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Rumors for April, 2010

Bob Uecker4/30 22:00: Brewers radio broadcaster Bob Uecker underwent successful heart surgery Friday in Milwaukee’s Froedtert Hospital, the team announced.

The procedure lasted six hours. Uecker will now remain hospitalized for about five to seven days, and a full recovery is expected to take 10-12 weeks, the release stated.

“As of 2:30 pm [CT], Bob is out of surgery and in the ICU,” said Dr. Alfred Nicolosi, who performed the surgery. “We are pleased that Mr. Uecker’s surgery went smoothly today. We replaced his aortic valve, aortic root and part of his ascending aorta. We also did a coronary bypass on one vessel.”

Our best wishes and a speedy recovery goes out to Bob Uecker from the PRO Rumors nation!

Information from MLB.com was used in this article.

4/27 12:24: Brewers broadcaster Bob Uecker is scheduled to have heart surgery on Friday and expected to miss 10-12 weeks. The team has called a press conference at 3:30pm CT to make a formal announcement.

Uecker may be best known for those that aren’t baseball fans as the TV dad of the T.G.I.F. show Mr. Belvedere. Uecker also was the announcer in the Major League movie franchise who said the famous quote, “just a bit outside.”

Our prayers go out to Uecker. We hope for a speedy recovery!

Information from Adam McCalvy of MLB.com was used in this article.

Categories : Injury
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Braves closer Billy Wagner or known better known to others as Billy the Kid is currently sixth on the all-time saves list with 386 saves. He recently sat down with manager Bobby Cox and told him that he plans on retiring at the end of this season, reports Carroll Rogers of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.  The lefty says that he had only intended to play for one year for the Braves when he signed his most recent contract but that the Braves through in the option year.

Cox told Wagner that he believes that he still has the ability to play for a few more years, but the 38-year-old says that he wants to spend more time with his family.  Wagner, who turns 39 in July, will earn $7MM this season.

Lets open it up for conversation.  Does Wagner have a place in the Hall-Of-Fame after he retires?

You can see Billy Wagner’s complete year by year statistics here.

Categories : Retirement
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Instead of paying the outrageous mobile phoneMatt Kemp and Rihanna rates of $5.00 per minute to the likes of O2 or  Vodafone while on tour in Europe, pop star Rihanna uses the online telephone technology Skype to talk with her boyfriend Matt Kemp of the Dodgers.

While in Paris, France on her European leg of her tour, she told the Daily Mirror newspaper, “I’m really happy right now. It’s an amazing city. I love it. It would have been so cool if he was here. I was hoping he would be able to come to London but he’s working. And I’m touring and shooting videos for my next single so it’s going to be seven weeks before I see him again.”

“We have to make do with Skype and phone, but I miss him. And this is the most romantic town. I can’t wait to see him again.”

Rihanna we hope you consoled your boyfriend in the wake of the team throwing him under the bus the other day. Also get used to using Skype since Kemp may be out of Los Angeles in a few years.

Categories : Fun
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1972-chevelle-ssYesterday we mentioned Tampa Bay Rays Joe Maddon receiving a custom hoodie from New England Patriot’s coach Bill Belichick. Today, Joe Smith of the St. Petersburg Times tells us that Maddon’s wife, Jaye, is giving the manager a 1972 Chevelle Malibu in “Rays” blue with white stripes down the middle, a white interior and an updated stereo system.

Maddon’s response?  “I’m getting a Chevy on her birthday, so that’s kind of cool,” he said.

Categories : Fun
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As anger and opposition to the new Arizona immigration law grows across the country, baseball is finding itself in the middle of the controversy. The 2011 All-Star game is scheduled to be held at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona and the Diamondbacks are owned by the Kendrick family, who has donated millions of dollars to Republicans in the state. Ken Kendrick, the managing partner for the Diamondbacks, has released a statement saying that he opposes the bill.

Another compelling overlap with baseball and the law that has garnered national attention is the fact that an estimated 25 to 30 percent of baseball is made up of Latin Americans. Many of these players come to the United States with limited knowledge of English and could now potentially have their rights infringed upon by the bill. Political figures from Karl Rove to President Obama, among others, have come out against it.

Major League Baseball and, more importantly, Bud Selig have a chance to change the image of the sport and win a huge public relations victory by making a stand to protect their employees: pull the All-Star game out of Arizona and lead the way in the fight to kill this bill.

Players in the league are here legally, the teams make sure of that, but players could still be detained if they forget their papers. Most lawyers agree that the new Arizona law will be overturned for being unconstitutional, but if baseball pulls the All-Star game until this happens, they come out smelling like roses.
Football did something similar in the early 90’s by taking the Super Bowl away from Arizona for not recognizing Martin Luther King Jr. day and did not return until after the holiday was made official by the state. The ramifications of this new law are much larger than whether or not a holiday is observed. This bill actually affects the rights of citizens and almost a third of Major League Baseball players.

Baseball should also consider the possible negative consequences of not being proactive in opposition to this law. There have already been boycotts in ballparks around the country of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Latino players could very well set up their own boycott of the All-Star game or playing in Arizona in general, which could be a potential black eye to the sport.

Selig has a chance to spin baseball positively in the press and be proactive. He has the power with the far-reaching “best interests of the game” clause. The question is now whether he will act in the best interest of the sport and the country or the best interest of one club in Arizona.

Adam JonesThis one is courtesy of Jamie Mottram of misterirrelevant.com.

Mottram points out that Baltimore Orioles center fielder Adam Jones is having a poor start to the 2010 season and is challenging his critics to a session of batting practice. Here’s his tweet:

i wanna hold a small clinic where i have people meet me at camden, i take them into the cage and throw bp. who think they can hit?????

His Twitter account is currently locked. I’m wondering if it has anything to do with MLB’s latest crackdown on their employee’ tweets.

Jones had a few other tweets that have since been blocked:
its time i catch fire. hasnt been the most productive month but still playing my azz off like usual.

funny how people thinks its easy from the stands.

Mr. Adam Jones I hope you find your batting practice friends, and hopefully when you are done throwing, they can throw some at you and you can raise your .202 average.

Categories : Fun
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Jeff FrancoeurCarroll Rogers of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution talks about how the Braves were able to draft slugger Jason Heyward in the 14th spot in the 2007 draft.

According to Rogers, the Braves used several tactics in order to keep the kids from Georgia from being drafted by other teams. Some tales include phantom bad medical reports on pitcher Adam Wainwright, a fax circulating that said Jeff Francoeur wanted a $4 million signing bonus and Heyward’s high school coach was asked to throw bad batting practice so that other scouts couldn’t get a good look.

Roy Clark, the former Braves scouting director who drafted Heyward, Francoeur and Brian McCann did not admit to his shenanigans. He said, “One day in the next 10, 15 years, I will talk about it.”

Rogers says the Braves went to great lengths to get Heyward, who they started watching since age 11. One Braves scout, Al Goetz, slipped into the woods behind the field to watch the games so that other scouts wouldn’t see him in the stands. Clark got friendly with a family who lived behind Francoeur’s high school, so he watched him play from there.

Categories : Fun, team
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Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Giants LogoSan Francisco Chronicle tells us that the Giants are in talks to join a group or groups that are pondering bids for the Golden State Warriors. The Giants’ participation could range from a marketing and sponsorship partnership to a direct financial investment.

There’s a possibility of the Warriors moving from their current home in Oakland to a piece of land that is south of the Giant’s stadium AT&T Park in San Francisco.

The Warriors are estimated to be valued between $300-400 million. The Giants aren’t alone in the bidding process. The founder of Oracle, Larry Ellison and the founder of 24 Hour Fitness, Mark Mastrov, are believed to be interested in purchasing the team.

Categories : team
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Jeramine DyeJoe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times suggests that the Chicago White Sox take a chance and call their former outfielder/DH Jermaine Dye.

Cowley says Dye will need two weeks to be ready to face Major League pitching, so he wonders if he could be “signed, sealed and ready to join the team in mid-May?”

The White Sox are currently in fourth place in the AL Central, five games behind the Minnesota Twins.

”It’s tough to believe that they’re in the position they’re in,” Dye said. ”I’ve talked to some of the guys, and they’re battling to figure it out.”

Signing Dye is one thing, but getting him playing time is a whole new problem.

”Right now, I don’t know where J.D. is,” manager Ozzie Guillen said of the possibility of getting Dye off the unemployment line. ”Our outfield is playing pretty good. I mean Carlos [Quentin] is struggling, but Andruw [Jones] is swinging the bat good, and [Alex] Rios is swinging the bat good. It makes me think, ‘OK, where would I put him?”’

Dye seems like he’s itching to go, but he’s not going to play for any team or for any price.

”I’m not going to a bad team, and I’m not playing for $1.5million,” Dye said.

Categories : free-agent
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A few days ago, I profiled Mike Stanton’s brutal treatment of Southern League pitching and appealed to the baseball gods for his call-up. Stanton has a .452-7-16 line in his last 8 games with Jacksonville. He’s made a pretty compelling case, and the Marlins could still use his bat, but that’s neither here nor there. If they haven’t brought him up by now, it’s clear that they probably aren’t going to do so by June 1st.

Most fans would like to imagine ownership as preoccupied with the concept of winning. Cleveland owner Richard Jacobs once quipped, “We won’t make any money, but we’ll have a damn good team.” Yet, because all owners want to make money, it follows that there is a certain pragmatism to this – pragmatism about collateral markets, about endorsements, merchandising, media, etc. Sometimes, pragmatism mandates hiring the very best scouts and minds and paying for the right players in order to win. Sometimes, it equates winning with adding revenue. And then sometimes it just means pocketing all that extra dough rather than reinvesting it in the team. In that last sense, amid the ownerships of all thirty clubs, Florida owner Jeffrey Loria is among the most “pragmatic.”

Loria isn’t one given to the notion of nonpecuniary advantages. Not one like Tampa Bay owner Stuart Sternberg, who opened his own checkbook to build the very blueprint for success by a cost-conscious team. This approach has quintupled the value of the Rays’ franchise in Sternberg’s first five years as owner. Tampa’s payroll is roughly twice that of the Marlins, who sit at the bottom of the league, and they still field a very competitive team despite the fact that they play in an office building, and in the game’s toughest division. Heck, as a Red Sox fan, even I like the Rays enough to buy their stuff.

Nor has Loria, until recently, taken baseball’s revenue-sharing system as a lease on roster-building, or as anything more than a way to pay off his own debts. Too many potential franchise players – such as Josh Beckett, Miguel Cabrera and Derrek Lee – have been parted with because of Loria’s unwillingness, not his inability, to sign them to a decent contract. In fact, it is precisely because of owners like him this system faces a serious overhaul. Instead, the Marlins’ owner is a guy who – and look no further than this – tried to save money by cutting the mascot’s salary in half. So here’s some food for thought, Mr. Loria:

Put aside the fact that in 2008, your scouts nearly netted you Atlanta’s Jason Heyward in the first round (instead of Matt Dominguez) and still picked you Stanton in the second. Please take a brief moment to imagine both Stanton and Heyward in your farm system, and allow that to sink in. OK. OK. Now, let’s look at the effect which the divergent Heyward, in starting his season in the majors, has had on Atlanta’s bottom line.

This year, the Braves had the biggest opening day attendance of any team in baseball, their biggest opener in more than a decade. Moreover, Atlanta has drawn 44,440 more fans than they had through their first six home dates last year. This could be attributed to a few different factors, until you see that Heyward kid’s jerseys being snatched up as though they are already collector’s items. The Braves didn’t save themselves any in his coming arbitration, but they did recognize an appeal which fans literally can’t deny, and it bodes well with the bookkeepers.

Unlike Jason Heyward, Mike Stanton isn’t playing in his hometown, but there is no ambiguity about his talent. He’s an enormously exciting position player who hits home runs with casual violence. No matter what your ownership style, he’s a cant-miss combo of the right stuff. Pushing back his arbitration date reflects a kind of pragmatism. Adopting him as a franchise cornerstone and a darling of the turnstiles might reflect another sort, as well.

Categories : editorial
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