was because it's possible he will one day wake up and be too big and out of shape to play daily in the major leagues, but it's too soon to say that day is now. The best season of his career was 2007, so I'm hoping he's able to rebound some when his knee heals up.

On a related note, have you seen my buddy Manny up there? .308/.386/.551 with 8 homers. He worked out this winter vigorously for the first time in ages--Manny is notorious for his hard work preparing for games, but it usually has to do with his swing more than it does lifting weights and exercising--and for once, the spring training fluff story seems to have a ring of truth to it. I'm not sure what exercises he did that allowed him to make an over-the-shoulder grab and then high-five a Sox fan, but he should keep doing them. You might ask, "But Marc, Manny's BABIP is .370, and you of all people shouldn't get excited when someone does that!" I'd agree with you if his career BABIP wasn't .343 with four seasons at a higher BABIP than this year's on his resume.


Q: Finally, I know you must get asked this all the time, and it's rough being in second place all these years.  But do you think 2008 is the season when the Red Sox can finally catch the Rays?

A: This is such blasphemy, and it's possible that if Sox fans bothered to venture out of their Nation (outside of their road trips designed to drive other team's fans insane), they would see me read this, but I could honestly care less if the Rays finish in first. Good for them. That doesn't apply to the other AL East teams (or hell, other AL teams outside of Kansas City) but the Rays deserve to win. Maybe that's just the baseball fan in me talking. I'm sure the Sox fan in me will start yelling in an hour when he realizes what I said, but it's nice to have someone else to catch up to and play important games against in the East. The Sox/Yanks rivalry is to the point where it's played out, and the "drama" just doesn't grab me, no matter how much the media tries to shove it down our throats every time they play.

And hey, the Sox finally won the division last year for the first time since 1995.
What a roster that was...I'm still not entirely sure how they did it.

Thanks Marc!

9 comments | 0 recs

Wednesday's Frosty Mug

So I skipped last night's game and went to see Iron Man instead. I wasn't a big fan of the ending, but it sounds like it was still significantly better than the game.

Win Expectancy Graph
BR Box Score
BDD Recaps
BP Postseason Odds: 77.7 and 5.6%

For what it's worth, about a week after I ranted about how the mainstream media is too close to the team sometimes, Anthony Witrado's story in the JS reads like it was written by one of us. Sounds like he's getting sick of excuses too.

We're several weeks removed from the Masters now, but this really is a tradition unlike any other: When the Brewers are bad, start talking about 1982 again.

Related: Robin Yount and Paul Molitor made Dugout Central's list of the top players with less than 400 home runs.

In-Between Hops is talking about reasons to fire or retain a manager.

Eric Gagne made Dayn Perry's list of the five worst free agent signings. For whatever it's worth, Troy Percival is 7-for-7 in save opportunities and just moved into 10th on the all time list.

On injuries:

David Eckstein left last night's game with a sore groin. An inning later his replacement, John McDonald, left the game with an ankle injury.
Orlando Hudson has a strained hamstring and will miss around 10 days.

Obviously, things haven't been going real well around here, but on the flip side, Astros fans are pretty excited about where their recent hot streak has taken them.

On the other end of the spectrum, we have the Mariners. U.S.S. Mariner has given them five games to save their season.

Results are in from the most recent Baseball Happenings Blogpoll. Manny Ramirez takes home the AL MVP once again, Cliff Lee gets the AL Cy Young and Jacoby Ellsbury wins Rookie of the Year. Full results here. Here's the ballot I cast:

ROTY:
1) Greg Smith
2) Jacoby Ellsbury
3) Clay Buchholz

Cy Young:
1) Cliff Lee
2) Zack Greinke
3) Roy Halladay

MVP:
1) Manny Ramirez
2) Carlos Quentin
3) Johnny Damon

Recondite Baseball has a list of pitchers who have allowed the most extra base hits in a season. Three current or former Brewers appear on the list, but only one did it in a Brewer uniform. The answer may surprise you.

That's all for today. Drink up.

29 comments | 0 recs

Tuesday's Frosty Mug

I think I need a Frosty Mug of coffee.

Win Expectancy Graph
BR Box Score
ESPN Video Highlights
BDD Recaps
Postseason odds: Projecting 83.5 wins and a 21.7% chance of winning the Central.

A quick aside to discuss in the comments: Does anyone actually watch/enjoy the ESPN Video highlights? I really used to like them, but lately I'm getting pretty frustrated with them. Take last night's game, for example. A pretty good back-and-forth with some interesting moments and late inning drama. ESPN could've produced at least a full minute of highlights to show that. Instead, the highlight package is 24 seconds long and the only highlight is a sac fly. If you want the ESPN Video highlights to remain a part of the Mug, say something in the comments, otherwise I'm cutting them tomorrow.

As I'm sure you noticed below, in the JS or on ESPN, Ben Sheets will miss his next start. I'm trying hard not to overreact. Really hard.

Of course, even with Sheets inactive, the Brewers still have 13 active pitchers on their roster. The Official Site says they're sticking to it, even if Luft On Deck does call it creatively twisted logic. Cardinals Diaspora also picked up on the need to pinch hit with a pitcher in the 7th last night.

Between the Green Pillars thinks Derrick Turnbow doesn't have a place in the bullpen anymore. Last week, in the comments of the Turnbow thread, I said the following:
If I’m Doug Melvin, I welcome the opportunity to restore the confidence of one of the few pitchers on staff guaranteed to be here next year. I think it’s easy for Melvin to say "Look, Derrick, I know we’ve set you back, but you’re still a key part of our plans and we’re looking forward to having you here long term. We just need you to do your part to prove you deserve it." I think it’s relatively easy to picture a world where Gagne, Torres, Mota (all free agents) and Shouse (almost 40) could be gone next year, and Turnbow and Riske are the best options at the end of the bullpen. If DM is half as smart as I think he is, he’s sitting down with Turnbow and pointing that out.
Obviously Turnbow's not pitching well. But unless we produce a bunch of contract extensions real soon, he's going to be a key part of the 2009 bullpen again.

Only one injury report today, so it's exceptionally brief: Rangers P Kason Gabbard left yesterday's game with back stiffness.

Results are posted for the Baseball Happenings Awards Blogpoll. Manny Ramirez takes home the MVP this week, Cliff Lee takes home the Cy Young and Nick Blackburn wins Rookie of the Year. See the full results here and the BCB ballot here.

Al over at Bleed Cubbie Blue notes that the Cubs are inching up on 10,000 franchise wins. (Clever joke about 100 years goes here.)

This week's Fan Opinion Poll is a week late but it's up, go vote here. This week's new topics include roster construction, Yovani Gallardo, resting closers, Ben Sheets, and the five questions I've been tracking with the previous polls. Please go vote, and if you have the capacity to help promote the poll and build turnout numbers, that'd be fantastic as well. Last week 142 people voted, my goal for this week is 150.

That's all I've got for today. Drink up.

9 comments | 0 recs


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Featured Poll

Poll
Jeff Suppan is due to be activated from the DL on Tuesday. What should the Brewers do with the rotation?
  • Insert Suppan and demote Dave Bush to the bullpen.
  • Insert Suppan and demote Son of Clung to the bullpen.
  • Insert Suppan and use Bush and McClung in a home/road platoon.
  • Kick Suppan to the pen and keep Bush and McClung in the rotation.
  • Trade J.J. Hardy for A.J. Burnett and leave the other three guys alone in a room with a sharp stick and the knowledge that there's only one open spot on the team.

  107 votes | Results

54 - 43

3

Won 3

65

NL Central Standings

W L PCT GB STRK
Chicago Red-star 57 40 .587 0 Lost 3
St. Louis Red-star 56 43 .565 2 Won 4
Milwaukee Red-star 54 43 .556 3 Won 3
Cincinnati Red-star 48 51 .484 10 Won 2
Houston Red-star 46 51 .474 11 Won 4
Pittsburgh Red-star 44 53 .453 13 Lost 4

(updated 7.20.2008 at 12:24 AM CDT)

FanShots

Quick hits of video, photos, quotes, chats, links and lists that you find around the web.

Recent FanShots

Brewers Interested in Huston Street?
McBush  Platoon
Brewer's Fan Goes Homeless
Robinade - only 12% juice, but 100% Robin.

I saw it in Pick and Save today, located in the milk cooler area with the other single serve tasty drinks (I apologize for the crappy resolution on my phone's camera... I've dropped it one too many times). I think it was like $1.29, so it's pretty fairly priced and a healthier alternative to the tasty sugar-filled sodas we all know and love.

It's pretty much regular lemonade, but it's definitely good - much better than Minute Maid. My sister says it tastes like Robin's sweat is in it...

How she knows what his sweat tastes like is beyond me...
A Pat Listach sighting!

Read the article.
Awesome!

(Hat tip to Big League Stew, which is seriously becoming a Brewers blog.)
courtesy of Big League Stew
Brett Lawrie about to do something unspeakable to the baseball.

(c) Fnawzm.
Buster Olney on the Brewers Schedule
He's no Ben Sheets.

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