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Thursday, March 31, 2011
Brandon Belt makes SF Giants' roster
In a bit of a surprise, Belt makes the roster and is batting seventh in the Opening Day lineup. So it may end up being Posey 2.0, but with slightly different programming and execution. Hopefully, the results are about the same.
From sfgate.com:
Brandon Belt makes SF Giants' roster
Sunday, March 27, 2011
2011 ROTY Candidates
GIANTS BRANDON BELT - REPEAT ROTY FOR THE GIGANTES?
The top ROTY candidates for 2011. It could come down to the Giants and the Braves dueling bats in the NL -- Freeman and Belt -- in a repeat of last years Heyward-Posey duel. I would like Chapman for the Reds more if he started rather than came out of the bullpen.
In the AL, I like either one of the two Rays pitchers, Hellickson or McGee, to win. I like Ackely for the Mariners as well. Sale or Drabek would not be a surprise either.
NL:
ATL - Freddie Freeman, 1B if he was not the real deal, Braves work harder to keep DLee
ATL - Craig Kimbrel, RHP could close, if he does will rack up stats
ATL - Mike Minor, LHP brutally effective, if unspectacular
PHI - Dominic Brown, OF all the tools, just needs the PT
SF - Brandon Belt, 1B-OF will give all the other candidate a month head start, a la Posey
WAS - Bryce Harper, OF all or none swing may struggle at times, will make highlights
CIN - Aroldis Chapman, LHP lights up radar guns everywhere
CIN - Yonder Alonzo, C needs PT
CHI - Brett Jackson, OF Quade may go young more so than Piniella, Cubs fans thankful
PIT - Jameson Tailon, RHP very young but may be one of the best the Bucs have, potential top of the rotation guy
STL - Shelby Miller, RHP injuries may force Cards hand, easy velocity in this arm
AL:
TB - Jake McGee, LHP could close for Rays
TB - Matt Moore, LHP may have three plus pitches, future ace / top of rotation starter
TB - Jeremy Hellickson, RHP brutally effective
TB - Desmond Jennings, OF all the tools for future greatness
BAL - Manny Macahdo, SS big, athletic hitter, still only 18 years old but comparisons to A-Rod are not met with giggles
CHI - Chris Sale, LHP starter or closer. I like him as a starter better, but who knows?
TOR - Kyle Drabek, RHP great bloodlines
TOR - J.P. Arenciba, C another kid who can rake, anywhere, anytime
KC - Mike Maustakas, 3B this kid can drive the ball
KC - Eric Hosmer, 1B hits mistake a long way, advanced as a hitter
KC - Wil Myers OF-C may have better chance of sticking as OF, bat plays better as C prospect
NYY - Jesus Montero, C If the Yankees push Posada to DH?
CAL - Mike Trout, OF has been compared to Mantle, gaudy stuff for a kid
SEA - Dustin Ackley, 2B this kids just rakes and rakes and rakes
SEA - Michael Pineda, RHP future rotation-mate for Felix
Friday, March 25, 2011
2011 MLB Predictions
Given that my 2010 pre-season prediction ended so well...
http://slavieboy.blogspot.com/2010/04/pre-season-mlb-predictions-2010.html
(GIANTS as World Champions just never gets old) --
...I decided to repeat the procedure exactly as I did last year. Same format. Same spot in my wife's basement (it's her house and my mom kicked me out long ago). Same lucky underwear from last year. DANG IT HONEY, YOU DID NOT THROW THEM LUCKY DRAWERS OUT, DID YOU!?!?!
Oh well, here it goes.
NL East:
Phillies: Again, 95+ wins with a buzz-saw of a rotation. Have to get to Brad Lidge to win.
Braves: Should be closer to 90 wins, but no cigar. Lose out on wild-card by a game or two.
Nationals: The Bryce Harper era begins. Luckily for Nats, he will not blow out his arm. + .500
Marlins: Less than .500, not by much. Fun to watch, young team. Too bad not many in Miami attend.
Mets: Paying penance just for knowing Bernie Madoff. Need a wrecking ball here.
NL Central:
Brewers: Greinke can relax here, cheese-heads provide low-stress environment. Might win 90, should be enough for this division.
Reds: The Aroldis Chapman era begins, hopefully his 100MPH+ arm is more durable. Just short of 90 wins.
Cardinals: Will struggle with injuries and .500 and being so close in the standings to the Cubs. LaRussa looks tired.
Cubs: Will struggle with .500 and being so close to each other in the dugout. On the other hand, will be giddy at being so close to the Cardinals in the standings, failing to realize that the Cardinals suck this year.
Astros: Might be in AAA if we were more like British soccer.
Pirates: Might be in AA if we were more like British soccer. Wins against them should only count as 1/2 win.
NL West:
Giants: Should have enough to hold off the Rockies, but not by much.
Rockies: Will challenge the Giants all year, especially late. A Wild Card that nobody, save Philly and the Giants, will want to face.
Dodgers: Until the Divorce Court of the McCourt's issues are resolved, this team will struggle. Divorce in LA-LA land is miserable and shit flows downhill -- do the math.
D-Backs: Might struggle to win 75 games.
Padres: See Pirates and Astros only with pitching.
AL East:
Red Sox: Tired of second place, brought out the checkbook to do something about it. Should be exciting and challenge 100 wins.
Yankees: Will coast into the wild card, if Boss, Jr. allows it. It's fun to watch someone who lives in a castle on his own island bitch about people building a custom McMansion in a gated community. What has baseball come to?
Rays: Rebuilding. Rinse, lather, repeat. Loaded with prospects.
Blue Jays: Canadian dollar now stronger than US dollar, may win 90 games but it will only count for 85 due to the conversion rate.
Orioles: Fighters in Uncle Buck's army will compete, but /- .500 by a game or two at best.
AL Central:
Twins: Still good enough in this division. Not as good as last year though.
White Sox: Will be OK unless Peavy's arm flies off. WHAT, ALREADY?!?!
Tigers: Still waiting for those stimulus funds from Washington to bail them out.
Royals: AL's perennial candidate for AAA
Indians: Another possibility for AA.
AL West:
Rangers: Should win the division easily.
Angels: Should be so much better. Should win 90+ games per year on talent. Coast too much.
A's: Still mired around the .500 mark.
Mariners: Might be most improved team in AL and they still suck. Shows how bad they were last year. A Felix arm injury away from AAA.
AL Playoffs:
Rangers pummel Yankees
Red Sox pummel Twins
NL Playoffs:
Phillies over Rockies (but not by much)
Giants over Brewers (by much, Greinke has to pitch under pressure)
AL Championship:
Red Sox over Rangers in a classic.
NL Championship:
Giants beat Phillies in a classic rematch of great pitching staffs. Teams have to figure out how to win like '69 Mets or girls softball teams, try to learn slap-hitting in futility.
Setting up a Giants - Red Sox World Series, which the Giants win in a seven game classic.
That's the way I see it, but I could be wrong.
GO GIANTS!!!
Top Illinois HS Baseball Teams / Players for 2011
In spite of the sub-40 degree temperatures, high school baseball and softball seasons have started across the state of Illinois. Early returns indicate that major league scouts will have the suburban Chicago area on their itinerary more so than usual.
It appears that New Trier OF Charlie Tilson is generating enough buzz to elevate at or near first-round status. Tilson is a speedy, toolsy OF who was featured in a recent feature in Baseball America and has really shined in some recent prospect showcases.
Another prospect who will attract radar guns to Downers Grove HS is RHP Nick Burdi. Oak Forest HS OF Tim Barry appears to be the areas top power hitter and should also attract a ton of attention this season.
Some of the other top area prospects are featured on my list below (and posted / updated periodically).
Note to parents and other friends of players whose names do not appear on my list:
Omission of anyone from my list doesn't mean a thing. It may mean I simply haven't seen / heard/ read about the player in question. I don't carry a checkbook / laptop / briefcase with a major league teams logo on it, nor do I carry athletic scholarships around with me. It's simply my list. So chill.
Here are some of the top Illinois HS baseball teams to watch this season (same caveats):
St. Rita - last years state runner-up. Returns five starters from last years team including LHP/1B Joey Filomeno and RHP Eddie Delariva.
Providence - a well-balanced squad led by Sam Travis, Matt Trowbridge and Joey Houlihan
New Trier - led by top prospect, Illinois recruit OF Charlie Tilson.
St. Laurence - led by two-way prospect and Purdue signee LHP/OF Kyle Wood.
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2011 TOP MLB HS DRAFT PROSPECTS (NW SUBURBAN CHICAGO AREA)
1. Nick Burdi 6-4,210 RHP Downers Grove South HS FB 92-94 with life, sharp + 83-85 Slider and 79-82 Change, attacks hitters, fearless demeanor. Low 3/4 arm-slot, mechanics need work, rushes. Louisville commit.
2. Tim Barry 6-0, 195 OF Oak Forest HS Top power hitter. Runs 6.9 60 yd. Solid frame, huge power bat.
3. Joe Ceja 6-5,230 RHP/3B Ottawa Marquette HS Big Strong, Power Arm, 92 MPH FB. Louisville commit.
4. Jake Junis 6-3, 200 RHP/SS Rock Falls HS 89 MPH FB. 6.8 60 yd. + runner. Strong arm, power bat. Iowa commit.
5. Charlie Tilson 6-0,175 OF/LHP New Trier HS L/L Football WR, 4.4 40 yd. 80 MPH FB. Illinois commit.
6. Joey Filomeno 5-11, 220 1B/ LHP St Rita HS 88-91 MPH FB, low 2/7 arm angle, good CH, strong athlete. Hits well, possible two-way player. Louisville recruit.
7. Ryan Hinchley 6-2, 170 LHP/OF York HS 88-90 FB, 74-77 CB workable change. Kentucky commit.
8. Jeff Boehm 6-1, 180 OF/LHP Mount Carmel HS 91 MPH FB with serious run Kentucky commit.
9. Jeremey Scheck 6-0,180 LHP/1B Stevenson HS L/L 86-89 FB, good stuff, throws three pitches for strikes, Clemson commit.
10. John Kravetz 6-3,190 RHP Mount Carmel HS Features 85 FB with movement, lefty bat, 72-74 CB 75-77 CH. Illinois commit.
Others to watch:
Kyle Wood 6-0, 200 OF/LHP St. Laurence HS L/L Strong hitter, two-way prospect . Purdue commit.
Dylan Craig 6-3,190 LHP Murphysboro HS Illinois State signee, upper 80's FB with workable off-speed stuff. Solid, thee-sport athlete.
Nick Hibbing 6-5, 185 RHP Lakes HS FB tops at 90 cruises high 80's
Wes Benjamin 6-1, 170 LHP/1B St. Charles East 85-88 FB with run, workable CH, long arms, athletic, competes well, Kansas signee.
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From Prepbaseballreport.com
http://prepbaseballreport.com/PlayerProfilesRankings/tabid/316/agentType/ViewType/PropertyTypeID/4/Default.aspx
1 Charlie Tilson
School: New Trier 2011
Positions
Primary: CF
Secondary: LHP
Height: 6-0
Weight: 170
60 Time: 6.6
Velocity
INF/OF: OF: 88
Pitching
Fastball: 82-85
Curve: 60-64
Changeup: 72
Throw/Bat: L/L
Comments: Committed to Illinois. ...
A top-level prospect, Tilson has the tools to play at a high level. The 6-foot, 165-pound left-handed hitting outfielder does it all well – and does it very easily. He can really run, as he showed with his 6.6 60. His athleticism, coupled with his tremendous outfield instincts and a solid arm, makes him the best outfield prospect we’ve seen in the 2011 class. At the plate, he had the best round of BP of all players, regardless of class at an indoor event, showcasing extremely quick hands, a quiet setup, a compact stroke and the ability to drive the ball to all fields. Tilson, who batted third for New Trier in its Class 4A state-title run as a sophomore, was also impressive on the mound. He has the ability to three pitches, including a fastball that topped out at 83 and a decent curveball. As solid as he was on the mound, make no mistake, his future is as a position player.
2 Nick Burdi
School: Downers Grove South HS 2011
Positions
Primary: RHP
Secondary:
Height: 6-5
Weight: 205
Velocity
INF/OF: 89-95
Pitching
Fastball: 89-95
Curve:
Changeup:
Throw/Bat: R/R
Comments: Committed to Louisville ...
A first-team all-state selection as a junior, Burdi went 9-0 for the Mustangs with a 1.03 ERA and 89 strikeouts in 53.1 innings this spring. He walked only 12, four of them in his final game of the year. This strong-bodied right-hander is a high-level talent who should receive significant pro interest as a senior. He possesses an impact power arm that climbed as high as 95 mph over the summer and fall with, it seems, more in the tank.
3 Tim Barry
School: Oak Forest 2011
Positions
Primary: OF
Secondary: C
Height: 6-0
Weight: 205
60 Time: 7.01
Pop Time: 2.02, 2.04, 2.10
Velocity
INF/OF: OF: 85
Throw/Bat: R/R
Comments: Committed to Kansas State University ...
The best hitter in the class, bar none ... A three-time all-state selection already. As a junior, he hit .578 with 17 homers and 43 RBI. He struck out just eight times, drew 28 walks and registered a .672 on-base percentage and a ridiculous 1.256 slugging percentage. Barry, who has 41 homers and a 170 RBI in three seasons, is on pace to shatter the state’s slugging records.
Earned first team All-State as a freshman after finishing with 73 RBI, second-highest total in IHSA state history. Best hitter in the class. Also has 13 homers and 13 doubles as a freshman
The powerful 6-foot Barry once again proved that he is without question the best hitter in the state. The right-handed hitting Barry demonstrated remarkable power and explosiveness; the ball came off the bat differently than any other hitter at the event. A three-time All-State selection, Barry blasted several home runs. He also ran a 7.09 60.
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"One who uses coercion is guilty of deliberate violence. Coercion is inhuman. Non-cooperation with evil is as much a duty as cooperation with good." -- Gandhi
Humans are prone to herd because it is always warmer and safer in the middle of the herd. Indeed, our brains are wired to make us social animals. We feel the pain of social exclusion in the same parts of the brain where we feel real physical pain. So being a contrarian is a little bit like having your arm broken on a regular basis. -- James Montier, GMO Capital Management
I look upon an increase in the power of the State with the greatest fear because, although while apparently doing good by minimizing exploitation, it does the greatest harm to mankind by destroying individuality which lies at the heart of all progress. -- Gandhi
Wednesday, March 09, 2011
My early season front-runner for Coach of the Year - Tom Walter
A great demonstration of a coach who doesn't just "talk the talk" about a team becoming a family or sacrifice. This guy "walks the walk" in a way that shows he has a true understanding of the concept of the servant-leader. It's easy for coaches to call for sacrifice in the name of team unity when the direction of the sacrifice is moving from others and towards enriching them. This coach stood tall when the equation was flipped in reverse.
According to the founder of the concept of servant leadership, Robert K. Greenleaf, a servant leader makes sure the highest priority needs of others are being met, which leads them to become "healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to become servants. The goal of servant leadership is to serve others. You change yourself and then you change one person at a time. And the movement grows. The change you desire to see in the world begins with yourself. Coach Walter definitely fits the mold with his actions.
A truly remarkable story. I believe either the coach or one of the players parents referred to the circumstances that led to this as "divine intervention". Amen to that.
The most discouraging part of the story and evidence that the NCAA is an out of control bureaucracy is that the Wake Forest athletic department felt compelled to check-in and make sure that this selfless, benevolent act was in violation of the NCAA's rules regarding extra benefits to athletes.
Something is rotten in college sports in general and that organization in particular when an act like this could even remotely be considered questionable while at the same time it takes them years and years to see the wrongdoing surrounding athletes like Reggie Bush and (S)Cam Newton.
http://sportscasm.com/2011/02/10/wake-forest-coach-donates-own-kidney-to-one-of-his-players/
Coaches are often to do whatever it takes for their players. These kids are often like the coach’s own children. They not only see the kids as athletes, but as young people who need to be mentored and pointed in all the right directions.
Sometimes, however, coaches go above and beyond what anyone would expect. Such is the story of Wake Forest Baseball coach, Tom Walter, who gave one of his players his own kidney.
Wake Forest’s slogan for the baseball team in 2011 is “What are you willing to sacrifice to help make this team better?”Head coach Tom Walter’s intent was to have his players thinking about sacrifice bunts, moving runners over, and giving up personal glory to help the Demon Deacons improve as a team.
But what Walter chose to sacrifice is greater than simply hanging in on a curve ball and taking one for the team.
Walter gave up a kidney.
In a procedure performed Monday (Feb. 7) at the Emory Transplant Center in Atlanta, Walter had one of his kidneys removed and donated to Kevin Jordan, a freshman member of the Wake Forest baseball team.
Jordan suffers from ANCA vasculitis, a type of autoimmune swelling caused by autoantibodies. The immune system produces normal antibodies to fight infection in the body. However, an autoantibody is an abnormal antibody that attacks a person’s own cells. ANCA stands for Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Autoantibody and when these autoantibodies are present in the kidneys, it causes a leaking of blood and protein into the urine and eventually results in kidney failure.
Dr. Kenneth Newell, the lead surgeon on the team that removed Walter’s kidney, was pleased with the procedures.
“Both surgeries went very well,” said Dr. Newell. “We are pleased with how each patient is progressing. We expect each will recover fully.”
Wake Forest actually took to time to find out if the donation would have been considered an NCAA violation – a gift from a Wake Forest employee. Todd Hairston, associate athletic director in charge of compliance did some research. But it looks like the NCAA is willing to bend the rules on this one Deadspin reports:
Listen to the People
I like the concept behind the Program for Public Consultation website and some of the response they have come up with regarding issues like the budget. Very democratic, very Wisdom of Crowds oriented. You think the PTB (Powers that Be) will listen?
explanation of Wisdom of Crowds from Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wisdom_of_Crowds
The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations, published in 2004, is a book written by James Surowiecki about the aggregation of information in groups, resulting in decisions that, he argues, are often better than could have been made by any single member of the group. The book presents numerous case studies and anecdotes to illustrate its argument, and touches on several fields, primarily economics and psychology.
The opening anecdote relates Francis Galton's surprise that the crowd at a county fairly accurately guessed the weight of an ox when their individual guesses were averaged (the average was closer to the ox's true butchered weight than the estimates of most crowd members, and also closer than any of the separate estimates made by cattle experts).
The book relates to diverse collections of independently-deciding individuals, rather than crowd psychology as traditionally understood. Its central thesis, that a diverse collection of independently-deciding individuals is likely to make certain types of decisions and predictions better than individuals or even experts, draws many parallels with statistical sampling, but there is little overt discussion of statistics in the book.
It seems like they were able to come up with some common sense answers to the budget question without the ancillary mess that the current process leaves behind. And one thing you have to say is, it fulfills the will of the people, because it is a composite of the will of the people.
I get the part that says we have a representative form of government. But it's pretty clear that over the last couple of decades, it is the representatives themselves who are a major part of the problem. The whole listening to the people who they represent thing.
Anyway, very interesting stuff.
Program for Public Consultation
Consulting the People on Public Policy
http://www.public-consultation.org/whatis.html
What is Public Consultation?
Public consultation is a means to improve democratic governance by helping governments consult their citizenry on the key public policy issues the government faces.
Public consultations are conducted with representative samples of the citizenry. Using standard scientific methods of random sampling, a sample is chosen and subsequently weighted to reflect the population census on all major demographic variables, thus producing an accurate microcosm of the citizenry.
Standard public opinion polls using representative samples can be an effective means of consulting citizens on issues for which they have already given significant thought.
The public consultation process has the potential to go beyond the limitations of standard public opinion polls and to widen the scope of possible areas on which the public can be meaningfully questioned. This requires giving respondents key information and presenting them a wide range of arguments on the issue. The goal is for respondents to have a deliberative experience that simulates that of a policymaker.
A key feature of the public consultation process is that it is, to the extent possible, developed in conjunction with policymakers, including those representing a range of views on the issue at hand. Policymakers, as well as advocates on different sides of the issue, are invited to propose and finally approve the information and arguments that are presented to respondents.
The most common form of the consultation process is through an in-depth survey in which respondents are presented key information and the opportunity to deliberate by evaluating the full range of arguments on an issue. Finally they are asked to express their views in response to a complex menu of policy options. Ideally such a process is conducted on-line so that the respondent can take all the time they need to read and re-read the presentation of information, arguments and policy options.
In some cases respondents engage in trade-off exercises in which they are required to make graduated choices among competing priorities, just as policymakers must do. For example, respondents may be asked to construct a budget by distributing revenues among numerous spending areas and considering the option of raising or lowering the level of various types of revenue.
For especially challenging or complex issues, it may also necessary for respondents to participate in citizen assemblies in which respondents meet in person for several hours to several days. In this context they have the opportunity to be briefed in depth, to ask questions of experts, and to deliberate in discussions with other respondents before finally coming to their conclusions.
Why Public Consultation is a Good Idea
Public consultation responds to Americans' demand for greater democratic responsiveness and can help restore Americans' confidence in government.
Polls show large majorities of the public are demanding that government be more responsive to the will of the people. This is prompted by their commitment to democratic principles. It is also prompted by the growing and now widespread perception that government leaders pay little attention to the voice of the people and prioritize serving special interests over the common good. This has led to disturbingly low levels of trust in government and undermined the public's readiness to make short term sacrifices for long term goals. Symptomatic are chronic budget deficits which reflect the public's resistance to paying taxes while still demanding services, prompted by the belief that a large portion of tax money serves special interests and not the interests of the citizenry.
Public consultation is a means to give the people a stronger and clearer voice in the policy process; it is likely to increase the influence of the public and to contribute to restoring confidence in the democratic process and the decisions of government.
It may be that the public has an exaggerated belief about the role of special interests and when given the chance may actually arrive at conclusions largely similar to the ones currently being made. On the other hand, it may be that they may arrive at significantly different policy decisions. In either case, having public consultation will give the public a greater voice and will create an opportunity for a real dialogue that can move beyond the current mistrust.
Public consultation can improve policymakers' understanding of the views of their constituents.
As mentioned, government officials have limited resources for gaining information about the attitudes of their constituents as a whole. Research shows that when government officials are asked to predict how the majority of their constituents will respond to a question, they are often quite mistaken. Research also shows that policymakers tend to underestimate the willingness of the public to accept the changes necessary to address key problems. Public consultation is a means to improve policymakers' understanding of the public and is likely to help free policymakers to be more proactive in addressing challenges.
Public consultation gives policymakers a way to test new ideas.
Right now the process by which new ideas emerge is relatively slow: they must first get attention from the media and only then do they gradually gain enough currency to be adapted into proposals for public policy and then finally to be considered by the citizenry. Public consultation gives policymakers the means to quickly and easily test new ideas for addressing current challenges, giving greater efficiency to the broader creative process by which policy develops.
Public consultation is likely to be a force for greater consensus.
The world of people who are actively involved in shaping public policy tends to be highly polarized, with individuals and groups taking strong positions and fighting hard to prevail. In the world of policy advocates and also among elected officials, on a left-to-right scale, there is a u-shaped curve with clusters on the right and left and few in the middle. Among the general public, though, mapped on the same scale, you find a normal curve, with many in the middle and fewer at the extremes. Members of the public are more likely to see some validity in both sides of the issue. Thus they tend to resist choosing one value over another and try harder to find policies that balance and integrate values. In focus groups consisting of representative samples of the public, people rarely argue and spontaneously try to find common ground. Thus public consultation with representative samples is likely to be a greater force for consensus than the existing policy community. Public consultation has the potential to mediate or between the polarized forces of the policy process.
Furthermore, public consultation can help discover the potential for consensus when it is not readily apparent. For example, when an on-line survey reveals a lack of consensus, this would be a key moment for conducting an in-person meeting in which people would have the opportunity to have discussions with people holding different viewpoints. These would be conducted by facilitators trained in proven methods for finding policy consensus.
Public consultation is a way to draw on the collective intelligence and even wisdom of the society as a whole.
Research has shown that the best approach to solving problems is to integrate the views of large numbers of people who are each likely to bring unique perspectives. The integration of these perspectives effectively pools knowledge and tends to produce conclusions that reflect a greater intelligence than is found in even the smartest individual in the group. Research has also shown that when policymaking communities, often consisting of highly intelligent and informed individuals, become unresponsive to outside perspectives they can become subject to 'groupthink' which can cause them to have major blind spots and to make decisions that, in retrospect, are seen as highly unfortunate. Public consultation is likely to constantly vitalize the policy discourse by giving expression to the full spectrum of views in the population and drawing on the intelligence of the society as a whole.
Public consultation can facilitate the emergence of constructive developments in society.
Contrary to widespread assumptions, the citizenry tends to be ahead of government in responding to emerging shifts in social norms and new collective priorities. For example, historically the majority of Americans was ahead of the government in supporting racial equality. Currently most Americans believe the government is not taking enough action on climate change, with large majorities supporting all the major legislation and treaties proposed over the last decade. It appears that the distribution of forces influencing the government is more committed to the status quo than is the distribution of attitudes in the public. Public consultation, by giving the public a greater voice, is likely to be a force to promote the emergence of new constructive developments.
http://www.public-consultation.org/studies/budgetcomparisons_mar11.html
Public Proposes Federal Budget Dramatically Different Than House or White House
March 3, 2011
Full report(PDF)
American Public Shows How it Would Cut the Budget Deficit
An innovative study has found that when a representative sample of the American public was presented the federal budget, they proposed changes far different from those the Obama administration or the Republican-led House have proposed.
The biggest difference in spending is that the public favored deep cuts in defense spending, while the administration and the House propose modest increases. However, the public also favored more spending on job training, education, and pollution control than did either the administration or the House. On average the public made a net reduction of $146 billion--far more than either the administration or the House called for.
While there were some partisan differences in the magnitude of spending changes, in two out of three cases average Republicans, Democrats and independents agreed on which items should be cut or increased.
The public also showed readiness to increase taxes by an average of $292 billion--again, far more than either the administration or the House.
"Clearly both the administration and the Republican-led House are out of step with the public's values and priorities in regard to the budget," comments Steven Kull, director of the Program for Public Consultation (PPC), which conducted the study. PPC is a joint program of the Center on Policy Attitudes and the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland. Unlike in conventional polls, PPC consults with the public by presenting respondents with information on policy issues and a range of options to address them. In this case respondents were presented the discretionary budget, with descriptions of each program, and allowed to make changes.
On average, the public cut defense spending by 18%, reducing it by $109 billion. By contrast, the president's proposal increases defense spending by 4% and the House calls for increasing it 2%. For intelligence agencies the public cut 15%, while the administration says the agencies would grow, though at a slower pace.
The most dramatic differences were for job training and higher education. The public increased job training a whopping 130%, while the House cut it by a stark 47%. The administration nicked it 3%. For higher education, the House cut it 26%, the administration increased it 9% and the public increased it 92%.
Energy and the environment were also major areas of difference. The House bill cuts the Department of Energy's work on renewables and efficiency by 36%, while the administration increases it 44%. The public went even further, increasing it 110%. While the House cuts the EPA's budget by 39% and the administration cuts it by 13%, the public increased spending on pollution control by 17%.
The public cut the space program 17%, while neither the administration nor the House made significant changes. The administration made modest increases to science, as did the public (5%), but the House cut it by 12%.
The public cut spending for foreign aid that is meant to serve strategic purposes. Aid to countries "of strategic concern"--known as the Economic Support Fund--was cut a substantial 23% while military aid was cut 15%. The administration cut the Economic Support Fund 9% while the House cut it 6%, but neither made significant cuts to military aid.
For more altruistic forms of aid, on balance the public made little change--increasing humanitarian aid by 18%, cutting development assistance 14% and leaving spending on global health essentially unchanged. In the president's 2012 proposal, humanitarian assistance funding is cut 8%, while funding for global health gets an increase (11%) and so does development assistance (12%). In the House bill, humanitarian assistance is cut 17%, global health by 6% and development assistance by 18%.
The administration is calling for large scale increases to federal spending in highways (53%), air travel and roads (36%), and mass transit (109%). The House made a deep cut (27%) to mass transit. The public, meanwhile, makes modest cuts to highways (9%) and air travel and roads (7%), but leaves mass transit essentially unchanged.
For this analysis the changes the public made in the budget exercise were compared to the OMB projected budget for 2015, while those the administration made were in its 2012 budget proposal relative to the previous year. Changes by the House were based on the recently-passed changes to spending for 2011. (2011 spending is lower than 2015 projections but the distributions are very similar; thus comparisons of percentage changes are meaningful.)
Besides making changes to spending, respondents were presented a series of options for increasing revenue. On average respondents increased revenues by $292 billion. The largest portion was from income taxes: majorities increased taxes on incomes over $100,000 by 5% or more and increased them by 10% or more for incomes over $500,000. Majorities also increased corporate taxes and other excise taxes.
For the estate tax, a majority (77%) favored reverting at least to the 2009 levels, taxing estates over $3.5 million at a 45% rate. Only 15% of respondents supported the estate tax levels recently passed: taxing estates over $5 million at a 35% rate.
The Obama administration holds to its position that the Bush-era tax cuts for incomes above $250,000 should be allowed to expire, and now proposes this for after 2012. By 2015 this would generate $97.2 billion in revenues. The House leadership has so far not made any proposal to increase tax revenues and has favored making the Bush tax cuts permanent.
The public study was fielded December 18-29 with a sample of 793 respondents (margin of error plus or minus 3.5%). It was conducted using the web-enabled KnowledgePanel®, a probability-based panel designed to be representative of the U.S. population. Initially, participants are chosen scientifically by a random selection of telephone numbers and residential addresses. Persons in selected households are then invited by telephone or by mail to participate in the web-enabled KnowledgePanel®. For those who agree to participate, but do not already have Internet access, Knowledge Networks provides a laptop and ISP connection. More technical information is available at http://www.knowledgenetworks.com/ganp/reviewer-info.html.
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Weep, you wealthy, for the miseries that are coming upon you. Your riches dissipate, and your garments become rage; your gold and silver are false, and their corrosion shall be a testimony against you, and shall eat your flesh as fire. You pursued earthly wealth with the last days of your lives. The wages of laborers, which have been fraudulently taken by you, cry out, and these cries of injustice have been heard by the Lord." - James 5:1-5-----
"Buying physical silver is by far the greatest act of wisdom and rebellion any American can and should be doing right now. It is both a Silver Bullet to rebel against the Elite’s corrupt system and a Silver Shield to protect your family and wealth in a post- dollar world. Buying physical silver is non-violent, non-compliant resistance. Most importantly it works outside of the system and it cannot be stopped."
http://dont-tread-on.me/the-silver-bullet-and-the-silver-shield
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up until the last 200 years, the Gold/Silver ratio was 16:1
- 323 B.C. the ratio was 12.5:1 upon the death of Alexander the Great
- During the Roman Empire the ratio was set at 12:1
- 12th to 17th Century the ratio was around 12:1
- end of the 19th century, the universal,fixed ratio of 15:1 ended
- end of the 19th century, the bi-metallism era ended, England demonetized silver
- 1980 the last great surge in gold and silver, the ratio stood at 17:1
- 1991 silver hit its low, the ratio peaks at 100:1
- 2003 to 2007 bull market in silver drops ratio to 45:1 from 80:1
- 2008 end of the Great Recession, the ratio rises back to 80:1
Historical Recent
Low 12:1 80:1
High 100:1 45:1
Talkin' Baseball (Willie, Mickey, and the Duke)
Talkin' Baseball (Willie, Mickey, and the Duke)
Duke Snider, Joe DiMaggio, Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle walk in from center field during an Old Timer's Day celebration on July 16, 1977.
Who owned during the late 1950's? The Yankees did in hindsight, but the most intense debates of the era centered around New York’s three All-Star and future Hall of Fame center fielders:
Willie Mays of the Giants,
Mickey Mantle of the Yankees
and Duke Snider of the Dodgers.
Willie, Mickey, and the Duke.
With the passing of Duke Snider (RIP) this week, we had a chance to reflect on the Duke's career specifically and the era in general and the question arose - Can you imagine if Mays, Mantle and Snider were able to arrange a LeBron-esque "Dream Team" which would have allowed all three to patrol a single outfield? That pesky issue of the Reserve Clause, of course, stood in the way. (thank you Curt Flood and Andy Messersmith).
The closest we came to this was when Terry Cashman and company airbrushed DiMaggio out of the picture for the song, Talkin' Baseball (Willie, Mickey, and the Duke), leaving our "Dream Outfield" intact.
This is such a great song, I can forgive the sacrilege.
Clearly, the Yankees would have been the team to pull this off. It may have even accelerated the Giants and Dodgers eventual move to the West Coast. Heck, the Giants and Dodgers fans may have pitched in to pack their bags.
Imagine this outfield.
LF Duke Snider
CF Willie Mays
RF Mickey Mantle
Not too shabby. The Yankees would have had to have moved Gene Woodling and Hank Bauer, but my guess is they might have been willing to make the effort.
The Dream Outfield smashed all kinds of records during four seasons — 1954, 1955, 1956 and 1957:
During those three seasons, The Big Three combined for:
- Three MVPs,
- multiple HR, RBI and batting championships
- One Triple Crown
- League leadership in over 30 major statistical categories
- Six pennants
- Three World Championships.
That was performing on the separate teams. Imagine them combining their talents with the Yankees. They would have owned NY. Oh yeah, they already did. DAMN YANKEES!!
---
Duke Snider, Joe DiMaggio, Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle walk in from center field during an Old Timer's Day celebration on July 16, 1977.
Who owned during the late 1950's? The Yankees did in hindsight, but the most intense debates of the era centered around New York’s three All-Star and future Hall of Fame center fielders:
Willie Mays of the Giants,
Mickey Mantle of the Yankees
and Duke Snider of the Dodgers.
Willie, Mickey, and the Duke.
With the passing of Duke Snider (RIP) this week, we had a chance to reflect on the Duke's career specifically and the era in general and the question arose - Can you imagine if Mays, Mantle and Snider were able to arrange a LeBron-esque "Dream Team" which would have allowed all three to patrol a single outfield? That pesky issue of the Reserve Clause, of course, stood in the way. (thank you Curt Flood and Andy Messersmith).
The closest we came to this was when Terry Cashman and company airbrushed DiMaggio out of the picture for the song, Talkin' Baseball (Willie, Mickey, and the Duke), leaving our "Dream Outfield" intact.
This is such a great song, I can forgive the sacrilege.
Clearly, the Yankees would have been the team to pull this off. It may have even accelerated the Giants and Dodgers eventual move to the West Coast. Heck, the Giants and Dodgers fans may have pitched in to pack their bags.
Imagine this outfield.
LF Duke Snider
CF Willie Mays
RF Mickey Mantle
Not too shabby. The Yankees would have had to have moved Gene Woodling and Hank Bauer, but my guess is they might have been willing to make the effort.
The Dream Outfield smashed all kinds of records during four seasons — 1954, 1955, 1956 and 1957:
During those three seasons, The Big Three combined for:
- Three MVPs,
- multiple HR, RBI and batting championships
- One Triple Crown
- League leadership in over 30 major statistical categories
- Six pennants
- Three World Championships.
That was performing on the separate teams. Imagine them combining their talents with the Yankees. They would have owned NY. Oh yeah, they already did. DAMN YANKEES!!
---
"We never had no rivalry between us. The three of us would talk among ourselves when we would all go to the All-Star Game. We used to kid each other. I would call up Mick (Mickey Mantle) and say, 'We got that little guy from Brooklyn coming over.' Mick says, 'You go up to him and find out what he's hitting, and when he tells you, I'll say, 'I don't think so, Willie.' We'd laugh. The Duke was a really nice man," -— Willie Mays on the late Duke Snider, in an interview with the Oakland Tribune.
Monday, March 07, 2011
White Sox 2011 Review: Win Now, Baby!!
The "Just win now, baby" philosophy is more associated with the Oakland Raiders mind-set (and look where it's gotten them recently) but you could also make the case that, from the top down, the White Sox organization share the same philosophy.
Baseball America recently had this to say about the organizations philosophy regarding player development.
from baseballamerica.com
http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/rankings/organization-top-10-prospects/2011/2610957.html
By contrast, Williams has shown little patience as a GM, constantly borrowing from tomorrow for today.
As a result of Williams' willingness to trade prospects for veterans and the team's bungled efforts in Latin America, Chicago has one the weakest farm systems in baseball. While Williams has dealt away 53 players (and counting) who have been ranked on Baseball America's annual White Sox Top 30 Prospects lists, few have come back to bite him—though righthander Daniel Hudson did go 7-1, 1.69 in 11 starts after being shipped to the Diamondbacks for Edwin Jackson in July.
To be fair, the strategy had delivered a world championship to the South Side of Chicago in 2005 and kept the team competitive on a yearly basis since then. From Owner Jerry Reinsdorf, to GM Kenny Williams to manager Ozzie Guillen, the focus is on moving the dial on last years 88 wins total and catching the Twins then developing the 2015 lineup and roster.
Part of the reason may be the relative lack of success of the White Sox top picks. From 2001 to 2007 the list of White Sox #1 picks reads as follows:
RHP Kris Homel
LHP Royce Ring
OF Brian Anderson
3B Josh Fields
RHP Lance Broadway
RHP Kyle McCulloch
LHP Aaron Poreda
Not much too look at there. No real impact players or potential stars. More recently the draft has produce starting 2B Gordon Beckham and rising prospects OF Jared Mitchell and LHP Chris Sale.
Sale is the crown jewel of the prospect list. The only question mark seems to be "starter or closer?" It seems as if he is the #5 starter only if Jake Peavy's arm flies off.
Sale is a 6-2, 175 LHP who was the 2010 # pick. He features a 95 MPH fastball with late life and good off speed stuff to complement the fastball. Sale projects as a top of the rotation starter down the road. They may ease him into that role and attempt to keep his innings down by using him out of the bullpen and spot starting. He should be a fixture in the Sox rotation for many years to come.
I like Jacob Petricka a 6-5, 170 RHP from Indiana State next as a prospect. He features a low-mid 90's FB and a workable breaking ball. He may end up as a set-up or middle innings reliever down the road.
JACOB PETRICKA
Gregory Infante is a 6-2, 185 RHP, a 24 year-old signed out of Venezuela in 2006, may have a higher ceiling than Petricka. He has a good feel for his secondary pitches, features a mid to high 90's FB and keeps the ball in the park. He has battled control issues at times. When those are fixed he should be a solid middle of the rotation starter.
GREGORY INFANTE
Another pitcher who could contribute is Anthony Carter, a 6-3, 180 RHP who was a 26th rounder in 2005. Carter is being groomed as a reliever, featuring a low to mid 90's FB and a plus slider. His control needs work as well, especially if he works our of the bullpen.
In the infield, Brent Morel may be the Sox Opening Day 3B. Morel is 6-1, 200 a 24 year-old 3rd rounder in 2008. He has a compact, line-drive producing swing with gap power. A solid bat with enough arm for 3B.
BRENT MOREL
Another corner IF prospect who may get pushed to DH is Cuban signee Dayan Viciedo. Dayan is 6-1, 240 and has 30 HR power potential. He rarely walks and has near zero speed. A classic hit or miss guy. His glove would follow him to 1B or 3B if it ever gets out of the dugout.
DAYAN VICIEDO
Eduardo Escobar is 5-10, 150 SS, a 22 year-old signed out of Venezuela in 2006, Escobar brings a skilled glove with a quick release (read weak arm). He has good range, but not much bat and little or no power. Maybe an Alexei Ramirez minus the bat?
EDUARDO ESCOBAR
Among the outfield prospects, Jared Mitchell seems to be the consensus pick as the top man. Jared is 5-11, 192 22 year-old OF who was the 1st rounder in 2009. He is a good hitter, athletic with plus speed. He works counts well and has a little pop in his bat, with more power projected.
JARED MITCHELL
After Mitchell there is a bit of a split. The one who I think could crash the gate is Brandon Short. He is 6-1, 175 OF, a 22 year-old, 28th rounder in 2008. Brandon is a battler, with decent speed and arm, a good bat who seldom walks. His bat is his calling card and as a 28th rounder, he will have to work hard for everything he gets.
BRANDON SHORT
Jordan Danks is a 6-5, 210 OF 24 years old a 7th rounder in 2008 out of Texas. He needs to hit more and show some pop that fits with his size. He has plus speed and is a patient hitter. His glove is a plus as well.
JORDAN DANKS
Another prospect who may be a couple of years away would be Trayce Thompson. He is 6-4, 200 20 year old who was a 2nd rounder in 2009. Trayce is a high-ceiling, athletic player with some pop in his bat. With the power, comes a high K-Rate. When he gets more reps and his hitting approach gets more refined, he could be one to watch.
TRAYCE THOMPSON
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“Whoever hears these words and acts on them is like the wise man who built his house on rock. The rains came, the streams rose, and the winds blew against that house; and yet it did not fall, beacuse it had a firm foundation. But those who hear these words and do not act on them are like the foolish who build their house on sand. The rains fall, the streams rise and the winds beat against their house, and then it falls, with a great crash.” - Matthew 7:21-27
Thursday, March 03, 2011
In praise of the average guy....maybe.
You just gotta love 'em. According to the article posted below, he's gotta get a clue....and a much better life in many areas.
Some of the highlights:
- The age when the average man is in the best shape of his life is 23? Twenty-three?!?! Are you serious, it's all downhill after twenty-three?
- % of men who consider themselves physically fit = 69%. Those that are actually physically fit = 13%. So 56% of men are big, fat liars. I thought it was just Rush Limbaugh.
- The part of the body men spend the most time trying to develop is the chest when the body part women are turned on the most by is the butt. That's just clueless.
- BTW, this part has always been a feature of TheSlavs National Health Care Plan or "SlavieCare":
Average cost of a 1-year gym membership: $648 - Amount the average 40-year-old man would save each year in medical costs if he exercised regularly: $949
The government should give credits for gym membership as a means to drive down health care costs. Or insurance companies could offer lower rates. Tie the rates to how many times a year you actually go to the gym or participate in health-related activities like 5-K's, Ironman's, etc. That would motivate folks, wouldn't it?
- OK, this one is just stupid. "Percentage of men who would never skip another workout if... women began wearing see-through spandex: 16%" They would never skip another workout on purpose. However, they would miss workout due to dropping dumbbells on their foot.
Men's Health did an "average guy" article or two some years back and there were some surprising results from that one as well.
- The # of Fortune 500 CEO's who cheat at golf = 1 in 3. (33%)
- Number of men who would use an illegal driver if it would give them an extra 10 yards = 2 in 7. (29%)
- Chances that a ticket brought from a scalper (which half of us have done) is counterfeit = less than 1%.
How depressing is that? A ticket scalper is apparently about 20 times more ethical than most of us and 33 times more ethical than a corporate CEO.
- Number of guys who yell at the TV when there is a bad call = 8 in 10 (80%). Who doesn't?
The number of spouses / gf's / bf's / sig. others who think their guy is an idiot for doing so = at or near 100%. Just saying.
- Number who are superstitious enough to believe their actions can affect the outcome of a game = 1 in 5 (20%).
Which just proves that 80% of guys just don't try hard enough and are not really fans of their favorite teams. I mean WTFreak is that? Are you trying to tell me a butterfly flapping his damn wings somewhere in the world can cause a hurricane somewhere else and I can't influence the outcome of a game? What kind of scientific BS are we teaching in our schools today?
Sorry folks Men's Health got this one wrong, it's not superstition, it's reality. Deal with it. And don't roll your eyes like my wife does either.
- Percentage of men who admit they've teed off from the women's tee = 6%.
Dang, what's with the cheating fellas? 28% would use an illegal club, of which 6% are pansies, and we get pissed off when 7-10% of MLB tests positive for PED's? Check your shorts fellas.
Percentage who think they could beat a female pro golfer (playing from the women's tee) = 12%.
All right fellas, I'm calling bullshit. Get a clue. 100% of the female pro golfers could probably beat the average man's game if SHE LET YOU TEE OFF FROM THE WOMENS TEES AND SHE TEED OFF FROM THE BIG BOY BOX. Please. Check yourself caveman.
Number whose love of sports has caused a woman to dump them = 1 in 9 (11%) Woman are just too compliant nowadays. Or maybe desperation set in. IDK.
Number of hours of televised sports the average guy will watch in his lifetime = 2,888.
Dang, I think I beat that on an annual basis.
Approximate number of divots the average golfer will create in his lifetime = 134,685.
No way.
Golf balls he'll lose in the water, the woods or thin air = 4,735.
Oh, I got that one beat. Easily.
Sport the average guy played as a kid - Baseball
Yes.
Sport he wishes he had played - Football
No. I just wish baseball had cheerleaders like football. Never figured that one out.
Distance the average guy as an adult can throw a football = 50 yards.
No. Not with two throws.
Distance he can drive a golf ball = 200 yards.
Can I use the illegal club in my bag? Ooops....
Speed at which he can hurl a baseball = 65 MPH.
Maybe, on a good day. Have the Ben-Gay or some cortisone ready though.
What today's Little League pitcher clocks in at = 60 MPH.
Little steroid fueled freaks. Bad enough I couldn't throw harder than the average Little Leaguer when I was one. Now you tell me I can't compete with the Little Eagers today. Dang. Being average stinks. Fellas, we gotta work on some of these averages.
See if you're better than the average male.
http://www.elitefeet.com/are-you-an-average-man
Here are the real stats of the average American man. This is either going to make you feel better or confirm you're going to have to overachieve:
The average man is 34.4 years old.
The average man is married with two children.
The average man earns $36,100 per year and has $3,100 in the bank.
The average man sleeps about 7 hours on a work night.
Age when the average guy is in the best shape of his life: 23 years
The average man is is about 5' 9" tall.
He weighs 175 pounds.
Age (yrs) 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69
Weight (lbs) 168 179 182 185 184
Weight (kg) 76 81.1 82.6 84 83.5
Percentage of men who consider themselves "physically fit": 69%
Percentage who actually are: 13%
Time it takes the average guy to run a mile: 8 minutes, 34 seconds
Time it takes the average American man to run 1.5 miles: 12 minutes, 45 seconds
Age (yrs) 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69
Time (m:s) 12:18 12:51 13:53 14:55 16:07
Pounds the average man can bench-press one time: 160
Age (yrs) 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69
Max. Weight (lbs) 180 158 143 128 116
Number of sit-ups he can do in 1 minute: 36
Age (yrs) 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69
Sit-ups 40 36 31 26 20
Number of push-ups he can do with good form in 1 minute: 27
Age (yrs) 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69
Push-ups 33 27 21 15 15
Number of pull-ups he can do: 1
Resting heart rate of a fit man: 52 beats per minute
Time it takes a fit man to log 8,000,000 heartbeats: 30 years
Resting heart rate of a man who's out of shape: 72 beats per minute
Time it takes an out-of-shape man to log 8,000,000 heartbeats: 19 years
Size of the average guy's biceps: 13 inches (flexed)
Size of his chest: 40 inches (inhaled)
Size of his waist: 34 inches
Amount of muscle the average sedentary guy loses each year: 1 pound
Amount of fat he gains each year: 1.1 pounds
The part of a man's body that is the biggest turn-on for the average woman: his butt
The part the average guy spends the most time trying to develop: his chest
Percentage of men who don't belong to a gym: 88%
Average cost of a 1-year gym membership: $648
Amount the average 40-year-old man would save each year in medical costs if he exercised
regularly: $949
Time period when the typical gym is least crowded: 10:00am to 11:30am
Percentage of men who would never skip another workout if... they could build twice the muscle with half the effort: 40%
Percentage of men who would never skip another workout if... women began wearing see-through spandex: 16%
Exercise equipment the average guy is most likely to own: dumbbells
Percentage of men who use their fitness equipment as... a place to hang their clothes: 45%
Percentage of men who use their fitness equipment as... a doorstop: 13%
Number of men who would rather work out than have sex: 1 in 7
Percentage of men who think that gyms are pickup joints: 14%
The life expectancy of the average man is:
Year Born 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 1997
Life Expectancy (yrs) 65.6 66.6 67.1 70.0 71.8 73.6
For those who believe, no proof is necessary. For those who don't believe, no proof is possible.” -- Stuart Chase (Writer and Economist, 1888-1985)
Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Cubs 2011 Review - Year Two: Hope Springs Eternal
Cubs Prospects beginning to pay dividends - Soto, Colvin and Castro
One of the more difficult jobs in baseball has to be in the PR department of the Chicago Cubs. Somebody in those offices has to deliver a message or a slogan -- that tells a fan base that has waited rather patiently since 1945 for a World Series appearance and 1908 for a World Series championship -- that the waiting will continue. The best the Ricketts family could come up with after spending $845M to purchase the team was “Year One”.
Cub’s fans (and the Ricketts family) are going to demand more for their money than that in 2011 and the good news may be found within the clubs suddenly resurgent farm system. Under the leadership of GM Jim Hendry, Farm Director Oneri Fleita and Scouting Director Tim Wilken, the Cubs are planting the seeds down on the farm that may result in a bumper crop of future major leaguers.
The Cubs organization is currently considered to have as many future big leaguers in its system than any other team in baseball according to the consensus of opinion of scouts and minor league directors. The team stubbed its toe at the beginning of the decade with its first-round picks beginning in 2001 with Mark Prior (mixed results). The Cubs followed that with Bobby Brownlie, Ryan Harvey, Grant Johnson and Mike Pawelek. Since 2006, the first-round has produced Tyler Colvin, Josh Vitters, Andrew Cashner, Brett Jackson and Hayden Simpson. Getting better, but it will take some time and a Rookie of the Year perhaps, to erase the memories of past futility and false hopes Remember Felix Pie? Brian Dopirak? Corey Patterson? Angel Guzman? And please don’t make me go all Hee-Seop Choi on your behind. Suffice to say, Cubs fans have been through a lot. In more ways than one.
But perhaps things are beginning to look up. Last year the Cubs introduced SS Starlin Castro and OF Tyler Colvin, as well as RHP Andrew Cashner, to the roster with mixed results and some question marks. Castro was an immediate hit with the bat -- posting a .300 average -- but his defensive lapses were a cause for concern. In his defense, ideally Castro should have been learning his craft in AA-AAA ball last year. There is nothing harder on a young prospect than making rookie mistakes on the major league stage, on balance Castro performed remarkably well and the expectation is he will be a fixture at SS for years to come.
Tyler Colvin showed promise as a hitter early, than tailed off somewhat as pitchers made adjustments. Like Castro, Colvin enters a pivotal sophomore year. A more patient approach should bring down his strikeout rate (100 in 358 AB’s) and lift his average (.254 BA) closer to .300. Colvin did club 20 HR’s last year, so a 30-90-.275 stat line is not out of the question for Colvin.
The only question about Andrew Cashner seemed to be “future starter or closer?” For now, it seems as if he will help Kerry Wood set-up closer Carlos Marmol. Not a bad option to have, a 6-6, 210 pound flame-thrower to lock down the sixth and seventh innings of games.
The Cubs took a pinch off the top of the prospect list to acquire RHP Matt Garza from the Devil Rays. RHP Chris Archer, SS Hak-Ju Lee and OF Brandon Guyer were highly regarded, but replaceable and certainly worth the price to add Garza to the top of the rotation. Garza, Carlos Zambrano and Ryan Dempster combined were 41-28 last year. Add a LHP Sean Marshall (7-5 record) instead of RHP Randy Wells (8-14 record) to the rotation and perhaps RHP Carlos Silva (10-6 record) or LHP James Russell and you have a starting staff that is capable of winning 60% or more of their approximately 90 decisions. Sixty percent gets you to 54-36. If you can manage to split those other games -- which are decided by bats and bullpens and in Wrigley Field generally leave behind softball scores – you can get to 90 wins and that should be good enough for a playoff berth, if not a divisional crown.
The bullpen is solid enough. The staff overall seems a little light on the left-handed side -- having dealt Tom Gorzelany to Washington for power-hitting prospect OF Michael Burgess -- and a decision has to be made on RHP Jeff Samardzia, but in a Central Division that may be the easiest pickings in the National League, the Cubbies have a shot as currently constructed.
Now, what does the future hold for the Cubs as far as prospects? After subtracting Archer and Lee from the top five prospects to get Garza, the Cubs recovered by securing Michael Burgess from Washington.
What is the buzz on Burgess? He’s a former first-rounder via Washington (2007 draft). A 5-11,195 lb. 22 year-old who throws and bats from the left side. Burgess brings a prodigious power bat, but strikes out frequently. He has a plus-OF arm. If he picks up his average a little and backs down the strikeouts (they go hand in hand) the Cubs appear to have a steal.
MICHAEL BURGESS
Former Nats' GM Jim Bowden offered this report recently:
“ Burgess has tremendous power, he's got 30-35 HR power, light-tower-power. When he hits them, he hits them a mile. He's got a great arm. He was a pitcher in high school, came out of Tampa, but a great arm. A good fielder, I'd say an average fielder with an above average [arm], he will throw you out. You try to score, you're not going to. You try to go first to third, Michael Burgess will throw you out. Now, what's the downside. High strikeouts. One out of four at bats he punches out. He's got some holes. He's got some mechanical things in his swing, I'm not going to call it a hitch, but he's got a little pump at the end that doesn't clear, and he hasn't been able to get rid of it yet, but, he's only 21-year-old, and that's when you look at prospects like this and you're seeing a guy that reaches all the way up to Double-A at twenty-one, if he was in the draft, he'd be coming out as a junior or senior in college and he'd be starting at A-ball or rookie ball. So, to me, you look at the age and go, okay only 21, he's got the power, and by the way, he's kept improving each year. I think it was a good pickup for [Cubs' GM] Jim Hendry. Look, he's not a sure thing, but if he makes it, if he can make some adjustments with the bat, and make more contact, Hendry might have just stolen a 25-30 HR major league hitter."
Not too bad. So Burgess goes towards the top of the list.
Keeping him company there and what, in some combination, will comprise the Cubs outfield of the future are:
Brett Jackson 6-2, 210 OF (2009 1st rounder) Age 22 - Best power hitter in organization, 4-tool player. Potential 20 HR, 20 SB type. Quick bat with plus speed.
BRETT JACKSON
Matt Szczur 6-1, 190 OF (2010 5th rounder) Age 21 – Best Athlete in organization. Fastest runner. Not much pop in the bat and needs more plate discipline and patience in hitting approach.
MATT SZCZUR
The top infield prospects would appear to be the following:
Josh Vitters 6-3, 195 3B (2007 1st rounder) Age 21 – Was the organizations top prospect in 2008-09. Has easy, compact stroke but can be pull-happy at times. Needs to develop a more patient approach.
JOSH VITTERS
Darwin Barney 5-10, 175 (2007 4th rounder) Age 25 – Makes contact, little pop in bat. Needs to be a more patient hitter as well. Best defensive IF in the organization.
DARWIN BARNEY
D.J. LeMahieu 6-4, 195 (2009 2nd rounder) Age 22 – May be one to watch down the road. Needs AA seasoning but early returns are good. Best Hitter for average in the organization, not much pop. Needs to develop more patient approach.
D.J. LEMAHIEU
Matt Cerda 5-9, 165 (2008 4th rounder) Age 20 – No speed, no pop. Consummate utility type prospect. Makes contact and HAS A PATIENT HITTING APPROACH. Yippee!!!!
MATT CERDA - CUBS PROSPECT
Cerda competed in the LLWS that featured Danny Almonte – his team lost – so from a purely poetic justice standpoint, I’m rooting for this kid.
Here is the ESPN.com article that documents the story:
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/eticket/story?page=cerda
MATT CERDA - LITTLE LEAGUER
Among the pitching prospects:
Trey McNutt 6-4, 205 RHP (2009 32nd rounder) Age 21 - Good control, best curveball in the organization, a power CB. 92+ on the FB. High strikeout rate. (10.00 K/9IP).
TREY MCNUTT
Hayden Simpson 6-0, 175 RHP (2010 1st rounder) Age 21 - Surprise of the 2010 Draft 1st round. Cubs have seen him get the FB to 94-97. Has Maddux-like approach to pitching. Projects as a #2-3 starter. If he hits big and soon, he can have a major impact on the organizations fortunes.
HAYDEN SIMPSON
Chris Carpenter 6-4, 215 RHP (2009 3rd rounder) Age 25 - Possible bottom of the rotation starter or set-up reliever. Solid 92-95 FB good slider.
CHRIS CARPENTER
Rafael Dolis 6-4, 215 RHP (2004 Dominican Republic) Age 22 - Converted SS, project as a pitcher. High 90’s FB has broken 100+. Has some elbow and control issues.
RAFAEL DOLIS
So the future appears brighter. The transition from Lou Piniella to Mike Quade should allow the organization to transition more smoothly from a veteran oriented win-now approach, to a more patient system where impact players are drafted and developed from within. The recent success of organization like the Rays, Twins, Braves and more recently, the Giants World Series victory from last year, demonstrate that this approach can pay dividends rather quickly.
One of the more difficult jobs in baseball has to be in the PR department of the Chicago Cubs. Somebody in those offices has to deliver a message or a slogan -- that tells a fan base that has waited rather patiently since 1945 for a World Series appearance and 1908 for a World Series championship -- that the waiting will continue. The best the Ricketts family could come up with after spending $845M to purchase the team was “Year One”.
Cub’s fans (and the Ricketts family) are going to demand more for their money than that in 2011 and the good news may be found within the clubs suddenly resurgent farm system. Under the leadership of GM Jim Hendry, Farm Director Oneri Fleita and Scouting Director Tim Wilken, the Cubs are planting the seeds down on the farm that may result in a bumper crop of future major leaguers.
The Cubs organization is currently considered to have as many future big leaguers in its system than any other team in baseball according to the consensus of opinion of scouts and minor league directors. The team stubbed its toe at the beginning of the decade with its first-round picks beginning in 2001 with Mark Prior (mixed results). The Cubs followed that with Bobby Brownlie, Ryan Harvey, Grant Johnson and Mike Pawelek. Since 2006, the first-round has produced Tyler Colvin, Josh Vitters, Andrew Cashner, Brett Jackson and Hayden Simpson. Getting better, but it will take some time and a Rookie of the Year perhaps, to erase the memories of past futility and false hopes Remember Felix Pie? Brian Dopirak? Corey Patterson? Angel Guzman? And please don’t make me go all Hee-Seop Choi on your behind. Suffice to say, Cubs fans have been through a lot. In more ways than one.
But perhaps things are beginning to look up. Last year the Cubs introduced SS Starlin Castro and OF Tyler Colvin, as well as RHP Andrew Cashner, to the roster with mixed results and some question marks. Castro was an immediate hit with the bat -- posting a .300 average -- but his defensive lapses were a cause for concern. In his defense, ideally Castro should have been learning his craft in AA-AAA ball last year. There is nothing harder on a young prospect than making rookie mistakes on the major league stage, on balance Castro performed remarkably well and the expectation is he will be a fixture at SS for years to come.
Tyler Colvin showed promise as a hitter early, than tailed off somewhat as pitchers made adjustments. Like Castro, Colvin enters a pivotal sophomore year. A more patient approach should bring down his strikeout rate (100 in 358 AB’s) and lift his average (.254 BA) closer to .300. Colvin did club 20 HR’s last year, so a 30-90-.275 stat line is not out of the question for Colvin.
The only question about Andrew Cashner seemed to be “future starter or closer?” For now, it seems as if he will help Kerry Wood set-up closer Carlos Marmol. Not a bad option to have, a 6-6, 210 pound flame-thrower to lock down the sixth and seventh innings of games.
The Cubs took a pinch off the top of the prospect list to acquire RHP Matt Garza from the Devil Rays. RHP Chris Archer, SS Hak-Ju Lee and OF Brandon Guyer were highly regarded, but replaceable and certainly worth the price to add Garza to the top of the rotation. Garza, Carlos Zambrano and Ryan Dempster combined were 41-28 last year. Add a LHP Sean Marshall (7-5 record) instead of RHP Randy Wells (8-14 record) to the rotation and perhaps RHP Carlos Silva (10-6 record) or LHP James Russell and you have a starting staff that is capable of winning 60% or more of their approximately 90 decisions. Sixty percent gets you to 54-36. If you can manage to split those other games -- which are decided by bats and bullpens and in Wrigley Field generally leave behind softball scores – you can get to 90 wins and that should be good enough for a playoff berth, if not a divisional crown.
The bullpen is solid enough. The staff overall seems a little light on the left-handed side -- having dealt Tom Gorzelany to Washington for power-hitting prospect OF Michael Burgess -- and a decision has to be made on RHP Jeff Samardzia, but in a Central Division that may be the easiest pickings in the National League, the Cubbies have a shot as currently constructed.
Now, what does the future hold for the Cubs as far as prospects? After subtracting Archer and Lee from the top five prospects to get Garza, the Cubs recovered by securing Michael Burgess from Washington.
What is the buzz on Burgess? He’s a former first-rounder via Washington (2007 draft). A 5-11,195 lb. 22 year-old who throws and bats from the left side. Burgess brings a prodigious power bat, but strikes out frequently. He has a plus-OF arm. If he picks up his average a little and backs down the strikeouts (they go hand in hand) the Cubs appear to have a steal.
MICHAEL BURGESS
Former Nats' GM Jim Bowden offered this report recently:
“ Burgess has tremendous power, he's got 30-35 HR power, light-tower-power. When he hits them, he hits them a mile. He's got a great arm. He was a pitcher in high school, came out of Tampa, but a great arm. A good fielder, I'd say an average fielder with an above average [arm], he will throw you out. You try to score, you're not going to. You try to go first to third, Michael Burgess will throw you out. Now, what's the downside. High strikeouts. One out of four at bats he punches out. He's got some holes. He's got some mechanical things in his swing, I'm not going to call it a hitch, but he's got a little pump at the end that doesn't clear, and he hasn't been able to get rid of it yet, but, he's only 21-year-old, and that's when you look at prospects like this and you're seeing a guy that reaches all the way up to Double-A at twenty-one, if he was in the draft, he'd be coming out as a junior or senior in college and he'd be starting at A-ball or rookie ball. So, to me, you look at the age and go, okay only 21, he's got the power, and by the way, he's kept improving each year. I think it was a good pickup for [Cubs' GM] Jim Hendry. Look, he's not a sure thing, but if he makes it, if he can make some adjustments with the bat, and make more contact, Hendry might have just stolen a 25-30 HR major league hitter."
Not too bad. So Burgess goes towards the top of the list.
Keeping him company there and what, in some combination, will comprise the Cubs outfield of the future are:
Brett Jackson 6-2, 210 OF (2009 1st rounder) Age 22 - Best power hitter in organization, 4-tool player. Potential 20 HR, 20 SB type. Quick bat with plus speed.
BRETT JACKSON
Matt Szczur 6-1, 190 OF (2010 5th rounder) Age 21 – Best Athlete in organization. Fastest runner. Not much pop in the bat and needs more plate discipline and patience in hitting approach.
MATT SZCZUR
The top infield prospects would appear to be the following:
Josh Vitters 6-3, 195 3B (2007 1st rounder) Age 21 – Was the organizations top prospect in 2008-09. Has easy, compact stroke but can be pull-happy at times. Needs to develop a more patient approach.
JOSH VITTERS
Darwin Barney 5-10, 175 (2007 4th rounder) Age 25 – Makes contact, little pop in bat. Needs to be a more patient hitter as well. Best defensive IF in the organization.
DARWIN BARNEY
D.J. LeMahieu 6-4, 195 (2009 2nd rounder) Age 22 – May be one to watch down the road. Needs AA seasoning but early returns are good. Best Hitter for average in the organization, not much pop. Needs to develop more patient approach.
D.J. LEMAHIEU
Matt Cerda 5-9, 165 (2008 4th rounder) Age 20 – No speed, no pop. Consummate utility type prospect. Makes contact and HAS A PATIENT HITTING APPROACH. Yippee!!!!
MATT CERDA - CUBS PROSPECT
Cerda competed in the LLWS that featured Danny Almonte – his team lost – so from a purely poetic justice standpoint, I’m rooting for this kid.
Here is the ESPN.com article that documents the story:
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/eticket/story?page=cerda
MATT CERDA - LITTLE LEAGUER
Among the pitching prospects:
Trey McNutt 6-4, 205 RHP (2009 32nd rounder) Age 21 - Good control, best curveball in the organization, a power CB. 92+ on the FB. High strikeout rate. (10.00 K/9IP).
TREY MCNUTT
Hayden Simpson 6-0, 175 RHP (2010 1st rounder) Age 21 - Surprise of the 2010 Draft 1st round. Cubs have seen him get the FB to 94-97. Has Maddux-like approach to pitching. Projects as a #2-3 starter. If he hits big and soon, he can have a major impact on the organizations fortunes.
HAYDEN SIMPSON
Chris Carpenter 6-4, 215 RHP (2009 3rd rounder) Age 25 - Possible bottom of the rotation starter or set-up reliever. Solid 92-95 FB good slider.
CHRIS CARPENTER
Rafael Dolis 6-4, 215 RHP (2004 Dominican Republic) Age 22 - Converted SS, project as a pitcher. High 90’s FB has broken 100+. Has some elbow and control issues.
RAFAEL DOLIS
So the future appears brighter. The transition from Lou Piniella to Mike Quade should allow the organization to transition more smoothly from a veteran oriented win-now approach, to a more patient system where impact players are drafted and developed from within. The recent success of organization like the Rays, Twins, Braves and more recently, the Giants World Series victory from last year, demonstrate that this approach can pay dividends rather quickly.
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Eagle Baseball Club Recommended Reading List for Baseball & Softball Excellence
- 52 Week Baseball Training by Gene Coleman
- Advanced Fitness Assessment and Exercise Prescription by Vivian Heyward
- Athletic Body in Balance by Gray Cook
- Athletic Development by Vern Gambetta
- Complete Conditioning for Baseball by Steve Tamborra
- Expert Performance in Sports by Starkes and Ericsson
- Measurement & Evaluation in Human Performance by Morrow, Jackson, Disch & Mood
- Norms for Fitness, Performance and Health by Jay Hoffman
- Sports Speed - 3rd Edition by George Dintiman & Robert Ward
- Sports Talent by Jim Brown
- The Softball Coaching Bible by National Fastpitch Coaching Association
- Total Training for Young Champions by Tudor Bompa
Eagle Baseball Club Recommended Products List
- Cutting the Cord: HotDog.com (formerly KillTheCableBill.com)
- Keep Your Eye on the Ball: The Science and Folklore of Baseball by Robert G. Watts and A. Terry Bahill
- Mindset: The New Psychology for Success by Dr. Carol Dweck
- Talent is Overrated by Geoff Colvin
- The Genius in all of Us by David Shenk
- The Talent Code by Daniel Coyle
Giants Top Minor League Prospects
- 1. Joey Bart 6-2, 215 C Power arm and a power bat, playing a premium defensive position. Good catch and throw skills.
- 2. Heliot Ramos 6-2, 185 OF Potential high-ceiling player the Giants have been looking for. Great bat speed, early returns were impressive.
- 3. Chris Shaw 6-3. 230 1B Lefty power bat, limited defensively to 1B, Matt Adams comp?
- 4. Tyler Beede 6-4, 215 RHP from Vanderbilt projects as top of the rotation starter when he works out his command/control issues. When he misses, he misses by a bunch.
- 5. Stephen Duggar 6-1, 170 CF Another toolsy, under-achieving OF in the Gary Brown mold, hoping for better results.
- 6. Sandro Fabian 6-0, 180 OF Dominican signee from 2014, shows some pop in his bat. Below average arm and lack of speed should push him towards LF.
- 7. Aramis Garcia 6-2, 220 C from Florida INTL projects as a good bat behind the dish with enough defensive skill to play there long-term
- 8. Heath Quinn 6-2, 190 OF Strong hitter, makes contact with improving approach at the plate. Returns from hamate bone injury.
- 9. Garrett Williams 6-1, 205 LHP Former Oklahoma standout, Giants prototype, low-ceiling, high-floor prospect.
- 10. Shaun Anderson 6-4, 225 RHP Large frame, 3.36 K/BB rate. Can start or relieve
- 11. Jacob Gonzalez 6-3, 190 3B Good pedigree, impressive bat for HS prospect.
- 12. Seth Corry 6-2 195 LHP Highly regard HS pick. Was mentioned as possible chip in high profile trades.
- 13. C.J. Hinojosa 5-10, 175 SS Scrappy IF prospect in the mold of Kelby Tomlinson, just gets it done.
- 14. Garett Cave 6-4, 200 RHP He misses a lot of bats and at times, the plate. 13 K/9 an 5 B/9. Wild thing.
2019 MLB Draft - Top HS Draft Prospects
- 1. Bobby Witt, Jr. 6-1,185 SS Colleyville Heritage HS (TX) Oklahoma commit. Outstanding defensive SS who can hit. 6.4 speed in 60 yd. Touched 97 on mound. Son of former major leaguer. Five tool potential.
- 2. Riley Greene 6-2, 190 OF Haggerty HS (FL) Florida commit.Best HS hitting prospect. LH bat with good eye, plate discipline and developing power.
- 3. C.J. Abrams 6-2, 180 SS Blessed Trinity HS (GA) High-ceiling athlete. 70 speed with plus arm. Hitting needs to develop as he matures. Alabama commit.
- 4. Reece Hinds 6-4, 210 SS Niceville HS (FL) Power bat, committed to LSU. Plus arm, solid enough bat to move to 3B down the road. 98MPH arm.
- 5. Daniel Espino 6-3, 200 RHP Georgia Premier Academy (GA) LSU commit. Touches 98 on FB with wipe out SL.
2019 MLB Draft - Top College Draft Prospects
- 1. Adley Rutschman C Oregon State Plus defender with great arm. Excellent receiver plus a switch hitter with some pop in the bat.
- 2. Shea Langliers C Baylor Excelent throw and catch skills with good pop time. Quick bat, uses all fields approach with some pop.
- 3. Zack Thompson 6-2 LHP Kentucky Missed time with an elbow issue. FB up to 95 with plenty of secondary stuff.
- 4. Matt Wallner 6-5 OF Southern Miss Run producing bat plus mid to upper 90's FB closer. Power bat from the left side, athletic for size.
- 5. Nick Lodolo LHP TCU Tall LHP, 95MPH FB and solid breaking stuff.