Countdown to Camp: My Favorite Husky

We are only a week away from fall camp starting for the Huskies.  This is the most anticipated year of Husky football since the early  2000’s and the excitement will only grow as the season gets closer.  Because the Mariners are tough to watch, read, and write about it, I’m going to go into a countdown here on the blog and have a new topic each day.  John Berkowitz over at UW Dawg Pound covered some of these topics in a series he did a couple of weeks ago.  Go check his blog out, he does a great job. 

Today the topic, or question, is who is your favorite Husky of all time?  Post your answer and thoughts in the comments section.

Growing up a little later than the rest of the Good Guys, I missed out on the ‘golden years’ of Husky football.  Of course, they might have been a little young to remember the National Championship in ’91 but they caught way more of the winning season streak than I did.  With that being said, it wouldn’t surprise me if we all had the same favorite Husky, Marques Tuiasosopo. 

I was always a Husky fan growing up but Tui solidified a lifetime of fandom.  Tui made it cool for me to say, “Let’s run the option” in backyard football games with my friends.  I still do that.  Tui led the Huskies to an unforgettable season and Rose Bowl victory in 2000-2001.  Every game seemed to come down to the wire and it was Marques bringing us the victory.  First, it was Miami, then Oregon State, then Stanford.  The dramatic victories kept coming.  He also killed the Cougars 51-3 in his final Apple Cup.

I had a basketball game the day that Tui had his signature performance, a 300 yard passing, 200 yard rushing game.  I’m still upset about that. 

Tui was tough, a leader, and was poised.  He was everything you could want in a college quarterback.  Now, he’s back working as an assistant trainer at the U and it’s common to see him catching passes from the quarterbacks during drills.  I imagine he’ll move on to coach somewhere soon but maybe he’ll get to see Jake Locker deliver a season like he had first. 

Honorable Mention:

Reggie Williams- He’s had problems since he left but from his very first home game he amazed me.  He’s one of the best receivers I’ve seen live.

Corey Dillon-  The first Husky game I really remember being at was the game where Dillon went off on San Jose State in the first quarter.  I remember it pouring rain and him running, that’s about it.

Sonny Sixkiller- Before my time, but Sonny has always been one of my dad’s favorite Huskies and that has rubbed off on me the more I learn about Sixkiller.

Juan Garcia- He was from my hometown and was a true Husky.  He played through 6 of the worst years of Husky football ever, but he played hard.  He surpassed the NFL to stay for a 6th season and ended up getting hurt in the spring which kept him from getting close to his potential.  He played through the injury and gave his team all he could in an age where the rest of the team and coaching staff didn’t seem to care a whole lot.  He was never a star but he was a real Husky.

Jake Locker/Mason Foster- Their stories aren’t finished yet but they’ve made their way up my list.

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Delmon Young

If you took Delmon Young’s 30 RBI’s from the month of July, he would end up 4th on the Mariners in season leaders in RBI’s. Jose Lopez and Guti have 42 RBI’s each. Casey Kotchman has 32 RBI’s.
Delmon Young drove in as many runs in July as the Mariners have scored in the last 9 games. The Mariners have only scored 35 runs in the last 13 games.
My goodness. In other news…. Sean White!

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Working On the Farm- AA West Tennessee

Edit-  Shortly after I posted this last night, Lueke and Beavan were promoted to Tacoma.  So that’s nice.  Expect to see Lueke in Seattle sometime this season.  Also, Cortes has been phenomenal in a handful of relief  appearances so far.  If he keeps it up, he could be on the fast track too.

AA West Tennessee Diamond Jaxx (Southern League)

When the season started, West Tennessee (WT from here on out) had maybe the best collection of talent in the system.  That’s been dampened slightly, as Tacoma’s gain of Ackley and Pineda was WT’s loss, but there’s still plenty to keep an eye on here.

The Tarnished Golden Child

Carlos Triunfel- SS (3B)  Triunfel has been in the system for four years now, and he’s still the youngest guy on the team at 20.  During his early years, he was seen as a potential Miguel Tejada type.  He had a good contact bat, was a bit of a free swinger, and seemed likely to add very good power for an infielder once he got some experience and filled out a little.  That description hasn’t really changed drastically, which is okay, I guess, but disappointing.  2008 seemed like a minor breakout, as he hit 8 homers with a .287/.336/.406 line.  Nothing incredible, but pretty good for an 18 year old in high-A ball, even if he was in an incredible hitter’s park at High Desert (more on that in the next post in this series).  2009 brought a gruesome broken leg and a lost season, however, and now at 20 he’s in AA and showing flashes but struggling regularly too.  His OPS is currently .645, which isn’t good, but he is a 20 year old in AA after missing nearly an entire year. 

It’s really hard to say where he goes from here.  Scouting reports are generally positive but lukewarm, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see him either breakout or continue to struggle next year.  Further clouding the issue is whether he can stay at shortstop or not.  Most have assumed he’d have to move off short (probably to third to take advantage of a cannon arm), but the Mariners have kept him there, and now scouts seem to think he might be able to stick for at least his first few years in the bigs.  I’m betting on an A-Rod-esque track, shortstop for the first 5 years or so before moving to third.  Doubt he’ll ever be as good at short as A-Rod was initially though.  2011 is the year to really watch Triunfel.  He’ll likely start at AA again, and if he’s going to put it together, I’d bet that’s when he does it. Continue reading

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Thoughts on Pac-10 Media Day

If you hadn’t heard, Pac-10 Media Day was yesterday which means the release of the media poll.  This is how the media picked (via Bob Condotta’s blog):

1, Oregon (15), 314
2, USC (12), 311
3, Oregon State (3), 262
4, Stanford (1), 233
5, Arizona (2), 222
6, Washington (1), 209
7, Cal, 175
8, UCLA (1), 134
9, Arizona State 81
10, Washington State 39

This is pretty close to what I expected.  Of course, these things don’t matter at all but it does mean that football season is getting a little bit closer.  In recent weeks I had talked myself into thinking that UW could win the Pac-10.  For reasons that I’ll save for another day, I still think they can but this poll gives me a little dose of reality.  Most of these writers know more about these teams than I do and they are more likely to pick it correctly than I am.  I’m sure the Good Guys will have Pac-10 predictions up as the season draws near so I’ll save mine for them.

Maybe the biggest news of the day, as far as Husky fans are concerned, was the retirement of Alvin Logan.  Logan had a chance at being a starting linebacker on the team but suffered from knee problems that ended his career.  Watching him in the spring, I thought he was perfectly capable of doing a fine job at that spot.  With his retirement the job comes down to two people in my mind: Victor Aiyewa and Josh Shirley.  The coaches may say other players are in the mix but I think those are the ones to watch during camp.  We wish the best of luck to Alvin Logan as his life moves on.

A few more notes after the jump.  Continue reading

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Working On the Farm- AAA Tacoma

After a long season that I really don’t have the words to describe, the Mariners are finally down to about 2 months and 60 games left.  While the trade deadline and maturation of Michael Saunders have made the last month a little more interesting, something else that is both significantly better and more interesting is the Mariners farm system.  Most of the affiliates are hovering near the top of their leagues, a nice sign for a franchise that needs to learn how to win.  More importantly, the talent level has improved to the point where each team has more than a few interesting players.

There’s a lot of interest in the Mariners’ minor league system right now, for good reason, so I thought I’d take a walk around the farm and give a quick rundown of who to watch at each level.  One caveat: I’m no scout and haven’t seen more than a handful of these players in action.  Everything you’ll see here is my composite memory of scouting reports and media pieces I’ve read.  There are some good writers, local and national, who know a lot more.  Jason Churchill at Prospect Insider typically has a lot of good information from a scouting standpoint, while Jay Yencich at Mariners Minors puts out a ridiculous amount of recaps, etc.  Jay also does a great weekly Minors Recap at USS Mariner that will keep you up on the majority of the system goings-on.  Here’s this week’s.  There’s plenty of other good stuff out there, especially Jon Shields at both ProBallNW and Lookout Landing.

I’ll take these one at a time and hopefully bust through them in the next few weeks, before the minor league seasons end and I take another vacation!  First up:  AAA Tacoma. Continue reading

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.642

Last night the Mariners were shut out again.  Their offense has somehow gotten worse.  They are last, by a wide margin, in almost every offensive category.  This has been covered almost everywhere on the Mariners blogosphere but here’s one stat that really jumps out; the Mariner’s are OPSing .642.  The league average is.741.  Yeah, umm… Ouch.  Let’s take a look at the OPS from every position.  I’ll use any player who have gotten a good amount of time at the position.

DH-  Milton Bradley – .641.  Ken Griffey Jr.-  .454.   Mike Sweeney – .802.  Russell Branyan-  .833.

Milton Bradley hasn’t produced anywhere near what we hoped for.  Two years ago he led the league in OPS and now he’s 100 points below the league average.  Griffey was bad, we all know that.  Sweeney’s OPS is inflated by that little hot streak he went on for 2 weeks at the end of May.  Plus, he’s been hurt ever since.  Branyan leads this position and he’s barely played since getting here.  This position is in better shape than it was 2 months ago but that’s not enough to make up for the terrible OPS earlier this season.

1B – Casey Kotchman – .663.  Justin Smoak – .469

Wow, this is bad.  Kotchman has been hitting better lately and that saves this position a tiny bit.  Smoak will hit better but he’s taking his lumps right now. 

2B- Chone Figgins – .607

You don’t expect your second baseman to have a very high OPS.  Most teams hope for a little less than average with decent defense.  Of course, there are exceptions every year like Aaron Hill last year.  No one expects their 2nd baseman to have a .607 OPS.  Figgins has been painful this year.  Matthew jinxed it.

3B-  Jose Lopez-  .601

At least Lopez has braces.  Hopefully, we find a team that will trade for him.

SS-  Jack Wilson-  .604  Josh Wilson-  .655

The Mariners shortstops lead the infield in OPS.  When you have the two Wilsons leading anything in a hitting category, you know your team is in trouble.  It’s not like their OPS’s are good, their walk rates are pretty awful and they have no pop, but this tandem is better than anything else we’ve had besides the outfield.

LF-  Michael Saunders – .759!  Milton Bradley – .641 Ryan Langerhans – .713

Hey, there’s a bright spot!  Saunders is above average and his last month of baseball makes it seem as if he will be the starting left fielder come next year (knock on wood).  We already went over Milton Bradley.  Langerhans has a pretty small sample size and has put up what you’d expect from a 4th outfielder.  Sadly, what you’d expect from a 4th outfielder makes him one of the best hitters on the 2010 Mariners.

CF-  Franklin Gutierrez – .694

To be honest, Guti has been terrible except for the first two months of the season.  He’s not this bad and will pick it up but I’d rather have Saunders hitting in the 3 hole than Guti right now.  That’s saying something.

RF – Ichiro – .743

Ichiro is on a cold streak.  He’ll get out of it.  Really, don’t worry about him.  Even when he’s at his best he’s not a high-OPS machine, that’s not his job. 

C-  Rob Johnson – .579 

Saving the best for last.  There have been other catchers here but they’ve come and gone.  None of them have gotten a very good sample size.  (For the record, Josh Bard is at .641, Adam Moore is at .519, and Alfonzo is at .537).  Rob Johnson is terrible in every way possible.  I hate watching him hit.  When he gets a hit its on a hanging slider that he hits into left field.  Unless he’s facing Ben Sheets, that is the only hit he knows how to get.  Unfortunately for Hips, Ben Sheets is out for the rest of the year.

Of the players that have played a significant amount Michael Saunders leads the team in OPS.  That may give you a little hope in the future but it should probably just make you sick to your stomach instead.  Geoff Baker wrote the other day that Felix Hernandez could help the team with his bat.  He’s right. 

Andrew

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Kavario Middleton and Josh Shirley

I’ve been gone for almost a week now and have missed out on some interesting things.  Some of those things included a Mariner scuffle that I don’t have any problem with.  Maybe they should do it more often because it’s the most entertaining thing the team has done this season.  Instead of writing a couple of paragraphs about something that has been covered too much already I thought I’d write about something that is actually exciting: Husky football.

Over the last week two big things have happened, a departure and an arrival.  Lets end on the good note.

Kavario Middleton was kicked off the team last week.  The news seemed to come all of a sudden, but I wasn’t too surprised by it.  In fact, I haven’t talked to anyone who was too surprised by the news.  Middleton was kicked off for breaking team rules.  I’ve heard rumors about him failing a drug test but I don’t really know if that was true.

Middleton came to Washington as a 5-star recruit who was supposed to make UW Tight End U again.  He had moments.  In his home debut against BYU, Middleton made a few nice plays as a true freshman.  He had the size to look like he belonged and he had the hands to become an amazing pass catcher. 

That never happened.  Instead Middleton didn’t care.  He never worked hard enough to become a good blocker.  He was supposed to be a star in the pro-style offense that Sark brought but that never happened.  Sure, he had flashes but so does Casey Kotchman and we all know Kotchman won’t work out.  At least, he won’t work out for the Mariners.  Middleton wouldn’t have worked out for the Huskies. 

I watched Kavario quite a bit this spring.  I saw Sark try to get teach him in every way possible.  He would pull him aside and try to teach him privately.  He would yell across the field to tell him to block.  He would praise him whenever he did something good but Middleton would still take plays off and that would show in the games.  I absolutely agree with Sark in letting him go.  Maybe he’ll figure it out somewhere else.  He has the talent and he’s young, I wish him the best.

Now on to the good news.  Josh Shirley is a Husky!  I followed recruiting pretty closely this year and Josh Shirley was the one guy I was really disappointed that we didn’t get.  If he had committed on signing day, Shirley might have been a bigger name than Sean Parker. 

He is exactly what the Huskies have been looking for.  A DE/LB with speed off the end.  He was a mad man in high school and played really well in the all-star games that followed.  He may be a little underweight right now but he is expected to play right away.

Yes, he got into some trouble down in Pasadena.  Or did he?  Maybe UCLA just jumped to conclusions.  Shirley, at the moment, has no charges against him.  He didn’t have to post bail.  Yes, he obviously did something wrong but at this point we don’t know if it was just being in the wrong place at the wrong time or something more.  We aren’t picking up a Jeremiah Masoli here.  He has no record and is regarded as a good kid from everyone I’ve heard.

This could be a great pick up for years to come.  Welcome Josh!

Andrew

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2011 Seattle Mariners

USS Mariner had an interesting post the other day about the challenges facing the Mariners if they want to be a contender in 2011.  You should read it, but if you’re not in the mood, the short version is this: it’s going to be tough.  Dave Cameron points out that the team is stuck in a funny position of having undeveloped youth alongside mediocre veterns with big contracts.  I guess that’s not all that funny, in either the haha sense or in how uncommon of a position it is.  By the way, I said it was funny, not Dave.  Anyway, moving on.

The Mariners have good young talent likely to see the field in 2011, in Felix, Guti, Smoak, Saunders, Ackley, and Pineda.  They have some other potential young contributors, namely Adam Moore, who have more questions but could be a big part of the future.  They have Ichiro and maybe Branyan as veterans who are still very useful.  Figgins and Bradley are the only big contracts that aren’t helping right now, but there is potential for them to join the useful group, moreso Figgins than Bradley, in my opinion.  Lopez is likely gone.  The guess right now is they’ll have around $10-20 million to spend in the offseason, if the payroll stays around the same level.

Cameron concludes that, given young players who need a shot (i.e. Adam Moore), the places where the Mariners can upgrade without major reshuffling are shortstop, DH, and the rotation.  I think most fans would have picked those spots as logical upgrades, and I don’t want to keep paraphrasing Cameron, so I’ll just say that I mostly agree with him there too.  I do see a couple of reasons for optimism he doesn’t mention, however.

  1. The Bullpen  Dave mentions that the bullpen isn’t worth mentioning because it has such a small effect, and I think I get what he was really saying, but if there’s an easy position to upgrade on this team, this is it.  The relievers as a group have been injured and/or horrible this year.  I’m becoming more and more convinced that a lock-down bullpen is a viable route to building a team.  It obviously has to be accompanied by lots of other pieces, but those teams that can throw out three or four true shut-down arms have a huge advantage.  I get the feeling good GMs have known this for a while and I’m finally catching on.  The problem is that relievers truly are hard to predict year to year, so this seems to be a fairly luck-dependent process.  I don’t know enough to throw out potential names for next year, but the Mariners don’t currently have many.  League is finally throwing his splitter more the last few games (shockingly, he’s been almost unhittable those games), so hopefully he’s turning the corner.  The others are a mess, and Aardsma, who’s been solid but scary, could be traded any day.  You can maybe count on Kelley, but two or three more guys, however they get them, would be a huge impact for 2011.
  2. The Young Guys  It’s certainly possible that Smoak, Saunders, Ackley, etc. are total busts or take a few years more years to develop.  I’d be surprised if they don’t take a few years to develop, actually.  But that doesn’t mean that some or all of them might not make a huge jump next year.  What if Smoak suddenly hits .280/.375/.475 with 20-25 homers next year?  I’m betting that’d be the best batting line on the team this year, and it’s not ridiculous to imagine.  Saunders could go .260 with 15-20 homers facing righties, and they could find a true right-handed platoon partner for him and be looking at 25-30 homers and solid peripherals from left field.  Ackley and Moore are harder to figure, but the same holds true there.  It helps that the guys they’ll be replacing (even if it’s the 2010 version of themselves) are setting an extremely low bar.
  3. Good Old Regression to the Mean  As tired as we all are of hearing about it, this year’s Mariners truly are playing well below their projected level.  While roster turnover and, in some cases, age will mitigate the bounce-back we can expect next year, there are still several players (Figgins, please be you) who should be much better.
  4. System Depth  While the Mariners minor leagues are not yet as full of impact talent as we’d like, the system has improved dramatically since Zduriencik took over.  We’re seeing this with Smoak, Saunders, etc. now, but we’ll eventually see another benefit, in the depth it provides.  A major league team will always have it’s main guys who start most of the time, but in the roster spots where they switch players out often, or when a starter goes down for a few weeks, a strong farm system’s depth can really carry the load.  Guys like Mike Wilson or Matt Mangini likely don’t have a future as an impact starter, but they offer decent chances of stepping in for a time and producing, and the more of those guys you have, the more likely one of them is to produce.  I don’t know if I explained my thoughts very well here, but I’m saying that a deep farm system can help even beyond the elite prospects, and we might start seeing that in 2011.
  5. Zduriencik’s Creativity  Going into last offseason, I can’t think of anyone I would have been more surprised to have on the Mariners than Cliff Lee.  I never imagined they’d be able to sign Chone Figgins.  While those moves didn’t result in a winning team, they’re good illustrations of how creative and surprising Zduriencik can be when obtaining talent.  I guarantee (to steal Dan’s signature phrase) that the 2011 Mariners will have at least one player who is acquired out of nowhere to the shock and delight of fans.  If Cliff Lee proved anything, it’s that Zduriencik is continually looking to improve the Mariners in any way possible.

All that said, it’s a long-shot for the Mariners to contend next year.  It’s probably not as long a shot as it was for the Padres to contend this year, however, so you never know what might happen.  And I doubt it can get any worse than this year has been!

-Matthew

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