ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS
Named Mark Connor pitching coach, and signed LHP Kirt Ojala to a minor league
contract. [11/26]
Although clearly less guilty than the D-Rays in this regard, chalk this up as
an example of Buck Showalter wanting people he’s familiar with. Connor was his
pitching coach with the Yankees, and the Boss’ decision to blame Connor for
some inadequacy (real or imagined) was another reason for Buck to give up on
wearing pinstripes. Ojala is a dandy signing, and could be a good example of
the veteran minor league pitcher who had to wait for expansion to get an
opportunity, except of course he can pitch. That won’t lead to a broader
acceptance by the media that there are lots of minor league veteran pitchers
who can play ball, mind you.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
Announced that Eddie Murray has joined the team as a coach. [11/24]
Re-signed C Lenny Webster to a one-year (plus one-year option) contract.
[11/25]
Small potatoes, although I suppose everyone can breathe a sigh of relief that
Murray didn’t try to hang on for one more year with somebody, somewhere.
Re-signing Webster isn’t without an element of controversy, since he was
scapegoated in the playoffs for his glovework, and backing up Chris Hoiles, his
job is for the most part as a defensive sub. But he’s also Erickson’s personal
catcher, so the O’s may not have had much choice in the matter.
BOSTON RED SOX
Acquired the contract of LF Jimmy Hurst from the Tigers for cash. [11/24]
With Jose Malave sold off to Japan, Hurst will step right into the ol’ cleanup
spot for the PawSox. Unless Duquette swears off biweekly roster moves, he’ll
get eight games and 14 PAs at some point next year. Don’t mistake him for a
prospect.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
Requested waivers on RHP Jeff Darwin for the purpose of granting him his
unconditional release. [11/26]
Along with last weeks’ removals of Mouton and Fonville, the Sox are clearing
away all of the young veterans of unproven quality on the roster. Darwin is a
good bet to sign wherever his older brother winds up, for the entertainment
value. Barring that, he’s still capable of being a useful fourth or fifth
righty in a major league pen.
CINCINNATI REDS
Signed RHPs Toby Borland, Daron Kirkreit, and Ramon Fermin, and LHP Riccardo
Jordan to minor league contracts. [11/27]
Jim Bowden’s shopping spree for pitching on the cheap yields some interesting
catches. Borland is only a year removed from an outstanding ’96 as a middle
reliever with the Phillies; he’s that rarest of rare treats, the wild
sidearmer, but with steady work, he can be useful. Jordan throws reasonably
hard for a lefty, and the Reds are desperate for LH relief, so he has the
inside track on a bullpen job in ’98. Kirkreit is your basic blown rotator cuff
survivor: he’s still struggling with what’s left of his talent. Fermin is your
basic stiff out of the A’s chain from the years when they were touting Tanyon
Sturtze and Joe Slusarski, and will entertain/terrify Indianapolis season
ticket holders.
CLEVELAND INDIANS
Claimed UT Chad Fonville off of waivers from the White Sox. [11/25]
The Rich family is probably less than enthusiastic about this, not that Bisons
fans are any happier about it.
HOUSTON ASTROS
Signed OF/PH Dave Clark to a one-year contract. [11/24]
Re-signed INF Billy Spiers to a two-year contract. [11/25]
Signed RHP Doug Henry to a two-year contract. [11/26]
These are the pickups of a team convinced it just needs a wee bit o’ help to
lock up its playoff spot. Clark is the best 4th OF and pinch-hitter in the
business, and a good LH bat to mix in with Alou and Bell for spot starts in the
OF corners. Re-signing Spiers is a risk, but with one more year of Sean Berry
to endure, and none of the SS prospects from Russ Johnson down to Jhonny Perez
looking like they’ll hit well enough to work their way up at third, they’re
hoping ’97 wasn’t the stuff of pixie dust, which is your basic bad bet. Henry’s
agent deserves alot of credit: he’s kept his big fly-prone man in pitcher’s
parks wherever possible, and if he’s survived the abusive workload Dusty Baker
heaped on him last year (6.59 ERA after the A-S break after tossing 42 innings
in 44 appearances in the first 87 games), should be the adequate setup man for
Billy Wagner that the Astros felt they needed.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
Signed C Mike Macfarlane to a one-year contract. [11/25]
Herk Robinson hedges his “commitment” to Mike Sweeney, which at this point is
getting pretty silly. If the Royals are ever going to win more than 80 games in
the next five or six years, it’ll be with Mike Sweeney after plenty of major
league playing time, and not by sharing the job with “Bud” until Sweeney’s
seasoned or double-dipped or twice-baked or whatever.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS
Signed C Tom Prince to a one-year contract. [11/24]
Last week saw a run on backup catchers, almost all of whom returned to their
previous employers. At what point are we supposed to believe the chestnut that
fans have a hard time following today’s game because of roster turnover?
MILWAUKEE BREWERS
Signed RHPs Scott Ruffcorn, Johnny Ruffin, Bobby Chouinard, and Bronswell
Patrick, and LHPs Matt Dunbar and Enrique Burgos to minor league contracts.
[11/2?]
The Brewers were caught short-handed on pitching in the upper levels of the
farm system last year, as well as on the major league team down the stretch, so
Sal Bando proudly announced these moves as the sort of thing that will
forestall all of that. That said, these aren’t a bad lot of signings for the
Louisville shuttle: Ruffin will get to see if last year’s injury cost him the
fastball that excited people in the first place, Chouinard and Ruffcorn will
have the opportunities to work their way into the Brewers’ troubled fifth spot
in the rotation, and Dunbar and Burgos will… be left-handed, which means
they’ll be gainfully employed while hoping they get the same break Ed Vosberg
did.
NEW YORK METS
Signed 1B John Olerud to a two-year contract. [11/24]
Signed P Juei Ushiromatsu. [11/26]
The Olerud signing (for two years at $8M) was remarkable in light of the
amazing Galarraga signing for twice as much money in Atlanta just days earlier.
Its a buyers’ market for firstbasemen, and Steve Phillips didn’t overpay for a
good player while his divisional rival was blowing twice as much on half the
player.
NEW YORK YANKEES
Signed INF Dale Sveum to a two-year contract. [11/25]
Sveum wins the lottery! This is double-double insurance in case both Scott
Brosius and Luis Sojo don’t turn out so well, and the Yanks decide they don’t
want to play the better, younger alternatives like Mike Lowell or Andy Fox.
Chalk this up as a spite signing by Bob Watson, who’s doing his damnedest to
earn the ax.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
Traded RHP Don Wengert and 2B/OF David Newhan to San Diego for RHP Doug
Bochtler and SS Jorge Velandia. [11/26]
Ugh. Blech. Gack. The market for serviceable middle men is steeper than it
should be when a good prospect like Newhan has to be given up to get Doug
Bochtler. Getting Velandia isn’t exactly good news either, because it gives the
A’s a ghastly alternative to just pencilling in Miggy Tejada on Opening Day,
and they already had one of those in Raffy Bournigal. At least Don Wengert will
be inflicting blunt trauma wounds to various bleacher denizens in a different
county…
SAN DIEGO PADRES
Signed C Jimmy Gonzalez, RHP Jose Parra, and LHP Al Newman to minor league
contracts. [11/24]
Signed C Greg Myers to a two-year contract; waived RHP Rich Batchelor. [11/25]
Traded RHP Doug Bochtler and SS Jorge Velandia to Oakland for RHP Don Wengert
and 2B/OF David Newhan. [11/26]
Kevin Towers makes some more dandy little moves. Signing Myers to a two-year
deal creates a handy platoon with Carlos Hernandez for a year or two pending
Ben Davis’ arrival, with Mandy Romero now looking like the regular at Vegas.
Jimmy Gonzalez is usually mistaken for a cross between a toaster and a brick
wall with his glovework behind the plate, so he shouldn’t be in the mix. The
Bochtler trade has brought the Pads a good hitting prospect in David Newhan,
who’s been futzing around pretty unsuccessfully as a secondbaseman, and who’s
more likely to wind up in an OF corner. Cutting Batchelor has reduced the
midseason trade with the Cardinals to getting Mark Sweeeney for two months of
Phil Plantier’s not-very-valuable time, plus the ink wasted on announcing the
release of Fernando, Danny Jackson, Scott Livingstone, and now Batchelor.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
Re-signed OF Stan Javier to a two-year contract. [11/26]
Although some people are saying this is just a temp job for Javier until Dante
Powell or Jake Cruz are ready to stick, if the Giants are smart, it’ll be to
start Stan in center while Brian Sabean comes up with some way to get Darryl
Hamilton out of a Giants’ uniform. In other words, some people have it right,
and Sabean will get to eat a few words instead of contracts to go with his crow
in ’98.
SEATTLE MARINERS
Picked up the team option on LHP Jamie Moyer contract for ’98; claimed RHP
Cam Smith off of waivers from San Diego. [11/26]
Well, that’s one advantage to having such an awful farm system: you’ve got room
for waiver claims. Smith isn’t really much better than Mac Suzuki, which makes
him one of the best pitchers in the organization, which is
another way of saying Piniella’s got this friend by the name of Jack Armstrong,
who needs work, and…
TEXAS RANGERS
Signed RHP Scott Klingenbeck to a minor-league contract. [11/24]
Extended the contracts of GM Doug Melvin and manager Johnny Oates through ’99;
outrighted OF Andrew Vessel to Oklahoma City. [11/25]
Klingenbeck’s signed with the right organization, if only because its the one
that values people like Tanyon Sturtze and Terry Clark. With that kind of
competition, it may not even take one injury for Klingenbeck to move up to the
majors.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
Named Tim Johnson manager. [11/24]
Signed LHP Randy Myers to a three-year contract, and C Darrin Fletcher to a
two-year contract (plus one-year option for ’00). [11/26]
Signed INFs Craig Grebeck and Pat Kelly to minor league contracts. [11/27]
Memo from Gord Ash to Jeff Patzke: you’re screwed. The BJs should either be
considering moving Crespo back to second or playing Patzke there, but now
they’ve got two mediocrities who didn’t pan out as well as some of us would
have liked. Crespo may yet stick as a utility man, but Patzke is basically
condemned to leave as a minor league free agent or spend another year at
Syracuse. The addition of Myers only gives the Jays a deep pen, but it won’t
add much in the way of wins. Signing Fletcher is the well-deserved kiss of
death for Sandy Martinez, and indicative of how weak the catching situation is
in the organization; he’ll essentially platoon with last year’s free agent
boondoggle, Benito Santiago. As for the hiring of Johnson, he has a good
reputation as a handler of pitchers from his stints as a bench coach in
Montreal and Boston, and he did a fine job with a basically crummy Iowa staff.
He’s got some learning to do as far as managing an offense.
Thank you for reading
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