Posts Tagged ‘luis castillo’

Knowns and Unknowns

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009 by Nerdicus Finch

I’m a big fan of Joe Girardi and was very happy when he was hired to manage the Yankees after the 2007 season. Unlike a lot of fans, I don’t blame him for the team’s third place finish last year – I’d chalk that up to just not being as good as the Rays and Red Sox, as well as some significant injuries to key players. That being said, I’m going to have a hard time defending Girardi against detractors after reading about his decision to go with Xavier Nady over Nick Swisher in right field.

In managing a baseball team, like most other endeavors, I would imagine that the name of game is minimizing mistakes. For the most part, you can’t control injuries, opposing pitching, umpiring, and a host of other variables, so you should try your best to make the right decisions regarding those things over which you exercise complete control, like choosing your right fielder. (It’s like Donald Rumsfeld said: there are knowns, unknowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns. It seems that one of the key jobs of the baseball manager is to totally nail decisions regarding the knowns, and do your best to prepare for and react to the unknowns). 

Choosing Nady over Swisher is one of those mistakes that is obvious to everyone, yet, somehow, happens anyway. It’s like the idea of batting Luis Castillo leadoff or signing Barry Zito or Gary Matthews, Jr. to enormous contracts. Apparently, everyone in the world knows it’s a bad idea except for the person who made the decision.

Oh, well. Hopefully, for the sake of the Yankees, they won’t make a similar mistake and put Melky Cabrera in center field. Brett Gardner probably won’t be much better, but he likely will be better. If it were up to me, and I was forced to have Nady in right, I would just take my chances on his defense and put Swisher in center. His 100 walks will result in a lot of runs over the course of the season.

The little things that kill…

Sunday, February 15th, 2009 by I Love Nerd York City

That’s right, I’m dropping a Bush reference from 1994…after reading this article from newyorkmets.com, I’ve been trying to distance myself from reality as much as possible. As far as I’m concerned, I’m still a freshman in high-school, and I expect to see the OJ car chase on TV:

In a scenario Manuel has contemplated, Castillo would bat leadoff, a position not unfamiliar to him, and Reyes, who has no career plate appearances as a No. 3 hitter, would bat third. Beltran could then bat second, a slot in which he has prospered in the past.

Luis Castillo leading off for a playoff-hopeful team is what I was expecting to complain about when I clicked on that article…little did I know that an ambush on my baseball-loving sensibilities was lurking Jeff Gillooly style.

After preaching a team-first mantra, Jerry Manuel turns into a bit of a basket case (#1 on the US Rock Charts).

The manager even went so far as to suggest a player who goes hitless in four at-bats but does the “little things” to help the team in one game might be rewarded the following day and have a better chance to play than a teammate who had two hits in four at-bats but did nothing to enhance the greater good.

What exactly will these hypothetical players be doing that will be more valuable than getting two hits? Is a catcher going to be throwing out 8 runners in the same game? Is a player going to be getting walks in 6 consecutive plate appearance? Is he going to make three home-run-robbing catches over the wall?  Will the guy who gets two hits also make four errors?

Manuel called it “kind of a ticklish situation”and noted, “We have to applaud and celebrate the little things.”

Ladies and gentlemen, major league baseball’s first ticklish situation! It’s like that good natured man with special needs always says, “stupid is as stupid does.”

Let’s just sign David Eckstein and get it over with.