Shorebird of the year – a season wrapup

Tonight I’ll close the book on the Shorebirds season by reviewing the numbers and also taking a look at how the players I selected as Shorebird of the Week fared, and, of course, select my pick for Shorebird of the Year.

First of all, the final Standings Report.

The Shorebirds finished the second half on a 5 game losing streak, with four of those coming at the hands of the Hagerstown Suns across the Chesapeake. As a result, Hagerstown passed us and Delmarva brought up the rear in the SAL North with a 27-42 second half record, 19 1/2 back of Lakewood, who won the half with a solid 47-23 record. What I’ve done is laid out the overall season records of each team in the 16 team league in order of finish. The parenthesis afterward indicate their finish in each half. An asterisk indicates the team is with the Shorebirds in the North Division.

1. Augusta 92-47 (2,1)
2. Lakewood* 84-55 (4,1)
3. Charleston 78-62 (3,3)
4. West Virginia* 74-62 (2,2)
5. Lexington* 75-63 (1,6)
6. Asheville 74-63 (5,2)
7. Columbus 72-68 (4,4)
8. Rome 71-68 (1,6)
9. Greensboro* 68-69 (5,5)
10. Hickory* 67-70 (6,4)
11. Greenville 67-73 (6,5)
12. DELMARVA* 64-73 (3,8)
13. Lake County* 64-74 (7,3)
14. Hagerstown* 58-82 (8,7)
15. Savannah 56-83 (7,7)
16. Kannapolis 42-94 (8,8)

Ironically, last season Kannapolis was the league champion (over Hagerstown) and this season both are among the bottom feeders. Had the standings been kept for a full season, Kannapolis would’ve finished a whopping 48 1/2 games out.

As an aggregate we finished 19 games behind Lakewood, who would have won a full-season title by 8 1/2 games over West Virginia, bridesmaid in both halves. But the BlueClaws get to square off against Lexington instead for the North title. The South Division playoff features the Rome Braves against the Augusta Greenjackets. The Greenjackets were runner-up to Rome in the first half but blew away the South in the second half. Despite the fact that the playoffs are set so the first-half winners have home field advantage, the pitching of both Lakewood and Augusta should carry them through to a pretty good matchup for the SAL title. If Augusta plays like they did when I saw them here, though, the Greenjackets should master the BlueClaws and take that colorful matchup.

If you look at the numbers, what most likely killed the Shorebirds this season was ineptitude at the plate. They had an aggregate batting average of .237 which was dead last in the league, and a full 40 points behind West Virginia, the squad with the best average. Some of Delmarva’s other team offensive rankings:

Runs scored: 582 (4.25 per game), 12th
Doubles: 231, 8th
Triples: 27, 11th
Home Runs: 79, tied for 12th
Walks: 534, 2nd (Columbus led with 569)
Strikeouts: 1,068 (3rd)
Stolen Bases: 101 (12th)
On-base percentage: .325 (10th)
Slugging percentage (total bases/at-bats) .355 (14th)
OPS (total of on-base and slugging percentages) .680 (13th)

All in all, they had an anemic and punchless offense this season, which did them in on a number of occasions.

On the other hand, the pitching was great for the first half of the season but faded toward the end. The Shorebirds finished 8th in the league in total ERA with a 3.76 mark. Lakewood paced the circuit with a solid 3.10 ERA, which is the reason they’re in the playoffs. Other pitching rankings among the SAL teams:

With just 4 shutouts, Delmarva outpaced only Hickory (who had 2) in the category.
Saves: 36, 6th
Runs allowed: 623 (4.56 per game), 10th
Home Runs allowed: 76, tied for 3rd
Walks allowed: 471, 9th
Strikeouts: 1015, 10th
WHIP (walks+hits/innings pitched) 1.37, tied for 9th

Aside from the stinginess of our pitchers in giving up the longball (which may be a factor of Perdue Stadium), our pitching faded at the end into mediocrity. Both categories quickly explain why Delmarva wasn’t much of a factor in the SAL this season.

Looking ahead to 2007, we may get some help. While Bluefield (the Orioles Appalachian League rookie team) only finished 31-38 (8th in the 10 team league), Aberdeen (Baltimore’s Class A Short Season club) finished 41-34 and tonight’s loss (along with a comeback win by Brooklyn) cost them the wild-card berth in the NY-Penn League.

During the season, each Thursday I selected a Shorebird of the Week, in total 22 players were honored. Here’s a rundown of how they fared on the season.

April 6: Josh Potter

Potter spent the full season in a Shorebirds uniform as he did in 2005. For the year, the Pennsylvania native made 42 appearances with one start, posting a 4-8 overall record with a solid 3.04 ERA and 2 saves. Most importantly, he walked only 34 in 91 2/3 innings while striking out 70. Potter will turn 24 just before next season, hopefully 2 good Delmarva seasons will get him up the ladder for 2007.

April 13: Arturo Rivas

A fan favorite, Rivas batted .257 in 93 games with Delmarva before being called up to Frederick. In 35 games with the Keys he actually hit better, a .275 mark. Arturo ended up among the Delmarva team leaders in RBI despite only being here about 2/3 of the season, collecting 42 RBI’s and 5 home runs. The Venezuela native turns 23 during the off season, so starting 2007 in Frederick would probably be right in line with his development.

April 20: Lorenzo Scott

Scott’s 29 stolen bases paced the team, but one thing he’ll have to work on for a chance in 2007 is making better contact – 140 strikeouts is far too many for a leadoff hitter (although he also walked 60 times, which was second on the team.) Toward the end of the season Scott usually batted in the 9th spot.

Lorenzo finished with a .258 average in 113 games, with 4 home runs and 32 RBI. The onetime Ball State Cardinal will turn 25 about the start of spring training, which means he may or may not get that chance at another Delmarva season. It may come down to one final shot for him to maintain his career come March.

April 27: David Hernandez

One of a crop of young Delmarva starters with good stuff, David was among those pitchers who seemed to tire in the second half of the season as the innings mounted. Hernandez ended up leading the team with 145 1/3 innings pitched in 28 starts. He also was responsible for the most “K”‘s being plastered on the board with 154 (4th in the SAL.) David’s record on the season was a somewhat deceptive 7-8 and he finished with a 4.15 ERA. The only concerns for the Orioles brass would be walks and longballs – David had the second-most on the team in each category, walking 71 and giving up 13 home runs. But he won’t turn 22 until May of next year, so another half-season in Delmarva wouldn’t hurt in getting him valuable experience.

May 4: Chorye Spoone

The second of three young Shorebird starters I selected as SotW, this 20 year old (turns 21 a week from Saturday) also had a team high 7 wins but 9 losses. Similarly to Hernandez, the Maryland native tired after the All-Star break, going from a excellent 2.33 ERA before to a 4.56 ERA afterward (overall his ERA was a respectable 3.56.) Spoone was the pitcher who allowed the most walks on the team (80 in 129 innings) so he needs to work on control for next year. I’m guessing he’ll be a mainstay of Delmarva’s 2007 pitching staff.

May 11: Kyle Dahlberg

The stocky backstop just did hit his weight this season (he’s listed at 6′-3″ and 211) as he managed a .218 average in 71 games. Kyle split catching duties with a number of players this season, mainly Brandon Snyder in the first half of the year and Zach Dillon toward the end. But he ended up leading that group in games and at-bats. While the average may not seem like too much, bear in mind that Dahlberg hit just .174 for Aberdeen in 2005 so maybe another season in Delmarva for the 23 year old (24 just after Opening Day) could start him hitting enough to move up the chain.

May 18: Mark Fleisher

If nothing else, Mark has the most vocal fans (or at least fan) of any player. Even on the radio broadcasts from Hagerstown, I’d hear the yell, “Come on Mark!” But Fleisher put together a pretty good 2006, he was right up among team leaders in most of the offensive categories. For the season he batted .261 with 16 homers and 67 RBI, and showed a good eye at the plate, striking out just 84 times in 421 at-bats. Mark was especially good after the All-Star break with a .275 average, 9 homers and 38 RBI. Since he’ll just turn 23 in a few days, I think he’ll have a pretty good chance of seeing Frederick sometime in 2007 – the question is whether we’ll see much of him in Delmarva. Just work a little bit on that fielding.

May 25: Brandon Snyder

Perhaps it may have been a little bit too much to live up to. Brandon started the season here but after the All-Star break the #1 Oriole pick in the 2005 draft found himself sent down to Aberdeen. To make matters worse, he’s spent time on the disabled list at both stops. Thus, 2006 was sort of a lost season for Brandon.

With the Shorebirds he hit just .194 in 38 games, with 3 home runs and 20 RBI while striking out 55 times in 144 at-bats. He fared better in Aberdeen, hitting .234 in 34 games. While it could have been in the Orioles’ plans to send the 19 year old prospect down once Aberdeen got its season going, I’m sure they would’ve liked to see him with about 350 at-bats or so in maybe 110-120 games.

Hopefully 2007 will finally be a full season for Brandon and I think the Shorebird fans will be reacquainted with him come April.

June 1: Brandon Erbe

The youngest of the SotW starters’ trio, Brandon was treated with kid gloves this year. While he made all but one appearance as part of the regular pitching rotation, I don’t recall him going more than 5 innings in a start and by the end of the season he was going just three or four. But I predicted not much more than 100 innings for the 18 year old, and he finished at 114 2/3 for the season. Quite possibly the talent may be worth the special care for the Orioles though, as he struck out 133, walked only 47, gave up just 2 home runs, and allowed only 88 hits. Outstanding numbers that a 5-9 season record fails to show, but a 3.22 ERA does give a clue to. Like the others, Brandon fell off his terrific first half numbers as the season ground on, going from a 2.34 ERA in the first half to a 4.25 mark in the second. Erbe is probably one of (if not the best) pitching prospects the Orioles have so hopefully you saw him this season.

June 8: Juan Gutierrez

In 2005, Juan put together a nice campaign for the Shorebirds and he was expected to mentor the younger catchers when the Orioles placed him back here for another season. Unfortunately, this season was one of regression for Juan and quite possibly may have been his swan song in the pro ranks. While he did shine in a brief callup to Frederick (.387 in 10 games) Gutierrez had a disastrous offensive season with Delmarva, hitting just .162 in 67 ballgames. Even worse, he managed just a .129 mark after the All-Star break. In the world of pro baseball, a 25 year old player who isn’t hitting low-A pitching is likely looking for work. You have to hope that he stays in the game somehow, but I’m afraid his playing days are done.

June 15: Brad Bergesen

When healthy, Bergesen was as solid as any of the other starting pitchers Delmarva sent out; in fact, of the group he likely had the most pinpoint control – allowing just 10 walks in 86 1/3 innings. But Bergesen lost two large chunks of the season to various maladies and that put a damper on what was otherwise a decent season. Bergesen finished 5-4 with a 4.27 ERA and typical of a pitcher who stays around the plate, gave up 97 hits in that 86 1/3 innings. Fortunately, he also has age on his side, as he’ll only turn 21 this month. Brad is another pitcher who I’m thinking the Shorebirds will be counting on in 2007, at least to begin the season.

June 22: C.J. Smith

C.J. was a player who played here in 2005 and went to extended spring training this season, but upon his return to Delmarva couldn’t find either consistent playing time or his hitting groove. After a forgettable 36 games where he batted just .183 with a homer and 12 RBI’s, the Orioles organization let him go. However, the 24 year old native of Florida did latch on with the St. Louis organization, where he toiled for a team called the Swing of the Quad Cities. There he did a little better, batting .237 in 25 games. More importantly, he improved his OPS from an anemic .550 with the ‘Birds to a more respectable .728 mark. (SAL average is about .700 for that stat.) Whether the signing by the Cardinals organization was just to fill a need or if he’s gained back a little bit of prospect status remains to be seen (C.J. was a 5th round pick by the O’s in 2004.) But it’s unlikely we’ll see him playing in Perdue again.

June 29: Quincy Ascencion

“Q” is another fan favorite who was rewarded by being selected to the league’s All-Star team this past June. What surprised me in looking up his numbers was the fact he stole 14 bases, he’s more fleet of foot than I would’ve guessed. But Quincy had a nice season here, hitting .260 in exactly 400 at-bats. While he hit no home runs on the season, he did show enough line-drive power to finish third among the Shorebirds with 27 doubles. And with the exceptions of the bagel in the home run total and two fewer steals, Quincy managed to improve upon his 2005 numbers so it’s possible he’ll get a shot at playing in Frederick next season. Since he’ll be 24 by then, it may be up to the Orioles to test him at a higher level since he’s played two full seasons at Delmarva.

July 6: Ryan Steinbach

Honestly, I was surprised Ryan didn’t do better this season at either stop. In the times I saw him, he looked like a pretty decent player. But the numbers weren’t there – he hit just .217 in 60 at-bats here and only .156 in 19 games at Frederick. Turns out it’s a real possibility I may have seen his one and only pro home run here back in August as he dropped one just over the M & T Bank sign. He ended the season with the Keys going 5 for his last 17 but striking out 8 times in that period as well. The one thing he did well for the Shorebirds – he walked 17 times in his brief stay, which gave him a .397 on-base percentage despite the .217 batting mark.

July 13: Trevor Caughey

Trevor, we hardly knew ya. He literally made his last appearance for the Shorebirds the day before I picked him as SotW. I believe he’s been let go by the Orioles organization but the Minor League Baseball website still shows him as active. Pitching just 5 1/3 innings for Delmarva, he finished with a 6.75 ERA, most of the damage being done in one terrible outing against Lakewood where he gave up 4 runs and walked 3 in 2/3 of an inning. But he wasn’t doing well at Frederick either, showing a 5.50 ERA in 36 innings spread over 25 appearances. He struck out 37 but gave up 8 gopherballs, which likely was his downfall.

July 20: Zack Dillon

One of the few second-half additions that made a positive impact, Zack became a regular at catcher and when he was rested from duties behind the dish, he usually was placed in the DH slot. 2006 marked the pro debut for Zack (who played college ball at Baylor), and he did quite well, hitting .262 with 3 homers and 21 RBI in 54 games here. Especially to his liking was Perdue Stadium, he hit .288 here but .239 elsewhere in the SAL. He can be forgiven for tailing off at the end of the season, as he finished the campaign mired in a 3-for-23 slump that dropped his final average 20 points. I think Zack will begin the 2007 season here sharing time with Brandon Snyder at catcher but getting those extra plate appearances as the DH. It’s sort of unusual for a 20th round pick to start at this level, but Zack did a nice job.

July 27: Blake Davis

Blake is another Shorebird who went from college campus to Perdue Stadium, after finishing at Cal State-Fullerton and getting selected in the 4th round by the O’s he made his pro debut here July 11, a game I attended. I seem to recall he booted his first chance at shortstop (one of 17 errors he committed in 50 games) but at the plate he was among the leaders, hitting .271 with 3 homers and 20 RBI, and swiping 9 bases. With the advanced placement, he may get a shot at jumping to Frederick quickly (if not before) next season based on these numbers and the regard they place him as a 4th round selection.

August 3: Vito Chiaravalotti

Vito was likely the closest thing to an overnight sensation that the Shorebirds had this year. Acquired from the Blue Jays organization in July, Vito wowed the fans with what seemed like nightly moon shots that majestically soared well out of Perdue Stadium. He was here for just 28 games and collected 27 RBI in that span, hitting .262 and 8 longballs during his month or so stay. But the longball magic seems to be limited to Delmarva. When Vito was picked up by the Baltimore organization, he was hitting only .190 in 42 games at AA New Hampshire. Drop him down two levels and he crushes the pitching.

But with Frederick he hit a horrid 3-for-40 (.075) without a home run. For the season as a whole, just a .201 average. While Vito was a great find for the month we had him, it’s not likely that a guy who turns 26 in October will be playing pro ball much longer.

August 10: Jarod Rine

Jarod might be another player on the last stop of his pro career. You know, I always hope that players who are sent down can find that spark that sends them back on their way up the organizational ladder, but even being picked as SotW did nothing to enhance Jarod’s chances. Following up a .213 average in 70 games in Frederick by hitting only .155 here doesn’t do much for career longevity. Compounding that was the .209 mark Jarod posted last season for the Keys. There’s no doubt Jarod is speedy (21 stolen bases each of the last two seasons) but in baseball you rarely can steal first and that’s likely Jarod’s downfall – at 24 (25 in November) it wouldn’t be a surprise to find the Orioles cutting him loose, even though he was a 9th round draftee.

August 17: Jon Tucker

Jon was the batter who had the highest average for Delmarva, hitting .280 in his 261 at-bats with the Shorebirds. He briefly made it up to Frederick and was respectable there, hitting .250 in 60 at-bats. The most important stat to me though was the fact that he struck out and walked an equal 43 times apiece, and that’s why Gary Kendall often placed him in the leadoff spot despite only 9 steals (compared to Lorenzo Scott’s 29.) And you can’t overlook 21 extra base hits among his 73, which is good for a small guy (5′-7″, 170) – heck, several bigger Shorebirds didn’t have that good of a ratio. He turned 23 during the season so I think Jon may be ticketed for Frederick in 2007.

August 24: Stu Musslewhite

I don’t know what it was about Stu, but despite hitting only .237 and just 3 home runs, he found himself third on the team with 53 RBI’s. And he always seemed to find a spot someplace in the lineup, whether playing short, second base, or third base. He even would run out between innings when he wasn’t in the lineup and catch the warmup tosses by the pitcher. Yes, odds are as a 24th round pick, the Orioles chose him simply to fill out the rosters at the low minor league levels, but you gotta root for a guy who may not be the most talented but certainly seems like a gamer who can make a difference. It says something when a guy who doesn’t hit all that well still manages to drive in that many runs, including a walkoff grand slam.

August 31: Ryan Finan

Ryan led the team in the following categories:

131 games played, 427 at-bats, 80 runs scored, 112 hits, 31 doubles, 17 home runs, 78 RBI’s, 198 total bases, and 85 walks. He was the top qualifying batter (370 at-bats to qualify) with a .392 on-base percentage and a .464 slugging percentage.

With that record, two things are certain – number one, if he’s not given a shot in Frederick next year it’s criminal; and number two, I saved the best for last as far as SotW picks go.

This year's Shorebird of the Year sporting the Harley Davidson uniform.

I’m picking Ryan Finan as this season’s Shorebird of the Year. Honorable mention as best prospect belongs to Brandon Erbe.

And I’ll start this all up again April 5, 2007. That will be next season’s lidlifter for the Shorebirds as they begin on the road in Lexington. The first home game will be a Friday the 13th affair against the West Virginia Power, just 218 days from now. Boy does that suck, I hate off-seasons.

Labor Day +1 standings report

I wanted to do this last night, but, number one I was dog-tired for reasons I’ll explain in a future post, and number two, the Mud Hens lost yesterday and set up a one-game playoff, winner take all, with Indianapolis for the IL West title.

Now, on Sunday night I was watching the Tigers play the Angels (who beat us, much to my chagrin) and the Tigers inserted a pinch-runner in the ninth just called up from Toledo by the name of Kevin Hooper. Seeing that, I assumed the Mud Hens were knocked out of the playoff picture but au contraire. Instead, they simply needed to beat the last-place Columbus Clippers at home on Monday to secure a playoff berth. Failing that, Indianapolis had to lose to Louisville. Neither happened.

So tonight in the friendly confines of Fifth Third Field there was a one game playoff for the IL West title, and a rematch of last season’s IL championship series. The great news is that Toledo won 4-0 and secured a second straight IL West title – their first back-to-back division titles (the IL has had a division format since the late 1980’s.) They finish with a 77-66 record and progress to meet South Division winner Charlotte in the IL playoffs. This season they will have to play 3 of 5 series games in Charlotte but get home field advantage should they get by the Knights. Now it’s time to defend that IL title we waited 38 years to secure!

Meanwhile the Tigers are hanging on to first place in the AL Central with an 85-54 record. Minnesota is now lurking 4 games back and Chicago has faded slightly to being 5 1/2 back. A HUGE series awaits the Tigers this weekend, 4 games in Minnesota.

Just for fun, I’ve jotted down the schedules of all 17 teams that are reasonably alive for the baseball postseason (7 in the AL, 10 in the NL.)

American League:

DETROIT (85-54) – 1 vs. Sea, 4 at Min, 2 vs. Tex, 3 vs. Bal, 3 at Chi, 1 at Bal (makeup game for an earlier rainout), 3 at KC, 3 vs. Tor, 3 vs. KC. (11 away, 12 home; 12 vs. teams over .500).

New York (82-55) – 1 at KC, 4 at Bal, 3 vs. TB, 4 vs. Bos, 3 at Tor, 4 at TB, 3 vs. Bal, 3 vs. Tor. (12 away, 13 home; 10 vs. teams over .500).

Minnesota (80-57) – 1 at TB, 4 vs. Det, 3 vs. Oak, 4 at Cle, 3 at Bos, 3 at Bal, 4 vs. KC, 3 vs. Chi. (11 away, 14 home; 13 vs. teams over .500).

Oakland (79-58) – 2 vs. Tex (counting game in progress), 3 at TB, 3 at Min, 3 vs. Chi, 4 vs. Cle, 3 vs. LA, 3 at Sea, 4 at LA. (13 away, 12 home; 15 vs. teams over .500).

Chicago (79-59) – 1 at Bos, 4 vs. Cle, 3 at LA, 3 at Oak, 3 vs. Det, 4 vs. Sea, 3 at Cle, 3 at Min. (13 away, 11 home; 13 vs. teams over .500).

Boston (75-64) – 1 vs. Chi, 3 vs. KC, 3 at Bal, 4 at NY, 3 vs. Min, 4 at Tor, 2 vs. TB, 3 vs. Bal. (11 away, 12 home; 12 vs. teams over .500).

Los Angeles (73-65) – 2 vs. Bal (counting game in progress), 3 vs. Tor, 3 vs. Chi, 4 at Tex, 2 at KC, 3 at Oak, 3 vs. Tex, 4 vs. Oak. (9 away, 15 home; 20 vs. teams over .500).

I think it’s going to come down to the final weekend whether Detroit hangs on to its AL leadership record-wise; either way the playoffs are beginning to shape up as New York vs. either Minnesota or Chicago and Detroit vs. Oakland. The reason it doesn’t matter is that the team with the best record plays the wild card UNLESS they’re in the same division. Barring an utter collapse by 2 of the 3 AL Central contenders, the wild card will come out of the Central; I believe that would be the first time it’s happened in the 12 seasons this playoff format’s been in existence. Thus, that places the Yankees against the wild card whether they finish first or second in the league – it only becomes important in a Tigers-Yankees championship series.

Meanwhile the National League is an absolute scrum – really there’s 10 teams with some shot at the playoffs. In order of standings (for the moment anyway):

New York (84-52) – 2 vs. Atl (doubleheader tomorrow), 4 vs. LA, 3 at Fla, 3 at Pit, 4 vs. Fla, 4 vs. Was, 3 at Atl, 3 at Was. (12 away, 14 home; 11 vs. teams .500 or above).

St. Louis (74-63) – 1 at Was, 4 at Arz, 3 vs. Hou, 3 vs. SF, 3 at Mil, 4 at Hou, 3 vs. SD, 4 vs. Mil. (12 away, 13 home; 3 vs. teams over .500).

Los Angeles (73-65) – 1 at Mil, 4 at NY, 3 at Chi, 4 vs. SD, 3 vs. Pit, 3 vs. Arz, 3 at Col, 3 at SF. (14 away, 10 home; 8 vs. teams over .500).

San Diego (71-66) – 2 vs. Col (counting game in progress), 3 at SF, 3 at Cin, 4 at LA, 3 vs. Arz, 3 vs. Pit, 3 at StL, 4 at Arz. (17 away, 8 home; 7 vs. teams over .500).

Philadelphia (70-68) – 1 vs. Hou, 4 at Fla, 3 at Atl, 3 at Hou, 3 vs. Chi, 3 vs. Fla, 1 vs. Hou (makeup game), 3 at Was, 3 at Fla. (16 away, 8 home; 10 vs. teams .500 or above). Florida is the only break-even team they play.

Florida (69-69) – 1 vs. Arz, 4 vs. Pha, 3 vs. NY, 3 at Atl, 4 at NY, 3 at Pha, 3 vs. Cin, 3 vs. Pha. (10 away, 14 home; 17 vs. teams over .500).

Cincinnati (69-70) – 1 vs. SF, 3 vs. Pit, 3 vs. SD, 3 at Chi, 3 at Hou, 4 vs. Chi, 3 at Fla, 3 at Pit. (12 away, 11 home; 6 vs. teams .500 or above).

San Francisco (69-70) – 1 at Cin, 3 vs. SD, 3 vs. Col, 3 at StL, 3 at Col, 4 at Mil, 3 vs. Arz, 3 vs. LA. (11 away, 12 home; 9 vs. teams over .500).

Houston (67-71) – 1 at Pha, 3 at Mil, 3 at StL, 3 vs. Pha, 3 vs. Cin, 4 vs. StL, 1 at Pha (makeup game), 3 at Pit, 3 at Atl. (14 away, 10 home; 12 vs. teams over .500).

Atlanta (66-71) – 2 at NY (doubleheader tomorrow), 4 vs. Chi, 3 vs. Pha, 3 vs. Fla, 3 at Was, 4 at Col, 3 vs. NY, 3 vs. Hou. (9 away, 16 home; 11 vs. teams .500 and above.)

As you can see, even Atlanta has a shot if they somehow get on a 12-1 tear and beat up on some of the teams they’re chasing. Almost every NL team is going to make an impact on the race as either contender or spoiler.

My guess is that the order of finish amongst the three NL division titlists will be New York, St. Louis, and Los Angeles. San Diego will likely fade at the end and miss the wild card, right now I’d have to say Philadelphia is the favorite. If an NL East team gets the wild card it will be bad news for whoever has the worse record between the other two division winners, since they’ll get the Mets. Let’s say Philadelphia does make the playoffs, it would be (under my scenario) St. Louis vs. Philadelphia and Los Angeles drawing the Mets. But if a team like San Francisco, San Diego, Cincinnati, or Houston gets the wild card then they get the Mets first.

Obviously this was the intent when the powers-that-be in Major League Baseball thought up the three division + wild card system. There’s even the possibilty (probably slim though) that the NL wild card could finish with only 80 wins. No team with a losing record has ever made the playoffs in baseball, the closest was last year’s 82-80 San Diego club.

On Thursday I’ll wrap up Delmarva’s season as I announce my pick as Shorebird of the Year.

Oh, and by the way, I do have some choice words for Ron Alessi, but I wanted to get this post out of the way first. Don’t worry, I didn’t miss his comments this morning.

Shorebird of the week 8-31-2006

Ryan Finan flips the ball back to the dugout, ready to start another inning in the field.

This is probably the most overdue honor I could give, as I’ve actually had the picture I’m using tonight for several months. Be that as it may, Ryan Finan is this season’s final SotW. The folks at Mountaire also honored Ryan on Sunday as the Shorebirds’ “Batter of the Year.”

For much of the year, Ryan’s held down the third base job and done pretty well at it. But it’s at the plate he’s done his best work. On the season he leads the team in games (127 including tonight), at-bats (413), runs (78), hits (107), doubles (tied with Mark Fleisher, 29 apiece), home runs (hit number 17 tonight), RBI (75), walks (81), slugging percentage (total bases divided by at-bats – .455) and is 5th in the SAL with a .389 on-base percentage. He’s just behind Jon Tucker’s .392 for the top Shorebirds spot but Tucker hasn’t played enough here to qualify for the league lead.

Whew! I’d say Finan’s been a dominant offensive performer. The only quibble one may have is that he’s hitting only .259 on the season but no Shorebirds with significant playing time except for Blake Davis and Jon Tucker are hitting over .270 anyway. Not bad for a guy who wasn’t taken until the 21st round in the 2004 draft. I can think of a few names on that 2004 draft list who failed to make anywhere near the impact Finan has in a Shorebirds uniform.

2006 was Finan’s second go-round with the Shorebirds; last year he appeared in 10 games here but only managed to hit .195 in 41 at-bats. Obviously this year he’s gotten the hang of this level so hopefully next season will see him moving up to Frederick full-time.

Next Thursday will be the season wrap-up for the Shorebirds as I review the season’s SotW honorees and how they fared, and pick out my Shorebird of the Year. Ryan Finan is definitely in the running!

The streak is over!!

I thought 2006 would be the season this happened but I was expecting it along about the middle of September, not on August 27th. Today’s 7-1 win by the Detroit Tigers in Cleveland officially ends an accursed 13 year streak of losing campaigns for the Tigers – they’re now 82-49 with 31 games left on the season. An 85-77 record in 1993 was the last winning mark for the Tigers until this year’s club. The last time the Tigers achieved assuring a winning season in August was their last World Champion team in 1984.

Next on the agenda for the Tigers is getting their first playoff berth since winning the AL East in 1987 and placing the Olde English D back to its rightful place among baseball’s elite teams.

Something else related about quality baseball teams…

This year turnabout didn’t get to be fair play. Last year I went on a roadtrip at the end of the season to First Energy Park, home of the Shorebirds’ SAL rival Lakewood BlueClaws. This was in the midst of the thrilling second half title chase that the Shorebirds won, outlasting the Lexington Legends. With Lakewood out of the race, they simply were playing for pride and in the park was hoisted a sign reading “No Clinching In Our House!” Luckily for us, Delmarva did anyway.

With the BlueClaws coming to town tomorrow to wrap up Delmarva’s home season, there was the possibility of the Phillies affiliate clinching the second half title in front of our faithful. Fortunately, we will not need to borrow Lakewood’s sign from last season as the BlueClaws eliminated the second place Lake County Captains this afternoon by beating them 8-3 at Classic Park in Eastlake, Ohio (a park I visited on my recent vacation.) So congrats to the BlueClaws, who have an overall 80-51 record despite an 0-9 start to the season.

Now it’s time for the Shorebirds to beat up the BlueClaws anyway and finish the home season on a positive note.

Shorebird of the week 8-24-2006

Stu Musslewhite of the Shorebirds trots back to the dugout, another at-bat in the books.

A mainstay of this season’s Shorebird lineup, Stu Musslewhite is the selectee for SotW. The versatile infielder has seen action mostly at second and third base this year, with some shortstop thrown in for good measure. That was his position at TCU prior to being drafted last year by the Orioles in the 24th round; however, with Miguel Tejada seemingly a perpetual Oriole shortstop, it makes sense to try Musslewhite at other positions – heck, he’s even the guy who goes out to warm up the pitchers prior to the inning at times.

While Stu hasn’t had a superb batting average this season (only hitting .239 prior to tonight’s action) he’s managed to maintain third place in the season’s RBI totals with 50 despite just 3 homeruns. The two players in front of him (Ryan Finan and Mark Fleisher) have 15 and 14 homers, respectively and are both hitting in the .260 range. So Musslewhite seems to have a knack for getting runs home in one way or another – it doesn’t have to be a hit to drive a run in, sometimes simply putting the ball in play will do even if you make an out.

Musslewhite will only turn 24 during this final homestand (Monday) so he does have a little more time to get things together. Perhaps another turn with the Shorebirds in 2007 to bring that batting average up and he may be on his way to a nice career as a utility guy for the Orioles or some other team. In this day and age of larger pitching staffs, flexibility with position players is a key element.

And it may not have been noticed, but a former 2006 Shorebird made his debut for the Orioles last night. Jim Hoey was called up to Frederick after the SAL All-Star Game in June, jumped to Bowie shortly thereafter, and was called up yesterday by the O’s as Chris Britton was sent to Bowie for a few days. He came on in the 7th inning last night against the Twins with 2 outs and one on, walked Torii Hunter, but struck out Jason Kubel to complete the inning. So Jim Hoey now has had a sip of coffee in The Show and probably will remain there for the balance of the season. He’s the first Shorebird I’ve watched to make it to the bigs!

Shorebird of the week 8-17-2006

Jon Tucker of the Shorebirds makes the throw to first during a recent game.

A 5′-7″ and 170 pound scrappy and speedy sparkplug, Jon Tucker is this week’s Shorebird of the Week. He would’ve made it to monoblogue a little bit earlier but the Orioles decided for a time that the Frederick Keys needed his services more than Delmarva did. I think even the Shorebirds were surprised they got him back, as they assigned the #6 uniform Jon was wearing to Blake Davis. So Tucker wears #5 now, as he did in this photo.

The small stature probably affected his prospects according to the scouts, as Tucker wasn’t drafted until the 20th round two years ago, despite being from a major college program (University of Florida.) The Orioles did take a chance on him and he’s done a pretty good job holding down second base for Delmarva, hitting .256 in 57 games here. Tucker even has a little bit of power, as 17 of his 51 hits this season here are extra-base hits (11 doubles, 3 triples, and 3 home runs.) Better still for a guy who’s generally been a leadoff hitter, Tucker has 36 walks compared to 35 strikeouts.

Jon fared all right in Frederick, hitting .250 in 18 games, but the power stroke wasn’t there as he managed just 2 doubles out of 15 hits. After a month in Frederick, Tucker was sent back down and picked things back up like he never left, with the exception of the new uniform.

It’s apparent that the time Tucker spent in extended spring training did him good (he didn’t join the Shorebirds until May 10.) With only a couple weeks left in the season, it looks like Tucker should end up with about 250 at-bats in Delmarva – this should be a good indicator of whether he’ll stay here in 2007 or make the jump full time to Frederick.

Shorebird of the week 8-10-2006

Shorebirds outfielder Jarod Rine peers over to get the sign from his third base coach.

This week I’m picking outfielder Jarod Rine as my SotW. One of the newest Shorebirds, Rine struggled with Frederick during the first half of the season (.213/2/21 in 70 games) but has picked things up a bit during this stop in Delmarva, hitting .231 (12 for 52) in 15 games here. Better still, he’s 8 for his last 27, which is a solid .296 clip.

So Rine is getting back into a little bit of a groove as he tries to get his pro career back in order. The 9th round pick in 2003 (out of West Virginia) needs to resurrect a good batting stroke as his time in the organization is becoming limited by his advanced age (he’ll turn 25 in November.)

It’s odd that he wasn’t here last season for me to recall him, so he must have been in Frederick (or above) all last season. This really had to come as a shock, as I’m sure being sent down generally is for any ballplayer. Hopefully a month in Delmarva will turn things around for him and allow him to rejoin the Keys before the season is done.

Shorebird of the week 8-3-2006

Slugger Vito Chiaravalotti returns to the dugout after a seemingly rare out.

It’s said that chicks dig the longball. While I cannot vouch one way or the other regarding his marital status, I must say that if the adage is true, women all over Delmarva are smitten with Vito Chiaravalotti. It’s obvious by the number on his jersey that he fancies himself a slugger – those of us who are a certain age recall the old blue and white #44 Braves uniform that belonged to home run king (in the non-steroid and juiced ball division) Hank Aaron.

Vito came to the Shorebirds via a trade with the Toronto Blue Jays organization on July 10. Now I was asked a question after last week’s SotW about whether Chiaravalotti would be able to get to the Show (the big leagues.) That may be a lot to ask of a guy who was only a 15th round pick in 2003 (by the Jays, out of the University of Richmond) and wasn’t exactly burning up the Eastern League at the age of 25.

With the Blue Jays AA team, the New Hampshire Fisher Cats, Vito was hitting just .190 in 42 games with 6 home runs and 18 RBI, striking out 45 times in just 137 at-bats. Move him down two levels to a team in a league that’s considered the inferior of the two low-A leagues (Toronto’s low A affiliate is currently the Lansing Lugnuts of the Midwest League) and it’s no wonder that he’s matched his home run and RBI totals amassed in 42 AA games in just 18 games with the Shorebirds. In 67 at-bats with the Shorebirds Vito’s hitting .313 with 6 home runs and 19 RBI, including a majestic pinch-hit grand slam on Monday night. Basically he’s doubled his output.

So it’s hard to tell what kind of future he has in the Baltimore organization. While it’s said that he was traded to the Orioles organization, I’ve yet to find out who he was traded for, whether it’s the ever-popular “player to be named later” or the more common “cash considerations.”

However, one thing is certain – Vito Chiaravalotti has put the lie to the notion that it’s hard to hit a ball out of Perdue Stadium. Just in the few games I’ve seen him he’s mashed a couple well over the fence. So as soon as I got a picture of him, he was destined to be SotW.

And thanks to my friend Sandra Lane, who was understanding enough to let me borrow her camera to take the shot. I have another better one of another Shorebird player who’s likely a future SotW as the opportunities dwindle to a precious few. There’s only 4 more to be picked, and I’ll pick the Shorebird of the Year on September 7th, with a rundown on how the SotW’s fared for the season.

July standings report

Tonight it’s not just about the standings, there’s commentary below. Bear with me.

But first, it’s time to take a look at how my teams are doing.

The Shorebirds have one piece of good news. While they are last in the league in batting, they’re not last in the SAL North standings anymore as Lexington (the first half champion) has slipped below the 13-23 Delmarva mark (the Legends are 13-25.) But as it stands, the Lakewood BlueClaws are taking advantage of a relatively easy second half schedule to reach just past the midpoint of the second half with a 26-12 record. This puts Delmarva 12 games in arrears with only about 32 games to go. The BlueClaws are 5 clear of Lake County, who’s second at 20-16. In the middle, the remaining SAL North teams are tightly bunched 2 1/2 games apart – in order it’s Hickory, Greensboro, Hagerstown, and West Virginia. (The latter two are actually tied at 17-20.) On the south side, recent departee Augusta took 3 of 4 from us and is blowing away that division with a 30-8 record. With just over a month to go, it’s starting to look like a Lakewood-Lexington showdown for the North title while an all-Georgia South tilt would feature Rome and Augusta.

The rest of the season for the ‘Birds has a shortage of home contests. They’re off tonight as they’re en route to North Carolina for sets with Asheville and Kannapolis, then it’s home to face the West Virginia Power. That brief homestand rolls into their final 8 games outside Maryland, a roadtrip to Lake County and Lakewood. They close out the home season with Hagerstown and Lakewood before the last series across the bay in Hagerstown ends the campaign. All of these are 4 game sets.

Meanwhile, it looks like things are back to normal for my Toledo Mud Hens. After leading the IL West at the All-Star break, they’ve slipped back into the pack, now residing in third place behind both Indianapolis and Louisville. Their 57-53 record places them 3 1/2 behind the Indy Indians (Pittsburgh’s AAA affiliate who’s 59-48) and 1 1/2 games behind the top Cincinnati farm club (the Bats are 58-51.) But look for the Hens to go in the tank as they’ve announced the sale of playoff tickets beginning Thursday.

Toledo does get some advantages the remainder of the way, however. The schedulemaker was somewhat friendly to the Hens as they face Louisville 6 more times, all at home. Meanwhile, they face Indianapolis just 4 more times (including tonight and tomorrow in Indiana) with the last two at home. The Hens will see Columbus 12 times in that stretch, along with 12 more games against the whole of the South Division (4 with Richmond and Durham, 2 with Norfolk and Charlotte. Except for Charlotte, the South teams are all under .500.) But Louisville and Indianapolis see more of the South than the Hens do, which may be a benefit – plus they square off just 8 more times against each other.

Of course, then you have the mack daddy, the Detroit Tigers. With a 70-35 record going into tonight’s game at Tampa Bay, the Tigers stand atop the AL Central with a 7 1/2 game bulge over Chicago and 8 1/2 over Minnesota. According to Baseball Prospectus, the Tigers have a 95.7% chance of making the playoffs. A win tonight and the Tigers will equal last season’s victory total with 56 games to play. (Yes they did, routing Tampa Bay 10-4.)

The stretch before Labor Day does have possible landmines though. After finishing with Tampa Bay, the Tigers face the bitter rival Indians at home before a critical three-gamer against Minnesota. Then a huge six-game road trip against both colors of Sox (White then Red) looms. Doesn’t get much easier at home either as Texas and the White Sox invade for four games apiece. The month ends with another tough six-game trip to Cleveland and New York. Finally, Labor Day weekend begins a six game homestand against Los Angeles and Seattle. But no real breathers until September is a few days old.

So that is your standings report about the teams that matter. Now I’m going to write about something that’s relatively near and dear to my heart.

People who know me and my passionate love of baseball probably know that I’m a frequent patron of Perdue Stadium. So far this year I’ve made it to 23 games, which is about on pace with last year (think I was at 27 last season.) Despite all of my seasons in Toledo, I doubt I made it to many more than 100 Mud Hens games, most of which I attended at the old Skeldon Stadium during the 1980’s (before I was married.) In some respects then, our humble stadium is my second home.

Last night’s power fiasco made it clear that Perdue Stadium is overdue for some renovations. If you weren’t there, you wouldn’t have seen anything about it in the Daily Times. But the game started with the first base side’s concession stands on the disabled list due to a mechanical problem. They finally did get them fixed about the third or fourth inning, but then the scoreboard began to malfunction around the seventh inning.

But the coup de grace was a subtle “pop” that I heard which made me look and realize the entire second and third levels had lost power. This included all of the concession stands, restrooms, luxury suites, and press box. The final 3 1/2 innings were played (it was an 11 inning game we lost 8-5) with the only noise coming from the crowd (a pretty sizeable one that was plenty loud and spirited enough). They did eventually restore power to the second level but the luxury suites, press box, and scoreboard didn’t function the rest of the way. In the last inning they were giving away hotdogs, likely as an alternative to them spoiling.

However, the problems with the electrical system didn’t begin last night, for pretty much the last month the fans have done without at least some of the scoreboard and video board elements. This started with the heavy Fourth of July storm.

It seems to me that stadiums come due for renovations every 10 to 15 years. Obviously I was not here in 1996 when the stadium opened, but I have it on pretty good authority that the scoreboard and video board are original with Perdue. Electronic equipment, particularly that which sits in the elements, does have a limited life span.

But another question occurs to me – is the team in a sort of limbo because of offers to buy the club from Comcast? I’m of the thought right now that the Shorebirds management will likely get whatever repairs need to be done to get the stadium through the final 12 games this season, but any long-term fixes will not occur unless and until ownership is settled. More worrisome is a persistent drop in attendance.

In 2002, the Shorebirds drew 253,171 fans for 68 home games, or an average of just over 3,700 patrons each night. The total fell to 228,344 in 2003, rebounded slightly to 230,536 in 2004 (I believe this was the first year Comcast owned the club) but again slipped last season to 219,361 despite having a playoff team. This season, if the current average is maintained for the final 12 home games, we’ll have just over 207,000 pass through the turnstiles. (The Shorebirds have had some bad luck weatherwise, though, they’ve lost 5 of their 70 home dates this season.) Through 53 games, the total attendance mark stands at 168,872 – a shade under 3,200 per game.

Now because they have 5 fireworks games scheduled in August plus an appearance by the mascot Reggy, they might get enough behinds in the seats to pass last year’s total by a few thousand. But I think the Shorebirds need to work on ways to create a little more buzz, and one method would be to invest in items that make the fans’ experience more comfortable.

I’ve been to a number of minor and major league parks over the last half-dozen years and there’s items I’ve seen in and about them that I think would be a good fit for Perdue Stadium (and not cost a whole lot.) But they enhance the enjoyment of the game moreso than the between-innings antics do.

To me, the first order of business is (preferably) replacing the scoreboard and videoboard or at least giving them a major overhaul so they work properly. It would also be nice to have a smaller auxiliary scoreboard installed on the first base side between the upper and lower deck, this board would simply have the score, balls/strikes, and outs. This way folks on the third base side (like me in my usual place) could glance up to see the count while being able to watch the pitch on the way, rather than turn my head. Toledo actually installed one after the first season in their new stadium because the third base side fans complained about the lack of a second scoreboard.

Another nice touch would be to expand the TV service that exists in the luxury box areas and do a closed circuit broadcast to the concession stands so those waiting in line can still follow the action without turning around. The new stadium in Cincinnati has this feature at their upper deck stands as the concourse is below the highest seats. In some parks, they instead place certain food and pop vendors on the side of the concourse facing the field so one can buy his or her items without losing sight of the game. Toledo is one park that features this (so do Detroit and Indianapolis, among others.) You still can’t do items requiring heavy cooking this way, but ice cream and pop can be done thusly. If they’re going to revamp the electrical system, why not add that capacity?

I’d like to see our hometown team stay that way. We got our team from another city that didn’t support it when they had the chance, so it’s up to the fans to support the one we have. But Comcast, or whoever may become the owner of the club, needs to meet the fans at least halfway and improve the facilities that the team calls home.

And as a final P.S. – tell Cheap Channel to bring back the local bands for Thirsty Thursday next season. Whiskey and Cowboy are a pretty damn lame substitute.

Shorebird of the week 7-27-2006

Shorebird infielder Blake Davis in his first pro at-bat July 11.

Sometimes in life you get to see a first. Once in awhile, it’s the beginning of something special. The jury is still out on the second part, but I happened to catch the professional debut of this week’s SotW a couple weeks back. While he’s not setting the SAL on fire yet, Blake Davis has moved into the starting shortstop role for the Shorebirds and is doing a respectable job at the plate. Thus far in 14 games he’s 14 for 53, which translates to a .265 average – 30 points better than the team’s as a whole. In addition, the speedy Californian has stolen 4 bases. For a full season that works out to 40 so he’s a threat to run.

Drafted in the fourth round this year out of Fullerton State, Davis may well be on a fast track up the Orioles chain. Generally the draft class of 2006 toils in Bluefield or Aberdeen but Davis made his debut in a Delmarva uniform. With Miguel Tejada being the subject of trade rumors because the Orioles are “sellers” at the trade deadline, the roadblock for Davis’s major league dream may be shoved aside. While he’s certainly not ready at this early career stage, it’s quite possible this picture may be of a future double play partner to Brian Roberts.

For the record, that initial at-bat led to a groundout to second base. However, he did get his first pro hit later in the same contest, a bloop single past the diving Lexington shortstop.

Shorebird of the week 7-20-2006

Shorebird catcher Zach Dillon checks his sign during a recent game.

When a team is last in the league in hitting, any offensive shot in the arm is good. When it comes from a player who plays a position that’s been lagging in offense much of the season, it’s a bonus. Catcher Zach Dillon has provided this offensive spark, at least in his first 21 games.

The Iowa native and product of Baylor University is knocking the ball around at a .313 clip in his 64 at-bats, with a homer and 10 RBI (and as an added bonus, 13 walks vs. 11 strikeouts.) He’s certainly not playing like a 20th round pick – usually those are the guys you pick to fill out the rookie league rosters and maybe they’ll stick for 2-3 seasons.

With this offense, skipper Gary Kendall is finding it tough to keep Dillon out of the lineup. Considering the other three catchers that have played most of the year (Dahlberg, Gutierrez, Snyder) are hitting a combined .203, the offensive hole behind the plate just found a filler. With this bat, the Shorebirds can be just a little more patient with some of the defensive lapses (3 errors in 21 games.)

It will be interesting to see whether this offense continues. Right now, he’s leaped over the two catchers picked in front of him this year (one apparently is unsigned, the other in rookie-league Bluefield) as well as last season’s #1 pick (former SotW and Aberdeen catcher Brandon Snyder.) But with the offensive struggles of the Shorebirds it seems like the hot bat will be in the lineup as a catcher or designated hitter for as long as the embers glow.

Shorebird of the week 7-13-2006

Trevor Caughey of the Shorebirds gets warmed up for last Sunday's contest as Mark Fleisher looks on.

This week’s SotW is stylish lefthander Trevor Caughey. He’s another former Frederick Key who was sent down as he was struggling a bit in the Carolina League. The struggles have lessened a bit here in Delmarva but the 9th round 2002 Oriole pick will still be given a pretty good chance to work himself out of his funk. Right now the 23 year old native of California is one of just two lefties on the Shorebirds’ staff, the other southpaw being fellow Frederick refugee Russ Petrick.

For the season, he has respectable numbers with two exceptions: he had a 5.50 ERA with Frederick and is toting a high 6.41 ERA for the Shorebirds. I’d have to say the key reason is the longball, as he’s surrendered 8 home runs in just over 40 innings of work this season (though none here.) 22 walks is a bit worrisome but not horrible, and he’s got good enough stuff to average over a strikeout per inning.

With his age and the fact he’s been in the O’s system for awhile, this might be one last chance for Caughey to get his act together. Fortunately, he is in a good position as one of just two lefties on the staff at the moment, so he’s going to see a lot of work. Rarely has a starter for Delmarva gone more than six innings this season, so relievers get a lot of opportunities. It appears that number 9 will get a lot of trips to the hill as the season winds down.