Pat Neshek rejoins A’s after newborn son’s death

05 Oct
2012

Two days after the death of his newborn son, Pat Neshek bravely returned to the Oakland A's clubhouse and will likely be a part of the team's ALDS roster against Detroit when it's announced on Saturday.

The righty reliever and his wife Stephanee experienced one of the worst possible tragedies on Wednesday when their son Gehrig John died 23 hours after birth. The world learned of the sad news via a tweet from Neshek that requested prayers for his family.

Neshek told the media at Comerica Park on Friday that the outpouring of sympathy and support on social media has helped his family cope with the still unexplained death. He said the birth of his son "was the best day I ever had" and that he'd go through it all again just for the short time he was able to spend with Gehrig. Neshek also said that he feels "so myself when I'm on the field" and returned to the team at his wife's suggestion. Stephanee Neshek also made the trip.

From Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle:

"The first thing she said is we need to get out of here and watch baseball, and that was fine with me," he said. "I wanted to be with her and I wanted to by her to get through this."

Neshek said that doctors never were able to determine a cause of death, but there will be an autopsy. He had gone home to watch the A's game on television and, he said, "I got a call in the fifth inning and Stephanee said, 'The baby stopped breathing.' It was really hard. We sat all night. We didn't know what to do."

Neshek decided to post on Twitter that Gehrig John had died because they had continued to get congratulatory texts and tweets, "and that really hurt," he said.

The AL West champion A's begin a best-of-five series against the Detroit Tigers on Saturday afternoon. Neshek was acquired by Oakland in early August and put together a 1.37 ERA in just over 19 innings of work for an A's bullpen that ranked fourth in the major leagues.

"I don't think we will ever get over it, but this is a good way to put the pieces back together," Neshek said.

As Susan Slusser said on Twitter, everyone in baseball is going to be rooting for Neshek whenever he enters the ALDS. And rightfully so.

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by in General

The Thursday slate should be a rich and entertaining one. Thirteen games are on the docket, with a 12-hour spread in starting times. Something for everybody.

Easy Street
Phil Hughes vs. TOR
Wandy Rodriguez vs. MIL
Anibal Sanchez vs. OAK

Rodriguez and Sanchez are long gone in most formats, but it's possible their resurgences were ignored in your pool. Every league is different. Hughes had his turn pushed back a day after Tuesday's rainout.

Fascination Street
Jaime Garcia vs. HOU
Jeremy Guthrie vs. CWS
Barry Zito vs. COL
Ross Detwiler vs. LAD

When Garcia is on his game, the opponent and park hardly matter. When he's out of sorts, he gets knocked around in Petco Park (witness the Sept. 10 appearance). This ideal matchup against Houston breaks the tie; use him. … Sometimes you watch Zito and wonder how he gets anyone out. But at home and against that awful Colorado road offense, maybe he can coax out a quality turn. … I wonder if the Orioles regret landing Joe Saunders rather than Guthrie, their old righty. The Colorado escapee has been terrific in seven of his last eight turns, allowing just five runs over those specific outings. The White Sox haven't figured him out yet: 23.2 IP, 13 H, 2 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 15 K. Through the quirks of the schedule, they're facing him for the fourth time in six weeks. … The Dodgers have been the worst offensive club in the majors this month, a selling point for Detwiler.

Mean Street
Clayton Richard at ARI
Mike Fiers at PIT
Bud Norris at STL
Tyler Cloyd at NYM
Tommy Milone at DET

Norris has turned the corner nicely over the last month (3.38/1.17), but how much help will he get from the Houston offense? … The Milone story is well-documented: smooth sailing at home (2.68/1.01) and jagged edges on the road (5.13/1.50). He handled Detroit easily back in May, but that was an Oakland turn.

Shakedown Street
Francisco Liriano at KC
Jeremy Hefner vs. PHI
Corey Kluber vs. MIN
Jorge De La Rosa at SF

If you want Mr. Liriano's Wild Ride to determine your championship fate, that's your business. None for me, thanks.

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Rangers shopping veteran righty Roy Oswalt – Roy Oswalt | TEX

28 Aug
2012
According to MLB.com's T.R. Sullivan, the Rangers are shopping Roy Oswalt to other teams.
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Tim Hudson has some advice for Tim Lincecum: ‘Be aggressive’

27 Aug
2012

The Atlanta Braves have such a wealth of young arms that Tim Hudson will never suffer from a shortage of fresh-faced pitching Padawans to sit at his knee.

But because this is 2012, a year in which analyzing Tim Lincecum's struggles has become a minor sport in itself, the 37-year-old Braves righty couldn't help but offer his own advice on Sunday night.

This was after Hudson had pitched seven innings of one-run ball in a 7-1 win over the San Francisco Giants. That, of course, used to be a very Lincecum-like line but allowing three runs over five innings has grown to be the norm for The Freak this season. Which is exactly the performance Lincecum turned in while getting tabbed for the loss before being the subject of Hudson's analysis.

From the San Francisco Chronicle:

Afterward, Hudson was asked about Lincecum, and he respectfully said the two-time Cy Young Award winner could be "a lot more aggressive in the strike zone."

Hudson added, "Just as a fan and a veteran of the game, you want to try to help out young pitchers. From the other dugout, it's what I see. His stuff is good. He's still 91, 92, 93 (mph), plenty to win in this league, especially with that changeup. He doesn't have to make every pitch a swing-and-miss pitch ... I was the same way when I was younger. You feel like a stud out there when people swing and miss. As I've gotten older, I've preached to our young guys that strikeouts are sexy, but outs are outs, man, no matter how you get them."

Lincecum pointed out to reporters that Hudson's sinkerball gives the Braves pitcher a little more flexibility when it comes to his approach. But he also admitted "there are other things you could add to your repertoire." Which is kind of what Hudson — who has aged as well as any pitcher currently out there when it comes to an evolving approach  — was getting at in the first place.

It's actually kind of cool to see Hudson reach out and offer some advice to an opposing pitcher who's struggling, though maybe it won't look like such a wise move if the two teams match up in the wild-card play-in game and Lincecum employs the help en route to a win.

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Mets call up LHP Olson, demote RHP Elvin Ramirez (Yahoo! Sports)

07 Aug
2012
NEW YORK (AP) -- The New York Mets have promoted left-hander Garrett Olson from Triple-A Buffalo and sent down righty reliever Elvin Ramirez.
Tags: , demote, Elvin Ramirez, Garrett Olson, LHP Olson, , , Ramirez, , , ,
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Confirmed: A’s promoting righty Dan Straily – Dan Straily | OAK

02 Aug
2012
Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle has confirmed that the A's are promoting Dan Straily.
Tags: are, Chronicle, Dan Straily, Francisco, , , , San, Susan Slusser, the San Francisco Chronicle
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Cardinals acquire righty Mujica for Zack Cox – Edward Mujica | STL

31 Jul
2012
Cardinals acquired RHP Edward Mujica from the Marlins for 3B Zack Cox.
Tags: , , , , RHP, , righty Mujica, , STL Cardinals, Zack Cox
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Marlins planning to keep righty Josh Johnson – Josh Johnson | FLA

30 Jul
2012
The Marlins have told teams that they're planning on keeping Josh Johnson, reports ESPN's Jayson Stark.
Tags: , Jayson, Jayson Stark, Josh Johnson, , , , , Stark
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Angels interested in Rays righty Wade Davis – Wade Davis | TB

26 Jul
2012
According to FOX Sports' Ken Rosenthal, the Angels are interested in Rays right-hander Wade Davis.
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Opening Time: Roy Oswalt throws BP; Dan Haren discloses back problem

04 Jul
2012
by in General

All holiday bullets, all the time. Refill your drink and let's figure out this game together.

The Roy Oswalt Revival Tour has been a massive flop so far, no matter that he's 2-1. His first turn was successful mostly because of the opponent (the Rockies generally can't hit outside of Coors), and since then he's been hammered for 26 hits and 16 runs (14 earned) against two legitimate matchups, the Tigers and White Sox. Big-league hitters are batting .422 against Oswalt, and he carries a 7.79 ERA and 2.25 WHIP. The White Sox hit three homers into the bleachers against the aging righty (he turns 35 at the end of August).

Now I understand how the Regression Police might debate Oswalt's stats: he's been unlucky, yada yada yada. As you should know by now, all outlier ERAs and outlier batting averages come with outlier luck stats. In the case of Oswalt, he's allowing a .500 BABIP and he's under the league norms in strand rate (63 percent) and HR/FB rate (13.6 percent). If you want to talk yourself into an Oswalt case going forward, there's a path that leads you there: his FIP stands at 4.16, his xFIP is at 3.76, and he does have the K/BB ratio in a good place. His fastball isn't the same as it was during the Houston heyday, but he's hitting the gun at 91.7, basically his number from last year.

I'm going to sit this one out; if you go on the Oswalt hunt, I'm not there with you. He's allowing line drives 28.4 percent of the time, which tells you something about his location. He's never pitched full-time in the American League before. His career numbers in Arlington were already messy, and those ratios were largely built from his salad days. I'll be shocked if Oswalt's ERA is under 4 the rest of the way, and in today's pitching-dominated world, you shouldn't take on this sort of risk. You need more safety from your back-end starters, and heck, you'd like more upside, too.

I try to be careful when it comes to quotes from professional sports. Players, general managers and coaches have no incentive to tell us the truth (or to be upfront with us), and we know agents can't be trusted. As the grapevine taught us long ago, you believe half of what you see and none of what you hear.

This is a roundabout way to introduce the Dan Haren situation. The Anaheim righty was kicked around Tuesday at Cleveland (4.1 IP, 9 H, 7 R, 6 ER, 1 BB, 1 K), the fifth straight time he's struggled. If you add up the numbers over this terrible run, Haren comes in with an 8.97 ERA and a 1.89 ratio, with nine homers allowed. Just 18 strikeouts over 27 innings.

Haren finally admitted after Tuesday's game that he's been battling lower-back pain all season. It's just the second time it's been mentioned; the ailment was briefly discussed in mid-May, then the topic vanished into mid air. This underscores the consistent fear we essentially have to accept with any struggling pitcher: maybe he's hurt and not telling us, or maybe he's hurt and still in denial about it.

I suppose it's nice to have a reason we can attach to the Haren slump, just so things make sense in a linear fashion. Maybe a skipped start or a DL stint would go a long way towards getting Haren fixed in the second half. He's been remarkably durable during his career, logging 216 innings or more in seven straight years. But the next time you see a big-name pitcher in a terrible run, don't automatically assume he'll magically return to his branded level of excellence. Pitching is one of the most unnatural acts there is, and anyone who toes the rubber carries a significant amount of health risk. There are no sure things on the mound.

The matchup between Trevor Bauer and Andrew Cashner looked pretty on paper but it didn't play out nicely on the field. Cashner actually was terrific through two innings, but a lat injury forced him out of the game shortly after third-inning warm-ups. Bauer, meanwhile, did the walk of shame in the fourth (3.1 IP, 6 H, 7 R, 6 ER, 4 BB, 4 K), letting fantasy owners down for the second straight turn.

It's hard to be overly optimistic on either pitcher for the immediate future, though I'd like to see what Bauer might do if he gets command of his curveball back. That pitch has been essentially useless to him in the majors, and he's also been working behind in the count too often — stuff you can't get away with in The Show.

One size does not fit all with fantasy advice, and especially with a wide-range-of-outcomes guy like Bauer. Deep-league owners will probably bench Bauer and hope for the best, while he's an easy drop in shallow mixers. The medium-league players have a decision, but I would have no problem cutting Bauer if something interesting caught your eye on the wire. There's no rule of thumb when it comes to prospect development; the light bulb goes on when it goes on.

A DL trip seems likely for Cashner, especially considering his extensive injury history. A similar lat injury cost Huston Street a month earlier this year. The Padres aren't going anywhere in 2012, so they have zero incentive to expose Cashner to any danger. If you're in a medium or shallow league that doesn't have DL spots, I advise you drop him immediately. The potential is wonderful, but I'll be shocked if the Padres put Cashner's rehab on the fast track. They're obviously planning for the future.

Let's open up the post-hype file and consider the name Tyler Colvin. He's homered in three of his past six games, giving him 10 round-trippers in just 168 at-bats for the year. He's also hitting .304, and you'll find him available in 91 percent of Yahoo! leagues.

Colvin doesn't have a full-time job to call his own yet, but that could change at any time. He's already seen action at four different positions (first base, every outfield post), so if one of four different Colorado players were to suffer an injury, Colvin's path clears nicely. (If I ran the Rockies, I'd start using Colvin as the regular at first base over Todd Helton — the kid is 26, the veteran is 38. Why not start looking ahead to the future? But Jim Tracy and Dan O'Dowd have not asked my opinion.)

I can understand why a lot of roto owners are leery on Colvin: his .150/.204/.306 nightmare in Chicago last year left a mark (though the plug was pulled after 206 at-bats). Some other owners will shy away because of Colvin's hacking mentality (just eight walks this year), and his extreme home/road splits (1.104 OPS at Coors, .748 everywhere else) — though you can pin the split argument on just about every Colorado player. And obviously he is not a full-time player just yet.

But in these post-hype cases, it often pays to say "why not?" when others are saying "why bother?" Consider the case of Trevor Plouffe in Minnesota, a former first-round pick (20th overall, 2004) who finally got it together in his Age 26 season. Is Colvin really that different? He was the 13th overall pick in 2006, after all, and everyone liked him in 2010 (20 homers and six steals over 358 at-bats). I'm not asking you to drop proven guys for Colvin, but this is someone to grab right now in most medium and deep mixers — and he might force his way into the shallow-league conversation soon enough. There's a plausible upside here. Don't wait until the picture is fully developed and the window is slammed for good.

Although the Indians had an offensive party against Haren, Carlos Santana did not get the memo. The Cleveland backstop posted one of his common lines: 0-for-3, with a walk.

Have a look at Santana's last two months: .196/.305/.270, one measly homer, 18 runs, 16 RBIs. Remember he had a back problem and a concussion issue in May — no one can be sure how healthy he is. In keeper leagues it's probably a forced hold, but in one-and-done formats don't wait around. There's good catching out there, pick up someone else. We're in it for the numbers, not the names.

Speed Round: You're on your own with Tim Lincecum (8 R, 7 ER at Washington). I'm not touching him in any of my leagues, even if he's sitting for free somewhere (I don't think he is). His only excellent start out of his last six comes with a huge asterisk — it was against the hapless Dodgers. … After hitting just three homers over 56 games, Ryan Zimmerman has four in his last eight games, including another in the early July 4 match. That must be an amazing shot of cortisone he put into his shoulder. … Dustin Pedroia has been told to stay out of Wednesday's lineup. Do not mess with thumb injuries, my friends. He'll be examined by team doctors when the club returns to Boston on Thursday. … Brian Fuentes has been designated for assignment, which sounds so much cooler than it really is. The A's tried aggressively to shop him but no one was fooled. … Shaun Marcum is still feeling discomfort in the elbow, so don't assume he'll return immediately after the All-Star break. … Brian Roberts (groin) is injured again, to the surprise of no one. He wasn't doing anything roto-worthy anyway. … Andre Ethier still has some discomfort in his rib-cage area, so "day-to-day" will probably turn into "DL stint" any moment now. Man do the Dodgers need to add a batter, or five. … So much for the cushy Franklin Morales start against Oakland; Bobby Valentine pulled out the rug from under us and called a holiday audible. The Red Sox will now use Morales on Saturday at home against the Yankees, one half of a double-header. Your depth and league specs make the call — this is not an automatic start on my clipboard. If you own Morales and are already committed, hope the lefty gets the better half of the draw (managers normally will rest some regulars in one half of a twin-bill). It's almost impossible to project double-leader lineups before the fact, however.

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