Tag: AL West

Rougned Odor: The Fighting Roots of a Venezuelan Cowboy

One punch

Flashpoints arrive frequently and violently as young Texas second baseman Rougned Odor spars his way through the early stages of a career that teammate Elvis Andrus swears will lead him one day straight into the Hall of Fame. Baseball or boxing Hall of Fame, Andrus doesn’t specify. For now, it’s probably safer that way.

Even at that, the sledgehammer blow Odor delivered to the face of Toronto slugger and bat-flipper Jose Bautista one simmering hot May afternoon in Texas was stunning both in its rapid delivery and brute force.

One punch.

Everyone knew there was no love lost between the Rangers and Blue Jays dating back to their emotional playoff series last October, when Bautista emphasized his crushing Game 5 home run with the flamboyant flip. Everyone knew it wasn’t over. Texas doesn’t cotton to being messed with, no matter the time, place or circumstances.

But when Bautista, still smarting from taking a fastball to the ribs from Rangers reliever Matt Bush a batter earlier, answered with a hard, late slide past second base as Odor turned a double play, nobody could have seen what would come next.

Bautista and Odor started to jaw, the benches emptied and instead of the usual milling about and gentle pushing that normally accompanies an empty-calorie bench-clearing incident in baseball…ka-pow! Odor landed a right hook that undoubtedly made Manny Pacquiao proud.

Even now, as the dog days of August slowly lead toward the stretch run, Odor’s punch remains a signature moment of this season.

Many rival players are wary of Odor (pronounced “ROUG-ned oh-DORE”) and many view him as a punk who undoubtedly will get his. They figure it’s only a matter of time.

“He plays with a lot of emotion. He’s a really good player, and I think that’s why he [rubs] people the wrong way,” Oakland catcher Stephen Vogt says.

“He has a little flavor to his game,” Texas third baseman Adrian Beltre added. “I understand from the other side sometimes it doesn’t look too good. But here, we embrace it.”

Odor’s notorious reputation precedes him. Last summer against Houston, at the beginning of an at-bat, Odor and Astros catcher Hank Conger became engaged in a debate heated enough to, yes, clear the benches.

When he was playing for Class-A Spokane in 2011, Odor ignited another bench-clearing brawl that was so wild it led to a Northwest League-record 51 players being fined.

Through all of this, there is a common theme: While many rivals view him as a punk, Odor’s teammates have his back. Many opponents (and their fans) hate him, but he is beloved in his own clubhouse.

“I don’t think in any part of his play he goes too far,” Rangers manager Jeff Banister told B/R.

“I take offense at those who think that playing too hard is offensive; I really do…A lot of people talk about playing hard for 27 outs; our guys go out and do it. That’s because they choose to. Each one of them. They’re accountable to each other.

Banister says because physical play isn’t part of the game the way it is in other team sports—blocking, setting picks, checking someone into the boards—baseball players have to help their teammates in other ways.

“In baseball, the reality is, hitting is individual. Pitching is individual. Fielding is individual, right?

“Once you put the ball in play, the only gift you can give back to your teammates is what? To run your ass off down the line as hard as you can so you have an opportunity to be safe, so the next guy has an opportunity to drive you in.

“For a guy like Rougie Odor, people call it a chip because it’s not what has become the norm. Our game needs guys who will play the game hard….Why fault him for his style of play?”

Some think Odor carries that chip on his shoulder because he is only 5’8″ and has spent his entire life, 22 years, fighting to measure up to everyone else.

Some think it evolved because he was so determined to battle and scrap his way out of his native Venezuela.

Some think it ossified as he’s risen to become the youngest player in whatever professional league the Rangers placed him in, up to and including his major league debut on May 8, 2014. He was 20 years and 94 days old, the youngest man to appear in the majors that season.

What has become as clear as one of those ringside girls at a championship fight is Odor is as volatile as a lit stick of dynamite and as controversial as a split decision.

That day in Texas, Toronto saw red. Bautista saw stars. And the biggest shock from that dusty infield scene was that, as Bautista’s sunglasses flew off, his knees didn’t buckle and he didn’t crash to the canvas, er, dirt, immediately.

In the end, the Rangers’ veterans banded together to pay Odor’s $5,000 fine, Texas sources tell B/R (he also was suspended for seven games after his initial eight-game ban was reduced on appeal).

“It wasn’t cheap,” Andrus said, grinning. “But it wasn’t crazy, either.”

Justice usually has its price.

    

One family

Baseball always has been the sweet science to Odor. His father, Rougned, played community college baseball in New Orleans and worked in the Cleveland Indians organization for nine years. His grandfather played in Venezuela. Four uncles also played. And his brother is a minor leaguer in Texas’ system, though he is not considered a prospect.

“I’ve been playing baseball since I was three years old,” Odor says. “I come from a family that’s played baseball. I was always playing baseball.

“That’s why I love this game.”

He was raised in Maracaibo, Venezuela, the country’s second-largest city behind Caracas. Maracaibo is stocked with fisherman, given its location on the western shore of the strait that connects Lake Maracaibo to the Gulf of Venezuela.

“It’s hot, like Texas,” Odor says.

Although he enjoys fishing, it never got in his blood. Not the way baseball did.

“I saw him in a tournament when he was five years old,” remembered his uncle Rouglas, now in his 29th season with the Indians organization. Coaches were pitching to kids and he was representing the state of Zulia. The opposing team had the bases loaded, and a kid hit a line drive to Rougned, who was playing second base.

“He caught the line drive and, obviously at that age, kids run when the baseball is hit. So Rougned caught the ball, stepped on second base and then threw to first base to complete a triple play. At five years old.

“I said, ‘Wow, I’ve never seen that in my life.’ We always said, ‘With that kind of confidence, did he get lucky, or did he know what he was doing?’ Obviously, he knew what he was doing because of watching family members.

“That was the first time I said, ‘Whoa, maybe he will have a bright future if he develops and continues to get better.”

Rouglas had a front-row seat during his nephew’s formative years because, among other things, he was the field coordinator in charge of Cleveland’s Venezuelan baseball academy from 1996 to 2001. He remembers his father—Rougned’s grandfather, Douglas—becoming upset with the coaches because he wanted Odor to play shortstop, but the coaches played him at second base.

The reason was simple: Most of the hitters were right-handed, and at that age they were swinging late and producing a steady stream of ground balls toward second base. I want my best infielder to play where most of the ground balls are going, the coach told Douglas. Doesn’t matter, Douglas would shoot back, shortstop is where the best player should be.

“They went back and forth,” Rouglas says, chuckling. “But the coach had an idea what he was doing.”

Odor just wanted to play.

“All my life, baseball,” he says. “I would go to school in the morning, then after that I would go home and then go to the stadium.”

His English is serviceable, though he often uses a translator to make sure he gets his thoughts across properly. Especially since the Bautista incident made him infamous, he’s leaned more on translators, people around the Rangers say. And the club itself has become more protective. When we speak, it is just Odor and me, no translator, and he is accommodating, friendly and unfailingly polite.

But only to a point. He cuts off the interview after a bit, pleading that he has to go hit in the batting cage. He wonders if we can continue our discussion after that. Which is fine, except later he says he is too pressed for time, and so we agree that I will return the next day to finish the interview.

Then the next day arrives and he continues to make excuses over the course of two hours, stalling until the coast is clear and he safely avoids any of the hard questions about his hot temper and brawling reputation.

“The only times his style of play got him into trouble was because of playing the game hard,” Rouglas says. “There were players who didn’t read that the right way. He always played hard and all out, similar to the way people used to play.”

At times, yes, it would anger his opponents. But Rouglas doesn’t remember his nephew fighting much as a youth.

“Not that I know of,” Rouglas says. “As a kid, I’m sure he had a few in school, but nothing major that I know of.”

On the field, though, sparks could fly.

“If you knew him, you knew that was his style of play,” Rouglas says. “It happened when they were playing a new team from out of state, and the team had no clue. When they were playing in the same state and everybody knew who he was, they knew his style, they accepted he wasn’t being dirty; it was just him playing hard.”

It also was him playing the way he was schooled to play.

“Being around professional people, we always were telling him to respect the game and play the game right way no matter what,” Rouglas says. “You hit a ground ball, a pop fly, you run the bases the right way. You’re down by 10, winning by 10, you run the bases. It’s the way the game is. Respect the game.”

Says Mike Daly, Texas’ director of international scouting when it signed Odor and now the club’s senior director of player development: “He knows how to play the game. He knows how to get a base. He knows how to do a ball read. He knows how to line up on a double cut. He knows a lot instinctually, and I think a lot of that was growing up with his dad, his uncle and his grandfather.”

The edge with which he plays appears to come naturally. At least, he says, it doesn’t emanate from where many believe: his short physical stature.

“I think I’m like everybody else,” he says. “I don’t think I’m a little guy.

“When I play the game, I think everybody is the same.”

      

One chip

When the major league scouts came calling, Odor was a switch-hitting shortstop. Now, he’s a left-handed-hitting second baseman. For good, it seems.

“I really like it,” Odor says of second base. “I like it more than shortstop. It’s more fun. I like turning double plays.”

He had just turned 15 when A.J. Preller, now San Diego‘s general manager but then Texas’ senior director of player personnel, first saw him at a tryout in Venezuela.

“The more you got around him, you noticed that he was a highly competitive kid,” Preller says. “He was a great kid, he loved to play, loved the game, he was a great teammate. Those things made it easier, as we went to sign him, to go to [Rangers general manager] Jon Daniels and tell him this is a guy we really wanted.”

By then, Odor was a high-profile international prospect. He also played in some tournaments in the United States in 2010 as his father and Rouglas worked to get him in front of as many scouts as possible. What Preller and others saw was a young, skilled and versatile kid burning with desire. A kid who played much bigger than his size.

That became evident quickly whenever the Rangers’ scouting contingent strategically placed him in tryout games.

“He always seemed to raise his game, always seemed like he had something to prove,” Daly says.

When the Rangers finally signed him in January 2011, a month before he turned 17, he actually was considered a late sign. Some clubs had concerns regarding whether he could survive at shortstop long term in the majors because of his size, according to several scouts. And because of that, clubs weren’t enamored with the money he was asking for at the time.

“Obviously, you look back on it now, and he’s worth every penny, but at the time, his bat was much better than probably we as an industry gave him credit for,” Daly says. “Certainly, he has enough bat to play second base.

“His running times, he was a below-average runner then, too. To his credit, he worked very, very hard. We saw him just after Christmas and he dropped his 60-yard dash time from 7.3 to 6.7, and you asked him, ‘Dude, how do you do that?’

“He said, ‘I kept running and I kept running and I kept running and I kept running. That’s how I got faster.”

With his future about to be decided by the evaluators, Odor worked with his uncle every day in Winter Haven, Florida, where the Indians trained at the time.

“That was a big clue to his makeup; he took something that was a limitation and turned it into a strength by running every day as hard as he could,” Daly says. “He dropped his 60 time, and now you see that bat and the speed and the edge that he played with, and we were lucky enough to be the highest bidders on him.”

Right before Texas signed him, Preller and Jayce Tingler, then the club’s coordinator for instruction in the Dominican Republic and now Texas’ minor league field coordinator, worked Odor out in the Dominican complex, where the ball doesn’t travel much. They flipped well-used (read: dead) baseballs to him. Odor, using a bat made from composite wood material, blasted several balls over the fence.

“He’s swinging a 35-, 36-ounce bat, which is a big bat for anybody, and me and Jayce look at each other and it was like, ‘OK, this guy’s a little different,” Preller says. “We don’t have anybody like this,'” Preller says.

“You could see his work ethic, and as he kept getting better and better you could see he was a hungry player; he wanted to keep proving people wrong.”

The Rangers signed him for $425,000.

Six months later, barely into his first season at Texas’ short-season Class-A affiliate in Spokane, Washington, he threw the punch that started the worst brawl in Northwest League history.

It was similar to the blow he landed on Bautista, though this time it was Odor who was thrown out at second base when things became testy. After sliding past the bag while attempting to break up a double play, he exchanged words with Vancouver Canadians shortstop Shane Opitz as he started to run back to the dugout. Words led to an exchange of shoves and then, ka-pow! Odor connected with a right hook and wound up with a four-game suspension for instigating the melee.

As in Texas following the Bautista punch, Odor’s teammates rallied around him.

“He’s not afraid to stick up for himself or his teammates,” says now-demoted Rangers first baseman Ryan Rua, who was in a Spokane uniform with Odor that day. “He felt the other player did something wrong, and he took it into his own hands.”

The Rangers immediately sent people from the front office to Spokane to see whether they had a problem on their hands. Conclusion: They didn’t.

“Anything like that that happens in the minor leagues, you want to make sure,” says Preller, who went to Spokane. “Were our guys on the up and up? It’s development. You want to make sure you’re not missing a teaching moment or anything like that.

“When we got through with it, we were sure this isn’t a character issue or a character flaw or anything like that. This is a competitive kid who ultimately, we felt…knew the difference between right and wrong and he’s going to be fine and develop the right way.”

Normalcy returned quickly, and Odor, whose time in the Northwest League was fleeting (58 games that summer before moving on the next season), faded back into the picture with everyone else. Bob Richmond, Northwest League president for 30 years before retiring following the 2012 season, says he recalls no other incidents with Odor.

“You never want to condone fighting,” says Daly, “but at the end of the day, you saw all his teammates out there with him and you could tell it was a very close-knit team, and they respect Rougie and it’s just part of baseball.

“These guys are very competitive and they want to win, and he wants to win, and it doesn’t matter if it’s in the major leagues or in a rookie ball game in Spokane; he’s always played with that edge.

“It’s something he learns from, but that edge is something we never want him to lose. That’s something that separates him, something that makes him such a special player.”

Even during winter ball at home in Venezuela, Rouglas says, things have become heated.

“I had a couple of players tell me, ‘Tell your nephew to take it easy,'” Rouglas says. “I said, ‘What do you mean?’ They said, ‘He needs to slow himself down.’ I said, ‘You don’t know him. This is the way he plays. We’re not going to tell him to change it.’

“He’s the type of player you want to have on your ballclub. If you’re on the opposing team, you’re not going to like him because he will find ways to beat you and do things the right way.”

Says Preller: “Great kid. One of my all-time favorites.”

   

One demotion

Where is the line between punching the accelerator and easing up ever so slightly?

Here is where that line is for Odor: Round Rock, Texas, home of the Rangers’ Triple-A affiliate.

Racing through the Texas system, Odor debuted with the Rangers in May 2014, less than three years after instigating the brawl in the short-season Class-A league. Over 114 major league games in ’14, playing as the youngest man in the majors, Odor tied for eighth in the American League in triples (seven) and was selected as the Rangers’ rookie of the year.

But in 2015, after just 29 games, he was hitting .144 with a .252 on-base percentage.

Banister was in his first season as Texas’ manager, and this certainly wasn’t the player he had heard so much about. The only thing Banister’s predecessor, Ron Washington, wanted from Odor was fewer strikeouts. In ’14, Odor fanned 71 times in 386 at-bats.

But this?

“I’d heard a lot of different things,” Banister said. “They talked about the energy he played with, how tough he was as a player. There’s no give-in. He’s hard-working. And as I watched him in spring training [in ‘15], he had gotten away from that.

“I’m not going to say he was passive, but he was not as described. Things didn’t seem to work out for him. He was not aggressive at the plate at times, and things kind of spun out of control for him, [as far as his] numbers. And you could see it start to affect him defensively. You could see it start to crumble as far as his focus and determination.”

So the Rangers unceremoniously shipped their 2015 Opening Day second baseman to Round Rock.

When they sent him down, Banister and the Rangers did so with one order: Go find Rougie Odor. Go summon that edge. Go tap back into that passion.

Instead of pouting or getting angry about his demotion, that is exactly what he did. And six weeks later, in mid-June, Texas called him back.

“We saw a completely different player,” Banister says. “I saw the guy that was described. A tough out in the batter’s box. He would bunt, he would hit balls out of the ballpark, he’d hit balls the other way and he ran hard on everything.

“He was aggressive, and there was no quit in anything he did. That’s the guy we’ve got today. I think he’s going to continue to be that way. He helps bring the energy that the veteran core needs.”

Odor batted .292/.334/.527 with 15 homers and 52 RBI over the Rangers’ final 91 games in 2015. He also helped them storm back from a ninegame deficit to pass Houston and win the AL West.

And he hasn’t stopped since. This season, through Sunday’s games, he was batting .273/.295/.492 and produced 23 homers and 62 RBI.

And, yes, one walloping punch.

“Great teammate, man,” Andrus says. “He’s like my little brother. How much he’s grown up in such a short time, it’s unbelievable. You can see how hungry he is to be a good player. He plays with a lot of passion, and a lot of people take it wrong, but I don’t see it that way.”

Says Beltre: “He’s smart. He’s been awesome for us. He’s the main reason we are where we are right now.”

Back when the scouts were flocking to see him in Venezuela, one of them predicted Odor was either going to be in the big leagues in three or four years or he would be out of baseball completely, depending on how he handled that chip on his shoulder.

Really, the scout said, Odor is reminiscent of one of his Venezuelan countrymen, Francisco “K-Rod” Rodriguez, who has closed for the Angels, Mets, Brewers and Tigers now for 15 years. Like a young K-Rod, the scout figured, Odor’s edge either was going to rub people the right way or the wrong way. No in-betweens.

   

One horse

Specifically, a cutting horse. Odor owns four of them, two male and two female, and keeps them at Alex Cabrera’s La Pelotera Ranch in Valencia, the third-largest city in Venezuela, some 107 miles from Caracas.

The horses are used in a popular Venezuelan sport called toros coleados, which, loosely translated, means “bull tailing.” It is a descendant of bull fighting. In this case, cowboys riding the horses work to grab the bull by the tail and flip the animal in competition. The bull is considered flipped when all four legs are sticking up.

Odor loves toros coleados.

“He’s a Venezuelan cowboy now playing for Texas,” Rouglas Odor says of his nephew, chuckling. “That’s what he is. A Venezuelan cowboy.

“He likes horses. He likes cows. He likes bulls. He likes animals. That’s a lot of the reasons why he loves Texas, because you can find cowboys in Texas, and he loves hanging around them.

“He has some friends who will take him around their ranch.”

Cabrera, 44, is a close family friend and played on the same Venezuelan team as another of Odor’s uncles, Eddie Zambrano, years ago. He spent the better part of a decade bouncing around the farm systems of the Cubs, Rays and Diamondbacks. At his baseball peak, Cabrera played in 31 games for the 2000 Diamondbacks. His son Ramon is a backup catcher with the Cincinnati Reds.

“Rougie rides every single day; he enjoys the ranch all day long in the winter,” says Cabrera, who estimates right now he keeps 95 horses at La Pelotera and about 1,000 head of cattle.

During his years playing baseball, Cabrera also came across Bautista several times. Though they were never teammates, their teams played against each other in winter leagues, and when Bautista was playing for the Dominican Republic and Cabrera for Venezuela, they faced each other in the Caribbean World Series.

“Let me tell you something,” Cabrera says over the telephone from his Venezuelan ranch. “I tell Rougned this guy is big in the major leagues. I tell him I’ve known Bautista for a long time, and he’s a big man, and you have to respect him. I say, ‘You’re a rookie.'”

Cabrera pauses and laughs.

“He’s crazy,” he continues. “Rougned said, ‘In the major leagues, we’re the same. I had to do something—he tried to break my ankle.’ I watched—the slide was so hard. Rougned is lucky Bautista did not hit him. If he hit him in the knee, he’d be hurt.”

Still, Cabrera advised caution. He told Rougned he shouldn’t have clocked Bautista. But he understands that in the moment, things happen.

Just as it became the Punch Seen ‘Round the Baseball World, it also became quite the topic for family conversation.

“We all saw what happened,” Rouglas says. “I’d rather talk about Rougned as a person.”

Odor is so adept with his fists that some have wondered whether he boxed as a kid. Even Andrus asked. No, Odor told him. No boxing.

“It was a great punch,” Cabrera says. “But no power. If he had a strong hand, Bautista would be on the ground.”

Still, the Venezuelan cowboy playing for Texas now has a reputation that precedes him. His Rangers teammates get asked about him by opponents during breaks in games, maybe during pitching changes or idle moments on the bases.

“Yeah, guys ask because of the perception from the outside,” Beltre says. “Guys ask, ‘What’s going on with Odor?’ He’s a good kid. He plays hard and he means well. He’s popular because he plays hard.

“He’s a good teammate. He can steal a base, play defense, hit, hit for power. He’s the complete package.”

Says Andrus, “A lot of guys ask me how it is dealing with him every day. I tell them I’m lucky to be playing next to him. He’s a future Hall of Famer, for sure.”

Again, to those who know him, whether on his Texas teams or from his area of Venezuela, Odor poses no problem.

“I don’t know that Odor,” Ramon Cabrera, Cincinnati catcher and son of Alex, says when the Bautista punch is mentioned. “The Odor I know, he’s a nice guy.”

Says Oakland’s Vogt: “He’s kind of in the new wave of baseball player, playing with a lot of passion and a lot of emotion. I like his style.”

In Texas, he lives in the same apartment complex as Rua. Though there are no horses in the residence, there is a pool, and sometimes the two will hang out there or at the mall. They share dinners and sometimes carpool to the ballpark together—especially for day games, so Rua’s wife can sleep in rather than serving as their own personal Uber driver.

This season, Nomar Mazara, 21, has replaced Odor as the youngest player on the Rangers’ roster, and if you look hard enough, there are signs that Odor is getting older. Even at 22, he’s beginning to lose some of his hair, and you can bet that the Rangers give him some heat for that.

Well, not too much.

“He’s 5’8″, 5’9″, but he walks around like he’s 6’4″, 6’5″,” Rua says.

As Odor himself says, when he plays he doesn’t think he’s a little guy. He thinks he’s like everybody else.

“Now that I make it, I want to stay here for a long time,” Odor says.

As long as this Venezuelan cowboy provides this kind of horsepower, energizing the Rangers’ veterans and immobilizing their opponents, he appears on the fast track toward doing so.

As Banister says, “We can talk for hours on the whys—why incidents like those happen—but everyone just sees the incident and wants to talk about it, and yet they don’t understand what led up to any of them.

“So criticize how you may, just understand who the man is.”

Each day, Odor walks by the manager’s office in Texas, and on most of those days he veers in and plops down to chat with Banister.

“I’ve never seen him have a truly bad day. He’s always got a smile on his face,” the manager says. “It’s engaging. It’s captivating. And it’s real.

“That’s a favorite part of Rougie for me, because no matter what you see or what you think you see on the field, this guy just loves to show up to the ballpark. It’s his favorite place to be. And he wears that every day. No matter what happened yesterday.”

      

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Carlos Gomez Released by Astros: Latest Details, Comments and Reaction

The Houston Astros released outfielder Carlos Gomez on Friday.

Upon designating Gomez for assignment Aug. 10, Houston had 10 days to work out a trade or assign him to the minor leagues, but instead the 30-year-old is now a free agent.

The 2016 season has been the worst of the Dominican Republic native’s MLB career, as he is hitting just .210 with five home runs, 29 RBI and 13 stolen bases.

Houston acquired Gomez in a deal with the Milwaukee Brewers prior to last season’s trade deadline, and he struggled down the stretch to the tune of a .242 batting average, four homers, 13 RBI and 10 steals in 41 games.

Gomez is a couple of years removed from a pair of career seasons. He made the NL All-Star team in both 2013 and 2014, and he hit .284 with an average with 24 home runs, 73 RBI and 37 stolen bases per season over the course of that two-year span.

The former Gold Glove Award winner has experienced a steep fall from grace since then, but he is a five-tool player when he is on his game.

Joe Frisaro of MLB.com reported the Miami Marlins have shown interest in signing him. MLB Network’s Jon Morosi added the following regarding a potential fit in Miami:

With slugger Giancarlo Stanton likely out for the season due to a groin injury, the playoff-contending Marlins desperately need outfield help.

Gomez may not help much if his 2016 form persists, but he could be a value signing should he recapture some of the magic he displayed in 2013 and 2014.

    

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Jonathan Lucroy Proving to Be Deadline Difference-Maker Rangers Hoped For

Jonathan Lucroy hit his seventh home run for the Texas Rangers on Wednesday in a 6-2 win over the Oakland A’s.

That becomes more impressive when you stack it next to another number: 15.

That’s how many games Lucroy has played in a Texas Rangers uniform. The two-time All-Star catcher, recall, was acquired Aug. 1 in a non-waiver trade deadline deal from the Milwaukee Brewers.

Lucroy‘s Rangers tenure is just getting started. He has an eminently affordable $5.25 million club option for next season that Texas is sure to exercise.

But with scarcely more than two weeks under his belt in the Lone Star State, the 30-year-old backstop is already producing like the elite talent the Rangers hoped he’d be.

The Rangers paid a hefty price for Lucroy and reliever Jeremy Jeffress, surrendering outfielder Lewis Brinson and right-hander Luis Ortiz, who became the Brewers’ No. 2 and No. 5 prospects, respectively, per MLB.com.

So far, it’s been a price worth paying. At 72-50, the Rangers hold a comfortable 6.5-game lead in the AL West.

Their plus-seven run differential, however, is easily the worst among serious postseason contenders. By contrast, the Chicago Cubs pace MLB with a plus-206 run differential.

Part of that can be pinned on a pitching staff that hovers in the bottom third in ERA at 4.30. But the offense has been hit by injuries to veterans Prince Fielder, whose career is likely over, and Shin-Soo Choo, who could be lost for the year with a fractured forearm.

Enter Lucroy, who has now clubbed more than half as many homers with Texas as the 13 he hit in 95 games with Milwaukee. Plus, he’s tallied 14 RBI.

He’s also clicked instantly with the Rangers staff, which might be the most important job for a catcher swapping squads at the deadline.

“The Rangers are now 8-4 with him behind the plate,” Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News noted Wednesday. “A bit more advanced: The staff ERA is 2.92 with Lucroy behind the plate; it is 4.43 with any other catcher.”

We’re squarely in small-sample territory, but Lucroy is among the game’s best pitch-framers overall, per StatCorner

He does his homework like a valedictorian hopeful, as Rangers skipper Jeff Banister explained to Grant:

You’d be hard-pressed to think anybody prepares in the same way this guy does. If you want to be great at your craft, there is a price to pay for it. He puts in the work. That type of work gains respect immediately. From what I’d heard and what I’d asked people about him, I knew he was serious about preparation, but I didn’t know that it was this extensive. He’s off the charts.

Lucroy is saying all the right things too, plausibly playing the role of humble contributor as opposed to deadline savior.

“It’s a really fun lineup to be a part of,” he said, per the Dallas Morning NewsAdam Grosbard. “They want to win, they play hard every day, they bring it every day.”

The Rangers have to fend off the Seattle Mariners and in-state rival Houston Astros for the division. The big-bashing Baltimore Orioles, Toronto Blue Jays and Boston Red Sox lurk in the East. And the Cleveland Indians, who Lucroy spurned before his trade to Texas, could be waiting come late October.

Combine Lucroy‘s steadying presence behind the plate with his eye-opening pop, though, and you have the blueprint for a difference-maker.

Now in his seventh MLB season, Lucroy has tasted the playoffs just once, in 2011, when he and the Brewers advanced to the National League Championship Series.

“I want to go to a World Series,” he said in January, per Tom Haudricourt of the Journal Sentinel. “That’s what all players want.”

If he keeps producing like he has been, that wish could be granted.

 

All statistics current as of Aug. 17 and courtesy of MLB.com and Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Coco Crisp: Latest News, Rumors and Speculation Surrounding Athletics OF

After seven seasons, it appears outfielder Coco Crisp and the Oakland Athletics are headed for a contentious divorce. 

Continue for updates.


Crisp Accuses A’s of Benching Him for Financial Reasons

Tuesday, Aug. 16

Crisp said Monday the A’s have been avoiding playing him so his 2017 option does not kick in, per Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle

I’m extremely hurt, the way things are being handled. I’m not calling anyone names, but this is really frustrating and disappointing. This has been my favorite organization going back to when I was a kid, because of Rickey Henderson, and I’ve enjoyed playing here so much, and I’ve put it all out there. … Up until recently, it’s been tremendously enjoyable.

Crisp, 36, is due $13 million in 2017 should he appear in 130 games. He has appeared in 93 of 119 games so far, meaning he can only miss five more games for that option to vest.

While the veteran has not spent any time on the disabled list, the A’s have become increasingly picky about when they play him. Manager Bob Melvin has sat Crisp 13 times since the beginning of July after leaving him out as many times in the first three months of the season—four of which were due to a lingering heel injury.

Crisp has been relegated to the bench against left-handed pitchers, and he has become suspicious of the team’s motives when he hasn’t been used as a pinch hitter.

“This is shady. Everyone else is getting used off the bench,” Crisp said. “[Melvin] can’t even look me in the eye right now.”

Crisp is hitting .239/.307/.410 with 10 home runs and 46 runs batted in. He has spent the last seven seasons in Oakland, making him the longest-tenured player on the roster. The A’s could look to move him before the Aug. 31 waiver trade deadline, but Crisp has 10-and-5 rights.

“But this team has never been motivated to give up a dollar,” Crisp’s agent, Steve Comte, said. “I know Billy Beane has always been fond of Coco, but what they’re doing now is really a joke. I’ve advised Coco to take the high road, but the way things are going is a disservice to him.”

The path to playing time will become even more difficult in September when rosters expand to 40 players. It seems almost preordained that Crisp will leave the place he’s played for nearly half of his career with a bad taste in his mouth.

With the A’s sitting at 52-67 and well out of contention, though, it’s hard to blame them for wanting to give younger guys time if Crisp isn’t in their plans.

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Shin-Soo Choo Injury: Updates on Rangers OF’s Forearm and Return

Texas Rangers outfielder Shin-Soo Choo suffered a fractured left forearm during Monday’s game against the Oakland Athletics, per TR Sullivan of MLB.com.

Continue for updates.


Latest on Choo’s Recovery Timeline

Tuesday, Aug. 16

Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported that Choo will be out indefinitely after having a plate inserted in his left arm on Wednesday.


Choo Provides Quality Power Bat When Healthy

This is yet another physical setback for Choo this year. He went to the disabled list with a back injury in July after already spending time on the DL with a strained hamstring and calf ailment in April.

The 34-year-old veteran has struggled some at the plate as a result. He was slashing .250/.369/.421 with seven home runs and 17 RBI this year entering Monday’s game.

He does have a solid track record to fall back on, despite his health concerns this year. He slashed .276/.375/.463 in 2015 for Texas and drilled 22 home runs. It was his fourth season of his career with at least 20 long balls, and he also counts three different campaigns with a batting average of .300 or better.

When healthy, Choo brings pop to the Rangers order, but they will have to look elsewhere until (or if) he returns as they attempt to maintain their positioning in the playoff race in the American League West.

Nomar Mazara is one candidate in his first full season in the majors. He has brought power of his own to the Texas order when given playing time and has 13 home runs in 2016. Mazara will likely have the opportunity to add to those totals with even more playing time given this injury to Choo.

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In Smaller Spotlight, Carlos Correa Has Continued Superstar Rise

Last year, Carlos Correa somehow lived up to the hype after beginning his major league career as baseball’s best prospect. After that, it was only fair that there was a huge spotlight on him coming into 2016.

If anyone out there has lost sight of Correa since then, they should know two things: One, it’s not your fault. Two, he’s still really, really good.

Nobody knows this better than the Minnesota Twins. Correa is a big reason why they just dropped three of four to the Houston Astros at Target Field. The 21-year-old cranked a two-run homer in a four-RBI day in a 7-5 win Tuesday, and he wreaked more havoc in both ends of a Thursday doubleheader.

In the day game, Correa helped the Astros to a 15-7 win with a long three-run dinger:

In the night game, Correa helped the Astros to a 10-2 win with an even longer solo dinger:

Like that, Correa’s sophomore season now looks suspiciously like his rookie season. In 2015, Correa hit .279 with an .857 OPS and 22 home runs in 99 games. In 111 games this year, he’s hitting .273 with an .850 OPS and 18 home runs.

It’s not a perfect match, but it’s close. Weighted runs created plus, which measures offensive performance on a scale of league average, calculates Correa has gone from being 33 percent better than the average hitter to 30 percent better than the average hitter. Offensively, the difference between his Rookie of the Year campaign and his quieter sophomore campaign is a split hair.

This is allowing the former No. 1 pick to keep a special place among his fellow shortstops. He was the best-hitting shortstop in the league last year. This year, he’s being outpaced by only Corey Seager and Aledmys Diaz. (Manny Machado has played more games at third base than short.)

And yet Correa has seemed invisible for so much of 2016. My powers of deduction lead me to believe that has something to do with the shortstop getting lost next to Jose Altuve. The 5’6″, 165-pound second baseman is a small man who’s casting a large, possibly MVP-sized shadow. It also hasn’t helped that the Astros haven’t been good and aren’t getting better. Before winning three in a row, they had lost 11 of 14.

Correa also shoulders some of the blame. There was talk in some parts (including these parts) at the outset of the year that he would contend for the American League MVP award. He fell flat in the face of those expectations. Through the end of May, he was hitting .253 and OPSing .762.

But since then? How about .291 with a .928 OPS and 10 of his 18 home runs? Pretty good, right?

Yeah, pretty good. And the difference isn’t just in the surface numbers.

Simply by comparing Correa’s 2015 to his 2016 season, it’s clear he’s used more of a measured approach this year. His chase rate on pitches outside the zone has dropped. And with it, his walk percentage has risen from 9.3 percent to 12.1 percent.

There’s a fine line between being patient and being passive, though. Correa was on the wrong side of it early on. He struck out in 24.2 percent of his plate appearances in April and May, up from 18.1 percent in his rookie season.

Jake Kaplan of the Houston Chronicle saw what the problem was, noting in late May that Correa was “giving away pitches for strike one and putting himself in holes early.” He also wasn’t adjusting to a heavy diet of inside heat.

“I think he’s a very selective hitter and sometimes might be too selective in trying to wait out the perfect pitch,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch said, per Kaplan. “I think as he matures and grows, he’ll learn when to hunt early-count fastballs or early-count strikes and maybe not wait all deep into the count until the pitcher’s in control.”

Cue the light bulb over Correa’s head turning on.

Since June, his strikeout rate has fallen to 17.3 percent. He hasn’t been swinging at more pitches, as his overall swing rate has remained stuck at exactly 43.7 percent. This has more to do with his swinging at the right pitches.

As Correa was breaking out in 2015, Brooks Baseball shows the righty swinger was at his most dangerous against inside pitches. Lo and behold, Brooks Baseball also shows his swing pattern has shifted from this in April and May:

To this since June:

Correa was doing a good job of keeping his swings confined to the strike zone in April and May but was aggressive in going after pitches in the outer third of the zone. Since June, he’s cleaned that up and played to his strength on the inner half of the plate.

This, combined with Correa’s good strike-zone judgment, helps explain the decline in whiffs. It also helps explain his increase in power. Although he had straightaway center in his sights Thursday, he’s mostly been pull-happy with a 45.4 pull percentage since June. That’s a good way to find power.

There are still things Correa can improve on. To hit for even more power, it wouldn’t hurt for him to get the ball airborne more often. And he remains a mystery on the other side of the ball. Correa can make amazing plays, but the advanced metrics continue to rate him as a below-average fielder.

The player Correa is, however, should not be taken lightly.

We now have 210 games of Correa being one of the best offensive shortstops in baseball. And now that he’s shown he has the ability to make important adjustments in addition to his insane natural talent, this is something everyone ought to get used to.

So that spotlight? It should probably be a little bigger.

        

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Jose Altuve’s Career Year Makes 2016 AL MVP Award His to Lose

When you write about the Houston Astros‘ Jose Altuve, it’s customary to bone up on synonyms for “short:” diminutive, small-statured, pint-sized.

You know what, though? Forget that.

Yes, Altuve is listed at 5’6″—and that might be in his cleats. But there has been nothing little about his production this season.

In fact, with 49 games left on the schedule, the American League MVP Award is Altuve‘s to lose.

After going 4-for-4 in a 7-5 win over the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday, he leads MLB in hits (159) and batting average (.361). He’s among the game’s top 10 defensive second basemen. He’s showing increased plate discipline and getting on base more often, having already drawn a career-high 48 walks. And the 26-year-old has added a surprising infusion of power, posting career highs in home runs (19) and slugging percentage (.570).

Add his 26 stolen bases, and Altuve has a decent shot at becoming baseball’s first 30-30 player since 2012. 

“There simply is no weakness in Altuve‘s game,” opined MLB.com’s Richard Justice, “and in a lineup that has some holes, he has at times seemed to be the only guy keeping the Astros in shouting distance of a second straight postseason berth.”

The Astros’ offense has not lit the league on fire in 2016; it ranks near the bottom third in runs scored and OPS. The starting pitching, too, has wobbled at times and sports a 4.13 ERA.

Yet thanks in large part to Altuve‘s production, the ‘Stros sit above .500 at 58-55, three games off the wild-card pace.

If Houston returns to the postseason, it’d boost Altuve‘s MVP chances since voters frequently take that into consideration when handing out individual honors.

But even if the Astros stay home come late October, there’s no denying Altuve‘s across-the-stat-sheet brilliance. As Tyler Kepner of the New York Times noted, “The last player to finish the season as the A.L. leader in average, hits, on-base percentage, steals and total bases was Ty Cobb in 1917.”

Watch your back, TyAltuve currently ranks first or second in each of those categories.

If you go by FanGraphs wins above replacement, Altuve‘s mark of 5.9 trails only Los Angeles Angels center fielder Mike Trout (6.7) and Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Josh Donaldson (6.2). Donaldson won the AL MVP last year and Trout was the runner-up.

But if Altuve could be dinged for the Astros possibly missing the playoffs, surely Trout will be hurt by the Angels’ abysmal season.

Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz is also in the mix, as he leads MLB with a 1.013 OPS in his farewell season. Sentimentality aside, though, Ortiz’s lack of a defensive position pushes him to the edge of the conversation.

Donaldson is perhaps Altuve‘s stiffest competition, and if the Jays make the playoffs, he could become the favorite. Since 1995, however, there have been just three back-to-back (or better) MVP winners in either league: the San Francisco Giants‘ Barry Bonds (2001-04), the St. Louis Cardinals‘ Albert Pujols (2008-09) and the Detroit Tigers‘ Miguel Cabrera (2012-13).

That’s not to say it won’t happen again. But it suggests voters are more apt to select a fresh winner. If we stack up the stats, it’s impossible to ignore Altuve‘s case:

The power numbers jump out compared to Altuve‘s career OPS (.790) and previous single-season home run high (15), but they haven’t come at the expense of his other strengths, as Sports Illustrated‘s Michael Beller noted on July 19:

Altuve has not hit one homer when behind in the count this season, but that’s not a bad thing given his skill set…Altuve is, first and foremost, a hitter who makes a ton of contact and gets on base with the best of them. He’s naturally going to default to that approach when he’s behind in the count. The change we’ve seen from him this year is an increased ability to exploit plus counts to the utmost while not giving up any of his contact skills.

“He won the batting title two years ago, and he came in even hungrier the next year,” Astros infielder and fellow Venezuelan Marwin Gonzalez said of his teammate and countryman, per Kepner. “That’s what people don’t know about him. Whatever he ends the season with this year, he’s going to want more next year and he’s going to work even harder. It’s never enough for him.”

If he becomes the first Astro to claim an MVP trophy since Jeff Bagwell in 1994, that’ll be tough to top.

Altuve isn’t the Astros’ only star. His keystone combo partner, shortstop and reigning AL Rookie of the Year Carlos Correa, is one of the game’s most exciting young talents.

Right now, though, Altuve isn’t merely the best player in Houston; he’s looking like the best all-around player in baseball.

And that’s no small feat.

 

All statistics current as of Aug. 9 and courtesy of MLB.com, Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs.

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Prince Fielder Announces He Won’t Be Medically Cleared to Return to MLB

Texas Rangers slugger Prince Fielder‘s career is over after 12 years in Major League Baseball.

On Wednesday, Fielder officially announced he would no longer be able to play, per TR Sullivan of MLB.com. “I can’t play Major League Baseball anymore,” Fielder said during a press conference. “It sucks to have it taken away early,” he added. 

“It took too much brain to walk in a straight line, that was real…I was thinking, how am I going to hit a fastball,” Fielder said

Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports first reported Tuesday that Fielder would announce his decision to step away from the big leagues. 

Rosenthal added Fielder is not retiring, but doctors will not clear him to play. Jon Heyman of Today’s Knuckleball noted Fielder will still receive the $100-plus million still owed on his contract because it’s a medical issue.

Fielder’s deal pays him $24 million per season through 2020, noted Rosenthal.

Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram added that Rangers general manager Jon Daniels said the team has insurance on the contract. Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News noted the Rangers will be committed to Fielder for $9 million per year through 2020.

Fielder will remain on the Rangers roster for the rest of his contract, according to Wilson, who added he’ll be on the 40-man roster in the offseason and the 60-day DL during the regular season. 

After the Rangers defeated the Colorado Rockies 7-5, the club held a postgame meeting to discuss Fielder, according to Wilson, who added the players still aren’t exactly sure what will happen on Wednesday. 

Fielder’s 2016 season ended in July when he underwent neck surgery to repair a C4/C5 disc herniation, per Rangers executive vice president of communications John Blake

Before Fielder was forced to go undergo surgery, he looked like a shell of his former self. The 32-year-old was hitting .212/.292/.334 with eight home runs in 89 games.

This campaign marks the second time in three years that Fielder’s season has ended prematurely due to injuries. He required a cervical fusion of the C5/C6 discs in his neck in May 2014. He used to be one of MLB’s great iron men, playing all 162 games four times in five seasons from 2009 to 2013, and he only missed one game in 2010. 

In a bit of sad irony, Baseball-Reference.com noted that Fielder’s 319 career home runs are the same as his father, Cecil Fielder, when his career ended. Prince Fielder also had a terrific .283/.382/.506 slash line in 1,611 career games. 

Fielder was a huge part of the Milwaukee Brewers‘ renaissance, in which they made the playoffs twice in 2008 and 2011, reaching the National League Championship Series in 2011. He led the National League with 50 home runs in 2007, played in six All-Star Games and had four top-10 MVP finishes. 

Even though Fielder was never able to consistently recapture some of his early-career heights after leaving the Brewers, he did play in a World Series in 2012 and an American League Championship Series in 2013 with the Detroit Tigers before he was traded to the Rangers for Ian Kinsler prior to 2014. 

Fielder looked like a throwback slugger because of his big body, but he was an outstanding hitter for average and had a keen eye at the plate to go along with his power. The abrupt end of his career does not define his overall legacy of greatness that started with his debut as a 21-year-old kid in 2005. 

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Tim Lincecum Designated for Assignment by Angels: Latest Details and Reaction

The Los Angeles Angels designated starting pitcher Tim Lincecum for assignment Saturday, Pedro Moura of the Los Angeles Times reported.

Lincecum started nine games for the Angels, recording a 2-6 record with a career-worst 9.16 ERA. 

Angels manager Mike Scioscia spoke with the media about the decision, per Moura: “It’s very clear now that he hasn’t progressed from his first couple starts. He’s kind of regressed a little bit.”

Scioscia said he hoped Lincecum would accept an assignment to Triple-A, but Moura noted the pitcher “has the right to turn the assignment down and become a free agent, assuming he clears waivers.”

The 32-year-old started his Angels career in impressive fashion June 18, going six innings against the Oakland Athletics while allowing just one run on four hits.

In his following eight starts, he allowed three or more earned runs in each appearance, including a 1.1-inning effort against the Houston Astros on July 24 in which he allowed eight earned runs on seven hits. 

His latest start Friday night against the Seattle Mariners wasn’t much better, as the M’s tagged him for six runs and nine hits in 3.1 innings.

The writing was on the wall when Scioscia was asked if Lincecum would make another start after Friday’s game.

So, if you ask me right now, I could say yes,” the manager said, per Moura. “But, obviously, we have to sit down, review his video, see where the positives were, and see where we are.”

Lincecum began the season as a free agent while he recovered from the hip surgery he underwent in September.

It was an unceremonious ending to his time with the San Francisco Giants, a team he won a pair of Cy Young Awards with. He saw his play dramatically decrease over the past few seasons, as he compiled a 39-42 record from 2012 to 2015.

He threw 41 pitches in a May showcase for numerous MLB scouts in Arizona as he searched for a new home in the majors.

Given Lincecum’s struggles, he’ll likely go unclaimed on waivers. If that’s the case, he will have to hope another team is willing to give him a chance to prove he can rediscover the form that made him one of the best pitchers in the game five years ago.

           

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Sonny Gray Injury: Updates on Athletics Pitcher’s Arm and Return

Oakland Athletics pitcher Sonny Gray suffered a forearm injury during his start against the Chicago Cubs on Saturday and was placed on the 15-day disabled list. It is uncertain when he will return to action.

Continue for updates.


Gray Placed on 15-Day DL

Sunday, Aug. 7

The Athletics announced the roster move, noting Chris Smith was called up from Nashville to take Gray’s place.


Gray’s Injury the Latest in a Long Season for Star Pitcher

This is a difficult blow for Gray, especially since his durability was a defining characteristic in the past two seasons. He pitched 200-plus innings in both 2014 and 2015, but this year has been a different story, as the 26-year-old spent time on the disabled list earlier in the season with a trapezius strain.

Gray came into the 2016 campaign as Oakland’s clear-cut ace after his All-Star campaign in 2015, when he finished third in Cy Young voting with a 2.73 ERA, a 1.08 WHIP and 169 strikeouts in 208 innings on his way to 14 wins. While he has never posted an ERA higher than 3.08 in a full season, he has struggled mightily in 2016.

Thus far, Gray has posted a 5-11 record with a 5.74 ERA while allowing a career-high 18 home runs.

Oakland does have options to turn to in the starting rotation, including Kendall Graveman and Sean Manaea. But with the playoffs already out of reach for the Athletics, there’s no rush to bring their ace back as they finish off a disappointing season. 

           

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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