• Look, up in the sky! It's a bird! It's a plane! It's a frog!

    ...a frog?

    Not bird, nor plane, nor even frog, it's just a little 'ole baseball blog!

  • How Great Was Tommy Henrich?

    Posted by on December 1st, 2009 · Comments (5)

    Today, in light of Tommy Henrich’s passing, I asked the Complete Baseball Encyclopedia to show me every Yankees batter with at least 5,400 PA with the team where he had 1+ RCAA during that span. And, once I had those results, I calculated the RCAA/502 PA for each player. Here is that leader board:

    Player		RCAA	PA	RCAA/502PA
    Babe Ruth	1634	9197	89.2
    Lou Gehrig	1247	9660	64.8
    Mickey Mantle	1099	9909	55.7
    Joe DiMaggio	708	7671	46.3
    Tommy Henrich	280	5409	26.0
    Bill Dickey	339	7060	24.1
    Earle Combs	307	6509	23.7
    Derek Jeter	388	9809	19.9
    Yogi Berra	323	8352	19.4
    Don Mattingly	293	7721	19.1
    Bernie Williams	343	9053	19.0
    Jorge Posada	208	6312	16.5
    Tony Lazzeri	221	7059	15.7
    Roy White	242	7735	15.7
    Bob Meusel	139	5544	12.6
    Thurman Munson	113	5903	9.6
    Graig Nettles	109	6247	8.8
    Willie Randolph	115	7465	7.7
    Elston Howard	63	5485	5.8
    Red Rolfe	58	5405	5.4
    Wally Pipp	18	6340	1.4

     

    Note Tommy Henrich’s placement here – trailing only Ruth, Gehrig, Mantle and DiMaggio; and, better than Dickey, Jeter, Berra and Williams. Needless to say, Henrich was a heckuva hitter, eh?

    Post to Twitter

    Yanks Decline To Offer Arbitration To Their Free Agents

    Posted by on December 1st, 2009 · Comments (2)

    Via the Ledger

    The Yankees announced in a statement Tuesday that they will not be offering arbitration to any of their eligible free agents.

    The team has seven arbitration-eligible players: OF Johnny Damon, INF/OF Jerry Hairston Jr., INF/OF Eric Hinske, DH Hideki Matsui, C Jose Molina, OF Xavier Nady and LHP Andy Pettitte.

    This only matters on Damon, Pettitte and Nady, as Rhett Bollinger points it out:

    The Yankees announced Tuesday that they will not offer arbitration to any of their eligible players by Tuesday night’s deadline, meaning the club will not receive Draft pick compensation if any of the players sign elsewhere.

    Outfielder Johnny Damon is the lone Type A player in the group, while left-hander Andy Pettitte and outfielder Xavier Nady rank as Type B players. Designated hitter Hideki Matsui, catcher Jose Molina and utility men Jerry Hairston and Eric Hinske were unranked and therefore arbitration doesn’t apply.

    If they would’ve offered Damon arbitration and he signed elsewhere, the Yankees would have been in line to receive a first-round Draft pick from the signing team if that club selects in the second half of the first round of the 2010 First-Year Player Draft or a second-round pick from the signing team if that club selects in the first 15 picks of the first round, plus a sandwich pick between the first and second rounds in either case.

    And in Pettitte and Nady’s case, the Yankees would’ve received a Draft pick in the supplemental round if they chose to sign elsewhere.

    My guess is that that feared Johnny Damon not getting a decent offer as a free agent and then accepting arbitration and possibly getting a one-year deal through the process worth more than $13 million bucks. But, then again, had that happened, would that have been the worst thing in the world for the Yankees?

    Post to Twitter

    “Old Reliable” Passes

    Posted by on December 1st, 2009 · Comments (8)

    Marc Carig has the story.

    Tommy Henrich wasn’t on the clock all that long…after all.

    Virgil Trucks is now the oldest Yankees old-timer

    Post to Twitter

    Red Sox Owner Has A New Plan To Try & Combat Yanks

    Posted by on December 1st, 2009 · Comments (4)

    Via Nick Cafardo

    Red Sox principal owner John Henry is calling for Major League Baseball’s revenue sharing system to be overhauled and replaced with a “competitive balanced payroll tax” in an effort to create competitive balance in baseball.

    Henry’s comments via e-mail came after he was asked to respond to agent Scott Boras’ comments to the Globe two weeks ago in which the super agent said teams aren’t spending their revenue sharing money and central funds on player salaries, which is what revenue sharing was intended to do for small market teams. Boras received backlash for his comments from MLB executive vice president Ron Manfred, who said Boras’ figures of teams receiving $80-$90 million from revenue sharing and the central fund “not based in reality” and “fantasy land.”

    But Henry is certainly going his own way on this very sensitive subject and is certainly not in lockstep with some of his fellow owners on the revenue sharing plan that was adopted in 1997 and distributes the wealth from large market teams to small market teams.

    “Change is needed and that is reflected by the fact that over a billion dollars have been paid to seven chronically uncompetitive teams, five of whom have had baseball’s highest operating profits,” Henry responded in an e-mail. “Who, except these teams, can think this is a good idea?”

    Henry added, “While the Red Sox are in the 16th largest media market we’ve found a way to be very competitive even though we are funding other teams. At the end of the day, the small market clubs still cannot begin to compete with the Yankees and have a very hard time competing with the teams that are struggling to pay them so much. Consequently, a system that directly impacts competition has to replace the current system, that hoped to, but ultimately did not cure competitive imbalances.”

    About $400 million – 34 percent of each team’s net local revenue – will be distributed to small market teams this year. Most of that percentage comes from the Yankees, Red Sox, Mets, and other high-revenue teams.

    Henry wrote that baseball “needs slotting for amateurs, a worldwide amateur draft and most importantly, an effective competitive balance tax that directly addresses disparity once and for all for baseball.”

    The Red Sox principal owner reiterated that baseball’s free market system should continue and that teams should be able to operate as they please, but that those who spend a lot will pay a lot of payroll taxes. “If the Yankees and the Mets spend a billion dollars plus of their investment dollars to build new ballparks, they should be allowed to keep their revenues from that,” Henry wrote. “But if they want to spend $200,000,000 annually on payroll, they should be heavily taxed directly on that – and if they want to spend more than that, they should be even more heavily taxed. So should all clubs who spend heavily on payroll – to the extent necessary – to bring the system into balance.”

    Here’s how Henry’s system would work:

    “It’s a very simple approach in which payroll tax dollars replace revenue sharing dollars and go directly to the clubs that need revenues in order to meet minimum payrolls that should be imposed on each club receiving revenue. Further, players would have to be protected with a guaranteed minimum percentage of overall revenues. This would be a very simple and effective method in reducing top payrolls and increasing bottom payrolls with no tax on revenues,” Henry wrote.

    Henry added that “The World Series should be determined by fully competitive teams on the field – not by how much particular clubs can afford to spend. A better solution is to address competition directly so that clubs can generate revenue more equally as teams become competitive across baseball.”

    While Henry, a former part-owner of the Yankees, has no love-loss for his biggest rival, he does believe that the current revenue sharing formula unfairly penalizes the Yankees and other big market teams which generate big revenues.

    “Baseball has determined that the best way to deal with the Yankees is to take as much of their revenue as possible. I see that in direct opposition to the ideals this country was built on. Baseball is a business and should be treated as such. Baseball is also a sport that needs competitive balance in order to prosper. Taxing their revenues and other “large markets” in the way it is presently done, is simply confiscation on an order of magnitude never seen in any industry in America,” Henry said.

    Betcha ol’ John Henry would like the line for his competitive balance tax to be drawn just above the Red Sox payroll and directly below the Yankees payroll…

    Interesting plan – let teams, including the Red Sox, keep their revenue and tax the Yankees on their crazy payroll. And, then, make the teams getting that tax money from the Yankees spend it on the players. Basically, Henry’s looking to try and get the Yankees to foot the bill for players playing against them while keeping the Red Sox revenue from being a hand-out to other teams…if I read this all correctly.

    These are the days where I really miss Big Stein. I’m sure he would have a reply to this plan – and then some…

    In any event, on a related note, Neil Paine offers some food for thought on why baseball needs a minimum payroll rule.

    Post to Twitter

    The Lucky Lefty

    Posted by on December 1st, 2009 · Comments (5)

    Playing around with Baseball-Reference.com’s Play Index Pitching Season Finder, I asked it to show me LHP who have pitched at least 10 games in a season for the Steinbrenner Yankees and who, to put it simply, really stunk in that season in question. Here are the results of that query:




    It’s pretty interesting to see Graeme Lloyd in 1996 and Damaso Marte in 2009 on this list – considering what big parts they played for the Yankees in the World Series those years.

    I mean reallyDamaso Marte. Who thought, based on the way he pitched this season, that he would have been so “key” for the Yankees in their quest for a ring this post-season? And, if they did think it, what were they sniffing?

    Post to Twitter

    « Previous Page