Tag: Jason Giambi

The Top 25 Oakland Athletics of All Time

The Oakland Athletics have a history of talented and interesting players.

The club was born in Philadelphia in 1901, left for Kansas City in 1955, and finally settled in Oakland in 1968. They are the proud owners of nine world series titles, trailing only the Saint Louis Cardinals (10) and the New York Yankees (27).

37 Athletics are enshrined in the baseball hall of fame and there are certainly more to come.

My criteria for this list includes: statistics, defense, aura, and longevity with the team.

There’s no scientific formula here, but be assured, I conducted thorough research.

I’ll only take into account players statistics when they were on the A’s, dismissing contributions they made with other teams. The numbers listed will reflect this.

I will also include non-players (managers, announcers, etc.) that had a significant impact on the organization.

Without further ado, here are the Top 25 Oakland Athletics.

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Colorado Rockies Cook Up a Victory

Can the 2010 season for the Colorado Rockies get any more strange?

With a 4-3 victory over the San Diego Padres on Friday night, the Rockies moved closer in the standings to the Padres in the West than they are to the Phillies in the Wild Card. All of this coming a work week after being within three-and-a-half games of the Phillies.

Such is life for the Colorado Rockies in 2010.

Aaron Cook, pitching for the first time since a mystery turf toe injury happened to reappear when the team wanted Jhoulys Chacin back in the rotation, looked like the Aaron Cook that pitched himself into the All-Star game in 2008. For the first time all season long, Cook pitched with a sinker that was going exactly where he wanted it to go. He worked ahead in the count and pitched to the spots he was looking to hit.

In all, Cook pitched 6.1 strong innings. He gave up two runs on four hits. He struck out three and walked four, one of which was essentially intentional when he walked Adrian Gonzalez on five pitches when he had a base open and two outs.

The victory saw two phenomenal defensive plays in the sixth inning. Melvin Mora made a barehanded catch and throw on a Miguel Tejada chopper that went 50 feet off of home plate. Later, Jason Giambi made a great diving stop and dove back to first base to record the second out of the inning with the bases loaded. In hindsight, Giambi’s play may have won the game for the Rockies.

With five games left against the Padres, and three against the Giants at Coors Field, the Rockies now shift their focus back to what their original goal was going into the 2010 campaign, winning the National League West.

At six-and-a-half games back, they are most definitely a longshot.

However, with the Padres in a freefall, partially because they were due for a setback and partially because their young pitching may have hit a wall, and with the Giants still within reach, the Rockies potentially could make a run.

What will be required, however, if the Rockies do want to win the West, is a road resurgence.

The Rockies won with four runs on Friday. That was the most runs the Rockies have scored on the road since August 11, when Melvin Mora hit a grand slam to lift the Rockies over the Mets 6-4. A four-run offensive output being haled as a resurgence underscores the issues that Colorado has had away from Coors Field.

If the Rockies want to win, they must beat the teams in front of them when they play head to head. Sweeps in baseball are never to be expected, especially on the road, but this club must find a way to sweep the Padres and get within four-and-a-half games of the division lead if they have any chance of crawling back into the race.

The Rockies are going to need 90 wins to get into the playoffs. That means that they must win 20 more games in 28 more chances. That will not be easy, but if there is a team who cannot be written off in September it is the Colorado Rockies.

One thing is certain: The Rockies will know whether they are in the race or not by the end of the day on Sunday.


For more on the Rockies visit RockiesReview.com
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Roger Clemens Indicted: The 10 Saddest Stories of the MLB Steroid Era

The Steroid Era has officially left its mark in professional sports while tarnishing the reputation of America’s pastime.

With the recent indictment of legendary hurler Roger Clemens, the next generation will be very confused about which players to look up to.

Players like Roger Clemens have forced parents to lie to their Little Leaguers and young baseball stars by telling them their favorite players are stand-up citizens.

Steroids and PEDs (Performance-Enhancing Drugs) leave fans with a bitter taste in their mouths. Are there any true heroes left? What role models will our children have in the realm of professional sports?

Here are 10 of 10 of the saddest stories of the steroid era in professional baseball, and the destructive wake they have left behind. 

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MLB Hall Of Fame: Steroids Aside, Is Jason Giambi a Hall Of Famer?

There is no fun in playing the Steroids Card in Hall of Fame debates.  So, let’s dispense with that disqualifier when discussing the following question:

Is Jason Giambi a Hall of Famer?

This is probably a question we’re already equipped to answer without reference to his admitted steroids abuse.

 

400 Home Run Club

There was a time when 400 home runs virtually assured a player a spot in the Hall of Fame.  

Just ask Billy Williams, a good player who crossed the 400 homer line and made the Hall of Fame ahead of guys like Babe Herman, Sherry Magee, and Norm Cash.

Or ask Dale Murphy, whose exclusion from the Hall is often justified by reference to his 398 career home runs.

However, starting in the early 1990’s, a peculiar thing began to happen: 400 home runs was deemed no longer good enough to get a player into the Hall automatically.

It started with Dave Kingman (442), who frankly did not belong in the Hall.  Then Darrell Evans (414) fell by the wayside.  Andre Dawson (438), the sole player-inducted into the 2010 Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, needed nine tries to make the Hall.

The 400 Home Run Club Exclusion was only compounded by the Steroid/Inflation/Expansion/Juiced Ball Era.

After 1993, we added the names Jose Canseco (462), Juan Gonzalez (434), and Fred McGriff (493) to the list of players for whom 400 home runs was insufficient to merit election to the Hall, and McGriff had as many home runs as Lou Freakin’ Gehrig.

Throw in the fact that Carlos Delgado (473) is probably well on his way to a Hall snub, and being a member of the 400 Home Run Club probably does very little for Giambi’s case.

 

Another Funny Club

As a post-script to the 400 Home Run Club issue, check this out:

Players With More Than 400 Home Runs But Less Than 2,000 Hits

Mark McGwire: 583/1626

Dave Kingman: 442/1575

Andruw Jones: 404/1825

Juan Gonzalez: 434/1936

Jason Giambi: 412/1907

Jose Canseco: 462/1877

Which of those players seems to be anywhere near sniffing the Hall of Fame right now?

 

WAR (Hunh!) What is it Good For?

I think–no, wait, sorry–I know that analyzing a player’s Hall of Fame credentials by discussing his WAR (which stands for Wins Above Replacement for those not in tune with the newest statistical fad) is silly.

Silly, not because I believe WAR to be a silly statistic or an unworthy statistic or an invalid statistic.  I think WAR is very useful.

However, I don’t see a day in the near or even distant future when Hall of Fame elections are going to turn on a player’s WAR.  So I think having a discussion about a player’s WAR is, as I said, silly.

Nevertheless . . . 

According to BaseballReference.com, Jason Giambi’s career WAR ranks him just ahead of Bob Elliott, Cesar Cedeno, Jose Cruz, Harry Hooper, Minnie Minoso, and Ron Cey, and just behind Ichiro Suzuki, Jimmy Collins, Enos Slaughter, Bill Dickey, Bob Johnson, Jack Clark and Stan Hack.  At this moment, GIambi is in a dead tie with Norm Cash (there’s that name again).

Obviously, Hooper, Dickey, Collins, and Slaughter are in the Hall, and Ichiro will be someday.  But most of those players Giambi compares to are not in the Hall of Fame.

If WAR is your standard, Giambi is out.

 

Other Statistics

The strength of Jason Giambi’s resume truly lies in his ability to get on base.  Outside of two great years–2000 and 2001–Giambi was never a great “hitter” as we usually understand that word in baseball.  A lifetime .282 hitter, even during his prime (which we’ll say was 1998 to 2006) his batting average was only .293.

For a home run hitter, Giambi wasn’t a particularly great “slugger” either.  Early in his career, he was a doubles hitter with power (40 doubles and 20 home runs in 1997 and 1998).  During his prime, that doubles power coincided with his home run power for only a couple of seasons; he had over 70 extra-base hits only twice in his career.

Part of Giambi’s problem, of course, was his health.  He managed to play over 150 games only six times in 16 years, and at this late stage in his career he is just now approaching 8500 plate appearances.

If Giambi had stayed healthy, we’d probably be talking 500 home runs instead of 400, and about 2500 hits instead of 1900.

 

Contemporaries

Without belaboring this point, remember that Giambi must be considered in context.  Assuming that this is Giambi’s last season (not an unfair assumption), Giambi was a rough contemporary (1995-2010) of the following first basemen/designated hitters, most of whom had better career numbers than he did:

Mark McGwire, Frank Thomas, Edgar Martinez, Jeff Bagwell, Jim Thome, Carlos Delgado, Rafael Palmeiro, Fred McGriff, John Olerud, Albert Pujols, and Mark Teixeira.

Now, we can deign to induct 12 first basemen/designated hitters from the same era into the Hall of Fame if we would like, but it has never been done before, and it wouldn’t seem like a very selective process if we did.

 

Intangibles

What are we going to remember Jason Giambi for?  Well, a few things, and not all good:

1) We’ll remember Giambi for his 2000 AL MVP.

He was amazing that season: 43 home runs, 137 RBI, a .333 batting average.  He led the AL in walks, on-base percentage, and a new statistic we were just learning about, OPS+.  And he did it all for an Oakland A’s team that defied the odds and beat a strong Seattle Mariners team by half a game to win the AL West.

2) We’ll remember Giambi for how well the A’s played after he left.

Giambi left the Oakland Athletics as the first of several high-profile stars to leave Oakland in the early part of the last decade.  With Giambi in 2001, the A’s had gone 102-60 but finished 14 games behind the 116-46 Seattle Mariners.  The following year, with Giambi gone, the A’s managed to add a game to their win column, finishing 103-59 and winning the AL West.

You may remember that Michael Lewis wrote a book about the A’s that season.

3) We’ll remember Giambi for how poorly the Yankees played once he arrived in New York.

The year before Giambi joined the Yankees, they went 95-65 and lost to the Arizona Diamondbacks in one of the greatest World Series of all time.  In 2002, the Yankees improved to 103-58, but lost in the first round of the playoffs.  After a trip back to the World Series in 2003–which they lost to the Florida Marlins–the Yankees failed to make it back to the Series again during Giambi’s time with the team.

In fact, in his last four seasons with the team, they failed to make the ALCS three years in a row and then failed to even make the playoffs.

Unfortunately for Jason Giambi, his intangibles add little to his otherwise already borderline Hall of Fame credentials.

 

At the End of the Day . . . 

At the end of the day, Jason Giambi’s candidacy for the Baseball Hall of Fame–again, steroids aside–has some pretty big issues.  

I think Giambi has a pretty big problem on his hands:

Giambi looks a little too much like Jack Clark and Norm Cash, and not nearly enough like Harmon Killebrew and Willie McCovey.

 

Asher B. Chancey lives in Philadelphia and is a co-founder of BaseballEvolution.com.

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MLB: Top 20 Players Who Look Odd in Their Current Jerseys

Most of the greatest players of all time spent the final year or few years on teams for whom they did not spend their entire careers, and it just didn’t seem right.

Whether it was Willie Mays with the Mets, Hank Aaron with the Brewers, Babe Ruth with the Braves, or Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker and Eddie Collins with the Athletics, seeing iconic players in some strange team’s uniform is always unsettling, like when your grandfather needs help going to the bathroom.

Guess what? Major League Baseball currently sports a gaggle of such players. Let’s have a look.

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Colorado Rockies 2010 Player Power Rankings

The Rockies have been disappointing this season. There. I said it.

Colorado has been average, mediocre, maybe even boring.

Some guys have been on fire from the start while others can’t seem to figure it out, ruining the party for everybody.

Read on to find out who’s been carrying his weight and who’s looked awful so far in 2010.

 

30. Jason Hammel (SP) – That 7.52 ERA isn’t going to cut it. Even for a fifth starter, Hammel has been nothing short of abysmal this season.

29. Clint Barmes (2B) – When your manager has to defend you in the media to justify keeping you in the every-day lineup, things aren’t going well. Barmes has been a black hole at the plate this season.

28. Esmil Rogers (SP)

27. Rafael Betancourt (RP) – After pitching lights-out at the end of last season, Betancourt has looked terrible in 2010. Add his signing to the long list of reasons why putting money into relief pitching is a bad idea.

26. Greg Smith (SP)

25. Dexter Fowler (CF) – Honestly, Fowler hasn’t done anything well this season. Do I need to be the first one to suggest that some time in Colorado Springs might do him some good?

24. Chris Iannetta (C) – I’m with everyone else on Iannetta. He looked bad in limited time this season, but he really didn’t get a long enough look to justify sending him to Triple-A. Either bring him back up or send him elsewhere for a couple of prospects. He’s too good a player to be sitting in Colorado Springs.

23. Melvin Mora (U)

22. Franklin Morales (CP) – I still have high hopes for Morales, but every time he seems to take a step forward, he ends up back where he was. Maybe this is as good as it gets for him. Maybe he’s going to be a mediocre middle reliever forever. Bummer.

21. Paul Phillips (C)

20. Eric Young Jr. (U) – Always an adventure in the outfield, EY Jr. looks like he needs some seasoning in the minors before he can become a productive major leaguer. Knowing where he’s come from, there’s no doubt he’ll keep fighting.

19. Ryan Spilborghs (OF)

18. Aaron Cook (SP)

17. Jason Giambi (1B) – Giambi has walked in a fourth of his plate appearances this year. It’s not the production fans expected, but it’s something.

16. Randy Flores (RP)

15. Matt Daley (RP)

14. Seth Smith (OF)

13. Jeff Francis (SP) – Two strong starts coming back from injury and fans are already talking about the good old days. I want so badly to believe he’ll be back to his old ways, I’m just not sure it’s going to happen.

12. Jorge De La Rosa (SP) – They hype for De La Rosa was as big as it was for anyone coming into the season, but the injury has derailed his hopes of padding the resume before hitting the open market in the offseason.

11. Matt Belisle

10. Todd Helton (1B) – At times this season, Helton has been hard to watch. At some point, we’re all going to have to admit that he’s nearing the end of the line. At least his on base percentage remains stellar.

9. Jhoulys Chacin (SP) – It’s been a really nice start for Chacin in the majors, probably better than expected. He has the talent to be a No. 2 starter in the majors and this may be the year he starts to show it.

8. Carlos Gonzalez (OF) – CarGo has been a productive middle of the order bat, but his .317 OBP ranks ahead of only Clint Barmes among regular starters. To become a real offensive force, he has to get on base more often.

7. Manuel Corpas (CP) – Corpas has filled in nicely as the team’s closer filling in for Franklin Morales, but fans should remember his struggles in 2008 and 2009. When Huston Street returns, this team will be much better.

6. Ian Stewart (3B) – Stewart is quietly having a very solid season for the Rockies. The strikeouts are a concern, but he seems to be filling out as a player. It’s nice to see.

5. Joe Beimel (RP) – Signed at the tail end of spring training, Beimel has been unbelievable this season. You can’t ask much more from a guy who holds a WHIP and an ERA under 1.00.

4. Brad Hawpe (OF) – Having Hawpe in the lineup changes the entire dynamic of the team. Coming into the season, I saw him as potential trade bait, but at this point I think he may be the key to making the playoffs for a second straight year.

3. Miguel Olivo (C) – As impressive as Olivo has been filling in for Iannetta, there is little evidence that he can keep it up for the entire year. Don’t be surprised if Olivo takes another face plant before the season is out. I don’t trust him yet.

2. Troy Tulowitzki (SS) – I hesitate putting Tulo this high because he really needs to hit for more power and his usually stellar defense has been sloppy at times this season. As usual, the team performs as Tulo does, and the team has been wallowing in mediocrity this year. He needs to produce more runs if the Rockies are headed for the playoffs.

1. Ubaldo Jimenez (SP) – Surprised to see him at the top of the list? Probably not… There’s really nothing you can say except Jimenez has done nothing but exceed fans’ lofty expectations coming into the season. He is one of the single most valuable commodities in baseball, and he looks to become Colorado’s most dominant starting pitcher ever.

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