Tags: coordinator, Jonathan Vilma, LA, linebacker, METAIRIE, nfl, Saints, Steve Spagnuolo, tampa bay, Wednesday, Yahoo, Yahoo! Sports
NFL suspends Bucs CB Talib 4 games (Yahoo! Sports)
13 Oct
2012
2012
Chiefs’ Cassel ruled out Sunday vs Tampa Bay (Yahoo! Sports)
11 Oct
2012
2012
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Chiefs quarterback Matt Cassel has been ruled out for Sunday's game at Tampa Bay with a concussion, and Brady Quinn will start an NFL game for the first time since the 2009 season.
Concession Speech: 2012 Tampa Bay Rays
05 Oct
2012
2012
With the regular season over, many teams are facing an offseason filled with golf rounds and hot-stove strategy.
But we're not going to let them get off that easy. No sir. No way. In an attempt to bring some closure between franchise and follower, we're giving a blogger from each team the opportunity to give a concession speech for this year's squad. Up next is our good friend Cork Gaines of Rays Index.
My Fellow Tampa Bay Rays fans ... My fellow Raysheads:
I come to you today under unfortunate circumstances. The games have spoken and our beloved Tampa Bay Rays will not be in the playoffs. And more importantly, for the 15th straight year, the season will not end with the Rays as World Series champions. That's gotta be some kind of record, right?
Look, as a baseball fan, I will respect the process. But I am here to tell you, the wrong team will win the World Series this year.
The Rays were the best team in baseball this season. Maybe they struggled to score runs at times. And OK, maybe they struggled to even get hits sometimes. But the pitching was the best in baseball. And pitching wins championships, right?
RIGHT?
So I will concede that the Rays will not win the World Series. But when another team does win, I will be doing my best McKayla Maroney impression. I will not be impressed.Mistakes were made: Did the Rays make mistakes? Oh boy did they make mistakes.
Anybody remember the Hideki Matsui experiment? Sure he didn't cost as much money as Manny Ramirez or Johnny Damon or *gulp* Pat Burrell. But he got 103 excruciating plate appearances, with almost all of them coming in a month (June) in which the Rays went 12-15. And in his short time, he earned the lovable nickname, Designated Last Out.
The biggest mistake they made was not trading a starting pitcher before the season. Specifically they should have moved Wade Davis for an upgrade at one of the many holes in the offense.
But with all the depth this team had in the rotation, the Rays moved Davis to the bullpen. Some thought he was insurance in case of injury, but he pitched well in relief. And when starting pitchers did go down, the Rays had plenty of other options in the minors.
The front office sycophants will tell you that Davis was a key component in a great bullpen. And yet, despite his strong pitching he was worth just one win all year (1.1 Wins Above Replacement). And this front office has proven again and again that they can find good relievers simply by digging through the dumpsters behind other stadiums.
So why not deal Davis and get a catcher or a middle infielder or even a good training staff that won't let Evan Longoria get hurt every year? Oh right. Because nobody would offer half their farm system the way the Cubs did in the Matt Garza deal.
Good job, good effort *head hits podium*.
Mudslinging time: Let me give you a few numbers...
- 3.19 - Team ERA and 0.14 better than any other team in baseball
- 3.34 - ERA of the starting pitchers, 0.42 better than any other team in the A.L.
- 2.88 - ERA of the bullpen, best in the A.L.
- 2.60 - ERA for the entire pitching staff after the All-Star break, 0.90 better than any other team in the A.L.
- 1,383 - Strikeouts for the entire pitching staff, an A.L. record.
- 0.60 - ERA for Fernando Rodney, an MLB record for relief pitchers (min. 50 innings pitched)
So yeah, the pitching was amazing.
Now let me give you a few other numbers...
- .711 - Team OPS, 12th in the A.L.
- 697 - The number of runs the Rays scored, 11th in the A.L.
- 32 - Times the Rays had 0 or 1 hits through four innings.
- 0 - Number of baserunners the Rays had against Felix Hernandez on Aug. 15, the third perfect game thrown against the Rays, and fourth no-hitter, since the start of the 2008 season.
We can live with ugly losses. Heck we were Devil Rays fans once, we can live with a LOT of ugly losses. But the Rays were 21-27 in one-run games, thanks in large part to an offense that would struggle in T-ball. The Orioles were 29-9 in one-run games. They went to the playoffs.
The biggest numbers might be 47 and 27. The Rays were 47-27 when Evan Longoria played (and half of those games were on one hamstring). They were 43-45 when he did not. In other words, they played like a 103-win team with Longo and a 79-win team without.
Sure, other teams had injuries. But when your payroll is $65 million, you can't afford to lose a guy that has been the most valuable player in the A.L. since the start of the 2008 season.
Hope for the future: OK, things aren't that bad. When this team finally suffered injuries to their starting rotation, two more pitchers came out of the Rays' starting pitcher factory and filled in wonderfully. So if we count Davis, the Rays now have eight major-league starting pitchers. Most teams struggle to find five.
And we just have to hope that Longoria will come back in 2013 and play 155 games. And they still have Ben Zobrist, who is like a Volvo. He is safe, dependable and a WAR machine. But you wouldn't want to pick a date up in one.
The pieces are there, and this team will once again be great. And who knows, maybe they will actually trade a starting pitcher for a big league bat or two.
A change is going to come: Change will come by not changing. The Rays maintain greatness by not making huge changes. In fact, most of the big moves have backfired, including Pat Burrell, Manny Ramirez, Johnny Damon, and Carlos Pena part Deux.
And yet, since the start of the 2008 season, the Rays have played 835 games (including the postseason), and there have only been 13 games in which the Rays were eliminated from the playoff hunt. That span includes four 90-win seasons and three trips to the playoffs.
And that's why it is even less likely they'll make a major free agency or trade acquisition. Instead, look for the Rays to do what they do better than most, find cast-offs to fill in the holes and hope for the best.
"Tampa Bay Rays." That name has new meaning in Major League Baseball these days. The national media is still consumed by the attendance and the third-oldest ballpark in baseball (not counting renovated or iconic parks, e.g. Fenway).
But that's OK. Because come April 2, 2013, we will once again be rooting for our Rays. We won't be rooting for a train wreck in red hose. We will be rooting for one of the best teams in baseball.
And should we win the day, the Rays will no longer be known as a laughing stock or a fluke, and Rays fans will declare in one voice:
WE WILL NOT GO QUIETLY IN THE NIGHT! WE WILL NOT VANISH WITHOUT A FIGHT! WE'RE GOING TO LIVE ON! WE'RE GOING TO SURVIVE! IN 2013, THE RAYS WILL FINALLY BE CHAMPIONS.
Or maybe the offense will once again suck just enough to prove that a team needs more than just one of the best pitching staffs in baseball history *head hits podium again*.
But yeah, congrats to whichever team wins this year ... Or something.
Follow Cork Gaines on Twitter and read him at Rays Index
Previous Concession Speeches: Milwaukee Brewers, Philadelphia Phillies, Arizona Diamondbacks, Pittsburgh Pirates,Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox, Minnesota Twins, San Diego Padres, New York Mets, Miami Marlins, Chicago Cubs, Toronto Blue Jays, Colorado Rockies, Kansas City Royals, Houston Astros
Are you ready for the postseason?
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Nationals LHP Gio Gonzalez wins Warren Spahn Award (Yahoo! Sports)
04 Oct
2012
2012
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- Washington Nationals pitcher Gio Gonzalez has won the 2012 Warren Spahn Award in a tiebreaker over Tampa Bay's David Price.
The Juice: Yankees clinch East, Red Sox set to fire Bobby Valentine
04 Oct
2012
2012
The Juice has concluded its fifth season of fun! Remember to stop by each weekday next season for an ample serving of news from the action, plus great photos, stats and video highlights.
[Y! Sports Fan Shop: Buy New York Yankees division champs merchandise]
Easier this way: Even if the Orioles hadn't fallen at Tampa Bay earlier, the Yankees would have won the AL East by smashing the Red Sox 14-2 on Wednesday night, clinching their 14th division title in 18 seasons and their 47th first-place finish in history, all since 1921. Robinson Cano went 4 for 4 with two home runs and six RBIs, and Curtis Granderson also went deep twice to back Hiroki Kuroda. Now, instead of having to play in a wild-card free-for-all on Friday, the Yankees can sit back and wait for either Texas or Baltimore in the ALDS.
[Jeff Passan: Bobby Valentine has fitting, frustrating swan song]
Bobby 'V' is for vamoose: The Red Sox finished with a 69-93 record and, if you've paid attention to Bobby Valentine all season, it was even more embarrassing than that. Rather than giving it another shot next season, the team intends to fire him any moment now, reporter Jon Heyman writes at CBS Eye on Baseball. With apologies to Boston fans, that's too bad, because it was kind of fun waiting for what Bobby V would do next. And what he does next probably will come on TV, because Bob Nightengale of USA Today says ESPN will bring back Valentine as an analyst as soon as he's free from the Red Sox. Nutzo.
Three times a-Longo: Evan Longoria likes to save his best for last, so he lighted up the Orioles for three home runs in Tampa Bay's 4-1 victory against the Orioles, sealing Baltimore into the wild-card game after a ridiculously fun and surprising 93-69 record. A year ago, Longoria hit two home runs on the final day of the season to help send the Rays to the playoffs. Meanwhile, the Orioles were Robert Andino-ing the Red Sox to knock them out of the playoffs. See how everything is connected?!
How's the rest of the postseason shake out?: Kaduk tells you!
* * *
Quote of the Day I:
"This was difficult. Come into the last day of the season, nobody knows what's going on. We've been taking it one day at a time for quite some time. It feels good." — Derek Jeter, on the Yankees sorting out their playoff possibilities by beating the Red Sox.
Quote of the Day II:
"When I went up in the ninth, A.J. (Pierzynski) told me that Longo hit three tonight. I was not going to let him show me up." — Dan Johnson of the White Sox, a former teammate of Longoria's with Tampa Bay, after he hit three home runs, too.
Quote of the Day III:
"It stinks just as much as the last time we were at .500." — Diamondbacks skipper Kirk Gibson, whose team finished 81-81.
* * *
[More: Raul Ibanez's heroics for Yankees may keep him from birth of his child]
Photo of the Day: Hey, it's Brandon McCarthy!
And he's pouring beer on a teammate's head during the A's victory celebration. Good to see B-Mac back with the gang as he continues to recover from the beaning.
* * *
Three Facts for the Water Cooler
• Chase Headley of the Padres finished a breakout season as the NL's RBI champion, holding off Ryan Braun of the Brewers. Headley went 2 for 3 and drove in two runs in a 7-6 win against Milwaukee to finish with 115 knocked in. San Diego, meanwhile, kept Braun off the board for the entire series and he finished with 112. Headley, playing home games at Petco Park, one of the toughest parks in the league for hitting, also finished with 31 homers and 31 doubles.
• Braves closer Craig Kimbrel struck out 116 of the 231 batters he faced, a 50.2 percent rate that "by far" is the best in history, notes Talking Chop.
• Expected by many to contend, the Marlins instead finished 69-93. They drew 2.2 million fans in their first season at a new ballpark, good for 12th in the NL but their highest total since 1997.
* * *
Love baseball? Ready for the playoffs?
Follow @AnswerDave, @bigleaguestew, @KevinKaduk on Twitter,
along with the BLS Facebook page!
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Cheap Colorado Avalanche at Tampa Bay Lightning Tickets – Tampa Bay – 12/8/2012
01 Oct
2012
2012
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A guide to the AL playoff possibilities
30 Sep
2012
2012
Heading into the season's last three games, the National League is relatively a drama-free zone. The Cincinnati Reds and San Francisco Giants have already clinched their divisions and the Atlanta Braves are a long shot to force an NL East tiebreaker with the Washington Nationals. The St. Louis Cardinals, meanwhile, own a two-game lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers for the last wild-card spot.
There's potential for craziness on the Senior Circuit, sure, but not as much as exists in the American League. Heading into Monday's contests, eight teams are still jockeying for position with only the Orioles, Yankees and Rangers definitely in the playoffs (though none of the three have clinched a division title just yet).
Here's a handy-dandy guide to the possible scenarios that could unfold in the American League the next few days.
Detroit Tigers
• Clinch the AL Central with a win or Chicago loss.
Chicago White Sox
• Clinch the AL Central with a sweep of Cleveland and a Kansas City sweep of Detroit, plus a win over the Tigers in Thursday's tiebreaker.
Baltimore Orioles and New York Yankees
• Clinch the AL East with any combination of four victories and losses by the other contender. The Orioles finish the season with three games at Tampa Bay while the Yankees host the Red Sox for three. Both teams are tied atop the AL East.
Texas Rangers
• Clinch AL West with one win against Oakland.
Oakland A's
• Clinch a playoff berth with one win over Texas or a loss from both Tampa Bay and Los Angeles
• Clinch AL West with a sweep of Texas
Los Angeles Angels
• Clinch a wild-card spot with sweep of Seattle and a Texas sweep of Oakland, plus a win over the A's in a tiebreaker on Thursday (which Oakland would host).*
Tampa Bay Rays
• Clinch a wild-card spot with sweep of Baltimore and Texas sweep of Oakland, plus a win over the A's in a tiebreaker on Thursday (which Oakland would host).
*Things will really get nuts if the Rangers, Angels and Rays all somehow sweep because it would cause a three-way tie between the A's, Angels and Rays at 91-71. In that scenario, Oakland gets a choice between two options because it won its season series against both Los Angeles and Tampa Bay:
1. It can play at home Thursday against the Angels with the Rays showing up to play the winner on Friday
2. It can rest on Thursday and travel to play the winner of L.A.-Tampa Bay on Friday.
Since the Rays won the season series against the Angels, they could also elect to play Oakland on Thursday with the hope of hosting Los Angeles at Tropicana Field on Friday. (Why any team would want to play two do-or-die games instead of one in exchange for something as negligible as home-field advantage remains one of the universe's largest mysteries.)
Confused yet? This A's-Angels-Rays tie is the most convoluted long shot of a scenario ... which probably means it will definitely end up happening.
Get ready for the postseason.
Follow @bigleaguestew, @KevinKaduk and the BLS Facebook page!
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Price gets 20th win as Rays beat White Sox 6-2 (Yahoo! Sports)
30 Sep
2012
2012
CHICAGO (AP) -- David Price became Tampa Bay's first 20-game winner, B.J. Upton homered twice and the Rays stayed afloat in the AL wild- card race by beating the fading Chicago White Sox 6-2 Sunday.
Desmond Jennings pops out after swinging at pitchout pitch (Video)
28 Sep
2012
2012
Miguel Cabrera did it when he was a Marlin. So did this eager Little Leaguer, the immortal Kelly Leak and all these major leaguers as compiled on a list by SABR.
So yeah, there's a track record of players putting a surprise swing on an intentional walk or pitchout pitch. Tampa Bay outfielder Desmond Jennings, though, won't be remembered among the successful ones as he swung at a Brett Myers pitchout that actually went over the plate on Thursday night — it looked like signals got crossed with catcher A.J. Pierzynski — and promptly popped out for the second out of the inning. You can't blame Jennings for swinging, though, because it was a really good pitch to hit. Things just didn't work out.
The good news for Jennings and the Rays: Myers was still in the game one inning later and he served up a home run to Evan Longoria for Tampa Bay's eighth straight win.
Want more baseball fun all season long?
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