Red Sox FSL Update…Yes, they used to have a team

The Boston Red Sox don’t have a Florida State League affiliate.  They did.  But now they don’t.  In fact, the Marauders used to be the Red Sox.  Before the Marauders were purchased by the Pirates and moved to Bradenton for 2010, the franchise operated as the Sarasota Reds.  Before that it was the Sarasota Red Sox.  The affiliation ended following the 2004 season.

Since being in the FSL the Red Sox have bounced out to the Lancaster Jethawks of the California League and now the Salem Red Sox of the Carolina League.  Fortunately for Andrew Miller that means there is no possible way (barring him switching teams) that he could pitch in the Florida State League this summer.

See Miller owns a fairly dubious piece of trivia.  In five professional seasons, Miller has pitched in both the Major Leagues and the FSL every year.  This isn’t a fact but I’m just going to say he’s the only player in Major League history to hold that statistic (I’m sure he’s not). 

A first round pick of the Tigers out of UNC in 2006, Miller has also spent time with the Marlins and threw the Florida State League’s only no-hitter last season with Jupiter.  It wasn’t exactly a pretty affair – six walks in six innings, combining with the bullpen for history.

“It was exciting for the team I guess,” Miller said, “but it’s not nearly as exciting as doing it at a higher level.  It was a little bit of fun.  It’s one of those things you can smile when you look back on.”

Overall pros and cons on playing in the FSL for Miller?  Well he’s pretty similar to other things we’ve heard.  It’s almost like ‘for answer A press this button’ by this point.  As a pro Miller pointed out travel and as a con he mentioned overall smaller crowds than at other levels.

“One of the side effects is that you don’t have too many fans so it’s not like there’s a huge crowd rooting the team on,” Miller said.  “It’s just something you deal with.  It doesn’t matter one way or the other.  In the Florida State League everybody’s working to get better. It’s a very personalized level you’re just kind of concerned with getting yourself better and moving onto the next level.”

The lanky southpaw has battled injury and sometimes ineffectiveness throughout his career, leading to his back and forth journey.  Those issues have caused some to maybe write Miller off.  The pitcher will quickly remind you he’s only 25.

“If I could do it all over again I certainly wouldn’t choose anything different,” Miller said.  “I had incredible experiences and I got to pitch in a pennant race right out of college.  I don’t think you’ll hear too many guys complain about time they’ve spent in the Major Leagues.  I wouldn’t trade it for the world.  Would I say I would have rather thrown 500 innings or 700 innings in the minor leagues before I got called up?  I would say absolutely not.  I’m still 25 years old and I’ve got some time to work out kinks and hopefully I’m doing that right now.”

I’m not pointing this out to ridicule Miller.  Actually, I’m doing it for quite the opposite.  Miller’s had a fine spring and is hoping to make the Red Sox roster.  My point was to try and relate some of what Miller’s had to go through to the Pirates.

The Marauders had two pitchers on their roster last season that got me thinking and were the reason I spoke to Miller in the first place.  Both Tim Alderson and Craig Hansen are trying to regain the magic they once had – Hansen as a 1st round pick by the Sox in 2006 and Alderson a 1st round pick by the Giants.  The former made it to the bigs right out of the BIG EAST and St. Johns.  The latter had great success at A-Advanced ball in his first full season.  Both were in Bradenton last year trying to get that back.

Hansen is returning from injury.  Sidelined all of 2009 and a large chunk of 2010 with Parsonage Turner Syndrome, Hansen sticks out like a sore thumb at minor league camp these days.  There amongst all the hopefuls stands the one-time top prospect trying to retrain his body to throw.  Hansen is the first baseball player to ever come back from the injury that can take anywhere from seven months to five years recovery.

“It feels like I’ve never thrown a baseball in life before,” Hansen said last year when he began his comeback with Bradenton.

Alderson is just trying to regain his spark.  A dominant amateur pitcher and early pro, the lanky righty fell off course the last year and a half or so.  His velocity dipped and his effectiveness dwindled.  ESPN the Magazine even featured him in an article.  In that piece Alderson drops this fairly poignant quote after his high school coach gave him an honest assessment of his current ‘stuff.’

“Everything we’d worked for, everything he developed is gone,” Alderson is quoted as saying.  “It’s hard to look at myself and think, I was a better pitcher when I was 15.”

So with those two guys in mind – indeed very different cases, and for that matter very different from Miller – I was curious as to what the Red Sox arm thought about trying to make a comeback – trying to bounce back and solidify himself.

“I think that’s huge,” Miller said of needing to have confidence.  “Anybody that’s playing professional baseball has the talent to pitch in the Major Leagues but the ones that are most successful are probably the most confident ones – the ones that trust their stuff and believe in their abilities and limit their doubts.  It’s huge.  It’s one of the most important things if not the most important thing.  Otherwise you’re going to go out there and dig yourself a hole.

To be honest with you it’s something that everybody deals with,” Miller continued.  “The ones that succeed are the ones that handle it the best or the ones that fight through it.  We’re not saving lives or anything but it is a hard game and it’s tough.  You’ve gotta block out those negative thoughts and move on and stay positive and attack the hitter.”

VARITEK LOOKS BACK

While I was in the Red Sox clubhouse I figured I wouldn’t waste the opportunity to pick at least on other brain.  Thought it might be neat to see what one of Boston’s stars remembered about his minor league career.  Enter Jason Varitek.

“As bad as some of the bus rides are it’s also fun,” the veteran backstop said.  “Guys having a ball watching a movie to playing cards to playing games to whatever.  You bond over a long period of time.”

Varitek never played A-Advanced ball.  He jumped right to the Double-A Southern League out of Georgia Tech.  He’s played just two games in the minors since his big league debut in 1997.

“I was overmatched, outtalented and humiliated,” Varitek said quite frankly about his early minor league career.  The catcher hit .224 in his maiden voyage for Port City.

“I learned to face adversity right away,” Varitek continued.  “The level of competition day in and day out was different than I had ever seen.  Part of development sometimes is you’re starring down a black hole and you don’t see any light and then all of a sudden some light appears and then some more and some more and some more.  That’s the encouraging thing for anybody is that there’s going to be some light at the end of that tunnel.  You just have to find where it is.”

ERIN ANDREWS NOT HERE

I had a small curiosity with the Red Sox in town.  Would Erin Andrews be on Boston’s pass list?  Essentially would there be a ticket left for her at will call?  She is a Florida native after all.

If you’re now scratching your head in confusion, allow me to start from the top.

Red Sox outfielder Daniel Nava has a small crush on Andrews.  It’s nothing new – been chronicled in USA Today, the Boston Herald etc.  The story first ‘broke’ when Pawtucket Red Sox broadcaster Dan Hoard (one of the best in the biz by the way) posted this picture (scroll down the link) of the PawSox pass list last year.  Turns out Nava’s always left a ticket for the ESPN star just in case she was in town.

Anyways, not that I was expecting Andrews to show up at McKechnie Field, I was kind of excited to see if there was a ticket left for her at will call.  Long story short…there was not.

Till next time,

Joel

 

 

The Most Annoying Sound in the World (and other things you learn on Photo Day)

We continue along today with my continuing journey of learning what actually happens during Spring Training.  If you missed our last edition, read it here, or here’s a brief recap:

As a kid Joel thought Spring Training involved games.  As he grew older he thought it was workouts and games.  As he grew older he realized minor league pitchers and catcher don’t report when pitchers and catchers do, that’s only the big leaguers.  He has also had the childhood belief dispelled that meals were like summer camp and involved all players coming into the mess hall, listening to announcements then going outside for the flag raising.  Well, the last one wasn’t much of a staple in my mind, but it had been fleeting thought when I was 12 or so, so there you go.

Today’s edition talks about photo day, which begins at about 7am.  This was early for me because I had been broadcasting a Pitt-Iowa college baseball game Saturday night and didn’t get to my hotel in Clearwater until about 12:30.  I woke up at four to ensure I could get showered, dressed and back to Bradenton by six.  While this may seem insane, it is, but I trained my body to learn to work on three hours sleep while in college (and cue my mother calling me concerned).  It wasn’t for bad reasons, I just worked a lot, but anyway.

So I arrived at Pirate City and took my position, swinging a bat to be used as a prop while waiting for players and coaches to arrive.  My job was to cross off the names of players as they came to the dining hall for pictures.  We all took our guesses at who would be first.  With Pirates Media Relations Director Jim Trdinich informing us it’s always a coach in first, I guessed hitting coach Gregg Ritchie.  Gregg let me down.  Actually it was Wally Whitehurst, 2010 Marauders pitching coach, that came through the door first.  Trevor Gooby, the boss, promptly changed his guess from whatever it was to Wally.  I guess he won.

As the morning went on my job grew to include “Hat Finder,” asking each player what size hat they wanted and then finding it.  There are a couple of issues here.  Hats are in sizes by the eighth inch but are reduced fractions (think elementary school).  This makes finding sizes much more difficult.  When you’re moveing quickly it’s hard to tell the difference between 3/8 and 1/2.  After all, three is bigger than both one and two and it’s just too much math in the morning.  Also of note here is that the most common size of hat is 7 and 3/8 inches.  It was also the hardest hat to find in our pile, causing Garrett Jones to yelp with glee when one was found in the haystack.  Yes, yelp, he didn’t want anybody else taking that hat.

Once fitted with hats the players go from station to station taking pictures for headshots, baseball cards and whatever else.  Some also stopped at the signing table and autographed I believe three dozen baseballs.  The authenticator was on hand to verify them all.  This was pretty cool because I’ve only ever read about this man (or his kind).  Now I know he does (they do) indeed exist. 

From there I toured around with Rule 5 Draft pick Josh Rodriguez and walked him into the board room where it looked like the dentist from Little Shop of Horrors had set up.  The photographers put Rodriguez in their chair contraption and took his picture with this funky looking column of cameras, slowly rotating him in a circle for the next shot.  I learned this was for MLB The Show.  They were shooting his 360 degree body shot so it can be perfectly replicated in the game.  And who said video games aren’t realistic?  Or maybe they’re too realistic haha.  Hey, soon will come the day when your video game will be rained out.

(PHOTO: Matt Diaz on the green screen)

diaz green screen.jpg

I then took Rodriguez upstairs where he shot all of his stuff for the PNC Park scoreboard.  We previewed this on last week’s Monday Morning Minute.  The two of us walked in on Aaron Thompson’s question and answer shoot.  While I don’t want to reveal too much I will say that Thompson was asked the following two questions back-to-back.  What is your favorite movie and what is the most annoying sound in the world?  He responded with Dumb and Dumber and, of course, this.

Some players were also asked about their celebrity crushes for the shoot.  I heard anything from Biel to Bullock and figured I would take the opportunity to tell GLEE star Diana Agron that she’s welcome to a Marauders game anytime.  Anyway, moving on.

I don’t want to reveal too many secrets, but some of the stuff they shoot for the scoreboard is really very cool.  And yes, it did involve fire, although it’s all digital. 

By the time photo day ended it was maybe 10:00.  All that in less than three hours.  File it away as another thing that goes on during Spring Training.

Till next time,

Joel

 

 

Eric Fryer Movin’ On Up

Eric Fryer just looks beyond his years.  Walk around Pirate City when the Major Leaguers are in town and he just kind of fits in.

“Look!  It’s Andrew McCutchen, Garrett Jones, Joel Hanrahan…Eric Fryer?”

To be honest, it took a while for me to get used to the fact that Fryer wasn’t this wily vet down in A-ball coaching others on their way to the Show.  I just always got the feeling he was some kind of Crash Davis.  After all, Fryer is on his third organization (because of trades, not releases), he’s married with a son and he’s, well, balding.  But then you check the vitals.

Last year was only Fryer’s third full professional season, and the first in which he only played one position.  The catcher found a home with Pittsburgh and is only 25, nothing more.  Next month the Ohio native is going to his first Major League Spring Training. 

“I was out taking batting practice and [Pirates Director of Player Development Kyle Stark] just kind of pulled me aside and said ‘Hey you want to come to big league camp?'” Fryer said very matter-of-factly.  “I said sure and he goes, ‘Yeah well we’re going to invite you.'”

Ho Hum.  But then again that’s Eric Fryer.  He just kind of takes everything in stride.  He goes about his business and he gets it done.  He falls under the category of a ‘Lunch pail guy;’ somebody who grabs the pail and just goes to work.

And Fry worked last year.  He hit .300 with the Marauders, heating up late in the year despite coming back from a broken face.  Yes, a broken face.  Fryer took a pitch to the orbital bone while batting against Charlotte in July and missed a month.  When he came back you could still see a little imprint of where the seams hit.  A big league Spring Training call is well deserved.

“Nothing really changes except when I’m going to arrive,” said Fryer.  “The goals are still the same: Go out and just improve every day that I can and get better leading up to the season.  It will be neat to gain a little bit more experience from the older guys, see a little more from [Chris] Snyder, [Ryan] Doumit and [Jason] Jaramillo.  I can see what they do really well and try and take it to my game.”

Fryer is one of 22 Non-Roster Invitees to Pirates camp.  He’s officially listed as an outfielder but says he hasn’t been told he’ll be doing anything other than catching.  Several other Marauders will be with Fryer, including fellow catcher Tony Sanchez, pitchers Jeff Locke, Bryan Morris, Ramon Aguero and Kyle McPherson.

“It’s nice that there are several guys I know from playing with them during the season or having been around them at instructs,” Fryer said.  “So it won’t be as awkward.  I feel like I can belong and they invited me for a reason so it’s just a matter of going out and playing and hopefully the results go in my favor.”

And it’s kind of nice because of the perks you get too.  Fryer said he’s already been ordered some bats, a nice change from the generic Pro Stocks he uses regularly.  He makes out just a bit better financially as well.

“I get a little more meal money up on the major league side so I’m going to take advantage of that and live off it a little bit,” Fryer said.  “Aside from that it’s just a chance to play against top tier competition and I think that’s just what everybody wants the chance to do.”

Pitchers and catchers report to Pirate City the third week of February.

 

Fryer, Eric - Bat Pose.JPG

 

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