Author Archives: Matthew

Y2010M! Mike Sweeney

(Y2010M! stands for Your 2010 Mariners! and is a series of posts aiming to touch on every player possibly important to the Mariners’ season.)

Geoff Baker is claiming today that, barring some unexpected pitching moves to deal with the Lee injury (13 man staff?), Mike Sweeney has made the opening day roster.  This will likely come at the expense of Ryan Garko and has commentors throughout the blogosphere gnashing their teeth and proclaiming that this clearly shows the team has no intention of winning this season. Count me as one who really doesn’t get it.  Get the gnashing of teeth, that is.  Sweeney on the team makes total sense from my viewpoint.  Sure, Sweeney and Griffey at DH again is not what anyone wants, but barring a trade for someone clearly better, Sweeney sure seems like the best option we have.  This team is not going to hit that much.  I think they’ll hit better than some are expecting, but they still need every bat they can get. Continue reading

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A Husky Post-Mortem

Yesterday at game time, I sat at my desk, unable to get away from work quite yet, Bob Rondeau giving his usual pre-game chatter, and I had a feeling that I frequently get before Husky football games, but rarely before basketball games.  It’s hard to describe, a nervousness that everyone has surely experienced, and I think it comes from knowing that the next few hours will become memories and a part of life.  That sounds overly important, sports are just a game, so on and so forth, and ultimately, what happens on the court or field isn’t that important to my life.  For those playing or coaching, it might mean a lost job or change in career trajectory, but for me, there’ll just be some sadness or disappointment or joy and whatever memories I take away from it.

It’s those memories that are important, so much more important than the game or results itself.  They are just some memories among many others, but they are a part of life.  Any sports fan can rattle off his strongest memories of games the way a music lover remembers concerts or a parent remembers times with his child.  For me, it’s Edgar’s 1995 playoff grand slam at my friend Dustin’s house, me alone on the couch while everyone else was off doing something else.  Falling asleep as a kid on my birthday with an Apple Cup on TV and a new baseball glove on my hand.  Watching the two UConn losses, the first in a church and the second in a bar.  A thousand moments at Husky Stadium: Corey Dillon running wild in the pouring rain, Santana Moss losing the ball, high fives with my dad, walking on the field looking for Andrew and Rachel after the USC win in a sea of joy and astonishment.

A game like yesterday’s is hard because there was very little worth remembering.  After one of the most memorable seasons in their history, the Huskies just got beat.  They didn’t play well, they didn’t compete, they didn’t respond when challenged.  It was a tough way for Quincy, one of their all-time great players and people, to leave.  It was a tough way to end a season that was alternately frustrating and exhilarating.

So I’ll leave the game breakdown to a fellow Good Guy here or elsewhere.  I don’t have much to say.  Anyone who’s watched this team could tell you what went wrong.  This game wasn’t right for this season.  This season was fast breaks and the whole team on the floor for a loose ball, MBA hook shots and dunks, Justin Holliday’s long arms and Elston Turner’s late season threes.  It was Isaiah becoming a basketball player and the leader of the team, and Venoy hounding Derek Glasser one last time.  It was a talented group of guys becoming one of the most exciting teams to watch I’ve ever seen, even if it started too late and ended too soon.  And it was Quincy Pondexter doing everything, making every shot, and it was especially Quincy dropping the game winner against Marquette.  It was a season worth remembering.

-Matthew

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Two More Weeks

The Mariners season opener is just two weeks from yesterday.  Luckily we have the NCAA tournament and the Huskies to watch those two weeks, because we have reached the official spring-training-is-incredibly-boring point.  This is also the point, though, where players start to round into shape and stop experimenting with swings and new pitches and such, so the results begin to mean a little more, but not really.  A look at some issues and questions still out there in Peoria after the jump! Continue reading

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The Greatest Team Ever

In the Mariners spring training bout with the Arizona Diamondbacks today, new ace and enforcer Cliff Lee was ejected for throwing over Chris Snyder’s head.  The two had gotten tangled up on a play at the plate earlier when Snyder was waving for a teammate to slide and Lee took him out going to back up the play.  Snyder’s quote on the incident, taken from Baker’s blog, written by Good Guy Bob Condotta

“Two guys going to where they need to be and we collided. Hell, he got me good, man. He Charley-horsed my leg. I still feel it. He almost clipped me twice. My leg hurt every time I squatted, then he threw a ball at my head. He’s up two-nothing on me. … He got me better than anybody coming around third. I aint been taken out like that in a couple of years (sic).”

His next time up, Lee threw one inside and then another that went over Snyder’s head.  Snyder dropped his bat and took a few steps toward the mound, benches cleared, etc.  Lee was ejected.  The two said the earlier incident had no impact on the latter, Lee said he wasn’t throwing at him, everything played down like usual, although the benches did clear again later.

Anyway, good story, but what I’m really writing about is my response to the text Andrew sent me about Lee being ejected, which was, “Nice! Way to go Cliff! This team could do almost anything and I’d be excited.”  And that’s totally how I feel about the Mariners right now.  They have so much goodwill built up from last year, and they’re so genuinely fun to root for, that I’d almost rather hang out in the clubhouse with them than watch them play a game.  Not that I don’t enjoy watching them play.  They’re just an incredibly entertaining, enjoyable, dynamic team.  Everything they do I get excited about.  A short list of awesome things from spring training off the top of my head so far:

  • Lee getting ejected
  • Griffey and Sweeney putting together A Mariner Idol and then coaching a practice in the span of a couple of days
  • Sweeney starting 12-15 when no one gave him a chance to even think about making the roster
  • Tuiasosopo hitting almost .500 while playing 4 positions so far, one of which he was playing it for the first time in over 2 years even thought it’s the hardest position on the field (SS)
  • Shawn Kelley possibly starting
  • Garrett Olson being just as bad as last year, so as not to delude anyone
  • Lopez and Chone trading positions, just because
  • Wak’s never-ending positivity about everything, including Lopez’s continued errors
  • Adam Moore playing like a good catcher and Rob Johnson not playing at all
  • Byrnes and Moore (? I think) falling flat on their faces before reaching the bag in consecutive games

There’s just an overall feeling that this team can do no wrong.  That’ll probably change at some point this year, but maybe not.  Coupled with the realization that this team has a lot of really good players (Lee, Felix, Ichiro, Figgins, Guti, hopefully Bedard), it’s hard not to be excited.  I don’t think we’ve discussed how great Felix, Lee and Bedard at the top of the rotation would be if Bedard comes back throwing well.  Those are three pitchers who could each be the best in baseball any given year.  Will it happen?  Maybe, maybe not.  But that’s kind of how the whole year is.  Maybe they’ll win a lot, maybe not.  It’s just the excitement of knowing there’s the possibility that’s enough for now.

A FEW QUICK NOTES AFTER THE JUMP! Continue reading

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What We Don’t Know

Saturday, Lisa and I were driving to the movie theater after watching the end of the Pac-10 championship game, and I had the radio on the KJR post-game show.  They were discussing the Huskies’ win, of course, and seeding in particular.  One caller made the case that he wouldn’t be at all surprised if the Huskies wound up in the 5-7 seed range when the brackets were announced.  Dick Fain, the host, disagreed politely but strongly, arguing that before the game the Dawgs were looking at a 13 seed and one game wasn’t nearly enough to jump them that high.  I got worked up pretty quickly over this argument, probably to Lisa’s suprise, because I don’t get too worked up. 

Fain ended up being right, as the Huskies are an 11 seed, and I didn’t really expect them to be a 5 or 6 seed.  What bothered me (and bothered is a strong word in this case) is that the argument was based on a presumption taken as fact.  No one knew if the Huskies were actually looking at a 12 or 13 seed before the win over Cal.  The only people that make that decision are on the selection committee, and with all the surprising results, I doubt they had UW set as anything at that point.  It was Joe Lunardi and the other analysts who had the Huskies as a 13 seed, and while they’re usually pretty accurate, and were in this case, it’s extremely possible that the selection committee could have viewed the Pac-10 very differently and had UW at 6 and ASU in the tournament.  We just didn’t know.

I had a similar reaction during the media’s battle over who had the proper calculations on the Mariners’ payroll this offseason.  After most of the initial moves, Geoff Baker and most of the local Mariner blogs calculated payroll down to the hundred thousands and debated, at times in fairly heated tones, who was right and what was off.  And while this was interesting and helpful in a lot of ways, I kept thinking, “You can’t take this strong of a stance when you don’t even know what the Mariners are going to spend on payroll this year!”  They could have decided to spend $175 mil. on payroll and we might have never known.  They would have just kept adding non-roster relievers and 1B/DH guys until they had the biggest spring training roster in history.  (One disclaimer: the actual writers on these posts were good about saying, “Based on recent salary and assuming it stays at that number, here’s what they have left.” It was mostly in the comments where the vitriol started to flow.)

I only bring these two instances up as a plea that we would all remember that we don’t know everything.  Often we don’t know much about a specific situation at all.  We can make a great argument based on statistical analysis or the two games I watched this weekend, and we might be right.  It’s just as possible, and usually more so, that we’re completely wrong.  Seattle Sports Insider has a nice post about this as it relates to spring training stats.  We can look at stats from the past few years and make guesses where a player should be, but sometimes a player develops in a way that can’t be forecasted.  Then it’s up to the coaches and management to decide if that player is ready, rather than writers who have not seen that player play for 5 months, if ever.  Coaches and management people are smart.  Really smart.  Even the less smart ones, of whom we’ve seen plenty in Seattle, know more about their sport than basically any of us ever will.

Most writers and other media sources are pretty good about recognizing this, especially the local ones.  The Mariners blogosphere certainly leans toward statistical analysis, some sites more heavily than others, but they all recognize that stats don’t cover everything.  I can think of several instances of reading through USS Mariner comments last year, however, and someone will say something like, “We need more hitting.”  No one disagreed with that, much less Dave Cameron and his fellow USSM writers.  But immediately another commentor would shoot back, “Actually, we don’t need more hitting, we just need better players overall. A run saved on defense is just as good as a run earned on offense.”  This became a kind of rallying cry, and in general is totally accurate, but I always wanted to ask that commentor if they’ve ever scored any runs while playing defense. 

I’ll end my rant now, with just a request.  Keep an open mind, and don’t debate like what you believe is absolute truth.  Maybe it is, but there’s a lot to be learned anyway, and it’s only a game.  I’d love to see this site become one where sports are discussed intelligently and enjoyably, because just about everyone has something worth saying.  Unless you’re saying something bad about Ichiro.  Then you can just stop talking, because Ichiro is awesome.

-Matthew

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UW vs. OSU Thoughts the Morning After

Tough but good win for the Huskies.  With ASU’s loss, I’d say UW is probably in the tournament, as long as Cal wins the Pac-10 tourney and not too many crazy things happen elsewhere.  A win tonight should seal the deal.

  • So much good entertainment in the game last night.  Andrew already wrote about Unbreakable.  The Husky cheerleaders were on fire.  I’ve never seen cheerleaders so excited about a game.  Had me wondering if they’re big basketball fans or just really pumped up to do their job.  And then… the missed dunk.  Missed dunks by the other team, especially on breakaways, might be my favorite part of a basketball game, and that was a great one.  Visually appealing, total momentum changer avoided.  That might have been the biggest moment of the game. Continue reading

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Spring Training Cuts- Rd. 1

First set of cuts yesterday.  In case you don’t follow spring training too closely, the team starts with lots of players and eventually cuts it to 25.  I think the Mariners started with 60 some.  The big number lets them get looks at young players or veterans and provides an incentive or some big league experience for the young guys.  Lookout Landing did a much more entertaining version of this, by the way.  The cuts:

  • Chris Seddon, Steven Shell- Two pitchers I hadn’t heard of who didn’t throw well and may never he heard from again.
  • Luis Oliveros- Minor league catcher with no real chance of ever making the bigs.  Guys like him are mostly there so they have enough catchers for all the pitchers who have to throw.
  • Steve Baron- Another catcher, but hopefully we’ll hear from this one again. Oft-debated 33rd pick overall last year out of high school.  Elite defensive catching prospect, questionable hitting, although he did manage a couple of hits in his limited spring at-bats.  Got good reviews from players and management mostly for being excited to be there.
  • Ryan Feierabend- Former decent starting pitching prospect, recovering from Tommy John surgery.  Softer throwing lefty who is a long shot to make it back, but you never know.
  • Mauricio Robles- Lefty acquired from Detroit.  Currently a starter, might end up in pen.  Good stuff got some raves early in camp, but needs seasoning for now.  Short guy, big arm.
  • Josh Fields- Reliever, last Bavasi first rounder, signed very late by Jack Z.  Last year was his first pro season.  Big fastball, killer curve, hasn’t put it together.  Thought of as a future closer when drafted, results have tempered that for now.  Still could be dynamite and get to bigs quick if he finds some control.
  • Nick Hill- Lefty pitcher.  Only guy remotely surprising on this list.  We might see him up later, so we’ll save any discussion for an eventual Y2010M! post.

Also, Cliff Lee threw yesterday, Kotchman batted third today, Wilson and Aardsma are working their way back from minor injuries.  The first of hopefully many Ichiro-Figgins double steals today. 

In basketball news, UCLA and Cal winners in the Pac-10 tournament so far today.  Memphis lost, hopefully taking them off the bubble.  Georgetown beat Syracuse, maybe helping the Dawgs a tiny bit.  I’m more and more inclined to think UW and ASU are in unless one of them loses tonight.  But maybe not, so tomorrow should be fun if they meet.  Go Huskies!

-Matthew

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Y2010M! Matt Tuiasosopo

(Y2010M! stands for Your 2010 Mariners! and is a series of posts aiming to touch on every player possibly important to the Mariners’ season.)

From the shores of the Pacific Islands to the Mongolian Grill in Woodinville, the name Tuiasosopo rings with peals of grandeur.  Any occasional local football fan knows that dad Manu played for the Seahawks, and first son Marques (maybe my favorite Husky of all time) is near the top of a long list of excellent Husky quarterbacks.  Some of his feats of greatness: Rose Bowl win, the first 300 passing 200 yard rushing game in history, and beating Miami in one of the most exciting games I’ve seen at Husky stadium.  Middle son Zach was a solid Husky fullback and linebacker, and cousin Trenton a serviceable linebacker who just graduated.  The sister (Lesley?) even starred for the volleyball team, if I remember correctly. Continue reading

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