<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><rss xmlns:atom='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' version='2.0'><channel><atom:id>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full</atom:id><lastBuildDate>Thu, 09 Nov 2006 11:47:58 +0000</lastBuildDate><title>San Diego Padres @ Bare Baseball - Baseball MLB Blog</title><description></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com</link><managingEditor>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</managingEditor><generator>Blogger</generator><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>15</openSearch:itemsPerPage><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/115350530160563617</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 18:07:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T11:08:21.610-07:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Pads react to Castilla's release</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/19/2006&lt;br />SAN DIEGO -- News of veteran third baseman Vinny Castilla getting released by the Padres hit teammates hard on Wednesday as they were getting ready to face the Phillies at PETCO Park.&lt;br />"He's an absolute class guy, the ultimate pro," closer Trevor Hoffman said. "Those are the guys you don't like to lose -- substance guys. He's just a good dude. It's the part of the game that's not fun."&lt;br />Castilla, whose spot on the roster was taken by Wednesday's starter, Mike Thompson, gave the Padres solid defense at third and a positive, supportive clubhouse presence. But his bat, which had produced 315 homers and 1,078 RBIs along with a .278 average before his arrival, never came alive. Castilla is batting .232 with four homers and 23 RBIs in 72 games, with 254 at-bats.&lt;br />"It was hard, after the career he's had, seeing him go through it," Hoffman said of his former rival, whose prime seasons were spent with the Rockies. "He was pressing, wanting to do anything he could for the club. Whether he was in a pinch-hitting role, playing defense, whatever you needed, he kept a great attitude. He's a team player."&lt;br />Castilla was close with first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, who is enjoying a breakout season (.287, 18 homers, 49 RBIs through Tuesday) in part because of the steady, uplifting counsel and advice from the other half of what manager Bruce Bochy liked to call his "Mexican connection."&lt;br />"The strength he had for him ... he was like a grandfather figure for Adrian, a calming influence for him," Bochy said of Castilla, who turned 39 on July 4. "I talked to Adrian; he understands."&lt;br />Castilla also was understanding of the Padres' decision, Bochy said, as difficult as it was to accept. The club will go with Mark Bellhorn and Geoff Blum at third -- each had 14 starts there through Tuesday -- as speculation continues to swirl that a deal involving a third baseman will be made by the July 31 trade deadline.&lt;br />"Vinny enjoyed his time here," Bochy said. "Vinny could see something [was] happening through the media, the talk about trying to get more production out of third base. He's been through it before at Tampa [in 2001]. He came out of that and put together a few good years."&lt;br />Bochy broke the news to Castilla after Tuesday night's game. Castilla is expected to clear waivers on Friday, at which time he becomes a complete free agent.&lt;br />"It doesn't get more difficult than that [breaking the news], the respect you have for Vinny, who he has, the career he's had," Bochy said. "It's been a pleasure and an honor to manage him."&lt;br />Johnson "close": The player who could feel the impact of Castilla's departure most in the immediate future -- outfielder Ben Johnson -- spoke with the veteran third baseman early on Wednesday.&lt;br />Johnson, who strained his left shoulder on July 4, is eligible to come off the disabled list and could take Castilla's spot with Thompson or another pitcher going to Triple-A Portland.&lt;br />Johnson, saying he was "close" to 100 percent, had expected to begin his rehab in the Minor Leagues on Wednesday, but he was told he'd be with the club in San Francisco for the start of an 11-game road trip on Thursday.&lt;br />"Sad day," Johnson said, shaking his head. "Vinny's as good a figure on a club as you could ever want. He's so down to earth, for someone who's accomplished what he has. He's really close to Adrian, but he took an active interest in all of us.&lt;br />"Guys like that, you hate to lose. Vinny said his goodbyes this morning, and he seemed fine. He's really strong -- just a good dude, in every way. I hope something happens for him."&lt;br />One hit away: Mike Piazza, who wasn't in the starting lineup on Wednesday with Josh Bard behind the plate, is one hit from 2,000 and becoming the seventh active player to reach 2,000 hits and 400 homers. He'll join Barry Bonds, Gary Sheffield, Ken Griffey Jr., Jeff Bagwell, Frank Thomas and Manny Ramirez.&lt;br />Piazza, batting .335 with 11 homers and 36 RBIs since May 12, covering 49 games, is two runs away from 1,000.&lt;br />Blazing hot: The right side of the Padres' infield has been torrid. Coming into Wednesday's homestand finale, second baseman Josh Barfield trailed only Chipper Jones in the Major Leagues with his .538 average for July. Jones was batting .551. Lifting his average to .304, Barfield has had nine multi-hit games in the month.&lt;br />Entering Wednesday's game, Gonzalez was tied with Chipper Jones for the NL lead with seven homers in July and was second in RBIs to Chipper's Atlanta teammate, Andruw Jones in RBIs. Gonzalez has 21, one fewer than the Braves' center fielder.&lt;br />Revved for Merv: Merv Rettenmund calls it a "coincidence," but the Padres clearly have caught fire since he replaced Dave Magadan as hitting coach on June 16.&lt;br />In 27 games since his arrival, San Diego's .295 batting average is fourth highest in the Major Leagues. Since July 4, covering 11 games, the Friars' .333 average is surpassed only by Atlanta.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/07/notes-pads-react-to-castillas-release.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/115350525088410840</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 18:06:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T11:07:30.886-07:00</atom:updated><title>Hoffman, Pads unable to finish sweep</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/19/2006&lt;br />SAN DIEGO -- It was a homestand that began and ended on the same stunning, off-key note: Trevor Hoffman blowing saves in the ninth inning.&lt;br />After letting a lead get away on Friday night against the Braves, who went on to sweep three games with as much thunder as AC/DC ever generated, Hoffman faced the music again on Wednesday.&lt;br />Entrusted with a 4-3 lead in the ninth, the game's No. 2 all-time saves machine was quickly out of sync. Hoffman hit leadoff man Shane Victorino with his first delivery, walked Chase Utley on five pitches and then served up a 1-2 fastball that Bobby Abreu yanked to right center for two runs and a 5-4 Phillies victory in front of 32,101 at PETCO Park.&lt;br />"You get the ball, you've got to do your job," said Hoffman (0-2). "I don't like coming out on the short end of the deal."&lt;br />The Padres, pursuing a sweep of the Phils, benefited from a three-run first-inning homer by sizzling Josh Bard and six solid innings from Mike Thompson in an emergency start by way of Triple-A Portland. The Friars had taken the 4-3 lead in the seventh when Brian Giles' two-out double delivered Rob Bowen, who'd singled batting for Thompson against starter Jon Lieber.&lt;br />Scott Linebrink worked out of a bases-loaded disturbance in the eighth inning to get the ball to Hoffman, who had converted 25 of 27 save chances.&lt;br />The Phillies' Tom Gordon, who would produce his 22nd save in support of winning pitcher Geoff Geary (6-0), had called Hoffman "automatic" at the All-Star Game. That was before Hoffman yielded the game-winning triple to Michael Young, letting a 2-1 National League lead turn into a 3-2 American League win.&lt;br />That was followed by Hoffman's inability to preserve a 10-9 lead against Atlanta on Friday night, meaning his save on Monday night against the Phils was his only successful venture in his past four.&lt;br />"The arm feels good," Hoffman said. "You can't hit a guy to lead off an inning. I haven't done that in a while."&lt;br />Bowen felt that the pitch "was pretty close [to a strike] -- it might have caught the black. [Victorino] was on top of the plate. He did a good job. Not a lot of guys are going to stay in there and take one like that."&lt;br />Hoffman also excused Victorino, saying he got the pitch too high, in a place where the hitter was able "to take one for his team" with his arm.&lt;br />After walking All-Star Utley, Hoffman had Abreu down 0-2 in the count, missed on a checked swing and watched the right fielder foul off a "a real good changeup" before lacing an 88 mph fastball to the gap.&lt;br />With 11 games in 11 days coming up on the road against National League West rivals San Francisco, Los Angeles and Colorado, manager Bruce Bochy replaced Hoffman with Jon Adkins, who finished the ninth with no further damage.&lt;br />"Trevor will be fine," Bochy said. "We've seen him so long and we're so accustomed to Trevor closing out games. It just so happens he [gave up] a couple there.&lt;br />"This was a tough loss. Any time you come this close to sweeping a team, sure, it's frustrating."&lt;br />Thompson, filling in for Chris Young (foot ailment), fought his command but limited the Phils to three runs on nine hits -- including catcher Chris Coste's first career homer in the fourth.&lt;br />"Being behind in the count so much, I can't go to my strength," said Thompson, who was 3-2 with a 4.30 ERA in nine starts while Woody Williams was sidelined. "For what I had, stuff-wise, I'll take it. Not my best, not my worst."&lt;br />Abreu's two-out RBI single in the first had the Phils in front, and Coste tied it with an RBI double in the sixth after Bard's three-run bomb, his sixth, had given San Diego a 3-1 lead against Lieber in the first.&lt;br />The Padres had Mike Cameron erased at home in the third trying to score on a pitch that got away from Coste, and Lieber worked out of a bases-loaded jam in the sixth.&lt;br />Hoffman blew only three leads all last season while delivering 43 saves, and three more faulty finishes in 2006 are too many to suit the man who has made "Hells Bells" the most popular tune by the border for 13 seasons.&lt;br />"Everybody's shocked -- because it so rarely happens," said Padres general manager Kevin Towers, whose long day included the release of popular third baseman Vinny Castilla. "Law of averages, I guess.&lt;br />"The good thing about Hoffy is he's able to put it behind him. I don't think there's anyone you'd rather have as your closer."&lt;br />Only Lee Smith, with 478, ever saved more games than Hoffman, who stands at 461 and counting.&lt;br />"This homestand could have been very good," Hoffman said. "Two blown saves ... You saw the way the guys battled, and I didn't finish it off."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/07/hoffman-pads-unable-to-finish-sweep.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/115350517502840211</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 18:03:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T11:06:15.030-07:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Piazza edges toward milestone</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/20/2006&lt;br />SAN FRANCISCO -- Mike Piazza never likes to talk about his hitting when he's on a roll, not wishing to test the baseball gods. So he's been a little quiet lately in the clubhouse.&lt;br />Showing that he still has snap, crackle and pop in his first season with the Padres, Piazza was in a reflective mood as he got ready to face the Giants on Thursday night at AT&amp;T Park, recalling his first Major League hit against Mike Harkey -- "a double that could have been a triple to right-center at Wrigley Field."&lt;br />His next hit would be No. 2,000 in his career, making him the seventh active player to combine 2,000 hits with 400 home runs.&lt;br />"I feel comfortable at the plate," Piazza said. "I'm letting the ball travel, trusting my hands. [Padres manager Bruce Bochy] is really looking out for me. My left leg's a little sore, but that's to be expected. We're staying on top of that. Boch tells me, 'If you need a couple days, shut it down.' And that makes me want to play even more."&lt;br />More than a few people in baseball figured it was over for the great catcher after he fell to .251 last season with the Mets, 60 points below his career average, with 19 homers and 62 RBIs in 113 games.&lt;br />The Mets signed Paul Lo Duca, and Piazza went on the market. Surprisingly, the best opportunity arose in San Diego, and the Padres wanted him to catch. He signed a two-year contract with an option for next season, and here he is entering the last week of July with a more Piazza-like .295 average, with 14 homers and 43 RBIs in 237 at-bats, sharing the job with the younger duo of Josh Bard and Rob Bowen.&lt;br />General manager Kevin Towers said on Thursday night that the club would like to have Piazza back in 2007 if money matters can be worked out. The mutual option is for $8 million, which might be too steep for San Diego's budget.&lt;br />But it's a long way from October, and Piazza's concerns are with the moment.&lt;br />"It's like anything," he said. "As long as it's not dead, you can bring it back with watering, positive stuff. At this point in my career, this is what I really needed. It's a good vibe here. The attitude's good. We have good young guys, a nice blend. The energy's good. The little positives are adding up.&lt;br />"I feel under the radar a little, but I like that. It's the first time in my career I've had that. In New York, I was expected to do a lot -- which I enjoyed. But I had some injuries the last few years, and that gets frustrating.&lt;br />"My wife last week said, 'Your attitude's good.' And she's right. Some good things have happened here."&lt;br />Adios, amigo: Adrian Gonzalez spoke with Vinny Castilla on Wednesday after his buddy was released by the Padres. Castilla indicated that he probably wouldn't play again this season, but he wasn't ruling out coming back next year if something enticing comes along.&lt;br />"He's a great person, respected throughout baseball," Gonzalez said. "Vinny's a guy we all adore, love greatly. He's a great ballplayer. What I'll remember is his personality, the way he came to the clubhouse with a smile on his face every day, no matter how he played the day before.&lt;br />"It teaches you a lot when you're around someone like Vinny. 'This is the big show,' he'd always say. 'There's no reason to be sad or mad because you had a bad day before. Today's a new day.'&lt;br />"He really helped me when things were going bad early in the season. I don't know if I'd have gotten out of that hole without him. I won't see his smile every day, but I'm still going to keep in touch with him."&lt;br />Bard, Muser out: Bard will be unavailable on Friday night as he serves his one-game suspension for disputing balls and strikes calls on June 25.&lt;br />Bench coach Tony Muser also is sitting out Friday night's game, serving his one-game suspension for leaving the dugout in an argument last Sunday at PETCO Park.&lt;br />Road bashers: The Padres opened this 11-game road trip against three National League West pursuers leading the league in road batting average at .287. They'd produced 10 or more hits in 10 of their previous 14 road games.&lt;br />Dave Roberts was given the start against Giants southpaw Noah Lowry in the series opener even though Eric Young, his occasional platoon partner, was 4-for-5 against Lowry. Roberts came into the game batting .353 against lefties, compared to .280 against right-handers.&lt;br />Johnson rehab: Outfielder Ben Johnson, sidelined since July 5 with a strained left shoulder, is due to begin his rehab with Triple-A Portland at Las Vegas on Friday.&lt;br />"I'm really looking forward to getting back out there and playing," Johnson said. "I hate sitting around watching."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/07/notes-piazza-edges-toward-milestone.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/115350502248964338</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 18:01:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T11:03:42.523-07:00</atom:updated><title>Friars falter against lurking Giants</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/21/2006&lt;br />SAN FRANCISCO -- Chan Ho Park shrugged. There wasn't a whole lot to say about this one, in any language.&lt;br />"It wasn't a good day for us," Park, the pride of Korea, said. "It was a good day for them."&lt;br />The Giants were living right on Thursday night. Barry Bonds cracked his 722nd career homer, triggering three eighth-inning, seat-finding lasers in succession, and southpaw Noah Lowry shut down the Padres on Thursday night in a 9-3 romp before 42,047 at AT&amp;T Park.&lt;br />Bonds powered a two-run homer against reliever Brian Sweeney after catcher Mike Piazza dropped Bonds' towering popup in foul territory for an error, Piazza's elbow making contact with the ground and forcing the ball out of his glove.&lt;br />Bonds' 14th homer of the season was followed by Ray Durham's 16th, to right, and Pedro Feliz's 16th, to left-center. All three blows came against Sweeney, a stalwart in middle relief all season for the Padres.&lt;br />"He got some balls up," Bochy said. "He's been throwing a lot. It was tough for Sweeney, but he's been doing a good job for us."&lt;br />The Padres, who were 2-4 on their first homestand following the All-Star break, had their National League West lead shaved to 1 1/2 games over the second-place Giants, who tagged Park with five runs in six innings.&lt;br />The Padres threatened for four consecutive innings, from the third through the sixth, but left runners in scoring position each time, as Lowry pitched out of trouble to go to 5-6.&lt;br />Park, falling to 6-6, was stung by the long ball. First baseman Chad Santos, from Hawaii, made his fifth Major League at-bat memorable when he smashed his first career homer. It exited the park in dead center in the second inning following Todd Greene's two-out single.&lt;br />"It was a fastball, a two-seamer, exactly where I wanted to throw it -- on the corner," Park said of Santos' blast, which happened in front of his parents, visiting from Hawaii. "I never faced him before.&lt;br />"I just threw it, trying to make a strike. He has pop. The ball carried pretty good. They hit some good pitches. Maybe the selection wasn't good. If I pitched against them, I wouldn't change anything -- except expect the squeeze and not walk the leadoff guy."&lt;br />Those bothersome things happened when the Giants pushed across three runs in the fifth, Randy Winn's RBI double and a squeeze bunt by Omar Vizquel the key plays.&lt;br />Park, who charged the Vizquel bunt but couldn't get it to Piazza in time, got in trouble by walking Santos leading off.&lt;br />"That walk hurt me big time," said Park, who is 1-3 at the Giants' new home with a 6.98 ERA. "And the bunt surprised me. If I kept the score to two or three runs, we've got a chance to win. Our team always scores late in the game."&lt;br />The Padres did, indeed, make the Giants squirm a bit in the ninth. Adrian Gonzalez's second single, already having extended his hitting streak to 11 games, was followed by a walk by Mark Bellhorn and an RBI single by Josh Barfield that ended Lowry's night.&lt;br />Dave Roberts' two-run single against Kevin Correia following a walk to Josh Bard made it 9-3, and Jeremy Accardo was summoned from the bullpen. Mike Cameron slapped a single to load the bases, and when Brian Giles laced a shot seemingly ticketed for center field, there was life in the Padres' dugout.&lt;br />Alas, second baseman Durham intercepted the bullet with a backhanded stab, and it was over when Piazza skied to right, ending a frustrating night for the man who has been afire of late.&lt;br />"It would have been very interesting if that ball gets through," Bochy said of Giles' shot, adding that Gonzalez lined into a double play in the second inning and Cameron lined to center to leave two runners stranded in the fourth.&lt;br />"The ball's got to bounce your way sometimes. They got hits when they needed them."&lt;br />Bochy felt Park "had good stuff but just made a couple mistakes. He had great innings and two rough ones where he made mistakes."&lt;br />Lowry, who moved to 3-1 in nine career appearances against the Padres, was more fortunate. His miscalculations didn't hurt him -- at least not until the ninth when the Padres finally rallied with too little too late.&lt;br />"He's a good young talent," Bochy said of the Giants southpaw. "He's been tough on us before. He has a good changeup. When he's on, he's tough.&lt;br />"We hit some balls well at times but couldn't find a hole. That's how it goes sometimes."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/07/friars-falter-against-lurking-giants.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287741842756708</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:55:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:56:58.433-08:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Blum looking for hot spring</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/01/2006&lt;br />PEORIA, Ariz. -- For a guy who isn't getting consistent sleep, the Padres' Geoff Blum is wide awake at the plate.&lt;br />"It's like Navy SEAL training at my home," said Blum, father of four daughters 27 months and younger in a lively Spring Training abode. "I'm going to see how many straight days I can stay up."&lt;br />Picking up where he left off with a big swing that decided Game 3 of the 2005 World Series for the Chicago White Sox in Houston, the switch-hitting Blum has doubled and homered in two intrasquad games.&lt;br />The homer came from the left side Wednesday against right-hander Seth Etherton, attempting to make the Padres staff as a Rule 5 Draft acquisition. The double came from the right side Tuesday against Erick Burke, a lefty hoping to make his mark among a bevy of candidates.&lt;br />Blum, never the shy, retiring type, doesn't mind mentioning it's important to come out smoking -- in contrast to his dismal 2005 spring showing when, as he put it, "rumor had it I was a question mark to make the team."&lt;br />"We can't sit back and wait," he said. "We've got to make it happen."&lt;br />The "we" refers to the five athletes -- rookie Josh Barfield and veterans Blum, Mark Bellhorn, Eric Young and Bobby Hill -- in the mix at second base in the absence of Mark Loretta, dealt to Boston for catcher Doug Mirabelli.&lt;br />"It's a pretty unique situation," said Blum, who has erred just three times in 139 career games (480 chances) for a .994 fielding percentage at second base. "On the one hand, it stinks to lose a guy in the clubhouse like Mark, a good guy to play with and be around. At the same time, it's an opportunity.&lt;br />"I want to contribute any way I can. It was a blast last [April/May] when we had that 24-6 run. That was a beautiful thing, everybody pitching in."&lt;br />In Houston in 2002, Morgan Ensberg, the heir apparent at third base, scuffled early in the season and manager Jimy Williams summoned Blum, who batted .283 with a .440 slugging mark in 130 games. Blum was the Opening Day third baseman the following season, playing 123 games (.batting .262) before getting shipped to Tampa Bay.&lt;br />"You never know in this game what's going to happen," Blum said. "You just have to be ready."&lt;br />He was ready in the 14th inning of World Series Game 3 when White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen pointed his way, Blum launching a home run that beat the Astros and paved the way for Chicago's Series sweep.&lt;br />Now, if the triplets -- Ava, Ashley and Kayla -- and big sister Mia will cooperate, maybe Geoff and wife Kory can get some sleep.&lt;br />Big Ben delivers: Also driving the ball with authority is outfielder Ben Johnson, his confidence soaring after a solid contribution to the Padres' stretch run, 12 of his 16 hits for extra bases. He has doubled and homered in the intrasquad contests.&lt;br />Johnson, who homered in three consecutive games late in the season and got a playoff start against Cardinals lefty Mark Mulder, crushed a Kenny Baugh fastball out of the yard Wednesday.&lt;br />"It was a pitch he was supposed to hit out, a sinker that didn't sink -- and he got it," said Baugh, who had more movement on his pitches than he wanted.&lt;br />"Ben looks good," manager Bruce Bochy said, noting how Johnson is going the other way effectively. "He's swinging well."&lt;br />Johnson, who figures to back up in all three outfield spots, could emerge as a platoon partner in left with Dave Roberts.&lt;br />"I feel pretty good up there," Johnson said. "I'm just looking to have a good spring and see what happens."&lt;br />Classic departures: The clubhouse will be missing a few prominent faces for a spell after Thursday's charity game with Seattle at the Peoria Sports Complex.&lt;br />Catcher Mike Piazza boards a flight before the game for Florida, where he'll join his Italy teammates for the World Baseball Classic. Third baseman Vinny Castilla and first baseman Adrian Gonzalez are leaving to be with Team Mexico, which faces Team USA and Jake Peavy in the Tuesday opener at Chase Field in Phoenix.&lt;br />Peavy is scheduled to pitch two innings against the Mariners, giving him a taste of competition before competing in the Classic.&lt;br />"Hopefully, that'll help," said Peavy, who will be part of the host country's first workout Friday.&lt;br />Pete Laforest, who will catch for Team Canada in a pool with the U.S., Mexico and South Africa, said he's looking forward to taking his hacks against Dontrelle Willis of the U.S. and Mexico's Esteban Loaiza but isn't familiar with the arms of South Africa, the Tuesday opposition.&lt;br />"I'm getting my body under me," said Laforest, who caught six pitchers in the two intrasquad games. "I'm ready to go. Watch out for Canada."&lt;br />Hit-and-run: Shortstop Khalil Greene agreed to a one-year deal, putting all 40 players on the roster under contract. ... Shawn Estes and Cesar Carrillo are due to follow Peavy to the mound against the Mariners on Thursday. Right-hander Chris Young gets the nod in the first official Cactus League contest Friday at Tempe against the Angels. ... Bochy said southpaw Sean Thompson has been held back with tightness in his shoulder. ... Clay Hensley was back on the mound Thursday, showing no ill effects from a sprained ankle. ... Gonzalez made the defensive gem of the second intrasquad game, a sprawling stab that grabbed Bochy's attention. "You can tell he's comfortable over there," Bochy said. "He handles the glove very well."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/notes-blum-looking-for-hot-spring.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287731415874814</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:54:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:55:14.163-08:00</atom:updated><title>Sledge grateful to former manager</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/01/2006&lt;br />PEORIA, Ariz. -- Terrmel Sledge feels he owes it all, his Major League stature and future, to Frank Robinson.&lt;br />Sledge, 28, is not sure he'd be here, optimistically preparing for the 2006 season with the Padres, if not for Robinson's belief in his talents at a time when Sledge felt like the zero next to his name in the hits column of the box score.&lt;br />"He saw something in me," said Sledge, a compact 6-footer who bats and throws left-handed. "I don't know what it was; I just played my game. I owe him my career."&lt;br />As a rookie with the Montreal Expos in their final season of 2004, Sledge, the team's left fielder on Opening Day, got off to the kind of start that has been known to bury a player in an avalanche of self-doubt.&lt;br />Day after day he came up empty, wondering if he'd ever be able to solve Major League pitching.&lt;br />That's where Robinson, a Hall of Famer with perspective and patience when young Sledge needed it most, exerted his profound influence.&lt;br />"He stuck with me," said Sledge, who is moving freely again after hamstring surgery last May ended his 2005 season prematurely. "Not a lot of managers would have done that.&lt;br />"I started the season 0-for-22, got my first base hit -- single up the middle against the Mets' Braden Looper in New York [on April 19] -- and then was 1-for-34 [through 14 games]. But he never quit on me. He kept encouraging me.&lt;br />"I heard stories about Willie Mays starting his career like that. It started coming around, and I ended up having a pretty good year. I give him all the credit."&lt;br />Sledge hammered to the tune of .291 after his 1-for-34 start to finish at .269, ranking among the rookie leaders in almost every offensive category while making the Topps All-Rookie team.&lt;br />Robinson's Nationals traded Sledge to Texas as part of the Alfonso Soriano Winter Meetings swap. The Rangers then flipped Sledge in the six-players deal that also made Padres of Chris Young and Adrian Gonzalez, with Adam Eaton, Akinori Otsuka and Billy Killian going to Texas.&lt;br />"Sledge is on his way to becoming a very good Major League ballplayer," Robinson said at the Nationals' camp. "This kid is a very good hitter. He is going to hit for average. He is going to hit for power. He is going to play good defense. I would look at him as a left fielder. He is a pretty decent baserunner.&lt;br />"He's a super kid -- quiet, unassuming, ready to play when you want him to. If he's not playing, he's ready when he's on the bench. Offensively, he's going to be good for a number of years.&lt;br />"Certain hitters like him, their abilities stand out before they put it together. You just look at the mechanics of hitting -- the speed of the bat, the way a hitter takes a pitch and go the opposite way. He's tough to pitch to. They stand out -- head and shoulders above the crowd."&lt;br />Having grown up in the San Fernando Valley and attended Kennedy High School in Granada Hills, John Elway's home turf, Sledge said he's delighted to be back in Southern California after summers in Montreal and Washington.&lt;br />He has impressed Padres manager Bruce Bochy in camp with his all-around talents and his ability to hit the ball with authority to all fields.&lt;br />"He's got good plate coverage, short to the ball -- that helps your discipline," Bochy said. "He's got some pop. You look at Terrmel, there's not one thing that stands out -- power, speed, arm. He just does everything well. He's solid in all facets of the game."&lt;br />Sledge has blended in nicely with his new Padres troupe.&lt;br />"I love it, being on a team that knows how to win, in a great atmosphere," said Sledge, who played at Cal State Northridge and Long Beach State and signed with Seattle as an eighth-round draft pick in 1999. "Plus, I'm home."&lt;br />Sledge's '05 season was a painful disappointment. Chasing a fly ball on May 3 at Dodger Stadium, he slipped and tore a hamstring and was lost to the Nationals for the season after surgery. He batted .243 with a homer and eight RBIs in 20 games.&lt;br />What he doesn't owe to his former manager goes to the medical community, Sledge said. The surgery was such a success, he is running without pain. The only physical issue has been a nasty blister on his right hand from getting his stroke down.&lt;br />"It feels like I never had surgery," Sledge said. "The technology now is amazing. Ten years ago, it would have been a lot different.&lt;br />"I try to play the game the old-school way. I'll do whatever they need me to do. I just want to be part of a winning team."&lt;br />If that means pinch-hitting and playing spot duty behind Dave Roberts, Mike Cameron and Brian Giles, Sledge said he will do so enthusiastically.&lt;br />He has shown he can handle the pressure of late-game situations. With a 12-for-21 late-season eruption in '04, he led his Expos with a .337 average with runners in scoring position.&lt;br />Sledge's 0-for-22 drought was the longest to begin a career in the Major Leagues since Pittsburgh's Aramis Ramirez went 0-for-24 in 1998.&lt;br />Rebounding with a vengeance, Sledge produced a season-high 10-game hitting streak starting April 23, batting .533. He hit his first career home run during the streak, a two-run May 4 blast against Colorado's Turk Wendell, and was named National League Rookie of the Month for May for hitting a team-high .316 with four homers and 12 RBIs.&lt;br />Playing all three outfield positions and six games at first, his season highlight was a game-winning grand slam against Josias Manzanillo in 8-5 win on July 31 at Florida. He homered in back-to-back September wins at Wrigley Field.&lt;br />Sledge made the final out in the Expos' last game in Montreal, Sept. 29, 2004, against Florida.&lt;br />"That was a strange year, playing games in Montreal with not many fans there, and going to Puerto Rico to play," he said. "It was an interesting start to my career. I love where I am now."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/sledge-grateful-to-former-manager.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287723656480218</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:53:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:53:56.570-08:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Peavy happy with tuneup</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/02/2006&lt;br />PEORIA, Ariz. -- His Team USA jersey having arrived in the mail, the familiar No. 44 on its back, Jake Peavy declared himself ready for his opening World Baseball Classic assignment Tuesday after going two innings in a charity exhibition against Seattle at Peoria Stadium.&lt;br />"I had a real live arm," Peavy said after giving up four hits and two runs, striking out two. "Marcel Lachemann [Team USA's pitching coach] told me my velocity was 90 to 94 -- all two-seamers [sinkers], no four-seamers. The location was better than I thought it would be.&lt;br />"It was a very productive day, and I'm encouraged going into this [Classic]. I'm going to get my work in there. I'm looking forward to it, to say the least."&lt;br />Hearing the national anthem for the first time since last October, when he faced St. Louis in Game 1 of the National League Division Series, Peavy got a sense of what it will be like when Mexico and Team USA line the field Tuesday at Chase Field in Phoenix.&lt;br />"When I heard the national anthem, that was one of my first thoughts -- it's going to be a neat feeling knowing I have a hand in the game," Peavy said.&lt;br />Peavy has put on five to 10 pounds during the offseason, gaining more upper-body definition. He's up to 198 pounds -- compared to the 170 he weighed when he arrived in San Diego in 2002.&lt;br />He said the fractured rib, sustained during that playoff game against the Cardinals, didn't bother him as he delivered 39 pitches -- right where he wanted to be with a 60-pitch limit for his first Classic start.&lt;br />"I thought Jake looked good," Bochy said. "He had a good fastball, curveball, changeup and good command."&lt;br />Baseball's ERA champion in 2004 and the National League strikeout leader in '05, Peavy would love to stay healthy enough to challenge for the lead in wins in '06.&lt;br />"Physically, head to toe, I'm as good as I've been feeling in a long time," Peavy said. "Most of the time in Spring Training you have nagging injuries. It's almost scary to feel this good in Spring Training."&lt;br />Team USA manager Buck Martinez said he was impressed with Peavy's competitive manner in an early spring game.&lt;br />"Every time you step out there, you can't go through the motions," Peavy said. "You're competing. I've got to get better. You push yourself. I just go hard."&lt;br />Peavy would be meeting with USA teammates in Phoenix later Thursday night, their first workout Friday morning. Peavy figures to be away until March 21, the Classic ending with a March 20 title game at PETCO Park.&lt;br />"That's weird," the Padres' ace said. "I'll be seeing the boys on the 21st."&lt;br />Estes sharp: Shawn Estes couldn't have been much happier with his Padres debut, throwing two perfect innings, striking out a pair of Mariners. He seemed happiest with getting over to first to cover as second baseman Josh Barfield ranged wide to take a hit from Raul Ibanez.&lt;br />"It was nice to get back on the mound and get that shot of adrenaline," said Estes, a free agent whose 2005 season with Arizona was cut short by an injury to his left foot. "In Spring Training, especially early, I like to focus on my fastball and changeup. I only threw one curveball [for a strikeout].&lt;br />"Basically, it's about arm strength now, and you do that with the fastball. You get on the mound and it's more about instincts, focusing on getting the hitter out. It allows you not to consciously think about the foot. I just reacted -- and it feels good now. So it's a good sign."&lt;br />Big Walter delivers: Walter Young, 6-foot-5 and 315 pounds of muscle, slashed a two-run homer in his first Spring Training at-bat against veteran right-hander Kevin Appier.&lt;br />A free agent signed after Baltimore dropped him from its 40-man roster, Young has been overpowering the ball since he arrived. The man from Mississippi had a full scholarship offer from LSU to play defensive end but opted for baseball.&lt;br />"That ball got out in a hurry," Bochy said. "He's a very likeable guy. Teammates like him. He's very professional in how he goes about his business.&lt;br />"He's here trying to make the club. Sure, he has a chance. With Ryan [Klesko] and [Adrian] Gonzalez, he's going to have to beat some guys out. When you have that kind of power, it's not something you teach. Anybody who hits the ball out of the park like that, it intrigues you. In our system, that's something we've been lacking."&lt;br />Carrillo shines: Also continuing to impress with his confident manner -- and sizzling stuff -- was right-hander Cesar Carrillo, the 2005 first-round pick in the First-Year Player Draft out of the University of Miami.&lt;br />Carrillo set down all three Mariners he faced Thursday, going to a two-ball count only once while throwing only one curveball along with his fastball.&lt;br />"I had good life on my fastball," Carrillo said. "I was moving it in and out. I try to throw everything off my fastball.&lt;br />"It felt a lot different being in a Major League game for the first time. But after you throw that first pitch, the jitters are gone."&lt;br />Carrillo, Bochy said, "looked very poised. He was throwing 90, 91 [mph], then jumped to 94 when he needed it."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/notes-peavy-happy-with-tuneup.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287717749153032</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:52:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:52:57.493-08:00</atom:updated><title>Young goes deep in opener</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/02/2006&lt;br />Padres at the plate: Walter Young crushed a two-run homer against Kevin Appier, a line drive over the wall in right center in his first at-bat. Third baseman Justin Leone had three singles, and shortstop Geoff Blum singled twice and lined out.&lt;br />Mariners at the plate: Yuniesky Betancourt stroked a two-run single against Padres ace Jake Peavy. Matt Lawton doubled and scored, and catcher Corky Miller delivered a triple against Scott Linebrink.&lt;br />Padres on the mound: Peavy prepared for his World Baseball Classic start against Mexico with two innings, giving up two runs and four hits while striking out two. Top 2005 draft pick Cesar Carrillo pitched a 1-2-3 inning, Shawn Estes pitched two perfect innings, and Trevor Hoffman struck out two in one inning.&lt;br />Mariners on the mound: Felix Hernandez struck out the side to open the game, getting Brian Giles looking. Appier was roughed up with two runs and three hits in two innings.&lt;br />Cactus League records: Padres 0-0; Mariners 0-0.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/young-goes-deep-in-opener.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287711640797618</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:50:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:51:56.413-08:00</atom:updated><title>Brocail set to make 2006 memorable</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/02/2006&lt;br />PEORIA, Ariz. -- Doug Brocail has pitched in 36 Major League ballparks across 11 seasons. He can't wait to make PETCO Park No. 37 when the Padres open their season against San Francisco.&lt;br />"When I went out there [to San Diego] and stepped on the field and looked out," Brocail said, having signed a one-year, $1 million free agent deal on Dec. 14, "it was, 'Man -- that's Yosemite.'&lt;br />"It was good to see how enormous it was in the outfield."&lt;br />Durable and dependable, the 6-foot-5, 250-pound Brocail, 38, spent the past two seasons in a smaller yard squarely in the Texas heat, reviving a career that he thought was dead when the Rangers expressed interest before the 2004 season.&lt;br />He'd spent the previous two seasons idle, recovering from a pair of Tommy John surgeries. His medical history is such that he refers to his many arthroscopic procedures over the years as "cleanouts," comparing them to oil changes.&lt;br />After 104 appearances in those two seasons in Texas, with nine wins in 13 decisions and 104 strikeouts in 144 innings, Brocail chose to return to his original organization. The Padres signed him in 1986 as a first-round pick, 12th overall, in the First-Year Player Draft.&lt;br />"I didn't recognize the downtown area -- it's beautiful, what they've done around the ballpark," Brocail said.&lt;br />He recalls those cool summer evenings by the Pacific, framed in stark contrast with "100-degree day games when it was 140 on the field" in Texas.&lt;br />After pitching in parts of three seasons with the Padres, Brocail departed San Diego following the 1994 season in a blockbuster swap with Houston that featured Ken Caminiti and Steve Finley coming west.&lt;br />As his personal fate would have it, the Padres began winning division titles (1996, '98) and reached a World Series ('98) after he left -- just as Houston would begin making playoff appearances after dealing Brocail to Detroit following the '96 season.&lt;br />He had four productive seasons in Motown but remained idle in October, watching old friends play for the high stakes.&lt;br />"I want to be a piece of the puzzle," Brocail said, explaining that his respect for manager Bruce Bochy and general manager Kevin Towers figured heavily into his decision to sign with the Padres.&lt;br />Bochy was a coach and Towers was scouting director during Brocail's first tour in San Diego.&lt;br />"There are other teams out there I could have signed with," Brocail said, "but I know K.T., and I know Boch. K.T.'s a straight shooter. I was roommates with enough guys in the game who played for Boch. I know how they are. I'm really excited about playing for them."&lt;br />Echoing the words and thoughts of other veteran newcomers such as Mike Piazza, Vinny Castilla and Mike Cameron, Brocail sees no reason why this remodeled team can't successfully defend its National League West title -- and take it a step or two beyond the National League Division Series.&lt;br />At this stage of his career, it's thoughts of an eventful October that move Brocail, who will miss his wife, Lisa, and their five daughters back home in the Houston area as he encamps in San Diego.&lt;br />"The game drives me," he said. "These guys weren't that far off [in 2005]. Once you get there, anything can happen in the playoffs. It's a driving factor for me."&lt;br />Bochy plans to make use of Brocail and a fastball he uses about 85 percent of the time in his familiar middle relief role.&lt;br />"He's what you're looking for -- tough and strong, a guy who loves to be out there," Bochy said.&lt;br />Brocail has appeared in 442 Major League games with a 37-40 record and 4.06 ERA. He had career highs of 70 appearances and 82 innings with the 1999 Tigers.&lt;br />He has been a reliever since 1994 following elbow surgery at the outset of the season. He'd started 24 games for the Padres in '93, going 4-13 with a 4.56 ERA.&lt;br />As down-to-earth as ballplayers get, Brocail is openly covetous of sparkling jewelry flaunted by some of his new teammates.&lt;br />"We have five or six guys here with [World Series] rings," Brocail said. "That ring they wear is what we're playing for. Those guys know what it's like to raise their arm and say, 'We're the best,' to get those goose bumps and go, 'Oh my God, we did it.'"&lt;br />One of his clubhouse neighbors at the Peoria Sports Complex is Cameron, a center fielder with few peers. Brocail sees the pieces fitting together nicely.&lt;br />"All we want as pitchers is good defense -- and we've got it," Brocail said.&lt;br />He's encouraged by the presence in the bullpen of a quality lefty, Alan Embree, one of four Red Sox champions in 2004 with the Padres. Embree joins an array of strong right arms. Scott Linebrink and the great Trevor Hoffman are late-game anchors with few equals.&lt;br />Brocail came back to San Diego to pitch in, do his part to make 2006 memorable. He burns to play meaningful games in October, to add a few finishing touches to a solid career.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/brocail-set-to-make-2006-memorable.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287702370458646</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:49:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:50:23.706-08:00</atom:updated><title>Park plans on early action in Classic</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/02/2006&lt;br />TOKYO -- Chan Ho Park may have stolen his manager's thunder after Korea's final team workout Thursday at Tokyo Dome.&lt;br />Heading into Korea's World Baseball Classic game against Chinese Taipei, manager In-Sik Kim has ardently refused to offer any hints about his starting pitchers, not only for the opener but for any of Korea's three Pool A weekend dates.&lt;br />"I would like to go out there for five innings, but it is a bit early," Park said. "I can pitch in two of the games, but not in all three."&lt;br />Park also said that he had been up late the night before studying film of Chinese Taipei, hinting that regardless of what Kim may say, Park is planning to see some action Friday.&lt;br />"They have some Major League and Minor League talent that has been preparing hard," Park said. "When I saw the video, I could feel the motivation. It may be tough."&lt;br />Park offered nothing further, and Kim, who used Park as the first of his 10 pitchers in an exhibition game earlier this week, stuck with his previous stance.&lt;br />"We're going to play at least three pitchers, and all of them have been practicing," Kim said. "I'm sure all the media from Korea can predict our starters, but the more pitchers we have to use, the less important the starter becomes."&lt;br />Kim also preached discipline for his hitters against Taipei: "We should take a good look at the ball," he said. "We must only swing at strikes."&lt;br />Asked what he expected to see from Chinese Taipei's starters, third baseman Dong-Joo Kim said, "I've been in international games against them, and they throw a lot of junk."&lt;br />Kim was one of the Korean players whose Olympic qualifying season ended in Sapporo, Japan, at the hands of the Koreans in 2003, leading up to the Sydney Olympics.&lt;br />"In 2003, we did not prepare enough, we did not have enough teamwork," he said. "Unless we make a crucial mistake, things will be different this time."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/park-plans-on-early-action-in-classic.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287697933617729</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:48:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:49:39.340-08:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: This year, Young able to relax</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/03/2006&lt;br />TEMPE, Ariz. -- It wasn't like this last spring in the Texas Rangers training camp. Chris Young threw everything he owned with everything he had in a pre-exhibition intrasquad game, straining to show manager Buck Showalter and the staff he had the right stuff.&lt;br />What a difference a year -- and one successful rookie season -- can make in a man's attitude and approach.&lt;br />"This is only my second big-league Spring Training," Young said, having thrown two innings (one run, one hit, one strikeout) in his Cactus League debut for the Padres against the Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium. "Last year, I was obviously not as proven -- not that I am now. Last year there were more question marks about me.&lt;br />"Instead of coming out of the gate throwing all three pitches at 100 percent effort level, I can work on some things, some variations on pitches."&lt;br />Young threw no curveballs against the Angels, moving his fastball around with an effective circle changeup he uses to keep hitters off balance.&lt;br />He walked leadoff man Chone Figgins, who came around to score with a stolen base and two infield outs. Tim Salmon's leadoff single in the second was followed by a double-play grounder by Casey Kotchman and a strikeout of catcher Jeff Mathis.&lt;br />"It's a start," Young said. "Obviously, I'm not where I want to be. I did some good things, and there are some things I want to work on. It's nice to have the first one under my belt."&lt;br />Health, he said, is his first and foremost priority. He'll go mostly with fastballs early on to develop arm strength -- unlike last spring when he felt he had to prove something every time he stepped on the mound.&lt;br />"His command's getting better and better," manager Bruce Bochy said. "He has said he didn't come in throwing as much this year. He's going to use Spring Training as a time to get sharp."&lt;br />Ashby's mixed emotions: On the one hand, Andy Ashby understood that this was a big step. After almost two seasons away, he was back on a Major League mound in competition against quality hitters, including four -- Adam Kennedy, Darin Erstad, Garret Anderson and Salmon -- who helped power a World Series champion in 2002.&lt;br />But that didn't make it any easier to handle for Ashby after he'd given up a homer to Anderson and another second-inning run before leaving the bases full by retiring Maicer Izturis.&lt;br />Four hits allowed and a hit batsman were not what Ashby had in mind for the occasion, but after it was over, he wasn't experiencing residual elbow stress and had the first one in the books.&lt;br />"I got some pitches up," Ashby said, identifying the ball Anderson lost as a cut fastball that didn't cut right. "I made a couple more mistakes, catching too much of the plate. But I felt pretty good. I don't like to give up runs, but it was nice to get the first one over with."&lt;br />Ringing the bell: Mark Bellhorn, a veteran free-agent acquisition bidding for the second-base job, made an impressive Padres debut with two doubles Friday -- the club's only extra-base blows in a desultory 10-1 loss to the Angels.&lt;br />"When they're having a good day," Bochy said, "they like to say they don't want to peak too early. We didn't peak too early today.&lt;br />"Fundamental things we're emphasizing, we didn't do them early. Nobody in particular bothered me; we just didn't play well in all facets of the game. Bellhorn had a nice game. It was good to see Ash back on the mound; it's been a long road for him."&lt;br />Bochy also liked Mike Cameron's speed and instincts going from first to third on a Brian Giles single, lefty Alan Embree's stuff and the command of Clay Hensley, who induced two ground balls (one an error on Paul McAnulty at first) and two strikeouts.&lt;br />Klesko goes deep: It did not take long for Ryan Klesko's first home run of the spring to leave the field. The solo shot came in the top of the fourth inning against Seattle's Eddie Guardado in a six-inning "B" game at Peoria Sports Complex. Klesko's blast to right field was the only offense the Friars would generate in 3-1 loss to the Mariners on Friday morning.&lt;br />Padres right-hander Jared Wells struck out one and gave up two hits but allowed no runs in the third and fourth innings. Right-hander Tim Stauffer started the game for the Padres, giving up one run in the second. The Mariners added one run in each of the fifth and sixth innings, both against non-roster invitee Kenny Baugh.&lt;br />Padres catcher George Kottaras, showcasing a quicker new delivery, threw out two Mariners attempting to steal second.&lt;br />The 22-year-old Kottaras, widely considered the club's catcher of the future, has been working with Bochy and Minor League catching instructor Joe Ferguson, who becomes a Rookie League batting coach in June.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/notes-this-year-young-able-to-relax.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287692636108965</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:48:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:48:46.363-08:00</atom:updated><title>For openers, Angels get best of Padres</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/03/2006&lt;br />Padres at the plate: Mark Bellhorn hit a pair of doubles. Mike Cameron reached base on an error and scored. Brian Giles singled and walked.&lt;br />Angels at the plate: Garret Anderson hit a solo homer in the fourth and Casey Kotchman hit an RBI double. Tim Salmon singled twice and scored. Howie Kendrick singled and scored.&lt;br />Padres on the mound: Starter Chris Young worked two innings, allowing a run on a hit and a walk. He also struck out one. Andy Ashby allowed two runs on four hits in one inning of work. Left-handed reliever Alan Embree allowed a run.&lt;br />Angels on the mound: Ervin Santana went two innings in his first spring start. The right-hander allowed a double and two walks, while striking out two and hitting one batter. Right-handed reliever Brendan Donnelly allowed an unearned run on two hits. Jered Weaver pitched 1 2/3 innings and walked four but did not allow a run.&lt;br />Cactus League records: Padres 0-1; Angels 1-0.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/for-openers-angels-get-best-of-padres.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287687508528075</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:47:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:47:55.086-08:00</atom:updated><title>Peavy slated to start U.S. semifinals</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/03/2006&lt;br />PHOENIX -- It never does any harm to think ahead. The first round hasn't started, and even though Team USA just gathered for the first time publicly on Friday at Chase Field, Jake Peavy -- scheduled to start the opener for Team USA against Mexico on Tuesday -- has been told he'll be starting the semifinal game on March 18 at his own PETCO Park.&lt;br />That's if the U.S. gets that far in the World Baseball Classic.&lt;br />The U.S. must be one of two teams to survive each of the round-robin first and second rounds to position itself for the semifinals. If the Americans do, there will be some neat symmetry in Peavy standing on the mound of his home Major League park to give the U.S. a shot at playing in the finals at PETCO on March 20. All three games in San Diego are already sold out.&lt;br />"That'll be great," said Peavy, the 24-year-old right-hander, who led the Padres to only their fourth National League West title last season. "That park is going to be rocking, I can tell you that. I can't even imagine being out there on that mound with the crowd chanting, 'USA. USA.' It's one thing to hear, 'Let's go Padres!' But it's quite another being there representing the red, white and blue."&lt;br />That seemed to be the ongoing sentiment on Friday as the star-studded U.S. squad posed for its team picture wearing the sparkling white uniforms with the red, white and blue USA logo emblazoned across the chest.&lt;br />There was Roger Clemens mingling on the field with Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, Johnny Damon, Vernon Wells, Derrek Lee and Ken Griffey Jr. in perhaps one of greatest ensembles of baseball talent in the sport's long history.&lt;br />Even A-Rod, who initially wavered about playing for the Dominican Republic or not playing at all, said he was caught up in the moment.&lt;br />"I wasn't really excited coming here, but now I'm very excited," said Rodriguez, who flew via private jet from the Yankees' Spring Training base in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday with teammates Jeter, Damon and Al Leiter, a late add to the squad. "Once you get here, you realize how important it is and how special it is. I'm very proud to be wearing this uniform. It's going to be a great event."&lt;br />Team USA manager Buck Martinez has had his pitching set for the first round since the provisional roster was announced on Jan. 17. Peavy, who threw 39 pitches for the Padres against the Mariners on Thursday in nearby Peoria, will be backed up by seven relievers against the Mexicans, who announced that the Orioles' Rodrigo Lopez will start the opener. Southpaws Dontrelle Willis and Leiter will team up on Wednesday against Team Canada left-hander Erik Bedard.&lt;br />And Clemens, forestalling retirement again for the umpteenth time since he left the Yankees after the 2003 World Series, is slated to go against South Africa on Friday at Scottsdale Stadium.&lt;br />Starters are limited to 65 pitches each in the first round and relievers are limited to 50.&lt;br />If the U.S. moves on to the second round from March 12-16 in Anaheim, as expected, Peavy and Willis will start the opening two games. Game 3 is open to question, depending on whether a win in that one is necessary for the U.S. to move on to the semifinals.&lt;br />"We're set through then and we'll see what happens," Martinez said. "Who we pitch in the finals will be contingent on how important that Game 3 of the second round is."&lt;br />Peavy opened the 2005 playoffs for the Padres and was rocked by the Cardinals at St. Louis in a game he left trailing, 8-0, in the fifth inning. Soon after that 8-5 loss ended, it was determined he was pitching with cracked ribs, an injury that was sustained during the NL West-clinching celebration on the field at PETCO Park.&lt;br />But more importantly, Peavy has experience in international play.&lt;br />In November 2004, Peavy, Clemens and Wells were on the MLB All-Star team that toured Japan and played their counterparts from Nippon Professional Baseball. Peavy pitched the final game of the eight-game series in Tokyo Dome and worked the first six innings of a 5-0 victory, allowing only two hits while striking out four and walking none.&lt;br />Wells was the MVP of the series. He batted .407 (11-for-27) with two doubles, two homers, seven RBIs and seven runs scored.&lt;br />"That was like the same kind of experience as this one," Peavy said. "We were representing America and there was certainly some pride involved with that. We didn't want to get embarrassed. Japan had a really good team. The Japan team that's in this tournament is really good, too. I saw firsthand what they can do."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/peavy-slated-to-start-us-semifinals.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287680470857881</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:46:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:46:44.710-08:00</atom:updated><title>U.S. notes: Peavy has eye tears</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/04/2006&lt;br />PHOENIX -- Jake Peavy, Team USA's starter in Tuesday's opening game of the tournament against Mexico at Chase Field, said Saturday that he recently was treated for slight tears in the retinas of both eyes.&lt;br />The San Diego Padres 24-year-old ace right-hander is acutely nearsighted and the diagnosis was determined during a recent eye exam. Surgery was not deemed necessary, and at this point, he said he's being treated with eye drops.&lt;br />"I have a hole in my retina," Peavy said during Saturday's second day of workouts for the American team. "Actually, I have holes in both of my retinas. There's some slight tearing in there and a little scar tissue. They're treating it with the drops and should be fine."&lt;br />Peavy wears contact lenses and said he is not able because of his condition to endure any sort of corrective vision surgery.&lt;br />Team USA manager Buck Martinez has tabbed Peavy as the starter for not only Game 1 of the first round against Mexico at Chase Field on Tuesday, but for Game 1 of the second round May 12 in Anaheim and the semifinals at Peavy's hometown PETCO Park on March 18 if the U.S. gets there.&lt;br />In his four big-league seasons, all with the Padres, Peavy has become one of baseball's top young starters. He's 46-31 with a 3.33 earned run average in 106 starts. In 2004, he led the National League with a 2.27 ERA, and last season led the senior circuit with 216 strikeouts.&lt;br />"That's just the way it is," Peavy said about his eyesight. "I've been living with that my whole life."&lt;br />Sunday's lineup: After the workout, Martinez released his lineup for Sunday's tuneup against the San Francisco Giants at Scottsdale Stadium: Johnny Damon (LF), Derek Jeter (SS), Ken Griffey Jr. (CF), Mark Teixeira (1B), Chipper Jones (3B), Brian Schneider (DH), Michael Barrett (C), Randy Winn (RF), Chase Utley (2B) and Rogers Clemens starting, with Al Leiter and all 10 relievers behind him in the 10-inning game.&lt;br />Those 10 innings: The Giants have agreed to do it, but since they are sending a split-squad to Mesa for a concurrent game with the Chicago Cubs, may not have enough pitchers to go 10 innings. Giants manager Felipe Alou said he would use some Minor Leaguers to accommodate the Americans. The Giants are also keeping most of their heavy hitters in Scottsdale. "Out of respect to the U.S.," Alou said. "We'll send all of our kids over to Mesa. Myself and the Major League coaching staff will stay in Scottsdale." The Giants manpower problem is complicated by the fact that Winn, Pedro Feliz, Moises Alou and Omar Vizquel are all with their respective teams for the Classic.&lt;br />Buck on the lineup: "We'd like to try and get as many guys as we can in the game," he said. "If we can, we'll get everybody in the game. There are some guys who haven't had any at-bats. Brian Schneider hasn't had any at-bats. In the exhibition game, its going to be a little more relaxed, so he's the DH. Randy starting in right field in the Giants ballpark is a little honor he deserves. Alex Rodriguez will pick up Chipper. We're going to go with at-bats rather than innings. I want everybody to get two or three at-bats. They're all healthy."&lt;br />Stars and stripes: Martinez said the three catchers will each start a first-round game, and he has already paired one with a starting pitcher and asked them to work together in practice: Clemens with Barrett in both the tuneup vs. the Giants and Game 3 Friday against South Africa, Jason Varitek with Game 2 starter Dontrelle Willis vs. Canada and Schneider with Peavy in Tuesday's Mexico tilt. ... First, Johnny Damon has moved right in from Red Sox Nation to the Yankees clubhouse. Now, he's feeling comfortable among his teammates on Team USA. "Guys who are well known around the league are able to get along with everyone," Damon said. "There's a lot of talent, potential Hall of Famers. Guys who have been around and represented the game very well." No, Damon hasn't grown back his signature beard now that he's out of Yankees camp for perhaps as long as 17 days. ... Martinez said he won't necessarily be guided by the 65-pitch limit for starters in the first round. It may be three innings and out, no matter how many pitches one of his starters throw. "If Jake blows through three innings and throws 35 pitches, because of the way we've put together this team, we can tell him, 'Thanks, that's all we needed from you.' He'll feel very good about his outing. He'll have gotten his work in. The Padres won't be concerned. And now we can get our relievers in the game."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/us-notes-peavy-has-eye-tears.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13573135/posts/full/114287675915030873</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2006 17:45:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-20T09:45:59.153-08:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Chairman getting to know team</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/04/2006&lt;br />PEORIA, Ariz. -- John Moores, Padres chairman of the board, made an appearance in camp Saturday and began getting a better feel for what he calls his "mystery team."&lt;br />In the company of the club's board of directors, Moores was given an update from manager Bruce Bochy and general manager Kevin Towers about a dramatically remodeled club that won the National League West at 82-80 before getting swept by St. Louis in the NL Division Series.&lt;br />"This is a little more of a mystery team than any we've had," Moores said of a club that returns only 16 of 57 players (28 percent) in camp from Spring Training a year ago. "I'm more comfortable [with the club] than I would have thought."&lt;br />Moores installed Sandy Alderson, architect of some great Oakland teams and former Major League Baseball executive, as club president last spring and is impressed with the way Alderson has gone about the business of restocking the club without extravagant spending on long-term deals.&lt;br />Moores stressed that management is committed to building the Padres internally with improved scouting and development. That department is run by Grady Fuson, an Alderson associate in Oakland who flourished in Texas before coming to the Padres last season.&lt;br />"I've been unhappy about the productivity of the farm system," Moores said. "Particularly I was very unhappy about the [state of the club's facility in] Dominican Republic. We've spent a lot of money over the years there and have little to show for it.&lt;br />"The facility was so inadequate I was shocked."&lt;br />He's optimistic a new, improved facility will greatly enhance the club's chances of mining some gold in the Dominican Republic.&lt;br />Refuting the notion that the Padres haven't spent enough money on Major League talent with a payroll in the $70 million range, Moores said: "We're spending at a furious rate right now. We are right at the borderline of being in compliance with the debt-service rule. The only way we're going to remain competitive long-term is by being efficient with the dollars."&lt;br />Alderson, Moores added, "has all the authority to do whatever he wants."&lt;br />Having devoted years to making PETCO Park a reality, Moores is flattered that his stadium was chosen by MLB to host the semifinals and championship game of the World Baseball Classic on March 18 and 20.&lt;br />"We'll get a lot of exposure," he said. "But the real benefit for us is it should be a lot of fun. I'm looking forward to it. The best analogue is it might be Super Bowl I [for baseball]. It might be a defining event the way the first Super Bowl was a defining event for the NFL.&lt;br />"Potentially, this is more important -- because baseball has an opportunity to be the international sport. [Commissioner] Bud Selig did something very nice for the city of San Diego."&lt;br />Bats come alive: Putting on a show for their boss after scoring only three runs in their first 19 spring innings, the Padres erupted for 20 hits in a 17-4 thumping of the Mariners at Peoria Stadium.&lt;br />The big blow was catcher Doug Mirabelli's three-run homer against Scott Atchison in a six-run sixth inning. Freddy Guzman had a double, triple and three RBIs after spelling center fielder Mike Cameron, who had a perfect day: two hits, walk, RBI.&lt;br />Ryan Klesko had an RBI single and double, and rookie second baseman Josh Barfield had two hits, including a two-run triple, stole a base and scored twice. Doubles were delivered by Eric Young, Dave Roberts and George Kottaras as well as Guzman, with Ben Johnson raking a pair of RBI singles.&lt;br />Starter Brian Sweeney went 1 2/3 innings, followed by Mike Thompson (2 1/3 innings), winning pitcher Jon Adkins, Doug Brocail, Brian Sikorski, Minor League lefty Jeff Jones and Jason Anderson (one inning each).&lt;br />Williams on target: Switched to an early "B" game against the Mariners, veteran right-hander Woody Williams yielded a single and a walk, striking out one, in two innings Saturday morning at Peoria Sports Complex. The Padres won the five-inning exercise, 4-0.&lt;br />Non-roster invitee Eric Junge then worked two perfect innings, striking out one. Right-hander Steve Andrade hit two batsmen -- uncharacteristic for a man noted for excellent control -- but got through his inning without allowing a run.&lt;br />Shortstop Matt Bush, the team's No. 1 overall pick in the 2004 First-Year Player Draft, had his best day in camp with a walk, single and stolen base.&lt;br />Eric Valent, a free-agent outfielder, had a double and single, driving in a run. Bobby Hill had two walks and a sacrifice fly, and Paul McAnulty delivered a single and sacrifice fly.&lt;br />Mark Bellhorn stayed hot with a single and walk in two at-bats following a two-double effort in his Padres debut Saturday in Tempe against the Angels. Also in a groove is Geoff Blum, who singled and was hit by a pitch in three at-bats.&lt;br />Hit-and-run: The Padres will play Korea's World Baseball Classic team Friday night at Peoria Stadium. Korea and Japan have advanced to the second round of the Classic. ... Padres right-hander Chan Ho Park, who had thrown effectively in camp before departing to join the Korean team, worked three scoreless innings to save Korea's opening win over Chinese Taipei in Tokyo.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://sandiego.padres.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://sandiegopadres.barebaseball.com/2006/03/notes-chairman-getting-to-know-team.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item></channel></rss>