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Ortiz and Ramirez, Ortiz and Ramirez
Photo
by Charles Krupa - AP
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Manny entertaining during BP
Photo
by Elise Amendola - AP
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Yes,
baseball is all about pitching and defense, but you wouldn't know it
from the
action on deadline day. Hitters carried the day. In three
pretty
huge surprises, Manny Ramirez went NOT to Florida at all, but wound up with
the
Dodgers, and gets to be Joe Torre's player, no longer his
nemesis. Ken
Griffey Jr. leaves the Reds after all those years. And Pudge of
course
will wear a Yankees uniform.
Only
the Pudge trade could even be remotely related to pitching, as the
catcher, of
course, is one half of every pitching matchup. And Pudge will
have to
represent the defense as well, for Manny surely won't be a Gold Glover,
and
Griffey, though he'll play centerfield in his new role with the White
Sox, is
kind of long in the tooth to be able to make an impact that way
anymore.
Yankees
fans are thrilled. Not only did they pick up one of the very best
catchers in the game, but they won't have to face Manny anymore.
Mets
fans are happy too, for, although the Mets made absolutely no deals,
they won't
have to face a Marlins team with Manny on it.
All
those pitchers who could have gone elsewhere, Washburn, the guys in Toronto (pick a
guy), and
just about every pitcher not playing for a contender, was fodder for
the rumor
mill. But the GM's went for hitting on the last day. And
WHAT
hitters!
Manny
Ramirez is a career .312 hitter and he's hit 510 homers. Ken
Griffey Jr.
is a career .288 with 608 home runs. Pudge isn't really in the
same class
but he does hold some records for 4-hit games. And his .302
career
batting average over so many years stamps him as an All-Star candidate
as well,
though he's hit "only" 293 dingers.
Dodgers
fans should be especially happy. Over a 2-day period, they picked
up
Casey Blake from the Indians, another power hitter, and now they get
Ramirez. The Dodgers weren't scoring enough runs, something Mr.
Torre,
after all those Yankees sluggers, can't really deal with. And now
he
won't have to.
Torre’s
outfield juggling may not cease altogether, but he’s certainly holding
some
more powerful cards. The Dodgers hit
only 74 home runs this year, next to last in home runs and fifth from
the
bottom in RBI’s in both leagues. Casey
Blake has 11 homers and 58 rbi’s while Ramirez currently has 20 dingers
and 68
ribbies. Dodger fortunes look much
brighter as their pitching has been good, currently holding the
league’s third best
earned run average.
I
know some of the Boston faithful think this was a good move, as they
did get
Jason Bay, a productive and powerful presence himself, in return for
Ramirez. And, of course, he won’t be
nearly the same pain in the butt.
How
much of a true “distraction” he ever was for the Red Sox seems a bit
unclear. For a guy who’s been a
distraction, he sure
gets more than his share of accolades from his team mates, former and
present. Former Sox now with the Dodgers,
Derek Lowe
and Nomar Garciaparra had only good things to say yesterday. Big Papi was pictured hugging Manny the other
day, no doubt his realizing their days as the top third and fourth
hitters in
the league would soon be at an end.
I
think Manny’s problems were with management alone. All
the players seem to acknowledge his hard
work and appreciate that he is a family man, a guy who does his job and
then
goes home to his family.
Of
course, the players didn’t have to worry about the gamesmanship Manny
used in
his all-out effort to maximize his income over his last playing years. And they weren’t on the hook for his salary. So, in the end, the Red Sox got off the 40
million dollar hook for just the 7 million they sent the Dodgers to pay
Manny’s
salary for the rest of this year.
Boston’s management may
be happy for now, but I have a feeling
they’ll be despondent in October. Jason Bay
is just not Manny Ramirez, not only with the bat, but I have a feeling
they’ll
miss the way Manny’d play all those balls off the Fenway wall.
But,
most of all, they’ll miss his sense of fun, his enthusiasm for the game
and
especially his pure hitting ability. Jason Bay
can’t be Manny. He’s a one of a kind.
Boston’s management says
they’re tired of Manny’s antics but those antics won them a World
Series in
2004 and 2007. Jason Bay
hits a hundred points less than Manny with runners in scoring position.
How
many times have we seen Boston
opponents intentionally walk Big Papi only to have to face Manny? And how many times had Manny stuck their
strategy right in the eye? Manny has to
be the best hitter in the league following an intentional walk. I don’t have any stats on which to base this
claim, just an observation. If I had to
guess, I’d say it was about .660.
Ortiz
and Ramirez, Ortiz and Ramirez, Ortiz followed by Ramirez, how many
times have
those words struck fear in all but the Boston
faithful? No more. For
an avowed Yankee-hater (in general), these
last days before the deadline have been an ominous sign of things to
come, a
portent of doom for the un-striped.
So,
for an old baseball fan, I guess it’s interesting that Griffey goes to
those
other Sox in Chicago.
And it’s kind of interesting
that the
Yanks got Pudge too. And, yeah, it’s the
first time ever that three future Hall-of-Famers have been traded in
the space
of 24 hours. Cool.
For
all that, the real story yesterday was Manny Ramirez going to the
Dodgers. Churchill said it best, “never in
the field
of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.”
For Boston,
the few
have lost a key man.
