March 2008

Travelin' Man

Greetings from Springfield, where it's a lot chillier than it was back in Florida. Your faithful correspondent has earned his money recently, having to drive from Atlanta to STL last night after the second leg of my flight home was canceled. Then drive to Springfield this afternoon for the games down here.

However, I am here.

It appears that Rico Washington is going to be on the team. Ryan is of course still down in Jupiter. However, it still looks like Ryan's injury is relatively short-term, so they'd rather add a guy who can be optioned out after Ryan is activated. I'm told Washington is an excellent defender at third base, and they're willing to play him at a ton of different positions.

Reyes is not listed in the bullpen for today, but per TLR, that's because he threw a side session yesterday. He's scheduled to be available tomorrow. That last decision, we are told, is still not final.

I'll have more for y'all if and when news warrants, so stay tuned.

Today's playlist, five of my favorite road songs:
* Willie Nelson, "On the Road Again"
* Black Crowes, "Wiser Time"
* Metallica, "Wherever I May Roam"
* U2, "Where the Streets Have No Name"
* Bob Seger, "Turn the Page"


-M.

Sun sets on Jupiter

As I write this, I have a beautiful view from the Roger Dean Stadium of a few clouds at sunset. The second and last equipment truck to St. Louis is pulling out right now. The Cards and Marlins have one more game tomorrow, but I'm heading home in the morning, and I can definitely tell you that the clubhouse is already starting to take on a last-day-of-school kind of feeling. Don't expect many long at-bats tomorrow.

I don't have a lot to offer that I didn't get in my stories today. It's been a grueling camp, with all the news, but it's also seemed to go by very quickly in a way. It really does seem like just a few days ago that games started. The decisions have pretty much made themselves in most cases, and I have very few quibbles with how the roster will shake down, given the list of players they started with. It's going to be an interesting team, whether it's good or not.

Your faithful correspondent probably won't blog tomorrow, but Friday in Springfield I'll have more for you. And of course the opener is coming soon -- M. in a tie! -- so that'll definitely be fun.

I leave you with today's playlist...
Stone Roses: "I Am the Resurrection"
Joy Division: "Atmosphere"
REM: "Diminished"
Beck: "Que Onda Guero"
Mike Doughty: "Unsingable Name"

-M.

Roster all but finished

* Kyle McClellan and Brian Barton have been told that, barring something shocking in the next 4 days, they are on the roster.

* Chris Perez and Cliff Politte were re-assigned to Minor League camp this morning.

* Juan Gonzalez's situation will be addressed by the club today, but one way or another, he's obviously not on the team.

* The only remaining questions are one infield spot -- whether Brendan Ryan is healthy enough, or instead if D'Angelo Jimenez makes the team -- and at the back end of the bullpen. It's down to Kelvin Jimenez and Anthony Reyes for that job.

* Hugo Castellanos is still in camp, but has been told he will not make the team. However, it appears that he will accompany the club to Springfield in order to serve as bullpen protection.

-M.

Clement throws

Matt Clement threw two innings in the Double-A - Triple-A game today. It was a camp day, so Memphis played against Springfield, and Clement was pitching for Springfield.

He didn't actually complete either inning. Each time, they called the inning off when he reached a certain count -- 20 in the first inning, 17 in the second.

Clement had a lot of movement on his ball, but both command and velocity were lacking. He was pitching at 84-85 mph and hit 86 twice. Of the seven batters he faced, he walked four, he struck out one, retired one on a flyball out and one reached on an error. He got three swinging strikes.

Story to follow on the site.
-M.

Pineiro pitches

Joel Pineiro pitched two innings in the Triple-A game today. He was scheduled to go 30-40 pitches, and he threw 34, 18 for strikes.

First inning: bunt groundout to catcher; flyout to left field; groundout to 3rd base
LOOOONG delay, as Memphis put up a big second inning.
Second inning: soft liner to second base; double to left field; strikeout called; strikeout swinging

He sat in the high 80s and hit 90 mph.

Story to follow on the site.
-M.

Monday camp tidbits (short)

* Troy Glaus stayed back due to some mild back stiffness. He's participating in batting practice here, so it's nothing too severe, but they elected not to subject him to seven hours of sitting on a bus.

* Pineiro is throwing in the Triple-A game at 1 pm ET, and I'll be there for that.

Not a lot else going on. The bus left at 7:30, and I'm not trekking to Fort Myers, so unless anything big is shaking here in Jupiter, it could be a fairly quiet day.

-M.

Roster projection, sixth guess

Lot of stuff up here today, so please do make sure you read down the page at all of the various entries.

The hitting side of this is pretty well set. Pitching is getting doggone close.

Starting pitchers (5)

Adam Wainwright
Todd Wellemeyer
Brad Thompson
Braden Looper
Kyle Lohse

Relief pitchers (7)

Jason Isringhausen
Russ Springer
Ryan Franklin
Kyle McClellan
Kelvin Jimenez
Randy Flores
Ron Villone

Catchers (2)

Yadier Molina
Jason LaRue

Infielders (6)

Albert Pujols
Adam Kennedy
Cesar Izturis
Troy Glaus
Aaron Miles
Brendan Ryan (D'Angelo Jimenez if Ryan is hurt)

Outfielders (5)

Rick Ankiel
Chris Duncan
Ryan Ludwick
Skip Schumaker
Brian Barton

and...
Today's playlist:
Albert Hammond Jr., "Hard to Live in the City"
Weezer, "The Good Life"
Presidents of the USA, "We Are Not Going to Make It"
Modest Mouse, "Gravity Rides Everything"
Counting Crows, "Have You Seen Me Lately"

-M.

Saturday afternoon camp tidbits: rotation set

* The first week's rotation appears to be settled. It will of course be Wainwright on March 31 for the opener, but after that it's a little different than most of us had been figuring. Todd Wellemeyer will go in game 2, April 2 against the Rockies, and Brad Thompson will pitch Game 3 against the Rox. Braden Looper will start the opening game against Washington, with Wainwright on regular rest on Saturday April 5 against Washington. Kyle Lohse will make his debut on April 6.

They want Lohse to get one more tuneup rather than going right into Major League games after two games. So after his Thursday start down here in Florida, he'll do some kind of work on Tuesday, April 1 before debuting April 6.

* Brendan Ryan got good news -- and a cortisone shot. They found nothing wrong with the bones in the area of his injury, and he's confident that the shot and some rest will get him set. He's hoping to work out on Tuesday and play on Wednesday, though that's no guarantee.

* More on Rasmus being up -- not only did he want to give Ankiel and Schumaker a day off, but Brian Barton was held out because he's dealing with a little hamstring soreness. He's considered day-to-day at this point.

-M.

Saturday morning camp tidbits

If you're here looking for the Mark Mulder update, please follow this link -- or just look down the page a little bit.


* Brendan Ryan is pretty much spending the day getting checked out medically. Not sure if we'll know something today, or if it will be tomorrow.

* From today's medical report: Tyler Johnson got an injection in his shoulder yesterday and will not throw until at least Monday, when he'll be re-examined.

* Colby Rasmus is not only with the big league club, as he was yesterday and as often happens with Minor Leaguers. He's actually in the lineup. TLR just said he wanted to get Schumaker and Ankiel a day off, but it definitely jumps out a little. I'm still not making too much of it, but I'm a little curious.

-M.

Mulder faces hitters

Mark Mulder just threw 30 pitches to Minor League hitters, simulating at-bats. Allen Craig, Daniel Descalso and Oliver Marmol stood in and simulated a total of 10 at-bats. Mulder was a bit erratic in the first half of the session, then settled in and got the ball down a lot more in the second half.

One ball fell in for a "hit," one bat was broken, one admiring obscenity was uttered by an observing teammate and at least 16 of the pitches were strikes.

More later...

-M.

Friday afternoon camp tidbits

* To cap off the morning's rotation notes, Wellemeyer will get the start Sunday. It will be Thompson on Monday, then Reyes on Tuesday. Looper, whose turn is Tuesday, will pitch in the Minors. The idea is that they don't want him facing Washington 10 days before he will face them in the regular season.

* Jason Isringhausen is scheduled to pitch again tomorrow, his first times going back-to-back this spring.

* Ryan Ludwick hit the ball very hard today. His single was solidly struck, although it dropped in pretty short. He hit a rocket of a line drive, then thumped a home run. Probably the best I've seen him hit it all year.

Speaking of Ludwick, this morning, I was interviewing D'Angelo Jimenez -- whose locker is right next to Ludwick's. At the end of the lineup, I said to Jimenez, 'Are you going to drive in Ludwick today?' Ludwick joked, 'If I get on first base and he hits a single, I'm scoring.'

Well, what do you know? Ludwick got on first base with a single. He took second on a wild pitch, then scored on a Jimenez single. Not exactly like it was drawn up, but not a bad call.

* TLR praised D'Angelo Jimenez's approach, even though Jimenez took two called third strikes with runners on base.

* Brendan Ryan has a very long day scheduled with the doctors tomorrow. It sounds like they'll be doing all sorts of exams on him to make sure he's dealing with exactly what they think he's got.

Today's playlist:
Elvis Costello, "(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes"
John Mayer Trio, "Good Love Is On the Way"
Steve Winwood, "Different Light"
Bruce Springsteen, "Jungleland"
Everclear, "Her Brand New Skin"

-M.



Friday camp tidbits

Busy morning already, so here is the morning news:

* Joel Pineiro is throwing a bullpen today and will pitch in a Triple-A game on Monday.

* Matt Clement will throw a bullpen tomorrow and will pitch in a Minor League game on Tuesday.

* Sunday's starter will be either Reyes or Wellemeyer, with the other pitching in a B-game or the Minors or something. Then Monday in Fort Myers it will be Brad Thompson. It appears, just by reading tea leaves, that Thompson is in the season-opening rotation and Reyes is out, but that's far from announced.

* D'Angelo Jimenez starting at shortstop today.

* Molina, Kennedy and Izturis all get the day off today. Not only are they not in the starting lineup, they have brackets around their names on the card -- ie, they have a true day off.

-M.

Thursday camp tidbits

Lotta stuff going on, so let's hit the highlights:

* Brendan Ryan will see the doctor on Saturday, and will be held out until then, as he nurses his intercostal strain.

* Tyler Johnson met with Paletta today and has shown some progress. They'll check again in a couple of days, at which point they'll determine the continuing course of action.

* Juan Gonzalez saw a doctor and has had the possibility of a hernia ruled out, but he's still not able to play. In fact, he will be scaled back from the level of activity he previously was doing.

* A number of Minor Leaguers were released today, including former high draft picks Mike Ferris and Eric Haberer, and last year's camp sensation, Dennis Dove.

* Aaron Miles went out and took some swings on the back fields today, as Chris Duncan and Juan Gonzalez have done in recent days.

* For those curious, and I know some of you are, Colby Rasmus is wearing No. 11 in a Memphis uniform at this point. Just thought I'd throw it out there.

* Loved today's lineup, even though it didn't produce. I think a perfect 1-5 for this team on a lot of days will be just how they did it, Barton-Duncan-Pujols-Ankiel-Glaus. I'd probably flip Kennedy up into the 6 spot and Molina down to 7, but overall, that's how I'd order them on days when those players all play.

Today's playlist consists of B-sides, alternates, and other rarities and the like:
R.E.M., "Crazy"
Smashing Pumpkins, "Starla"
Rolling Stones, "Memo From Turner"
Pearl Jam, "Yellow Ledbetter"
U2, "Hallelujah Here She Comes"

-M.

Wednesday camp tidbits

Greetings from Fort Lauderdale. Unlike Vero Beach, if we never come back to this facility again it will be no heartbreak. Here are today's notes...

* Isringhausen threw a very good inning and said he felt just fine.

* Big day for Chris Duncan, who had three hits in the Minors and two in the big league game -- including a home run at each location.

* Brendan Ryan is dealing with a strained right intercostal muscle, which they don't seem to believe is too serious. Nonetheless, he was unavailable today. Took some swings in the morning but did not participate in BP.

Not a lot else to offer, I'm afraid. Most of the morning's chat with TLR was regarding Ryan and Cesar Izturis, and I'll roll that into a story a little later this afternoon. So check the site. Otherwise, I leave you with today's playlist.

Neneh Cherry: "Buffalo Stance"
New Order: "Round and Round"
Al Green: "Take Me to the River"
The Cinematics: "Chase"
Liz Phair: "Help Me Mary"

(all but the first have been randomly shuffled into play by my iPod today... not a bad day!)

-M.

Rasmus, Mather among six cuts

The Cardinals had their first really significant round of cuts today.

Colby Rasmus, Mark Johnson and Clayton Mortensen were re-assigned to Minor League camp.

Mike Parisi, Jason Motte and Joe Mather were optioned to Triple-A.

There are now 15 position players in camp, 16 healthy pitchers and six sidelined pitchers (counting Carpenter, Clement, T.Johnson, Mulder, Kinney and Pineiro)

Story to follow.
-M.

Monday camp tidbits

The Cardinals are decked out in green jerseys with green caps. It's not a bad look, actually, with one exception -- Anthony Reyes' high red striped socks don't really go that well with the green.

A few notes in advance of tipping a couple of half-and-halfs later tonight...

* Kyle Lohse threw 70 pitches over four simulated innings against Class A hitters this morning. Actually, they weren't exactly simulated innings, because he was going for pitch counts rather than outs. He got a total of 20 outs over four "innings" and looked good in doing so.

* Also pitching, and pitching well, in that simulated game was Mike Parisi. Dave Duncan gushed about Parisi afterwards. Here's his comment when I asked about Parisi:

"He's going to pitch in the big leagues. I don't know when it's going to be, but he's got big league stuff. He's got a big league arm. Big league pitches."

* Juan Gonzalez and Chris Duncan took swings in the sim game. Duncan looked OK, got a hit and seemed to do a decent job. Gonzalez just appeared to be laboring, and clearly winced on at least one or two swings.

* However, I just heard from John Mozeliak that Gonzalez's MRI has been read and was "normal."

* Braden Looper threw a second pen today and was very deliberate. Just working hard on staying back and keeping the ball down. Story on this later on the site.

* Pineiro threw a bullpen. He'll likely throw another in two or three days before he even starts throwing to hitters. They're going to take it slowly with him.

* Isringhausen is a little better. TLR said if it was the season, he could pitch, but they'll be cautious and hold him till Wednesday.

Today's playlist, including a little St. Patrick's Day flavor:
Cold War Kids: "We Used to Vacation" (amazing song, but geez it's depressing)
Mark Ronson: "Stop Me" (heard this for the first time this morning; great stuff)
Gnarls Barkley: "Run"
Dropkick Murphys: "I'm Shipping Up to Boston"
New Order: "Everything's Gone Green"

-M.

Sunday camp tidbits, final

Just a few final notes before I head home for the evening...

* Kyle Lohse will throw to hitters tomorrow. Dave Duncan estimated that Lohse will throw about 70 pitches. Since Mike Parisi wasn't used today, Parisi will probably alternate innings with Lohse tomorrow in a simulated game.

* Kelvin Jimenez is probably the one player I have most underestimated in my roster projections. It sounds like he's in a very good position to be one of the relievers on the roster. Far from set in stone, but he's in good shape.

* Matt Clement will probably play a light catch session on Tuesday, then throw to hitters again on Thursday -- giving him one extra day between throws.

* Congrats to Jeff Burton on a very nice win at Bristol -- that's karma, paying him for not wrecking Kyle Busch last year.

* Butler, a 7 seed? Brutal. Just brutal.

-M.

Izzy scratched

Jason Isringhausen was scratched from a scheduled appearance today due to some back stiffness. He could pitch tomorrow. Pretty much everyone downplayed it, and Isringhausen was gone by the time we got to the clubhouse.

I'll have a story up on the site shortly.

-M.

Sunday camp tidbits

* Chris Duncan went out on the back fields to take at-bats in the Minor League games today. Just trying to get him as many ABs as possible, to help him try to get back on track.

* The club is still waiting to hear on Juan Gonzalez's MRI. They expect to have it read by a radiologist tomorrow.

* Cesar Izturis tripled, finally getting his hit total as high as his error total. Perhaps more interesting, the Cardinals have a legitimate shot at totaling more triples this SPRING (9 so far) than all of last season (13 -- ouch).

* Matt Clement threw to hitters today and wasn't quite as sharp as last time, but was OK. He left a lot of balls up in his first "inning," then did a better job of getting it down after a break.

* I'll have a story later today on the roster, basically arguing that the offensive half of the roster is pretty much set. Things COULD change, but I'm not sure there are any real decisions left.

Today's playlist:
Eddie Vedder, "Hard Sun"
Pearl Jam, "In Hiding"
Jack Johnson, "If I Had Eyes"
John Lennon, "Gimme Some Truth"
Pulp, "Common People"

-M.

Roster projection, fifth guess

Things are much clearer on the offensive side than they were, and much less clear on the pitching side.

Starting pitchers (5)

Adam Wainwright
Braden Looper
Kyle Lohse
Todd Wellemeyer
Anthony Reyes

Relief pitchers (7)
Jason Isringhausen
Russ Springer
Ryan Franklin
Brad Thompson
Kyle McClellan
Randy Flores
Ron Villone

Catchers (2)
Yadier Molina
Jason LaRue

Infielders (6)
Albert Pujols
Adam Kennedy
Cesar Izturis
Troy Glaus
Aaron Miles
Brendan Ryan

Outfielders (5)
Rick Ankiel
Chris Duncan
Ryan Ludwick
Skip Schumaker
Brian Barton

As I see it, there are really only 14 players still with a legitimate shot of breaking camp -- the 13 listed above, plus Joe Mather. Mark Johnson won't be on the team. I'm very confident that Colby Rasmus will start out in Memphis. D'Angelo Jimenez isn't making this team. And Juan Gonzalez's bid looks finished, at least for now.

On the pitching side, it's downright impossible to make a real projection. The possibility DOES exist that Pineiro could open the season on the active roster, but not taking a turn until the second week. I'm not sure exactly how that would work, fallout-wise, but my guess is that Reyes would be the one to lose out, somehow or other.

-M.

Saturday camp tidbits: Gonzalez still out

* Juan Gonzalez is once again not on the travel roster. He underwent an MRI yesterday and they should know more today.

* Joel Pineiro will play a longer catch today and is building toward a bullpen, which should be sometime next week, either Monday or Wednesday.

* Brad Thompson, whose turn to pitch was tomorrow, is on the travel roster today. I didn't get a chance to talk to TLR or Dunc before the bus left, but since nothing here is accidental, I'm deducing that this may be a significant sign.

* Kyle Lohse is wearing No. 26.

-M.

Friday camp tidbits

First, farewell to my single favorite place in baseball. It will be really, really sad to leave Dodgertown for the last time. This place is an absolute gem. Here's hoping the Orioles are in here SOON, but even then it won't be the same.

But as for today's spring notes and bits...

* Per Dave Duncan, Lohse will throw to hitters in a simulated game on Monday, and his next outing after that will be in a game (unless he throws a normal side session on, say, Wednesday, like pitchers often do between games).

* Still no day for Clement to get in a game, but everyone was really impressed with his throw yesterday.

* Pineiro played catch today. I've had a hard time tracking anyone down to confirm exactly what the medical staff determined when they met with him, but if he was allowed to play catch, it has to be somewhat good news.

* Brendan Ryan had a fantastic game, looking sharp in the field and making an absolutely tremendous baserunning play when he scored from second on a wild pitch. Yes he was 0-for-3, but his walk turned out to be pretty big in the winning rally. I am consistently impressed with Ryan as a defender.

* Waino and Santana tomorrow at a sold out Tradition Field in St. Lucie. Should be fun. If Gonzalez doesn't play, take that as a definite negative sign on his status. Though I definitely get the impression that if it's Gonzalez vs. Barton, then Barton probably wins out.

* Speaking of Gonzalez, very interesting exchange yesterday. The team has been saying all along that Juan is willing to go to Memphis if need be. But Juan hadn't actually said that. So Joe Strauss asked him that very question, point-blank, yesterday. Would you be willing to go to Memphis? And Juan didn't answer it. Here's his response: "I don't talk about tomorrow what will happen. We're talking in the moment. Right now I'm here."

-M, listening to a little Dead Milkmen (I like you, Stuart!) and already missing the Mrs., who headed north today.

Lohse throwing at 10

Listed on today's schedule, Kyle Lohse to throw a bullpen at 10 am ET.

-M.

Lohse physical

Here's what I was just told --

Lohse will in fact be down here for a physical, likely tomorrow. A deal, I was told, is NOT done at this point, which is odd, but that's the info I got. Also not sure whether he'll throw for them too, or if it's just a physical. More as I get it...

-M.

Thursday camp tidbits

* The lineup looked a lot like what we'll probably see in the second game of the season (not Opening Day, since the Rockies will be going with a lefty). TLR asserted that part of why Duncan hit second was so that he could get him his ABs and get him out of the game. However, I really like Duncan in the spot -- he has the power TLR likes, as well as the ability to get on base. Better him there and Ankiel down lower in the order.

* Mark McCormick pitched for Double-A Springfield today. I wasn't able to get out and watch him, but the estimable Derrick Goold said he was very impressive and was lighting up the gun pretty well. I hope to have some more detailed info from farm-system folks later today.

* In talking about Ankiel and selectivity, TLR had the following quote this morning:

"You know, that buzzword, on-base percentage, working the count, all this kind of stuff, that can be very confusing to a hitter. They think that the way that you win is to go up there and take a lot of pitches. So you make a bunch of outs, but you see five or six pitches. Nothing happens offensively."

Ultimately I think his main thought is that you don't want to change a selective hitter, but man, I'd love to see Rick take a few more walks. TLR agreed that Ank's walk/K ratio will probably improve with experience and learning the strike zone better, but he doesn't want them to tell Rick to be more patient/selective.

* Peter Gammons' ringtone is "Gimme Shelter" by the Stones. Knew I liked that guy.

-M.

TJ still sidelined; Gonzalez ailing -- UPDATED

Update -- Juan Gonzalez is also sidelined. He's dealing with a mild left abdominal strain. He was originally supposed to be in yesterday's lineup, according to TLR, but was scratched. He's day-to-day, according to Barry Weinberg. Story to follow.

Just talked to Tyler Johnson, and he's going to remain shut down for another week. He said there's still some discomfort in his shoulder, so they're going to take it easy and re-evaluate in a week. Johnson met with the medical staff yesterday, as was the plan when they first shut him down.

Story to follow on the site.

In other news, the lineup today is pretty much the Day 2 lineup. I would say Opening Day, but they're facing a lefty on Opening Day. This is the lineup:

1. Schumaker RF
2. Duncan LF
3. Pujols 1B
4. Ankiel CF
5. Glaus 3B
6. Kennedy 2B
7. Molina C
8. Looper P
9. Izturis SS

-M.

Tuesday camp tidbits

Notes and bits from today at the yard:

* Chris Duncan got a couple of at-bats and TLR said he came through it fine. Still not certain whether he'll play tomorrow, or if they'll take it easy and give him a day before sending him back out there.

* Clayton Mortensen will in fact be Friday's starter at Vero Beach.

* Up and down game for Rasmus. He had a couple of nice ABs, but also a bad K with the bases loaded in the ninth and misplayed a ball in the first.

Plenty of stuff on the site today, and one more story to come, so please do check it out.
-M.

Tuesday morning update -- UPDATED

* One addition to this morning's updates: Three cuts. Blake Hawksworth and Mark Worrell were optioned to the Minors, and John Wasdin was re-assigned to Minor League camp.

* Chris Duncan is back in the lineup, playing first base.

* Anthony Reyes is feeling better and will start tomorrow, taking the rotation spot that was Joel Pineiro's. Still no word on Pineiro; hope to know more soon.

* Intrasquad game scheduled for this morning, with Thompson, Parisi and Springer all to pitch.

* Today's lineup vs. BAL:
1. Schumaker LF
2. Izturis SS
3. Rasmus CF
4. Ankiel RF
5. D.Jimenez 3B
6. Duncan 1B
7. Molina C
8. Wellemeyer P
9. Kennedy 2B

-M.

Roster projection, fourth guess

Starting tomorrow, I get my annual Spring Training breather, so you won't hear anything from me till Tuesday (say, that sounds like a good name for a band!). Hooray for Mrs. Dude coming south!

Here's my latest guess for the roster:

Starting pitchers (5)

Adam Wainwright
Joel Pineiro
Braden Looper
Anthony Reyes
Todd Wellemeyer

Relief pitchers (7)
Jason Isringhausen
Russ Springer
Ryan Franklin
Brad Thompson
Kyle McClellan (this was by far the single hardest spot to call)
Randy Flores
Ron Villone

Catchers (2)
Yadier Molina
Jason LaRue

Infielders (6)

Albert Pujols
Adam Kennedy
Cesar Izturis
Troy Glaus
Aaron Miles
Brendan Ryan

Outfielders (5)

Rick Ankiel
Chris Duncan
Ryan Ludwick
Skip Schumaker
Juan Gonzalez

Stock rising:
Joe Mather, McClellan, Schumaker, Villone, Ryan
Stock falling:
Kennedy, Reyes, Gonzalez

Last names on:
McClellan, Ryan, Gonzalez
First names off:
Mike Parisi, Kelvin Jimenez, Mather, Colby Rasmus

-M.

Thursday camp tidbits - UPDATED

* Stories coming later today on the site: a look at the bullpen in the wake of TJ being hurt and one of the long guys being in the picture, and something on Izzy's outing.


* Ryan Ludwick has been cleared by the training staff and says he feels fine after being hit on the helmet by a pitch last night. However, TLR held him out today as a precaution just the same.

* Gabe Johnson and Bryan Anderson were re-assigned to Minor League camp this morning.

* Sidney Ponson just arrived and will throw on Field 1 in 20 minutes or so. Sir Sid actually looked in better shape than he ever was in '06, and he hit 94 mph. I don't think he's going to sign with STL -- just don't think the team is that interested. But I expect someone will give him a look.

* Nearly every position player will be making the trip up to Orlando and staying for both games against the Braves.

* Amaury Marti is back in the lineup. Basically, in TLR's explanation, he's done well in camp so far, he got two hits last night, so he's rewarded with another start.

-M.

Lucky Seven, halfway-through-Spring edition

1. Which longshot/surprise pitcher has the best chance of making the team: McClellan, Parisi, Motte, someone else?

2. Which longshot/surprise hitter has the  best chance of making the team: Mather, Barden, Marti, someone else?

3. Reyes: one good, one bad so far. What's your hope for him this year? What's your expectation?

4. Who will be left-handers in the bullpen on Opening Day (could be one, two or three)? Who should be?

5. Are the Mets in big trouble or little trouble?

6. What's your favorite non-baseball website?

7. Beach, mountains or desert?

-M.

Publishing, entertainment, social advocacy

My colleague Ken Mandel, over at Phillies.MLB.com, wrote a really nice piece that I thought you guys might want to read. It's generally about non-native-English-speaking players adjusting to life in the USA, but more specifically it's a lot about old friend So Taguchi. I recommend giving it a read.

-M.

Re-assessing Rasmus

A few days back, maybe even a couple weeks ago by now, TLR made some comments that got a lot of people in a tizzy regarding Colby Rasmus. Essentially, he seemed to be saying that if the team was better with Rasmus as a part-timer, then he'd have no problem carrying Rasmus as a part-timer.

Today he said something different. I'm not sure whether to classify it as clarification, a change of position or what, but hopefully today's comments sit better with a lot of the fan base:

"But the key thing is in this place, it would be a situation where he would play a lot.

"He needs to play at this point in his career.

(follow-up question, asking whether this really jibes with what he was saying earlier about it being OK if Rasmus was a 250-AB guy this year)

"If we have a void there, and we need him to win, yeah, we'll take him. I don't think we're going to have a void there. I don't know that we're going to have a void. I think we have a legitimate competition."

(you've often talked about how players with options lose all ties. is that the case here?)

"He doesn't win ties for one reason, because other guys he may be tied with are out of options, and he doesn't win a tie because he needs to play. The optimum thing to do with him is to give him a lot of everyday experience. But that doesn't mean, if all of a sudden we're short of outfielders, and we need him, he's [not] there."

-M.

A business primer

For some of you, this may be completely uninteresting, or it may be all stuff you already know. But I got a lot of mailbag questions, so I wanted to offer a little further illumination on how some of the business end of things works with regard to contracts and service time and whatnot.

First an important fundamental concept:

Service time determines a LOT. That's why Prince Fielder is making $670,000 while Ryan Howard is making $10 million. And it's why Pujols' contract, though it's worth an average of $14.3 million a year, guaranteed him $7 million in the first year. Up until a player reaches free agency eligibility, his salary is determined by a combination of service time and performance.

Comparable players are also important. This is tied in. Albert Pujols set a precedent for Ryan Howard, who set a precedent for Prince Fielder. This is a big part of why Rick Ankiel's situation was so hard for both sides to read -- good luck finding a comparable player.

Now, on to the details...

Players with up to about 2 2/3 years of Major League service time have basically no leverage. All players with zero years, one year or two years fall into this category. Then there's a cutoff each year for what makes a player a "Super Two" -- that is, a player with fewer than three years' service time who is still arbitration-eligible. Brad Thompson, with two years plus 110 days, fell short this year. These players, not yet eligible for arbitration, are commonly called "zero-to-three" players. They are COMPLETELY cost-controlled, and therefore highly desirable if they can play.

Up until a certain point of the spring -- this year it's today -- these players can negotiate with the team. Ideally, they reach an agreement on a salary, sign a deal and move on. If they DON'T agree, however, the team is fully within its rights to do what's called renewing the contract, and simply assign a dollar figure to the player. In some cases, it's right around what they were offering in the first place. In some cases, it's less -- almost as a punitive measure to the player for being difficult, or to make a point, or simply to save some cash. My understanding is that in Adam Wainwright's case, the club did NOT do this.

Pujols made $900,000 in his final zero-to-three year. Ryan Howard also made $900,000 in his final year before arbitration. But it's based on performance AND service time. Pujols didn't necessarily perform any better in 2002 than he did in 2001, but he got more money after 2002 because he had more service time.

OK. That basically wraps the zero-to-threes.

Then you have arbitration-eligible players. Every player from "Super Twos" up to -- but not including -- six full years of Major League service time is considered arbitration-eligible. This year, the Cards' group included So Taguchi, Aaron Miles, Todd Wellemeyer, Yadier Molina and Rick Ankiel.

Again, a combination of service time and performance determines salaries, so once the season ends, it's possible to begin guessing what a player is likely to make. Based on these guesses, you get the first step of the arbitration process -- tendering, or non-tendering, the player a contract. If the team tenders the player a contract offer, then the player will be back for the following year. If the team chooses to non-tender the player, the player becomes a free agent. It doesn't mean he can't return. It simply means that the club has no desire to allow the arbitration process to determine the salary. This happened with Miles this year. The Cards released Taguchi before the time came, because they wanted to draft Brian Barton.

Once players are tendered contracts, they can negotiate with the team. At a certain point in
the winter, as arbitration gets closer, the teams and players exchange figures. Often, this jump-starts the bargaining process, and many times the team and player come to an agreement at roughly the midpoint between their stances. A deal can be struck, for one year or multiple years, at any point up to the hearing.

However, once there's a hearing, an arbitrator determines the player's salary. And there is NO middle ground. Each side makes its case, and the arbitrator picks a winner. That is the player's salary for the year. And I emphasize again, it's largely determined by service time. Andruw Jones made $3.7 million in his first arbitration season and $8.2 million in the next. Then he signed a new deal, paying him $9.5 million for what would have been his third arbitration season, escalating to $11.5 million the following year and eventually to $13.5 million. Miguel Cabrera made $7.4 million in his first arbitration-eligible year, and he'll make $11.3 million this year, his second.

The player and the team are subject to this process up until the winter finally comes that the player has six FULL seasons of service time. Not five years and 170 days, but six full seasons. There is no rounding up, as with the Super Twos.

At that point, the player is on the open market, where the whole equation changes. He has multiple bidders and is no longer cost controlled.

Anyway, hope this helps some people understand the process, and why Adam Wainwright is making less than $500,000 while Todd Wellemeyer is making $1 million.

-M.

(currently playing on the iPod: Drive-By Truckers, Brighter Than Creation's Dark)

Johnson update

Tyler Johnson has a "strained rotator cuff and tendinitis." He'll be held out of pitching for a week, though he plans to do long toss and work on strengthening during that time. Haven't talked to the medical staff yet, but Tyler seemed downright relieved -- he was clearly worried it would be much worse.

-M.

They got us working in shifts!

A few additional thoughts and notes from today in Jupiter...

* Mr. McClellan certainly threw strikes. He gave up a lot of hard contact -- very hard contact -- in the first inning. But he had a good curveball, threw strikes, and as the manager sometimes says, he "didn't scare." He'll get more innings.

* Interesting sight after we talked with McClellan. Minor League camp starts tomorrow, officially, but they're already getting some work in. Four of the more intriguing arms in the system threw off mounds right outside the clubhouse today, with Dyar Miller and Brent Strom among those looking on. Mark McCormick, Nick Webber, Eric Haberer and Jess Todd all threw. I couldn't really tell you much about any of them, other than that Webber looks like he's throwing really, really hard. But considering all McCormick has been through, it has to be a good sign that he was participating in something that other guys were doing too.

* 8 am bus for Viera tomorrow. No veteran is sad to miss that trip, I guarantee you.

-M, off till Tuesday as soon as I finish this McClellan feature.

(now playing on the iPod: Stones, Let It Bleed. Sometimes you need to go back to the old favorites)

Sunday camp tidbits

No tidbits tomorrow, as your faithful correspondent gets a desperately-needed day off. But in the meantime...

* TLR confirmed that he expects Sidney Ponson throw for Cards scouts at some point in the next week or so.

* Tyler Johnson is still choosing not to comment on his ailing shoulder. TLR acknowledged being "concerned" but said given that Johnson didn't come to camp in tip-top shape, "it is not a big surprise."

* Three guys who have been behind/sidelined/slowed are throwing bullpens in just a couple of minutes -- Clement, Pineiro and Wasdin. Updates later today.

* Joe Mather gets another start. It's hard to know just how seriously he's being taken, but TLR explained that his RH-ness helps him get a few extra looks that a guy like Haerther isn't getting. Mather also has some versatility that some of the other OFs have.

-M.

Tyler Johnson scratched

Tyler has "tightness and weakness" in his left shoulder, per Barry Weinberg. He was scratched from a scheduled appearance today, after his warmup throw didn't go very well. Will undergo an MRI on Monday. More to come on the site later this afternoon.

-M.

Opening Day roster projection, third guess

Let's make this a weekly thing on Saturdays...

Starting pitchers
(5)
Adam Wainwright
Joel Pineiro
Braden Looper
Anthony Reyes
Todd Wellemeyer

Relief pitchers (7)

Jason Isringhausen
Russ Springer
Ryan Franklin
Brad Thompson
Randy Flores
Tyler Johnson
Ron Villone

Infielders (6)

Albert Pujols
Adam Kennedy
Cesar Izturis

Troy Glaus
Aaron Miles
Brendan Ryan

Outfielders (5)

Rick Ankiel
Chris Duncan
Ryan Ludwick
Skip Schumaker
Juan Gonzalez

Catchers (2)
Yadier Molina
Jason LaRue

Discuss...
-M.